
April 27May 4, 2000
movies
by Sam Adams
The Castle of Cagliostro ($29.95 DVD, $29.95 subtitled VHS, $19.95 dubbed VHS) If you were charmed by last years Princess Mononoke but found it just a bit weighty, the release of this 1979 gem offers the perfect chance to explore the lighter side of famed anime director Hayao Miyazaki. Starring the well-known manga character Lupin III the grandson of Maurice Leblancs fictional French thief its a boisterous adventure thats part James Bond, part Cary Grant. Lupin III is a dashing playboy bandit whos always slightly too sure of himself, a cocky goofball who gets himself into scrapes as quickly as he gets out of them. Here hes up against the evil Count Cagliostro, the monarch of a tiny European country which may be home to the worlds largest counterfeiting ring. In addition to fleeing the bumbling Inspector Zenigata and getting a peek at all that fake money, Lupins also, wouldnt you know it, out to save the imprisoned princess whom the Counts forcing to marry him. Castle doesnt have Mononokes elaborate scenery, but it has a lightness of touch that is woefully absent from todays heavy-handed adventures. With its wit and humor its more like Hitchcocks classic entertainments, goosing you and letting you in on the gag at the same time.
Silver and Gold ($24.99 DVD, $19.98 VHS) Neil Youngs not exactly Mr. Showbiz, but hes made a surprisingly consistent effort to document his live act at every stage of his career. Silver and Gold, released to coincide with Youngs album of the same name, is Youngs seventh concert document, following Rust Never Sleeps, Freedom Alive, Weld, Unplugged, The Complex Sessions and Year of the Horse. Shot on Youngs solo acoustic 1999 tour, the straightforward film captures Young in a setting that should be intimate but still feels expansive. Surrounded by a semi-circular forest of guitars (the unplugged equivalent of the giant Marshall stacks he used on the Weld tour), Young coaxes out versions of a half-dozen tunes from the S&G album as well as older songs from "Philadelphia" all the way back to "Expecting to Fly." Silver and Gold gets you close enough to see that Young prefers Sierra Nevada Pale Ale and dips his harmonicas in a plastic beer cup full of water, and since he never acknowledges the audience, it really is just like being there.