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Post  Guest Sun Oct 23, 2011 10:33 pm

Yesterday I saw the story about a man who falls in love with a sheep from "Everything you always wanted to know about sex (but were afraid to ask)".

It's so funny.

I only found it in Italian



When I saw 4:14 Gene Wilder caressing his woolen sweater I couldn't stop laughing

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Woody Allen Empty Re: Woody Allen

Post  eddie Sun Jan 15, 2012 12:08 am

Woody Allen: cinema's great experimentalist

Since the 'early, funny' films, Allen's subject-matter has matured, but there's a line of comic genius that runs from Sleeper through to Midnight in Paris

Michael Newton

guardian.co.uk, Friday 13 January 2012 15.00 GMT

Woody Allen Anjelica-Huston-and-Woody-007
'Like Blue Velvet remade by Bob Hope': Anjelica Huston and Woody Allen in Manhattan Murder Mystery. Photograph: Sportsphoto/Allstar/Cinetext Collection

Thomas Hobbes declared that all laughter depends on sudden contempt, that flash of superiority when the other chap slips on the banana skin and we don't. When we smile, we show our teeth. For this reason he warned against the self-deprecatory gag, for after all who wishes to pull down contempt on himself? No one seems to have told Woody Allen.

Along with Alfred Hitchcock, Allen must be the most recognisable director in the history of cinema. In 1984 an anthology was published devoted to people's dreams about him. To like his early films is to like him; perhaps the peculiar intimacy of his relationship with the audience stemmed from the fact that he had been a stand-up comedian. These films maintained that sense of performing to their audience – Annie Hall (1977) is as much about the faux-intimacy of addressing the viewer as is Alfie.

There is nothing more intimate or more immediate than a joke. Allen knows this all too well, and in Annie Hall he dramatised it, showing the way that jokes establish sympathy with another person; they call for a response – you either get them or you miss them. It's there in the moment when Alvy Singer (played by Allen) tries to repeat with another woman the laughter he had shared with Annie Hall (Diane Keaton) over their attempts to catch and cook a still-living lobster. We in the audience are free to laugh along or not; if we don't, then what is at stake is perhaps not just our sympathy with the movie or its director. In his 1970s jeremiad The Culture of Narcissism, Christopher Lasch also worried about Allen's use of the self-wounding joke. Allen, he asserted, was using humour to defend against the serious. Yet Allen's wit was always more than that, a pre-emptive strike against one's own pretensions, but also a bright disruption offering the possibility of insight.

For all these reasons it's hard not to approach Allen's films biographically. The man on screen was always a persona, of course, and yet the works seemed like fragments of a great confession: regarding Annie Hall, Allen and Keaton had been lovers (her real name is Diane Hall); Radio Days (1987) is slantwise memoir. It's symptomatic that so often when Allen imagines a character writing, what they produce is part autobiographical fiction, part wish-fulfilment. For me, as an adolescent in the 1980s, Allen's films opened a door to sophistication – not that alluring knowingness of defeat that permeates a movie like The Third Man, but a world of dining out, love affairs and cultural consumption. The first time I heard of the possibility that someone could enter psychoanalysis was through Woody Allen. A film such as Love and Death (1975) appealed to the teenage me, who had just discovered Russian novels, loved them and yet could find it funny that I loved them, a turn of events that little in my environment allowed for. With Hannah and Her Sisters (1986), it's hard for me to be objective; it seems so personal to me, it's sometimes a surprise that other people know it.

Allen has lamented that his work has had no cinematic influence, that he has no followers. If that is true, he may console himself with the certainty that his art has extended into people's lives. Few of us (hopefully) have had a Scorsese moment or met a Coppola character. Yet who has never felt that they were, even for a moment, inside a Woody Allen film? And who has never met (or been) a Woody Allen type, neurotic and self-effacing? By engaging with everyday life, he has permeated it.

In the 1970s, Allen looked irreverent, hip, a part of the New Hollywood generation. In an age of "auteurs", he was the auteur personified, the writer, director and star of his films, active in the editing, choosing the soundtrack, initiating the projects. His modishness stemmed from his films' willingness to talk about sex; no one noticed that for all the talk his films held back from depicting the act itself. He was modern enough to seem part of a contemporary social problem, the exemplar of the modern narcissist, the distracted consumer of "relationships".

But actually even while he was in vogue he was already out of time, an old-fashioned guy aghast at contemporary vulgarity. He was already in his early 40s when Annie Hall came out; his music was Bechet and Duke Ellington, not Hendrix or the Eagles. In an era of unconventionally good-looking leading men, Allen presented the most unlikely romantic hero of all: the balding, bespectacled nebbish up against smouldering Al Pacino. The mood of the times was for anti-heroes, for downbeat rebellion. But by virtue of his ordinariness Allen was the greatest rebel of all, offering a way to be male without being a conventional Hollywood he-man such as Robert De Niro or Jack Nicholson. You can see it in the way the two types drive – in one case Gene Hackman weaving and screaming down a one-way street in The French Connection, and in the other Allen, a man ill at ease with the mechanical environment, sputtering out of Manhattan in Broadway Danny Rose (1984). Both types derived from old movies – for one the Western hero or film-noir tough guy, and in Allen's case, Bob Hope. Allen was sexual, but no "stud", sensitive, courteous, and above all both funny and ultimately earnest. One of his great gifts to cinema has been to portray through his own acting and through the casting of men such as Owen Wilson in Midnight in Paris (2011) a decent way to be a man.

Yet many people hate Allen's films. Like Bob Dylan, he has lost his form and yet the current work strikes many viewers as a comeback. More accurately, he has always made some weaker films, had some bad runs (most notably from Scoop in 2006 to Whatever Works in 2009), but he clearly has it in him to produce at every turn in his career vibrant, spirited movies: Midnight in Paris (2011) is possibly a slight work, but is also (in my eyes, at least) perfect.

Some avoid his movies, feeling they know in advance what they're going to be offered. They can indeed feel, when viewed at a distance, as though they are just more of the same for ever: the older man and the younger woman, the shrinks, the neurotic loser, the architects and writers and theatre people. It can seem as though everything takes place in an insulated Upper East Side world, exploring the travails of an arty, intellectual, comfortably bohemian middle class that hardly exists anymore except in a fossilised state. Even away from New York in a film such as You Will Meet a Tall Dark Stranger (2010) there was a sense of business as usual. And yet, close up, what strikes us now is both the remarkable consistency of Allen's vision and the surprising variety of his films: from a modern fable like Zelig (1983) to the science fiction farce of Sleeper (1973), from the fantasy of The Purple Rose of Cairo (1985) to the problem play that is Crimes and Misdemeanours (1989). Above all, his subject-matter has matured as he has. The early works depict the archetypal young adult about the city, but later he has turned to the problems of middle age and, more recently, old age. It's possible that his audience has aged with him, and that he means little to most people under 30. I recently showed Annie Hall to a group of 20-year-olds; they concentrated gloomily as though confronted with one of Strindberg's heavier efforts. Accustomed perhaps to The Hangover and Knocked Up, they even seemed doubtful whether it was a comedy at all. The audience when I saw Midnight in Paris clearly loved it; but at 46, I was one of the youngest people there.

Perhaps Allen now seems a comfortable figure, the official bard of bourgeois Manhattan. In fact, he is one of American cinema's great experimentalists in narrative, a man devoted to finding out as many different ways as possible to tell a story. The fruits of his years in psychoanalysis are apparent here. Annie Hall tries every means possible to fragment the individual and its story: split-screen scenes, empty frames, black frames, subtitling (to show what people are really thinking), a disembodied soul drifting off during sex, a cartoon version of Woody, confrontations with the younger self, the man up on TV versus the same man on the street. It's tightly structured, but the film's surface is nonetheless non-linear, digressive and self-questioning. If the early films seemed self-obsessed, Allen responded by moving on to the group portrait, creating narratives that were diffused and decentred, with double or even triple plots. Such movies produced a complex image of their social milieu. He is a man immersed in Americana, who has also been sceptical about America. His inclination towards European cinema could account for his perceived lack of success with the American audience. Without his penchant for WC Fields and Mort Sahl, he might have fully been what he almost is, the American Eric Rohmer.


In fact Allen had the enormous gift of creatively loving both Vittorio De Sica and the Marx Brothers, Ingmar Bergman and Born Yesterday. This complex taste is really the source of all that is best and all that is most contradictory in his films. He favours European slowness, yet his own films show a preference for American rapidity – a cut-to-the-chase rhythm that feels urban, that suggests New York. Sometimes one suspects that, like Graham Greene, he divides his movies into "novels" and "entertainments". As with Greene, it's apparent that many of his most profound works belong in the latter category.

At his darkest, he proffers comedy without affirmation, an unrelentingly desolate view of life. In Crimes and Misdemeanours, Lester, the fatuous director of sitcoms (played by Alan Alda), repeats his possibly absurd mantra, "In comedy, things bend, they don't break". Yet in several of Allen's best "comedies", breaking is precisely what things do. Like Thomas Hardy, he clearly feels that in a world without God life is meaningless; like Hardy, too, there's a reliance on coincidence and the unlikely accident to twist the plot. Art has loaded the dice. Increasingly his characters are caught up in the machinations of design. They may invite such contrivance, for after all they so often seek to disrupt their own lives, to break up marital bliss for a risk. In Allen's comedies, the ordered life is always provisional. Collapse comes with an affair, a mix-up. If order is restored, then that, too, is a makeshift solution. In works such as Crimes and Misdemeanours and Husbands and Wives, there is existential grit in the oyster, an undercurrent of real despair. Such films tell us that life is pretty awful, and we can only hope to get through it the best way we can. Morals are valued, but their efficacy is doubted.

And yet Allen's jokes don't always believe in this troubled vision. For all that he is morose, he cannot be consistently bleak. He tried to be a philosopher, but cheerfulness kept breaking in; he tried to be a clown, but philosophy kept him doubting. Melinda and Melinda (2004) demonstrated his problem: the same story is told twice, once tragically, and once comically; while I can delightedly remember almost every aspect of Will Ferrell's comic descent into suffering, the tragic part of the film is lost to me. Apparently lacking faith in the essentially comic nature of life, Allen has nonetheless done his most valuable work in comedy. At his best, he tenders a contrary vision of art, as healing illusion, a step into a fantastic world that holds out an antidote to despair. He has deserved something of his reputation for angst, but there are as many films that celebrate the silly. He is a great praiser of things, a lover of cities and cinema. His films are often best understood as tributes to film. That sweet masterpiece, Manhattan Murder Mystery (1993), is Blue Velvet remade by Bob Hope, the dull couple launching themselves into hapless adventure.

His great subject is the illusion offered by art. Watching films, and making films, have offered him – and us – a place of escape. In Hannah and Her Sisters, Woody Allen's character, Micky Sachs, has his faith in life restored by a Marx Brothers movie; to paraphrase Kenneth Williams, if life is a joke, then we might as well make it a good joke. Yet the more recent film, You Will Meet a Tall Dark Stranger, exposes the fatuity of our sustaining illusions – the beauty of the woman in the window opposite, the flattering promises of new age "spirituality", the thought that death and old age might be evaded with a treadmill and Viagra. The delusions unravel, or not, but are seen through and sent up. In his loveliest films, The Purple Rose of Cairo or Midnight in Paris, there is a gentler unmasking. He acknowledges the glamour of the silver screen and the magnetism of the past. When the films return to the real, they do so honourably, knowing and accepting that, while sometimes disappointing, the best kind of life is the life that actually is.

Allen has never produced a single great masterpiece, no Godfather, no Raging Bull. Instead over the years, he has made a multitude of small things, comic novellas rather than great novels, pleasurable and rewarding works of art that, without trying to be great, have accumulated greatness, remaining tentative and lovable.

• Wise Cracks: The Comedies of Woody Allen is at the BFI Southbank until 31 January.
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