Sunday, December 14, 2025
Tripoli (1950)
Saturday, December 13, 2025
The Phoenician Scheme (2025)
It is 1950. Zsa-zsa Korda (Benicio Del Toro) is a wealthy businessman who has concocted the most extraordinary venture that will be hugely profitable. However, there are those who want him to fail. Thus, a bomb blasts a hole in the side of his plane. Even so, he survives the crash. This is the 5th or 6th plane crash he has survived. Mostly. He briefly visits the afterlife each time. Determined to have his plan carried out in the event of his death, he summoned his daughter from a nunnery. Liesl (Mia Threapleton) is not interested in being the heir but accepts the post temporarily. Korda is a man of learning and hires a tutor for his kids - he has 9 sons in addition to Liesl. Bjorn (Michael Cera) is a mousy fellow with a Swedish accent. Korda also assigns Bjorn to be his administrative secretary when they travel. And so begins the travels. The deal is not yet complete. There is a gap in the funding. At each stop, Korda attempts to fill the gap, but it instead grows bigger.
Like all Wes Anderson films, it is quirky. All the lines are delivered in monotone. The camera moves in very specific ways and the scenes are meticulously formatted. This man loves his blocking. However, the story just isn't there. Is this a story about a father reconnecting with his daughter? Probably. Is this a mystery in which a murderer is uncovered? Not really. Is Korda out to find the person or persons who have been trying to assassinate him? Not intentionally. Is this a story of how a rich businessman is going to get even richer? Not at all. Is this just a random series of events where quirky lines can be delivered by famous actors? Yes.
It is an all-star cast. Everyone wants to be in a Wes Anderson film and many of these actors have become Anderson regulars. Tom Hanks, Willem Dafoe, F. Murray Abraham, Billy Murray, Bryan Cranston, Scarlett Johansson, and Benedict Cumberbatch each have small roles. Cumberbatch looks ridiculous as the Rasputin-like Uncle Nubar.
The best line in the movie is repeated several times by Korda: "Myself, I feel very safe." This became funnier with repetition. Michael Cera's transformation from bookish Professor Bjorn to American spy was also quite funny. Even with the cigarette and mustache, he still looks unimposing.
It has its moments, but it is a below average Wes Anderson film. Obviously a must watch for his fans but I'd go with Moonrise Kingdom or The Life Aquatic instead.
Gentlemen Broncos (2009)
Ben Purvis (Michael Angarano) is an awkward young man who likes to write science fiction stories. He has recently completed Yeast Lords: The Bronco Years. His mother, Judith (Jennifer Coolidge), rushed him out the door and drove him to catch a bus. He was headed to a young writers' camp which was hosting Ronald Chevalier (Jermaine Clement), a giant of science fiction. In addition to meeting Chevalier, he befriends Lonnie and Tabatha, more socially awkward people. Though Chevalier has been successful, he is currently in a rut. His publisher is threatening to dump him and has refused his latest work. Desperate, he modified Yeast Lords and submitted it to his publisher.
The movie occasionally flashes to the world of the Yeast Lords. Bronco (Sam Rockwell) is the last of the yeast lords and in the hands of his enemies. He escapes to join with an awkward brother and sister who assist him in raiding a yeast factory, overcoming cyclopses, turrets, and surveillance does. Depending on who is reading the material and editorial decisions, the appearance of the world and characters change. Funny.
There are some directors where the look and feel of a film marks them. Wes Anderson is the most recognizable of these, but Jared Hess falls in there too. This has a look and feel like Napoleon Dynamite. It is a world where everyone is awkward, even the cool kids. There is always a desire to look away so as not to witness the characters' embarrassment. Either that or laugh at them.
Just okay.
Landman
Tecumseh: The Last Warrior (1995)
October 1813, Canada. Tecumseh's band treks away from Detroit. The situation is bleak but Tecumseh (Jesse Borego) is confident that they will defeat the Long Knives (Americans) tomorrow. His sister, Starwatcher, is less confident. She soon recollects what had brought them to this place.
March 1768, Ohio. Tecumseh was born as a star streaked across the sky. This was a great omen and his father named him for the Panther in the Sky. All agreed he had a great future as a warrior.
October 1774, Ohio. Tecumseh's father has gone to fight the Long Knives in Virginia. While his father is away, Tecumseh has a nightmare/vision in which his father is killed. He sees the face of his father's killer and it stays with him.
Some years later, Tecumseh's mother departs to the west, leaving her children. Tecumseh will not go, as his father told him never to surrender land to the Long Knives. In time, he is old enough to go to war with his older brother, Chiksika. Though he fled in fear from his first battle, Tecumseh proved to be a natural warrior in his next. As the years progress, Tecumseh becomes a respected warrior who fights beside Chiksika and Blue Jacket (Holt McCallany), a white man who didn't want to live among the whites. They fight on the side of the British during the American Revolution
1794, The Battle of Fallen Timbers. Before the battle, Tecumseh viewed General Wayne through a looking glass. They would shoot this general during the battle. However, he also saw another man who had the face of his father's killer. The night before the battle, Chiksika declares that he will be killed and Tecumseh should carry on. As prophesized, Chiksika died. Worse, Blue Jacket signed the Treaty of Greenville.
Tecumseh had lived long enough to see the way of things. Each time the Indians signed a treaty for peace, it promised only a few such years before more encroachments led to further treaties that surrendered more land. The Long Knives played the tribes against each other. He must unite the tribes to resist further encroachment. It would require years. His younger brother, Tenskwatawa, had become a prophet and drew others to him. Here was the glue that might bind the tribes into a great confederacy.
William Henry Harrison (David Clennon) saw the threat of Tecumseh's plan. To him, America must expand and Tecumseh was an obstacle to be overcome. When the two met, Tecumseh saw the face of his father's killer in person. Though the two conversed and nearly came to blows, they could resolve nothing. A war was the only path forward.
The movie is surprisingly faithful to history. The dates and events are generally correct. Chiksika died two years before Fallen Timbers. Harrison was indeed an aide to General Wayne during the Fallen Timbers campaign but was only an infant when Tecumseh's father was killed. Clearly, this was just a vision to tie the long running conflict together at the end. The man who claimed to have killed Tecumseh, Richard Johnson, gets a brief cameo. The movie shows that only Tecumseh's band faced the American army at the Battle of the Thames. In fact, 700 British troops were also present, though the red coats and the Indians formed up separate from each other. Tecumseh's forces were stationed in marshy woods, not open fields. As shown, dragoons and mounted riflemen would have trampled the Indians.
Too much time is covered in the film, giving only brief glimpses of his life as the years pass. This covers a 45-year period! How about starting with the meeting of Tecumseh and Harrison in 1810 and concluding with the Battle of Thames in 1813. Yeah, that compresses things nicely and shows Tecumseh at his peak.
Entertaining and educational. Recommended.
Sunday, December 7, 2025
Archibald Gillespie, USMC
In Dream West, Marine Lieutenant Archibald Gillespie arrived at John C. Fremont's camp in Oregon to relay verbal orders from the president. Moments later, he was killed in an Indian attack. This is a rewrite of history.
Gillespie was born in New York in 1812 and joined the Marines in 1832. In October 1845, President Polk provided him with secret messages for Commodore Sloat of the Pacific Squadron, US Consul Thomas O. Larkin (based in Monterrey, California), and John C. Fremont. He sailed to Vera Cruz, arriving on December 10th. His efforts to cross the country were hindered by the latest uprising. However, he crossed the country and arrived in Mazatlán. In late February, he was picked up by an American ship on the west coast of Mexico and made his way to Monterrey, California. Having delivered his messages to both Sloat and Larkin, he then went in search of Fremont.
Fremont had been ejected from California by General Castro and was near Kamath Lake in Oregon, which is where Gillespie found him. No sooner had Gillespie arrived with his secret message than Fremont marched back into California. Little did they know, the war had begun with the Thornton Affair almost 2 weeks earlier. The Bear Flag Revolt took place on June 14th and Commodore Robert "Fighting Bob" Stockton raised the US flag on July 18. Los Angeles surrendered on August 13th, thus concluding the initial conquest of California.
Captain Gillespie was named military commandant of the southern district. He had 48 men to hold Los Angeles. This might have been fine if he had not imposed martial law. The locals soon rose in rebellion. The American forces were soon under siege at Fort Moore Hill. By the end of September, Gillespie surrendered and marched to the coast, leaving Los Angeles to the Californios. An initial effort to retake the city with the help of the US Navy failed. The Navy transported Gillespie and his men to San Diego.
In early December, news arrived that General Kearny was nearby. Stockton sent a detachment under Gillespie to escort him the rest of the way to San Diego. Gillespie arrived with 40 men and a field gun. After his long march, Kearny was itching for a fight. He had traveled from Fort Leavenworth, Kansas to California without a shot fired. So it was that the weary Dragoons charged to battle against fresh Californio lancers who knew the terrain much better and whose lances were not rendered useless by the rain. The Californios recognized Gillespie from his tyrannical rule in Los Angeles and targeted him. He was lanced in the chest, puncturing a lung.
Despite the disastrous battle, the column arrived in San Diego on December 12th. Despite his injuries, Gillespie was well-enough to ride north the following month. He was again wounded during the battle to retake Los Angeles. On January 10, 1847, Gillespie was called upon to raise the US Flag, the very one he had hauled down in September.
Gillespie remained with the Marines until 1854. He died in San Francisco in 1873.
Though most of this falls outside the story that Dream West tells, Gillespie should not have been killed off. Though Fremont's party was attacked by Indians and also 'got even' with them soon after, Gillespie was not one of the fatalities. Gillespie should have been yet another cameo, like Jim Bridger or Tom Fitzpatrick.
Saturday, December 6, 2025
Stephen Watts Kearny
In Dream West (1986), Brigadier General Stephen Watts Kearny is cast as the villain. In the first episode of the miniseries, an animus is established between Kearny and Fremont. Fremont requested a cannon for his expedition, which Kearny reluctantly provided. In conversation, Kearny asked what year Fremont graduated West Point. Fremont did not attend West Point. Kearny clearly looks down on him for this failing. That is peculiar since Kearny was not a West Point graduate either. In fact, though both had attended college, neither managed to complete their degrees. In the second episode, Kearny and Fremont clash about who is in charge in California. In the final episode, Kearny is a witness at Fremont's court martial, a court martial instigated by Kearny. His final appearance in the series is to plead for forgiveness from Jessie Benton Fremont before he died from Yellow Fever. Kearny deserved better.
Stephen Watts Kearny was born in 1794. He dropped out of Columbia to join the Army when the War of 1812 began. He was captured at the Battle of Queenstown. His bravery at that battle earned him the rank of Captain. After the war, Kearny stayed with the army and was posted on the frontier.
In 1819, he was part of the Yellowstone Expedition. The expedition failed spectacularly, getting bogged down in Council Bluffs, Iowa. The following year, he was part of another expedition, this one exploring and mapping the territory between Council Bluffs and Fort Snelling (Minneapolis, MN).
In 1825, Major Kearny was part of General Atkinson's Rocky Mountain Expedition. Nearly 500 troops traveled from Fort Atkinson (Omaha, NE) up the Missouri River, replicating Lewis and Clark's travels.
The following year, he supervised the building of Jefferson Barracks in St. Louis, Missouri, where none other than William Clark lived. Kearny courted and married William Clark's step-daughter, Mary Radford.
In 1833, Lt. Colonel Kearny was made second in command of the newly formed 1st Dragoon Regiment, based in Fort Leavenworth, Kansas. In 1836, he rose to Colonel and became the commander of the 1st Dragoons.
With all this western experience, it is unsurprising that Brigadier General Kearny was made commander of the Army of the West when the Mexican-American War was declared. His westward march was surprisingly uneventful. He captured Santa Fe, New Mexico without firing a shot. He then set out for California, unaware that Commodore Stockton and Lt. Col. Fremont had already captured it. He learned of those events when he met Kit Carson on the road. Based on Carson's reports, Kearny sent two-thirds of his men back to Santa Fe and continued to California. By the time he arrived, the state was in rebellion.
The Battle of San Pasqual
Having learned of a band of Californios in the area, Kearny decided to attack. However, his men were poorly mounted; they had just suffered a trek across the southwestern deserts. The rain made the gunpowder damp and surprise had been lost. The Dragoons charged in a ragged line. By contrast, the Californios had excellent horses and were armed with lances. The Dragoons were no match and only the presence of a cannon saved them.
Kearny thus arrived in San Diego with a pitiful and beaten force. Compared to Fremont's California Battalion and Stockton's sailors and marines, Kearny was all bark and no bite. He conceded command to Stockton and joined in the retaking of Los Angeles. When Stockton sailed away and Commodore Shubrick took over the Pacific fleet, Kearny made his move for command. The Mormon Battalion and New York volunteers arrived to give him the biggest army in California. He had been sent to take California and he outranked Fremont. Fremont continued to balk and earned himself a court martial.
Fremont's court martial lasted 3 months, concluding in February 1848. Afterwards, Kearny was sent to Mexico as military governor of Vera Cruz and then Mexico City. He contracted Yellow Fever and was sent home. He died in St. Louis in October, 1848.
Fremont put Kearny in an impossible situation. Should he have just endured insubordination? Certainly not. In the best of times, Kearny was known to be difficult. He was a harsh man who made few friends. This is not the sort of soldier to forgive and forget. On the other hand, Fremont was a national hero. President Polk attempted to split the difference by nixing the punishment while affirming the verdict.
