"This shit made people into hippies."
Written, directed, and produced by McKenzie Woodward. Bravo!
With all the interest in Noir these days how the fuck do we not hear about this film? The three nimrods who reviewed it on IMDb haven't a clue.
A reviewer by the name of digitalhat has twelve reviews total almost all the films are rated 1 or 2/10 except for Mad Max: Fury Road (2015) which he gives a 7/10 he should change his name to digital- ass-hat. The other two reviewers Top_Dawg_Critic and ks-60500 both have incredulity that the makers of the film chose to make it in black and white. Give it a go and watch it for yourself you may be pleasantly surprised also.
Excellent Cinematography by Evan Avtal who obviously knows WTF he's doing in the "Noir" department. Music by Kerry Baines, Vernell Daye, and George Kamar.
Willie Wright as bookie Charlie Jenkins "Mr. Weekend" |
Janelle Marie as whore / call girl Nora Fiddledown |
The film stars Willie Wright (a nice surprise) as bookie Charlie Jenkins, Janelle Marie (unknown to me) as whore / call girl Nora Fiddledown, Trenton L. Culkin as pimp and wanna be actor Cole O'Donnell, Peter D. Michael as the "whale" bettor and gun dealer Hyman Steinberg. Spencer Tatum as the weed growing, daub smoking Blake Lumbuster, Jacob Tasher as Rentboy, E.R. Ruiz as a goon with one ear chewed partially off called Jake D Morrow, Lee Coc as Diego Cervan, Nick Thomas as Big Slim Fizz, and Mario Ponce as Hector Valdon (Scar).
Peter D. Michael as Hyman Steinberg |
Spencer Tatum as Blake Lumbuster |
This film reminded me of some of the Exploitation Transitional Noir made between 1960 and 1969. The quality of those independent productions was all over the map and they were not polished. But hey, some beat the odds and were good enough. Mr. Weekend plays like these shoestring budget films with unknown actors that only needed to play two weeks in a grindhouse theater to make all their money back, and that's a good thing. There are no car chases and minimal special effects.
Mr. Weekend's got some funky daylight green screen effects that will remind you of the real noticeable Hollywood rear projection shots on restored films. I would have added an overall vignette blur to the whole frame except for Wright. It wouldn't have been noticed then, but maybe McKenzie wants us to notice. The crackle old film effect being a sort of a wink wink to the audience. The technique redeems itself later on in Mr. Weekend during the night driving sequence. It reminded me of a bit of the graphi novel-ish Goldie driving sequences in Sin City. This is how it should be done on the cheap. It's good enough, and the well written screenplay makes this both entertaining and hopefully inspirational to other Noir filmmakers.
Story
Somewhere in the City Of Angels. Room 21. The Lit Motel. A cheap "hot sheet" shithole. Charlie Jenkins. Ex B&E con. Ex-bookie. A baller. Worked for Big Slim Fizz in one of Horse Dick Jimmy's rackets. On the run with a cool 4.9 million in pure crystal LSD.
The LSD |
Charlie was a fly bookie with style, with "Flava." We get his bookie story. He tells us that winners just cant wait to get ahold of him while the losers will stall and avoid him as long as they can.
The title sequence |
Hell, they'll even leave sunny Cal, change their name, and move to Alaska to welch on a 10K bet. We watch him throw a bunch of envelopes on a bed, open a safe, and toss a couple of stacks of Benjamins after them. He makes up individual payoffs, puts them in the inside pocket of his suit jacket, and heads out to make his rounds.
What follows is a nice title sequence with our main man Charlie walking along a partially white tiled underpass it will remind you of the 2nd Street tunnel. It, the 3rd Street tunnel, and Angels Flight are all that's left of Classic LA Noir's "ground zero" slum Bunker Hill. If you know enough about Classic Noir, this sequence real or digitally created, will hook you right from the get go. Its accompanied by a cool Ethio Jazz piece that's both airy, sad, and haunting, called "Tezeta" by Mulatu Astatke.
Pam the IT woman |
The payoff envelopes on the front seat |
After the pay offs Charlie goes and makes his collections. Charlie first visits Blake Lumbuster, Charlie carries lock picks he lets himself in. He surprises Blake in the shower and tells him he owes 8K. Blake tells him he's got to move some shit around but he'll have it in a few days. Charlie tells Blake that Big Jim Fizz will let you slide but he won't let you slip. The vigorous is $850.
Blake doing a daub |
L.S.D |
Charlie rushes back to his crib to heat up some Chinese take out for his usual "date" with Nora. Nora is a call girl who lives with her "boyfriend''/pimp Cole, when she is not out turning tricks.
Nice visual with reflection of Charlie picking Hymans door lock |
Somethings fucked -up! Strange noises coming from the bathroom down a hall. Charlie scoots. He is out in the hall when he pauses.
Out in the hall |
Pure LSD Crystal |
Guinea Pig Blake |
Telling Nora |
Noirsville
E.R. Ruiz as Jake D Morrow |
Blake's LSD hallucination of Charlie is in color |
Lee Coc as Diego Cervan |
Director McKenzie Woodward as Tom Quivertinkle |
Mario Ponce as Hector Valdon (Scar) |
Trenton L. Culkin Cole O'Donnell |
Again Mr. Weekend is a nice surprise. Especially when you are not expecting much, its a thrill to see a contemporary Neo Noir film get it all so right. It can be done. Its a shame that with all the obvious interest in Film Noir these days this film didn't get much buzz.
It's also somewhat understandable too, with the pseudo promotion of all kinds of films out there claiming to be Film Noir. But its also due to a basic misunderstanding of what Noir is.
For Instance, there's a Facebook page called The Femme Fatales of Neo Noir that illustrates this fact nicely. Its got 111.0K members most of which just post glam and cheesecake publicity pics of their favorite hotties du jour (you would a think it should be just screen caps of their Noir films). Noir has a subjective element but without a good grounding in Noir, somehow, in some minds, Action, Superhero, and Crime films are automatically analogous to Films Noir. Now I admit I haven't seen all of the films, nobody has, but from those that I have seen, I question the Noir creds of a lot of these women, maybe 10% are bonafide Noir Femme Fatales and another 20% are Noir Femmes.
Noirsville's simplest definition of Noir is three fold. Noir is a simple dark pan generic story told in a visually stylistic manner that subjectively for you has enough of those elements to tip a film Noir for you the individual. Also always keep in mind the original coinage of Films Noir in France. French right-wing and religious publications condemned any films that they deemed went against the laws of the state or were stories about unrepentant individuals of low morals as "Films Noir."
If you think about it, the two extreme poles of that broad original coinage definition regardless of quality would be snuff films and porno.
There has been 62 years of world Cinema, TV films, and Mini Series since the now commonly acknowledged end of Classic Hollywood Studio Film Noir in 1959. Film Noir wasn't really even on the radar screens of average cineasts until the 1980s. There is a lot of content out there, world over, never mind in just the U.S., that should be evaluated to see if they fit the Noir universe.
Again Bravo to McKenzie Woodward, Evan Avtal, and the cast and crew that made this film happen. For a debut effort fantastic 7-7.5/10, hoping for more to come. Black Noirs Matter, Baby! Streaming currently Free on Amazon Prime.
The Music, besides the before mentioned "Tezeta" includes, "Didn't I," by Darondo, "Opium Dreams" by George Kamar, "Beyond The Lights," "Used To Me," "Corner Store," "Rattle Of Concerns, by Vernell Rainy, "About It," by Vitakari, "House Of Film," "I Liked That," by Boom Ellington, "Rails Up," "Eastside In Me" by E.R. Ruiz, "Prison" "Indian Kush," by Lee Coc & Milton Bradley, "Breathless," "Out In The Night," "Happy Days" by Rubaiyat, and "Relation" by Sinderella.
The Film Noir Foundation's Noir City Film Festivals should add this as an epilogue to their Classic lineup along with one or two other Neo Noirs of note, as a way to extend and broaden Film Noir appreciation to the present.
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