Tag: 1983

  • A Christmas Story (1983)

    A Christmas Story (1983)

    #140RVW

    Proud to say I saw the initial theatrical release 30 years ago. Spent years trying to convince others to watch it. I think I can stop now…

    A Christmas Story

    What’s more:

    For a long time I couldn’t watch this movie. We were early to the party on this one. My dad loved Jean Shepherd from his performances on WGBH in Boston and a show run on PBS American Playhouse “The Great American Fourth of July and Other Disasters”. (I haven’t seen that in 30 years but would love to see it again (time to search the interwebs). According to iMDb (http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0084022/) it starred Matt Dillon and was shot in Boston.

    So when A Christmas Story was announced, my dad made sure we got to it. I tried in vain to tell everyone I knew how funny it was, and dad screened it at his school for years. We taped it off of tv at some point and any time friends came over to the house it was one of the movies they always wanted to watch (along with Holy Grail). So I got sort of sick of it. And when it started running 24 hours a day at Christmas, I no longer needed to actively plan to sit down to watch it. I’d catch a bit here or there, and enjoyed it exactly as much as any other annual Christmas special.

    A Christmas Story

    But this year I wanted my daughter to see it properly, not piecemeal. So we sat down and I re-discovered a nearly perfect movie. There were no revelatory moments; everything was just where I’d left it. But it was a true pleasure to accompany my girl into her first viewing and remind myself just how funny each gag is. And, yes, it holds up. Not just for me – she laughed herself silly…

    A Christmas Story

    Poster:

    Trailer:

  • WarGames (1983)

    WarGames (1983)

    140 Character Movie Review – #140RVW

    Tight & clever thriller works just as well today, but as 80’s time capsules go, they don’t come better than this. Quality makes it a classic

    WarGames

    Spoiler-free Movie Review of WarGames:

    (#140RVW published 6/3/2013; full review published July 17, 2014)

    Last night I needed something to cheer me up; a comfort food movie. So I reached for WarGames, possibly my favorite movie without the words Star Wars somewhere in the title. And my mood was restored within five minutes, probably around the time we hit the 20 Grand Palace for some pre-class Galaga.

    WarGames

    I absolutely adore WarGames. I enjoy it today exactly as much as I did 31 years ago. The combination of thrills, humor and geekiness work just as well today, which is possibly surprising post-Cold War. Much like Dr. Strangelove before it, there is a universal thought process that is being targeted, not a particular time or war. Strangelove focused on Mutally Assured Destruction (MAD) and the ease with which a nuclear war could be started. WarGames is surely its spiritual descendent.

    WarGames

    WarGames stars (pre-Ferris Bueller) Matthew Broderick as David Lightman, a brainy but underachieving computer geek who uses his skills to change his grades and make free phone calls. His antics attract the attention and eventually affection of classmate Jennifer Mack (Ally Sheedy). This is the first and one of the best reasons this movie has a special place in the heart of all geeks; it gave us all hope that we could get the girl.

    WarGames

    David is trying to hack into computer game maker Protovison in order to try out their upcoming games when he stumbles upon a mysterious site with strict security and an intriguing list of games, including Global Thermonuclear War. David dedicates himself to getting into the system by learning more about the system programmer, Stephen Falken. Of course, he doesn’t realize that he is actually tapping into NORAD’s defense system and inadvertently prompting World War III.

    WarGames

    Such a great concept for a film. Like Strangelove, it spooked a lot of people upon release, as they began to come to terms with how easy an accidental war may be. WarGames isn’t based on a true story, but the ideas behind it most certainly were real concerns of the Cold War and a logical bit of speculation. The movie retains its bite because while the Cold War may have thawed, those missiles and the foolhardy MAD way of thinking are sadly still with us.

    WarGames

    The film went through some changes between the initial concept in 1979 of a dying scientist inspired by Stephen Hawking and the final hacker premise. Along the way, original director Martin Brest was removed when the film was taking a dark turn. The effect seems to have worked, as the final tone of the film is perfect. The movie only works if David is a likeable kid who was out to have fun, not a little terrorist.

    WarGames

    In fact, maybe the strength of the film is how human all of the characters are. There really are no villains in this film other than the war mindset. Those who would usually be the heavies, the authority figures, are believable, empathetic beings, not caricatures or plot contrivances. You really can understand the views and actions of every single character in the film. Even David’s teachers, school administrators and parents are sympathetic people.

    WarGames

    It helps that the acting is top shelf. Broderick & Sheedy were each 21 and both in only their second feature film, so they actually look (more or less) like high school students. Both are fresh-faced and credible as kids who could get over their heads and each have moments of great vulnerability as they confront just how serious the situation has become. These aren’t precocious teens who are smarter than the adults they suffer, they are kids trying to have fun and terribly scared when they realize what they have inadvertently started.

    WarGames

    Sheedy’s character is slightly less fulfilling than it could be. Jennifer shows herself to be a strong, capable young woman who probably could be given more to do. She does nail one of the films best scenes, as she implores Falken (John Wood) to reconnect with the world he has left behind.

    WarGames

    The character of Falken was inspired in part by Stephen Hawking, but envisioned as John Lennon, who reportedly was interested in the role prior to his death. I have a hard time believing he would be in a Hollywood picture in this way, but no trouble whatsoever visualizing him as the character.

    WarGames

    Dabney Coleman is his usual excellent self as Falken’s former colleague John McKittrick and Barry Corbin absolutely owns the role of General Beringer, ad-libbing most of his lines.

    WarGames

    Finally, I have to say a few words about Maury Chaykin and Eddie Deezen as Lightman’s hacker friends Jim and Malvin. It’s such a great scene, brilliant exposition masked by fantastic comedy. The movie is filled with comic moments such as this one, which really help the film to be so enjoyable.

    WarGames

    WarGames is such a fantastic movie. It was a big success at the time and continues to be loved today. They keep threatening to re-make the film (they did make a forgettable straight-to-video sorta-sequel, WarGames: The Dead Code in 2008), but I sure hope it never happens. You can’t improve upon perfection…

    Poster:

    Trailer:

    http://youtu.be/bymdsSvLfJY

    Bechdel Test:

    Fail

    The Representation Test Score: B (7 pts)

    (http://therepresentationproject.org/grading-hollywood-the-representation-test/)

    WarGames Representation Test
    [schema type=”movie” name=”WarGames” description=”A young man finds a back door into a military central computer in which reality is confused with game-playing, possibly starting World War III.” director=”John Badham” actor_1=”Matthew Broderick” actor_2=”Ally Sheedy” actor_3=”John Wood” actor_4=”Dabney Coleman” actor_5=”Barry Corbin” ]

    Main Cast Matthew Broderick David, Ally Sheedy Jennifer, John Wood Falken, Dabney Coleman McKittrick
    Rating PG
    Release Date Fri 03 Jun 1983 UTC
    Director John Badham
    Genres Sci-Fi, Thriller
    Plot A young man finds a back door into a military central computer in which reality is confused with game-playing, possibly starting World War III.
    Poster WarGames
    Runtime 114
    Tagline The only winning move is not to play.
    Writers Lawrence Lasker (written by) &, Walter F. Parkes (written by)
    Year 1983