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Koch on Film

koch-2009-10-20_z

By Ed Koch

“An Education” (+)

On a Sunday afternoon, attending a 2:30 p.m. screening at the Regal Union Square Stadium 14, I found a near packed house that was sold out when the lights went down.  The reviews of the film were excellent, but for a sold-out performance on a Sunday afternoon, the public drums voicing the movie’s praises had to be working overtime.  They were right to do so.  This is a lovely, delicious film with fine acting and a unique plot.

Sixteen-year-old Jenny (Carey Mulligan), who lives in a London suburb, attends a private school and expects to go to Oxford the following year.  During a torrential downpour, she meets David (Peter Sarsgaard) — who offers her (and her viola) a ride home.  Thus begins a romance between a young girl and an older man in his 30s who, no matter how sweet and dazzling in personality, appears to be a grifter.

Jenny’s middle-class parents, Jack (Alfred Molina) and Marjorie (Cara Seymour) play their roles beautifully.  They are devoted to her and very protective, particularly her father.  Two friends of David, one a fellow grifter, Danny (Dominic Cooper), and his wife, Helen (Rosamund Pike), add sophistication to every scene in which they appear.  Danny looks his role of grifter with a touch of degeneracy, but the latter aspect only in appearance, not in any action.  The film ends in a surprising way, totally unexpected after Jenny accepts David’s marriage proposal, giving up her expected career which requires her attendance at Oxford.

The movie has a PG-13 rating, signaling a picture without sex or violence, which undoubtedly will keep some people away.  I would say this is a unique film well worth your attendance, notwithstanding the several anti-Semitic reflections.  An extra bonus is the presence of Emma Thompson playing the Headmistress at Jenny’s school.

Rated PG-13; 95 minutes. At Regal Union Square Stadium 14 (850 Broadway; at 13th St.). For screening times, call 212-253-2225. For the box office, call 212-253-6266.

“The Damned United” (-)

I was drawn to this movie primarily by the presence of the lead actor, Michael Sheen, who did such a wonderful job portraying Tony Blair in “The Queen,’ and David Frost in “Frost/Nixon.”  The trailers also looked interesting, so I decided it was worth seeing.  When I saw the picture on opening night at the Regal Union Square Stadium 14, only 20 or so other people were in the audience.  I knew I had made a mistake.

The script is based on a novel by David Peace.  Don Revie (Colm Meaney) is leaving his position as the manager of a number one British soccer team, Leeds United, to take a position with a national team.  He is replaced by Brian Clough (Michael Sheen), who built a championship team, Derby, from the ground.  Clough is assisted by his ubiquitous sidekick, his good friend and expert scout of players, Peter Taylor (Timothy Spall).  Clough hates Revie because Revie rudely ignored him when Clough coached humble Derby.  The film flashes back from 1974 to 1968 to tell the story.

The rough and thuggish team members engage in deliberate fouls and assaults to win.  Clough attempts to make them decent, play-by-the-rules adversaries, but that is not their style and they start losing games.  Clough betrays his friend Peter by threatening to quit the team, resulting in Peter’s departure.  The loss of Peter’s expertise and the team’s game losses result in Clough being fired.

The story should have added up to an interesting and exciting movie, but it didn’t for me.  It was not due to Sheen’s acting, but rather to a boring and confusing script.  Granted, I’m not a soccer fan, but I suspect there were not many jocks in the theater.  I was happy when the lights went up and the audience headed for the exits.

HS said:  “I looked forward to this movie, because I have read about British football (our soccer) but never knew what it looked like.  Now I know a little, but not much.  The movie shows Clough as so arrogant I don’t know how anyone would hire him, and never tells us what he does to be such a good coach.  The owners are depicted as fat, rich, greedy buffoons.  Some of the players are brutes who deliberately injure other players, but are never caught by the referees.  It was unclear when he was with Darby and when he coached with Leeds.  Clough’s wife and kids had cameo appearances just to assure us that when Clough hugged Pete (which they did a lot), it was man stuff and not gay.”

Rated R; 1 hour, 38 minutes. At Regal Union Square Stadium 14 (850 Broadway; at 13th St.). For screening times, call 212-253-2225. For the Box Office, call 212-253-6266.