Miller’s Crossing


Miller's Crossing and The Glass Key13 Feb 2007 08:27 pm

I must say again that the graph used to compare the length of sentences in the novel and number of seconds of shot in a scene, is an interesting way of analyzing film and literature. While we watched that scene in “Miller’s Crossing” again and specifically looked for the cuts in filming, I started to get a headache and my eyes hurt. I guess that’s the only downside to watching for and honing in on those elements in movies.

If a film maker wants to keep the audience interested in their movie, having multiple cuts during a scene is greatly needed. You keep the viewers on their toes, watching for everything that is happening with each character on the screen. Now, sometimes one long shot can be a very instrumental moment in a movie, and you certainly need those too if a film is going to do well in the long run. Constantly jumping from shot to shot can get a little nerve racking. But if there is to be long shot of something (a fixed shot) there needs to be great dialogue. The beginning of “Miller’s Crossing” accomplished this beautifully. Tarantino used this in Pulp Fiction with a long still shot on Bruce Willis’s face while Ving Rhames is making a speech about why he’s giving Willis money. These shots can can have an amazing impact in the movie, but they can also kill the moment. Great film makers know this little tip and can use it profoundly.

Miller's Crossing and The Glass Key and Yojimbo11 Feb 2007 05:20 pm

I have to be honest, I was completely lost when people started talking about feelings and such during last class. I just didn’t know what people were trying to say, and maybe that’s why we needed a different word other than “feeling.” I still don’t know if we came up with one that satisfied the situation.

I can see how directors took the novel and adapted it into a movie; each film had its own method of doing so. But I don’t know if the first two films captured the original plot of the novel. “The Glass Key” (film) was more of a love story than anything else, but the novel was about a detective-like man solving the murder of Taylor Henry. The movie hardy focused on the murder at all. You see the relationship between Ed and Paul, Ed and Nick, Ed and Jeff, Ed and Janet, Paul and Janet somewhat. But what about Taylor Henry and everyone else? The film wraps everything to a close when Ed suddenly goes to Janet’s house and solves the case, which was barely examined at all elsewhere. The only thing about this film that was even remotely similar to the novel is most of the characters, but there are even problems with that – Ned=Ed, Shad O’Rory=Nick Varna. Maybe I’m coming down so hard on this film simply because it took on the same name of the book, but couldn’t truthfully carry that title through to the credits. I feel the people who were involved in making this film had other plans which they would invoke throughout it. For instance, a homosexual love story between Jeff and Ed.

As for “Yojimbo” I see the film as using aspects from the novel, but making a film about something else. Sanjura came into the town messed everyone up a little, then killed them all, and left, knowing he had cleaned the place up. Ned was never trying to clean anything up! He only wanted to get ahead in life, and that can be seen with him getting Paul to pull some strings to make him a detective just so he could get his gambling money back. Sanjura could care less about money, and the closest resemblance between the two of them is that they were good at playing all the sides. Even then Sanjura played everyone a whole lot more than Ned did in the novel.

Now “Miller’s Crossing,” even though I thoroughly enjoyed the movie, wasn’t a great adaptation of the novel either. I can see how the film is more “conscious” of itself, pulling in factors and points that draw a comparison between the film and book. I understand that adaptations don’t always follow the written works they come from. (Look at “The Scarlet Letter,” an extremely loose adaptation of its novel. It has a great cast, but there are so many odd and horrible things about it that I can’t even explain them.) There is definitely more of a gangster feel to this film than the “The Glass Key” (film), and that is one factor which brings the film closer to the novel. But even though Bernie is supposed to be (I think) Taylor Henry, the film is far different from the novel, because one of the underlying factors that kept the book going was the Henry murder and trying to figure out who did it. Bernie was not murdered in the beginning and he wasn’t killed in the woods, so he doesn’t fit Taylor’s role.

I guess this is just my own feelings on adaptations not being true to their predecessors. I also must say that the comparison of the number of words in the sentences and number of seconds in each shot was a pretty cool thing to see. Many people in class didn’t seem to think very highly of this idea, but I really thought it was interesting.

Miller's Crossing08 Feb 2007 07:33 pm

I have to say that in my opinion, “Miller’s Crossing” is definitely a genre film. It has semantic and syntactic elements of a gangster film in it. There are other factors that play into other ongoing genres that might be working within, but first and foremost the gangster element shines the brightest. I don’t think I need to point out how gangsteresque the scene with Leo shooting the crap out of everyone is. It was like the complete opposite of Sonny getting blown to pieces in “The Godfather.” They came to kill Leo and O’Bannon ends up waging a one man war against Johnny Caspar’s gang — “The Godfather Strikes Back,” coming to a theater near you.

millerscrossing_b.jpg

Looking at “Miller’s Crossing” on the Internet Movie Database (imdb.com), this is what they understand to be the film’s genre: Crime, drama, thriller. Now I can’t see a traditional type of thriller working within this film, but, sure, there were some intense moments. The other two, crime and drama, are definitely what make a gangster film what it truly is. I watched the trailer for the film, and let me just say it was pretty good. I have to point out that the last thing said in it is: “No one is what they seem to be at Miller’s Crossing.” The funny thing is that the body out there was supposed to be Bernie, but it wasn’t. I hope someone else can find some humor in that too. But in the trailer you see the cops, the bosses, their henchmen, the lovers, the rats, the heels, the double-double crossers, and everyone shooting at everybody. (There was some discussion on what a heel might mean and I found this: Heel- an inconsiderate or untrustworthy person [this is supposedly an informal definition])

millerscrossing_b.jpg
(I had to put it on here again.)

As it was said last class, many people go to a movie based on its genre and their expectations of what should be presented. You go to a horror film, and you’re expecting to see a little gore. You go to a gangster film and you want to see different bosses battling it out for the top, crime erupting left and right, and crisis and turmoil around every turn. “Miller’s Crossing” certainly holds up to it’s claims, while also preserving the story of “The Glass Key,” and that is why it was just so good. Although, having Albert Finney, John Turturro, and Gabriel Byrne certainly helped as well. Let’s face it, if a person went to see what they believed to be a gangster film and it actually turned out to be slapstick comedy, I feel movie goers might have some issues they would like to discuss with Hollywood, or maybe just their neighbor.

millerscrossing_b1.jpg
(One more for the road.)

Interested about the title? I feel like I’m destroying what I am trying to do here, but for the sake of clarity here you go. I was just looking for something to describe Leo in some way, which also started with an ‘L.’ Lahmu is a deity from Akkadian mythology. I’m sure that doesn’t seem relevant, but there are four things I found out about this deity that sort of apply to Leo:

1. He was sometimes depicted as a snake, and I would definitely say Leo acts like a vicious snake at times.

2. He and his wife gave birth to the two deities who then created the first gods. Leo created an organization that is the foundation of that city.

3. Lahmu, at one point, meant “the muddy one.” I just thought it was funny because of the “clear as mud” statement.

4. Lahmu was a gatekeeper of a temple. Leo is the gatekeeper, so to speak, of his city, which is like his temple.

(http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lahmu)

millerscrossing_b1.jpg
(Oh, what the hell.)

Miller's Crossing and The Glass Key and Yojimbo06 Feb 2007 05:42 pm

You know, I think about 1990 and I say, “That wasn’t so long ago.” But then reality hits me, and I revise, “1990 was 18 years ago.” In “Miller’s Crossing” I recognize the actor playing Tom (Gabriel Byrne), the leading man. He was one of the main characters in “The Usual Suspects,” which was only made five years after “Miller’s Crossing.” But Byrne looked much older for some reason; even five years seems like a lot of time. But Byrne was not the man who made me think this film was 18 years old; it was John Turturro who did that. He looked so young, he looked like a kid; it was his face.
gk-av.jpg
We were told to focus on the first thing we hear and see in a film, so I did that. First came the sound, ice being dropped into something and making a “dinging” sound. Then I saw the glass cup, maybe three pieces of ice now sitting within it. Someone pours a drink into it, picks it up and walks away. Then came Johnny Caspar’s monologue. I noticed half way through Casper’s speech, which he probably had to think really hard about before he arrived, the man who had poured himself a drink was guy standing behind Leo. Then it turns out that he is the central man of the movie. So the first thing viewers see is Tom’s actions.
yojimbo.jpeg
Speaking of these actions, Tom pouring the drink, it might be a foreshadowing of what currently looks like a drinking problem. Every time I have seen Tom on the screen, he, at some point, is drinking some sort of alcoholic beverage. That might be a possibility, but I’m just speculating. I truly enjoy the fact that Tom, who fulfills the same role as Ned/Ed/Sanjura, actually has a gambling problem. It pains me to watch a movie that does not much to do about the book it is based off of. The film “The Glass Key” was a lot like the novel, but I feel important factors were left out. At least it was not like the movie and book versions of “I,Robot.” I actually preferred the movie to the book, but that’s just me. But so far, even though “Miller’s Crossing” does not have the same title or characters in it, I can see hints of “The Glass Key” all across the screen.
millers_crossing_still.jpg