HAPPY BIRTHDAY MICHAEL MANN!

 

 

Michael Mann

 

 

The internet reminds me that today is a day to consider Michael Mann, seeing as how he turned 72 today.)  But when it comes to your greatest inspirations, it doesn’t take a calendar or a new theatrical release (but really, see BLACKHAT though) to celebrate the work that means so much to you.  It’s a year-round process.  If I’m stuck for something to watch, in goes a Michael Mann movie.  If I’m in the mood for excellence, in goes a Michael Mann movie.  If I’m looking for writerly focus, in goes a Michael Mann movie.  There’s almost no director in film history whose movies I’d rather watch.  Taking an entire filmography into consideration, he’d be my guy.  (It’s between him, Tod Browning, and Sergio Leone, basically.)

Why do I love Michael Mann’s movies?

 

 

 

Energy.

 

 

Atmosphere.

 

 

Sound.

 

collateraljazz

 

Picture.

 

 

Momentum.

 

 

Repose.

 

 

Geography.

 

 

Faces.

 

 

Intensity.

 

 

Airlessness.

 

 

Density.

 

 

Psychology.

 

MV5BMTk4NTIzNzU2NF5BMl5BanBnXkFtZTcwMjMyNDY3Mw@@._V1_SX640_SY720_

 

Ambition.

 

 

Restlessness.

 

 

Composure.

 

 

Deliberation.

 

 

Urgency.

 

 

Ferocity.

 

 

Thought.

 

 

Painterliness.

 

HEAT

 

Equanimity.

 

 

He’s one of the rare action directors who shows an obvious interest in women and the uniqueness of femininity.  You couldn’t get much more macho than a Michael Mann film, yet he works harder than most male filmmakers to pair his male leads with equally strong women.  His movies center around acts of violence and codes of dispassionate professionalism, yet nonetheless have a seemingly incongruous romantic air.  The male characters in these movies don’t disregard or disrespect women.  They aren’t afraid of women.  They desire women, often yearn for sustained partnerships, even if the unions are fleeting or doomed.  This gives the films a tension, a cool warmth, unique to cinema.

 

 

And in a Woody Allen world, here’s the rare Jewish-American director who presents the male of the species with the smarts that go without saying, only — and this is the important part — coupled with toughness .  Michael Mann doesn’t make movies about nebbishes, and he doesn’t make movies for them either.  Not for nothing, I suspect, was James Caan the first leading man in a Mann feature (THIEF).  Not for nothing, I suspect, was THE KEEP his second feature.  Jewishness isn’t an overt theme of Mann’s work, and identifiably Jewish characters in his work are rare — Lowell Bergman in THE INSIDER and Ace Bernstein in the TV series LUCK are two of the few — but it’s the identity of the lifework that matters, the assertiveness and the authorship.  Michael Mann characters don’t stammer or fumble or shit themselves — they have style, strength, and determination.  I went to Hebrew school. So I’m telling you, as one of the Chosen:  On a molecular level, this stuff matters.

 

 

When we talk about the modern greats, we talk about guys like Spielberg and Scorsese, who I adore and admire, but these are fairly conventional guys by comparison — Michael Mann is working at the same level, but his work often borders on the experimental.  He’s earned a seat at the contemporary Round Table.  This is a life’s work with consistency and scarcely-paralleled craftsmanship from outset to present day.  There’s a sense of purpose in every film he makes.  Because some will always need to argue, there are those who would debate Mann’s level of success from film to film, but god damn, people — how rare is it in mainstream American film that a director works so hard to push the boundaries of the medium on a technological level while also being so absorbed by story, character, and performance?  The following poster gallery represents a survey of an unparalleled career, and even the nitpickers in the crowd, whatever they think of the ones that they didn’t appreciate as much, will be forced to agree that this is a redoubtable array of films.

 

 

THIEF (1981) The Keep (1983) Manhunter (1986)  Miami Vice Crime Story The Last of the Mohicans (1992) Heat (1995) The Insider (1999) Ali (2001)  Collateral (2004) Miami Vice (2006) Public Enemies (2009) Luck (tv) blackhat

 

That’s one epic resume you’re looking at, and do I ever hope he keeps on making these things for as long as humanly possible.  As far as a birthday tribute to a man I never met goes, that’s the most important wish I could ever put forth.  Health, clarity of mind, financing, and movies.  Many, many more movies.

 

 

Beyond the reflection above, I haven’t written at length about many of Michael Mann’s movies — since my thoughts on HEAT or MANHUNTER alone could fill a book apiece — but here are my scattered thoughts on the three most recent feature-film releases for my personal site (click on the poster images to get to the words):

 

Collateral (2004)

 

 

 

Miami Vice (2006)

 

 

Public Enemies (2009)

 

 

I’ve also written about THE KEEP and THE INSIDER for Daily Grindhouse…

 

TheKeepPoster2

 

The Insider

 

 

 

 

…And in case you missed Mike Vanderbilt’s great Michael Mann Week feature a couple weeks back, here he is on THIEF, THE KEEP, and MANHUNTER.

 

thief

 

Title The Keep (1983)

 

manhunter-1986

 

Now get your lazy ass to a theater and go see BLACKHAT if you still can!

 

 

— JON ABRAMS.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Please Share

Tags: , , , , , , ,


No Comments

Leave a Comment