The Nick Cassavetes Show.
I‘ve always been a great fan of the films by John Cassavetes. His films made, next to Anna Magnani, Gena Rowlands my fave actress. Just love her presence & intensity in the movies of her husband.
Next to Alexandra and Zoe Nick is the third child of John Cassavetes and Gena Rowlands. Nick is an actor, writer and director himself and cos of my admiration of his parents i gave three of his films a shot.
First one was John Q (2002) with Denzel Washington and probably the worst one to start with. Nick is obviously influenced by his fathers cinema verité but he reduces it to absurdity and this film is the best example for it: overwhelming emotional-affectionate cliché cinema (long live sloganism!).
Alpha Dog (2006) with Justin Timberlake which is his most recent work was the next one to examine and this is high quality medicore shit. Probably his biggest film and it doesn‘t take long to realize it’s a safe bet. He might have had a capable producer this time, someone who took care that everything is just smooth: consistent characters, glossy pictures, groovy music and “quality” camera work. If it wasn‘t for the fascinating Anton Yelchin (Zack Mazursky – the hostage), his fine acting but also his voice and apperance in general there would be no reason to watch this movie except for a quick sunday afternoon entertainment.
The last one in line is The Notebook (2004) starring Gena Rowlands. It’s a cliché movie again but at the same a very strong love story. It’s hard to escape the passionate and tragic love affair, their ardent love when they first meet as teenagers, the pain when class tears them apart and finally when they meet again after years. It’s part of the cliché but also one of the strengths of this film that you can really feel the presence of their love and at the same time how fragile it is…
Nick Cassavetes directed to two more movies which i‘m going to see soon (one is with Gena Rowlands again) and then i‘ll give another sprout of the Cassavetes-Rowlands Clans a try, Zoe R. Cassavetes and her feature debut Broken English with Gena Rowlands and Peter Bogdanovich.
PS: I‘ve been on narcosis earlier today – might still be under THE influence.