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Bad Lieutenant: Port of Call New Orleans

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Recent Reviews


  • December 28, 2009
    1. The White Ribbon - a gripping whodunnit (maybe?) from Michael Haneke. Its a film, like all of Haneke's, that simmers on the surface, boils underneath, and begs more quetions than it answers. This beautifully shot alegorical picture has more than meets the eye.

    2. Ballast - a...( read more) very, very low key film from Lance Hammer in a great debut. It's performances are pure, its story is poignant and touching. An all around great film, full of artistic authenticity.

    3. Sin Nombre - another brilliant debut, this time From Cary Fukanaga, whom I've been in touch with a few times. Very much looking forward to his future work. Sin Nombre is a brutal depiction of the struggles of getting to America. It's an excellent companion to another great South American migration story, El Norte.

    4. Le Silence de Lorna - another brilliant, soul searching essay of a film from the Dardenne brothers, who seem incapable of making a bad film.

    5. Fantastic Mr Fox - Wes Anderson's first, and I'm guessing not last, foray into animation. The stop animation he uses calls back on history, and allows for the story to take front and centre. I loved it.

    6. A Prophet - a gripping and gritty French prison drama. Within its small confines it reaches somehow for epic and achieves it. Powerful, powerful stuff.

    7. Inglorious Basterds - Well Mr Tarantino, we've waited and you have given (unlike Mr James "chock a block special effects" Cameron). The Basterds were for some reason blasted at Cannes, but I thought it was an excellent and vibrantly told retelling of history. It's light fare, but that's Tarantino's bag, and for my money this is without a doubt his best work along with Pulp Fiction.

    8. You, the living - a delightfully deadpan bit of absurdism from the master modern surrealist, Roy Andersson.

    9. Antichrist - an uncomfortable, sometimes excessive but always artful bit of reverse theology. It's a movie with something to say (I think) that will leave most turned off. You better be ready for this one.

    10. The Hurt Locker - the first great film about the Iraq War. It's a nail biting thriller, taking an objective position among the soldiers themselves. War is a drug, the film tells us, and we can see why for some people.

    11. Bad Lieutenant - Is this a great work of art like Aguirre or Stroszek? Nah, but I'll be damned if it's not only of the most delightfully deranged movies of the year. It also doesn't hurt that Herzog creates a couple of the greatest scenes in recent memory (here's looking at you iguanas and dancing souls).

    12. Two legged Horse - rom Samira Makhmalbaf, daughter of Mohsen Makhmalbaf, the great Iranian filmmaker. Its a tale of a well to do man who hires a boy, mentally handicapped boy to carry around his son who lost his legs in a landmine exlosion. The wealthier boy dominates his "two legged horse," selling rides on him, feeding him straw and more or less turning him into a horse. It's a tough film and certainly not meant as entertainment, but it's powerful and meaningful.

    13. Goodbye Solo - another great film from Ramin Bahrani, this time about an immigrant cab driver who befriends an older man who hires him to drive him to a place where he will commit suicide

    14. Big River Man - in a year where we've had to do without any pseudo documentaries from Werner Herzog, Big River Man will suffice. It chronicles the journy of Martin Strel of Slovenia as he swims the Amazon River. Heres a guy who's swam the Mississippi and the Yangtze. He must be in peak shape, but he's not. He's in his 50s, he's overweight, and may or may not (likely the former) have a drinking problem. The documentary I assume is aiming for ecstatic truth as Herzog puts it, but nevertheless chronicles a healthy dose of insanity. Great stuff.

    15. Broken Embraces - another great collaboration between Pedro Almolvodar and his muse Penolope Cruz. What a rich and vibrant looking piece of work this is.



    A few other films I really admired/enjoyed this year:

    Crazy Heart - a great film about the archetypal fallen country and western singer trying to get his life back together. Great performance from Jeff Bridges in particular.

    Precious - a film that has earned itself heaps of praise, and attached itself some big names AFTER it was made and released. Sure Oprah and Tyler Perry are "producers" but only have Lee Daniels and crew completed the film and had it released. They have nothing to do with the movie itself other than promotion. Nevertheless, a very strong film with very strong performances from its two leads (particularly Mo'nique).

    Up in the Air - another gem from Jason Reitman

    Vincere/Sweet Rush - two very admirable and very vibrant films from aging legends of the screen. Vincere is Marco Bellochio's story of Mussolini and his secret lover. Sweet Rush is a highly admirable film from aging Polish great Andrei Wadza that resonates with more experimentation and creativity than the great majority of young filmmakers today. Neither film is the directors best work, but both are admirable for their youthful vigor and granduer. Sweet Rush features moving monologues from Krystyna Janda recalling the real life death of her husband and frequent Wajda collaborator Edward Klosinski that are worth the price of admission alone.

    Knowing - a movie that got crapped on by nearly every critic out there (minus Ebert who gave it 4 stars). I was skeptical but must admit that I throrougly enjoyed the film and found it to be very well done for the most part (minus Rose Byrne who seems only to know how to shriek terribly). I found it effective, and you gotta call a spade a spade!
  • December 23, 2009
    herzog's newest film will never be confused with one of his great masterpieces, but i actually really enjoyed watching this film. nic cage gives the most eccentric performance of his already eccentric career, and the best word to describe the film is "bizarre", but in a good way...( read more). the film was far from perfect with some moments of sub par dialogue and an ending that was way too neat to fit the messy storyline, but overall this is a film i enjoyed.
  • December 20, 2009
    Bad Lieutenant: Port of Call New Orleans is one of those movies where when its over, you're not sure if you liked it or hated it; whether it was really good, or really bad. All you know is - you have to see it again. Well, I have watched it again, and I'm no closer to figuring ...( read more)out what the fuck this movie is than I was the first time. I don't know what it all means. I don't know the point of the iguanas, or why Nicholas Cage has an accent for half the flick, or why the last 20 minutes are so surreal it could be a dream sequence. The movie is both brilliant and maddening, insane and trippy, pretentious and lackadaisical, predictable yet wholly original. In short...you won't see another movie like this in 2009, or perhaps any year, and during a time where freshness is a quality lacking in many movies, this alone makes it worth a recommendation.

    This probably sounds like damning with faint praise. But make no mistake - I was not bored watching Bad Lieutenant. It's a film you can't take your eyes away from. Mostly this heightened interest is from Nicholas Cage, who's in every scene of the film and basically represents both the best and worst forms of acting he's displayed in his career. "Over the top" doesn't even begin to describe this performance. He thrashes, he gnashes, he smokes and snorts and laughs and fucks and slaps and shoots his way until eventually, the movie ends. Catharsis? The only redemption here is so hollow and seems so purposefully contrived, it HAS to be fake/"all a dream" (if this finale had been placed with the director's aggravation, everyone would be lamenting the studio fucking with a director's vision - but instead, Werner Herzog has gone on record saying he wanted the ending to be a hilarious depiction of descending to Hell, so now it's all deemed brilliant - remember the finale of Taxi Driver, and that's what we get here). Whatever the purpose of this character's arc, I can certainly say that Cage gives it his all, and goes for broke. It's an impressive and shocking performance.

    And the rest of the movie basically revolves around that - and also Herzog's camera, if you notice that kind of thing in the movies. I love the way he moves his camera, pulling in and out and around in ways I would never have thought of. It's a perfectly shot film, helped by having a very intrusive musical score by Mark Isham (also on purpose, though, and also therefore kinda cool). But I'm just not sure what to make of it all. The script has some really great moments; Cage going ape shit in a drug store, the now infamous Iguana scene, or the even more peculiar moment where a man is shot and then Cage says his "soul is still dancing', and we see a younger version of that character breakdancing around to the sounds of a banjo. But there's a lot of stuff, too, that just doesn't work. The script has some dialogue clunkers. Cage's relationship with Eva Mendes doesn't really go anywhere, and a lot of the subplots manifested from his "badness" (like the trouble he gets in with two old ladies in a retirement home), aren't satisfactorily dealt with. But then, I get the feeling this was all part of the point - that Herzog and his writers were trying to say something about the nature of most cop movies by making it so bizarre and twisted and, essentially, such a mess. If that's the case, then good for them - but I sure don't fucking know what the point was.

    My biggest complaint would perhaps be the comparison to the first film. Other than the title and the fact that the main character is a drug addicted and power hungry cop, there's no relation to the 1992 Abel Ferrara movie (he's also a lot better behaved in this version, if you can believe it). Maybe this is just as well. But that film had a strong power to it, a religious urgency brought about by the heavy Catholic stuff in the film. Here, the Bad Lieutenant doesn't give a shit about religion, and I think that's missing something that was really important and pivotal in the first film. But whatever. Port of Call: New Orleans is still a fascinating flick, one that narrowly sidesteps being a masterpiece - but one that also barely misses being a total disaster. If you're open to very different types of filmmaking, then you owe it to yourself to see this flick. If not, then steer clear.
  • December 18, 2009
    "The only criminal he can't catch is himself."

    Terence McDonagh is a drug- and gambling-addled detective in post-Katrina New Orleans investigating the killing of five Senegalese immigrants.

    REVIEW
    ...( read more)ter>
    Kissing cousin in name only to Abel Ferrara's "Bad Lieutenant" provides ample scenery-to-chew for Cage in a sort of return to form/gonzo freaky-deaky tour-de-force as a New Orleans cop whose back injury leads to a downward spiral of drug addiction and other forms of debauchery while being promoted to lead a task force into the investigation of a brutal slaying of Senegalese immigrants linked to a drug kingpin. Loosey-goosey filmmaker Werner Herzog stretches the bare-bones yet serviceable script by veteran TV scribe William M. Finkelstein and lets Cage get his ya-yas out (the sole reason to see and an extra * for good measure).
  • December 17, 2009
    Eva Mendes doesn't have much screen time. I don't know why she's on the movie poster. Wait. Yes I do. There's no use comparing this to the 1992 film called Bad Lieutenant by Abel Ferrara because it's not a remake, not the same film at all.

    Herzog doesn't spend a lot of time on t...( read more)hings, which is good, I suppose, because that way we get more Herzog. But then again, if he would have known ahead of time that he was going to get the performance from Nicolas Cage that he got he might have spent a little more time massaging the script and he would have produced a masterpiece. Instead what he gives us is a pretty good movie with a masterpiece performance from Cage. The film comes off as a series of vignettes rather than a smoothly flowing story. A lot of it is rather implausible if you stop and dissect it so maybe a series of hallucinogenic impressions was the only way to go. It's a great film but it's not a masterpiece.

    sitenoise at the movies: The Bad Lieutenant: Port of Call New Orleans
  • January 5, 2010
    This movie matched up to the original. The only gripe i had was the almost cop-out ending... but then it let go of the punches pulled. What a relief, there is a fucked up movie in Hollywood this year that looks great and is so scummy that is got no media hype. Its movies like the...( read more)se that should be made more often
  • January 5, 2010
    Not so much of remake but a total makeover from the Original. Pretty much the only theme that stays is that the character is out his tree most of the time.

    After this ended had to think a bit, but decided that I actually really enjoyed this. Maybe ever stranger is that Nick C...( read more)age was actually pretty decent throughout. Never thought i'd say that!

    Val KIlmer has a masssssivveeee heid.
  • January 4, 2010
    ur just like a stone who hav no felling damn u
  • January 3, 2010
    This is one weird movie, but I did enjoy it. I watched the other Bad Lieutenant movie and it has nothing to do with that one at all. Except for the main character being completely fucked up on drugs.

    Nicolas Cage was great. And I was beginning to think I was never gonna say thos...( read more)e words again. He seems to be really good in these type of roles. It had an interesting cast and they were all good. Maybe not Xzibit.

    Interesting film.
  • January 2, 2010
    Herzog is just a crazy bastard probably has been his whole career. He churned out some great arthouse fare and I love his Nosferatu remake more than the original but the majorly positive critic reviews for this make you wonder if it's just some sorta hype or if everyone's gone cr...( read more)azy. Mostly it's the humor in this movie that confuses me. It's funny, real funny but it's too funny to be ironic in any way or 'artsy' even. Put this with long DV close up takes on alligators and iguanas and you have either a real artsy mess or a very ahead of its time in filmmaking message. Either way it's entertaining it's similar in a lot of ways to ferrara's but also way different.

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