Showing posts with label Bad Lieutenant: Port of Call New Orleans. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bad Lieutenant: Port of Call New Orleans. Show all posts

Thursday, September 3, 2009

The word from Venice: Bad Lieutenant might not be that bad


Anyone who knows me is aware of my loathing of Nicolas Cage and his films. He's annoying and his films usually suck. But the trailer for Werner Herzog's Bad Lieutenant: Port of Call New Orleans revealed that this would be one of the few movies that didn't have Cage racing through fire, manically trying to save the world from certain doom. Which is a good thing.

Variety's Todd McCarthy shows that maybe my instincts were right and the film does not entirely suck:

From the moment it was announced, there was something a tad loony about the idea of remaking -- or revisiting or reinventing or whatever they want to call it -- Abel Ferrara's 1992 "Bad Lieutenant," with Werner Herzog, no less, directing. Well, lo and behold, there's also something rather loony about the finished film itself. But there's also a sort of deadpan zaniness, stemming from a steadfast conviction in its own absurdity, that gives "Bad Lieutenant: Port of Call New Orleans" a strange distinction all its own. Not at all an art film, the picture lacks sufficient action to sate the appetites of sensation seekers, but star Nicolas Cage's name means enough to offer some short-run B.O. traction and good home-viewing market returns.

...New Orleans is a bright, if blighted, city, and Herzog approaches it, as well as the depredations of the title character, with a straight face and unblinking lens, the better to catch a glimpse of the links connecting Katrina, the corruption of authority as seen through the outrageous behavior of the lieutenant, and the money, which lands mostly in the wrong places.

The film is offbeat, silly, disarming and loopy all at the same time, and viewers will decide to ride with that or just give up on it, according to mood and disposition.

Thursday, July 30, 2009

Venice Film Festival line-up unveiled

Films included in the festival line-up for the 66th Annual Venice Film Festival include Werner Herzog's Bad Lieutenant: Port of Call New Orleans, Michael Moore's Capitalism: A Love Story, Jaco van Dormael's English-language debut Mr. Nobody, Tom Ford's (yes, that Tom Ford) directorial debut A Single Man, and John Hillcoat's The Road. According to Variety (via RopeofSilicon) there will be 71 world premiers.

Steven Soderbergh's The Informant and Grant Heslov's The Men Who Stare at Goats will also be included in the line-up, but they will be out of competition.

Midnight movies include Antoine Fuqua's Brooklyn's Finest, which is set for a November 27 release and Nicolas Winding Refn's Valhalla Rising starring Mads Mikkelsen.

The Golden Lion Lifetime Achievement Award will be given to John Lasseter and the 3-D versions of Toy Story and Toy Story 2 will be screened for the award.

RopeofSilicon gives us a pretty good list and you can head on over to Variety for the full list.

66TH ANNUAL VENICE FILM FESTIVAL LINEUP COMPETITION

  • Bad Lieutenant: Port of Call New Orleans, Werner Herzog (U.S.)
  • Capitalism: A Love Story, Michael Moore (U.S.)
  • The Road, John Hillcoat (U.S.)
  • Soul Kitchen, Fatih Akin (Germany)
  • Survival of the Dead, George Romero (U.S.)

OUT OF COMPETITION

  • The Informant!, Steven Soderbergh (U.S.)
  • The Men Who Stare at Goats, Grant Heslov (U.S.)
  • REC 2, Jaume Balaguero, Paco Plaza (Spain)
  • South of the Border, Oliver Stone (U.S.)

MIDNIGHT MOVIES

  • Brooklyn's Finest, Antoine Fuqua (U.S.)
  • Valhalla Rising, Nicolas Winding Refn (Denmark)

GOLDEN LION FOR LIFETIME ACHIEVEMENT 2009
JOHN LASSETER AND THE DISNEY/PIXAR DIRECTORS

  • Toy Story 3-D (New Version), John Lasseter (U.S.)
  • Toy Story 2 3-D (New Version), John Lasseter, Lee Unkrich, Ash Brannon (U.S.)

Wednesday, May 27, 2009

Werner Herzog’s Bad Lieutenant remake trailer

I think the trailer made its way online a while back, but Film Junk just posted it. I have never seen Abel Ferrara's Bad Lieutenant, but apparently this remake starring Nicolas Cage looks nothing like Ferrara's 1992 version. Which might seem bizarre, but since Werner Herzog hasn't actually seen the original we'll have to let that slide. Why in the name of hell is this even considered a remake then? The words "Bad Lieutenant" are in the title so therefore, it's a remake? Nicolas Cage movies have a way of fucking baffling me.

Cage plays a drug addicted cop, and even though I've taken a few shots at Cage's ludicrous career, this looks interesting. At least he isn't trying to save the world and it reminds me of his oddball performance in Matchstick Men, which I liked.

Speaking about Cage’s performance, he [Herzog] is quoted as saying, “You will see something extraordinary when you see him on screen. It’s the best he’s ever done.” So there. Bad Lieutenant: Port of Call New Orleans is expected to be released sometime in late 2009. [Film Junk]