Sunday, December 22, 2013

AMERICAN HUSTLE, 12 YEARS A SLAVE, HUNGER GAMES: CATCHING FIRE, NEBRASKA, OUT OF THE FURNACE, plus some Christmas DVDs A CHRISTMAS CAROL, THE MAN WHO CAME TO DINNER, THE BISHOP'S WIFE, REMEMBER THE NIGHT, and Spike Lee's PASSING STRANGE

AMERICAN HUSTLE is the best Martin Scorsese film that Scorsese did not make.  The director, David O. Russell has been on a big time role---his last two films received multiple Oscar nominations and won supporting actor Oscars for Christian Bale and Melissa Leo (for THE FIGHTER 2010) and best actress for Jennifer Lawrence (for SILVER LININGS PLAYBOOK 2012)--all awards well deserved.  In the new AMERICAN HUSTLE, I can predict nominations for most of the cast-- Christian Bale, Jennifer Lawrence and Amy Adams, again, and director and script and picture, along with some others.  There's punch and drama and style in scene after scene, and the film  becomes almost hypnotically compulsive as it follows a complicated plot that mimics the true life ABSCAM scandal in the 1990's.  But as with any good drama, the real interest here lies in our sympathy with the characters, and here D.O.R scores with producing vivid characterizations from his large cast, which also includes Bradley Cooper, Louis C.K., Elisabeth Rohm, Alessandro Nivola and Robert DeNiro.  Every time a new character appears, we are fascinated by who they are and what they are going to do.  The film is punctuated by a sensational musical score that features quite a number of appropriate songs from the 90's.  This is a quality film that will stand up to multiple viewings.       GRADE-------A

It's low key and charming, but NEBRASKA creates a world of lived in characters and goes in directions that will surprise you.  It is much more than a simple story of a demented older man (played with astonishing vacuity by Bruce Dern) misunderstanding his winning of one million dollars.  It's yearning for a past time and place, and becomes steeped in regrettable nostalgia as the main characters reconnect with friends and family from the past.  The mood reminded me a lot of the Peter Bagdonovitch masterpiece THE LAST PICTURE SHOW 1971--both films share  somber yet beautiful black and white cinematography and feature bleak pasts and futures for many in their dying small town culture.    GRADE------A-

A lot of the action mimics the earlier film, but HUNGER GAMES: CATCHING FIRE creates it's own mood and in many ways is the superior film, especially since the whole new theme of revolution is in the air.  I have a similar complaint in that the first HUNGER GAMES used a lot of hand held camera which made it hard to see what was going on---especially in the crucial start of the murderous game itself, as a dozen teens rush to get their hands on their weapons.  Well, CATCHING FIRE uses that same stupid hand held procedure again---right when the teens are rushing to get their weapons, but at least most of the rest of the film was easier on the eyes.  And this new film has a bizarre ending that really keeps you keen to see the rest of the story.      GRADE-----A-

I was impressed with the directorial decisions made by  British director Steve McQueen in the harsh, bleak film 12 YEARS A SLAVE.  The film, about a Northern black freeman who is kidnapped to the pre Civil War south, does not back away from showing the dismal cruelties of slavery, and the cast is very persuasive.  There's absolutely no humor, no luridity (as, for example, in last year's DJANGO) and very little humanity shown, however, and the film becomes quite depressing.  In spite of a superior production, fine acting and skillful production, it is a film I never want to experience again.        GRADE------B+

Another finely constructed and acted film is also quite bleak (that being the key word here for the week before Christmas) and that film is OUT OF THE FURNACE.  An excellent Christian Bale, again, is struggling to overcome a jail experience for vehicular manslaughter, but his younger brother (an effective Casey Affleck) is so disturbed from his time spent in Middle East warfare that he has a nihilistic view of his life, and becomes involved in bare knuckle boxing, eventually with some very unsavory characters.  Well done but v e r y heavy.             GRADE-----B


DVD CHOICES of the WEEK

I finally caught up with a filmed version of a play PASSING STRANGE (2008) by director Spike Lee, and he captures the energy, music and pathos of the characters very well.  He knows exactly where to put the camera without being showy, and he doesn't use much handheld stuff, letting the characters talk and sing to progress the plot.  Basically, your standard tale of a young African American teen who leaves his mother's Los Angeles home after high school to find social and sexual
 liberation in France and then Germany, discovering sex, love, loneliness, politics, friendship and betrayal in the doing.  The music and lyrics were written and performed by STEW and the total cast of five portray many characters in effective and energetic ways.  I enjoyed the music very much and found the production to be impressive.       GRADE------B

The first version of  310PM TO YUMA (1957) --a Western featuring a sinister Glenn Ford and fascinating Van Heflin was introduced on TCM as featuring a "homoerotic seduction scene on a wedding bed" between a deputized Heflin and the killer he's trying to get to prison in Yuma, played by a sneering Ford.   Ya know, looking at it that way, I could see it, and it certainly added an interesting element to the tension.  This film was faithfully remade in 2007 with Russell Crowe and Christian Bale, and as I recall, it was very effective.      GRADE-----B

Set at Christmas time, THE MAN WHO CAME TO DINNER is a first rate film based on a play, where a cranky man (Monty Wooley) slips on the icy stairs of a local business man, breaking his hip, and is immovable indefinitely, upsetting the household in many acerbic and amusing ways.  The cast includes delicious turns by Bette Davis and Ann Sheridan who spar off over the love of a young man.  (They apparently didn't like each other in real life, either, so that only enhances their scenes together.).  Jimmy Durante and Billie Burke among others also amuse.  At times the dialogue and action become frenetic, but it moves along at an funny, clever pace, and constantly makes me laugh.
        GRADE-------A-

Filmed in over a dozen different versions over the years, this British version of A CHRISTMAS CAROL (1951) aka SCROOGE is, in my mind, the best.  Alastair Sims is the perfect Scrooge, and the supporting characters are splendid.         GRADE------A-

A curious film, REMEMBER THE NIGHT (1940) features Fred MacMurray as a lawyer who must prosecute thief Barbara Stanwyck, but first, in a strangely awkward coincidence, takes her home to his family over the Christmas holiday week, where they (naturally) fall in love.  This film is an interesting precursor to the classic DOUBLE INDEMNITY (1944)where MacMurray and Stanwyck work together to murder her husband.   I'd never seen this film, but I really liked the play between the leads, and the supporting characters include the memorable Beulah Bondi and a young Sterling Holloway.  Preston Sturges who later became a great director with films like CHRISTMAS IN JULY, SULLIVAN'S TRAVELS, LADY EVE, PALM BEACH STORY, MIRACLE OF MORGAN'S CREEK and others,  made all the mentioned within the next 5 years.  REMEMBER THE NIGHT has all the themes of his directed films--strong women, sexual discovery,  poverty, humanistic characteristics, etc.       GRADE------B+

I'd never seen THE BISHOP'S WIFE (1947) before, but I found Cary Grant, David Niven and especially Loretta Young all quite charming.  Set just before Christmas as Bishop Niven is going through a crisis about trying to raise money for a new church, an angel named Dudley (Grant) arrives to help him through his problems with fund raising and becoming a better family man--but not in ways he thinks he needs or wants.  There's a bit of IT'S A WONDERFUL LIFE, and CHRISTMAS CAROL, and it's not as good as those, but it manages to be engaging and surprising.  Remade as THE PREACHER'S WIFE (1996) with Denzel Washington as Dudley, and Whitney Houston, but that was not very memorable.      GRADE------B+

In spite of a strong cast which includes George Raft, George Brent, Randolf Scott, Joan Blondell and Ann Harding, the seldom seen film CHRISTMAS EVE (1947) was so deadly dull and convoluted at the same time, that I kept nodding off in the first hour, and finally I turned it off.      GRADE----D



Saturday, November 30, 2013

PHILOMENA, DALLAS BUYERS CLUB, ALL IS LOST, ABOUT TIME, BEST MAN HOLIDAY, DELIVERY MAN, WADJDA plus Billy Wilder's AVANIT!, 5 YEAR ENGAGEMENT, BALL OF FIRE

The films of Richard Curtis include the memorable  FOUR WEDDINGS AND A FUNERAL (1994), NOTTING HILL (1999), and LOVE, ACTUALLY (2003).  He also wrote the two BRIDGET JONES (2001/2004)films, BEAN (1997), WAR HORSE (2011),  and for TV he wrote BLACKADDER, MR BEAN, and THE NUMBER 1 LADIES DETECTIVE AGENCY.  His newest film ABOUT TIME is very much his film, and I think it is his most intimately personal endeavor.  It's the type of ambitious film that manages, despite some iffy plot devices, to convey how important it is to find happiness in your own life, how your actions can affect others, and how doing the right thing can be the best action despite the possible down falls.  He wraps this all up in comic, dramatic and romantic style, and it will make you feel that you've really witnessed something substantial.  The plot device he uses---how the men in his family can travel back in time to change their behavior and get what they really want, actually becomes rather unimportant by the end.  The device almost becomes a McGuffin--it's intriguing and creates some funny scenes, but in the end, the film becomes a heartfelt document on the human heart.  It's really a beautiful film.     GRADE---------A-

Modest but perfectly constructed and acted, PHILOMENA is based on a true story novel about a woman who is searching for the child she gave up for adoption 50 years earlier.  With the help of a skeptical journalist interested in writing her story, the two set out to find out what has happened to her now middle aged son, and track him to America from Ireland.  The relationship between the writer and the mother carry drama, tension and humor, and there's a lot of sting to this story to keep it from becoming maudlin.  Stephen Frears (THE QUEEN 2006, THE GRIFTERS 1990, DANGEROUS LIAISONS 1988, MY BEAUTIFUL LAUNDRETTE 1988) directs with a solid unobtrusive hand.       GRADE---------A-

Based on a true story, the DALLAS BUYERS CLUB may not be the best constructed film of the year, but thanks to two beautifully audacious performances, becomes a fascinating depiction of the mid-1980's, when AIDS raised the political and medical consciousness of the nation.  Matthew McConaughey raises the bar he set earlier this year in MUD, by throwing himself into the role of a homophobic, drug using electrician and rodeo man who becomes one of the first heterosexual man to get full blown AIDS.  The film shows how he must deal with homophobia and fear from others as he battles the disease the only way he knows how---by importing from other countries drugs to help fight the disease--for himself and others.  All this clashes with the slow medical results and the government actions to block his efforts.  The other performance comes from Jared Leto as an HIV infected trans gendered man who wants to live as a female.  Leto is transformed and illuminating as she fights for her life against the deadly disease.     GRADE---------A-

The surprise film of the season comes from the effective BEST MAN HOLIDAY--a comedy drama that becomes a likable tearjerker featuring a half dozen fine attractive actors portraying some best friends in past years who gather at the holiday time to hash out their relationships.  The film reminded me A LOT of THE BIG CHILL (1983), but the soundtrack is filled with soulful holiday songs instead of rock songs, and the film doesn't hedge when it comes to the sometimes unpleasant past.
   GRADE------------B+

The reliable Robert Redford single handedly keeps the one character ALL IS LOST a fascinating experience.  He portrays a lone sailor attempting to sail across the ocean alone, but must fight for survival when his sail boat is damaged by a floating container filled with tennis shoes.  It works a lot like the current GRAVITY--putting you in his place and mind as he battles the elements.     GRADE---------B+

Based on the popular French Quebec film from two years ago called STARBUCK, the new film featuring Vince Vaughn is now called DELIVERY MAN, and I'm pleased to report that the remake, written and directed by the same director, is very faithful, and effective.  Vaughn plays a man-child who in his 20's visited the sperm bank a lot, and thanks to the unethical practices of the bank, finds that he has impregnated over 500 women.  Nearly half of these children, now nearly 20 years old, want to know who their biological father is.  The film doesn't go into any discussion of the adapted parents, or the lame subplot of how Vaughn came to owe the mob $80,000.  But the film does have some moving moments as he tries to get to know a few of his children, and there are a lot of laughs as he tries to become a better adult.  I enjoyed it.     GRADE------B

From Saudi Arabia comes WADJDA, about a smart young girl living in a repressive society where women are second class citizens.  She wants to get a bike, but according to her family and neighbors, bikes are for boys. (It is suggested that bike riding will cause her to lose her virginity.)  The trouble with this film for me is that most films set in the Middle East have a similar theme, and watching some of the twisted logic that passes for religion makes me want to scream.  The film is leisurely, familiar and predictable.       GRADE------C+


DVD Choices-----------------------

In the summer of 1972, I went with a friend to help pick apples at the Chelan orchard of a mutual friend.  It was hot, hard physical work.  One night we decided to go to the movies in Wenatchee, nearly a 40 mile drive away, and ended up at the drive-in.  I don't remember what the main feature was, or even the co-feature, but when the third feature started (!!!!), which must have been after midnight, I was wide awake and alert, as my friends were sound asleep.  This bottom of the bill feature was AVANTI!, a film I knew nothing about at the time.  It engaged and delighted me, and I've never forgotten it.  This is old-fashioned film making at it's smoothest and most intelligent best.  Jack Lemmon is the haggard and fussy son of a man who heads a large cooperation, and who has just inconveniently died in a auto accident in an Italian resort.  When he arrives at the hotel to pick up the body, he meets the daughter of a woman who has just died in the same accident.  His father and this woman were secret lovers and died together.  Then the bodies disappear from the morgue.  This film takes its time to create interesting characters, all with wacky and curious traits, and if you take the time to  let the film get under your skin, you will enjoy AVANTI! fully.  It helps to have the eye candy of beautiful Italy as the back drop.  This is typical, delightful Billy Wilder stuff (SOME LIKE IT HOT, THE APARTMENT) and it you've never seen it, try it.        GRADE-------A-

I recently saw, for the first time, BALL OF FIRE (1941), a charming screw ball comedy directed by Howard Hawks and staring Gary Cooper and Barbara Stanwyck.  She plays a gangsters moll who hides out in the large home of Cooper who directs a group of socially backwards older academics who are trying to write an enclycopedia.  The similarities to SNOW WHITE end there, but the film is consistently amusing, the leads create some delightful chemistry, and there are some charming scenes as the woman finds her way into all the gentleman's hearts.      GRADE-------A-

THE FIVE YEAR ENGAGEMENT (2012) is one of those dramedies that work harder at creating interesting characters than throwing gross jokes at you every minute.  I found the characters to be quite believable and sympathetic, and every time I see it I think it is funnier and funnier.  Emily Blunt and Jason Segel are the couple who must postpone their wedding due to various life complications.  GRADE-----B+

A smart, witty British comedy about an eccentric scientist (Alec Guiness) who discovers a new material that repels dirt--it never needs cleaning or replacing, THE MAN IN THE WHITE SUIT (1951) creates a dozen funny characters as the plot, which involves the garment industry trying to suppress his invention, spins merrily along.  It's a corker.      GRADE-----B

Shortly after BALL OF FIRE, I saw Gary Cooper, again, in an earlier film version of Ernest Hemingway's FAREWELL TO ARMS (1932) in which he plays an ambulance driver during WWI who falls in love with a nurse (a young Helen Hayes).  They will do anything to be together, including going AWOL.  The film stresses the love over the war, but there are some impressive "montages" as he tries to escape the war to find his love.     GRADE------B-

I recently finish reading A WIDOW FOR ONE YEAR, a novel by one of my favorite writers, John Irving, and in that novel is a small short story about A DOOR IN THE FLOOR(2004), which is the title for this film, which offers up only the first third of the novel.  It's a faithful, somber adaptation that limits itself to the break down of a marriage between a writer of children's novels and his wife--he arranges for a young assistant to become his wife's lover--possible to help her overcome her depression at the death of their two sons several years earlier.  Or possibly to cover his own need for extra marital affairs.  The actors (Jeff Bridges, Kim Basinger, Elle Fanning, etc) are quite good, and the film is handsome to look at, but it feels quite sad and empty--and incomplete.  The novel goes on for 50 more years, and actually is about their young daughter, who is abandoned by the mother in the final scene.  I liked it better watching this film now than 9 years ago when I first saw it, but it still feels unsatisfactory.      GRADE------------C+

I saw two films directed by Ida Lupino and featuring Edmond O'Brien, both made in 1953.  The first is a straight forward story of THE BIGAMIST, about a man who ends up married to two women in different cities, and can't decide which one he loves the most, which drives him to distraction.  The second is THE HITCHHIKER, where two men on a camping trip pick up a hitcher who turns out to be a serial murderer, and the three play a cat and mouse game.  Both are rather straight forward in their plotting, and certainly watchable, but the low budget keeps either from becoming better than they are.       GRADE FOR BOTH FILMS-----------C+


Tuesday, November 12, 2013

ENDER'S GAME, GRAVITY, RUSH, CARRIE, CAPTAIN PHILLIPS, THOR: THE DARK WORLD, FIFTH ESTATE, RUNNER RUNNER, and MILDRED PIERCE 1945

Starting at the top of the list from the past few weeks one must put ENDER'S GAME right up there as a smart, exciting, cerebral science fiction experience, that actually got a round of applause at its conclusion, something that doesn't happen very often, especially with sci fi films.  The story of a  brilliant young teen trained to save the world at the risk of his soul, the film has delicious eye candy special effects, a compelling story line and some great actors (Ben Kingsley, Harrison Ford, Viola Davis, Asa Butterfield and Hailee Steinfeld, to name a few), and the film moves along at an exciting pace before coming to it's disturbing and shocking (for me) ending.   There is a whole handful of gaming and literary ENDER'S GAME product, and I look forward to the next cinematic installment, much like I looked forward to each LOTR episode.       GRADE-----A

Another impressive science fiction experience is the unique GRAVITY, nearly a one woman show featuring the resourceful Sandra Bullock as a stranded astronaut trying to make her way home from space after a series of disasters leaves her stranded and in a near helpless situation.  The story line is simplistic, but the film puts you in her position  and creates an atmosphere of claustrophobia, fear, loneliness and hope.  It's like nothing you've ever seen on film before.       GRADE-----A-

Tom Hanks and cast really shine in the docu-drama CAPTAIN PHILLIPS, and he's the compelling, main reason for watching this based on a true story film about the capture by Somali pirates of a shipping vessel in the Indian ocean.  I'd rate this film even higher if it weren't for the annoying hand held camera business that makes the film so unpleasant to watch at times.  Especially impressive is the sympathy and empathy given the Somali perpetrators hopeless cause.        GRADE-----B+

I wasn't really motivated to see director Ron Howard's new biographical sports (car racing) film RUSH, but I found it to be incredibly well constructed and involving, and the actors were fascinating, especially Daniel Bruhl, who also is so effective in the currant FIFTH ESTATE (see below).   GRADE-----B+

It came and went quickly, but the independent film UNA NOCHE creates a fascinating world of life in the oppressive Havana, and deals with a brother and sister, and the object of their affection, a male friend, who try to leave Cuba on a wooden, makeshift raft.  It is thoughtful and bittersweet.    GRADE-----B+

A new faithful version of CARRIE is a success, mainly because the actors (Julianne Moore and Chloe Grace Moretz) breathe new life into the story of a shy high school girl who is berated and teased by her classmates, just as she is learning about the strange psychic powers that she has.  The film is also updated for a modern audience (Carrie's horrible shower experience goes viral from some one's cell phone, etc).  I enjoyed this version as much as Brian De Palma's 1976 thriller, and if you haven't seen CARRIE in a while, this is worth the watch.        GRADE-----B

I was NOT a fan of the 2011 version of THOR, which I found to be dull, with a confusing and unnecessary subplot stuffed with political blah blah about one race of aliens hating another etc.  Good news----this sequel called THOR; THE DARK WORLD is a giant step in the right direction.  The special effects are outstanding, there's a lot more humor, and film moves along without getting bogged down in political clap trap.  And then there's the amazing Tom Hiddleston who plays Thor's evil (adopted) brother Loki.  He steals this film (as in the first) to very good effect, and if the film makers were smart, they'd figure out a way to cast him in a starring role, since muscle bound Chris Hemsworth (also starring currently in RUSH)  who plays Thor, is not nearly as interesting as Loki.
      GRADE-------B

A small run for the SIFF film I USED TO BE DARKER has a confused teen running away from her parents (in Europe!!) to her aunt and uncle in Baltimore (!!) only to find that they are in the middle of a nasty divorce.  It's a little film, but I liked the subtly and nuance that many scenes displayed.      GRADE-------B

Benedict Cumberbatch makes an excellent Julian Assange in the stylish thriller THE FIFTH ESTATE, based on the life of the computer genius who started Wikileaks, a place where whistle blowers could expose government and corporate corruption.  Daniel Bruhl (RUSH) is also excellent as his friend.  But over all, the film suffers in comparison to the excellent documentary that came out this past summer called WE SELL SECRETS: THE STORY OF WIKILEAKS, which covers the same ground in an even more provocative and fascinating manner.  They would make an interesting double bill.     GRADE------B-

It's been only a couple weeks, but I've already put RUNNER RUNNER out of my head.  A predictable story of a young hot head computer champion who thinks he can take down a world wide computer gambling king pin (Justin Timberlake and Ben Affleck, respectively), the film plays along in predictable fashion until the unrealistic ending.  There is just nothing memorable about this film.     GRADE-----C


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A couple films from TV and DVD......


I watched GOLDFINGER (1964) in incredible Blu-Ray and found it to be a fascinating 007 James Bond adventure, still.  The gold paint death, the amazing theme song belted out by Shirley Bassey, the bowler hat of death, the laser beam creeping towards Bond's crotch, and outrageous women including Pussy Galore, -----the list goes on and on.  This film is a classic.      GRADE-----B+

MILDRED PIERCE (1945) is a Joan Crawford classic, but the film is soapy, lurid and sort of rambles along when is should be film noirish sharp.  Still, there are many fascinating elements about it.  I watched it because the night before I stumbled upon LOVE CRAZY (1941), a wacky screwball comedy featuring William Powell and Myrna Loy, and was particularly impressed with the madcap portrayal of Jack Carson--one of those faces that look familiar, but you can't quite place it.  He is featured in MILDRED PIERCE, and quite effective too, though he never made it to the big big time---he's more of a character actor.  LOVE CRAZY is about a series of misunderstandings that has a married couple on the brink of divorce.  The husband decides to pretend to be crazy to postpone the divorce, but ends up getting institutionalized instead.   He (Powell)  pretends to be a woman to escape, so the last 30 minutes is played (to decent effect) in drag.  Not great, but it had it's moments of mirth and laughs.          GRADE for MILDRED PIERCE and LOVE CRAZY----------B for each.

ISLE OF THE DEAD (1946) featuring Boris Karloff, promises horror when it is really about a plague that keeps a group of people quarantined on an island so that they don't infect those on shore.  Watchable if unmemorable.       GRADE------C+



Tuesday, October 8, 2013

BLUE JASMINE, INEQUALITY FOR ALL, ENOUGH SAID, THE SUMMIT, PRISONERS, INSIDIOUS Chapter 2, YOU WILL BE MY SON, IN A WORLD, UNFINISHED SONG, THERESE, AFTERNOON DELIGHT, plus some great SILENT FILMS

The first week of September was spent sailing the Inside Passage from Seattle to Alaska with family and friends.  Five days later I came down with a whopper of a cold, and my computer seems to be possessed by molasses, so I am WWWAAAYYY behind in reporting films.  So I will be brief and hopefully succinct.

Woody Allen continues to amaze and astonish me with his skillful and intelligent writing and direction, and this time he has the incredible presence of Cate Blanchet to deal with--and she grabs the title role of BLUE JASMINE in both hands and proceeds to shake the living daylights out of it.  There's also an incredible supporting cast (as usual), but Blanchet is so mesmerizing that you can't stop watching, even though this story of a wronged women going mad when she loses her rich but sleaze bag husband (Alex Baldwin, natch) to prison and must live with her salt of the earth sister (Sally Hawkins) in a rough New York neighborhood seems desperate and depressing.  She is first in line for this years Oscar race, and would be the one to beat.      GRADE-------A- 

From France comes the astonishingly compelling melodrama YOU WILL BE MY SON (TU SERAS MON FILS).  The elderly owner of a large vineyard finds his health slipping, and his best friend and partner is dying, so he turns to the partner's clever son to take over the vineyard, by- passing his own faithful but dull son who assumes he will be taking over the reins.  It's strong, fluid film-making and I was transfixed to the bitter and shocking end.      GRADE------A-

The documentary INEQUALITY FOR ALL explains in horrifying detail how the increasingly widening income gap in American is causing even more problems than you might think.      GRADE--------A-

A dynamic and realistic low budget film SHORT TERM 12 deals with a half way house where abused and difficult teens (addicted, behavioral issues, etc) learn to deal with their problems.  It is run and staffed, for the most part, but young adults, who have many issues and problems of their own.   The film features some very naturalistic performances by many first time actors, and becomes quite profound in illuminating human behavior.      GRADE-----A-

AFTERNOON DELIGHT is another low budget wonder, about a bored housewife who visits a strip club with her husband and some friends, meets a stripper, and in an effort to turn the sex worker's life around, offers her a job as a nanny for her young son!!!! Of course, some colors can never change, and the film is perceptive and very interesting--it takes turns you never expect.    GRADE----B+

PRISONERS goes darker and deeper than any recent Hollywood film in memory, but that's not necessarily a bad thing.  Father of a kidnapped daughter, Hugh Jackman goes rather crazy in his efforts to find her and a neighbor child.  It's a chilling and creepy story, well done.   GRADE----B+

A reenactment documentary of the tragic events that lead to the 11 deaths of K2 mountain climbers in 2008, THE SUMMIT is very gripping and sad.     GRADE------B+

Julia Louis-Drefuss and James Gandolfini make an engaging couple in the adult romantic dramedy ENOUGH SAID.  The film making is subtle and assured and the relationships are believable, and the dialogue and banter is witty yet low key.   GRADE-----B

UNFINISHED SONG (aka SONG FOR MARION) rushed into and out of town in a week, but when I saw it at SIFF it invoked some deep emotional responses as it deals (somewhat) with the grieving process among the elderly.  Cancer sufferer Vanessa Redgrave is the happy and cheerful wife to her grumpy old man husband of many years Terrance Stamp.  Her dying wish is for him to sing like he used to--she is part of a community chorus of elders-- but his bad temper and cranky demeanor make him difficult to deal with.  The actors are all quite good, and there are several moments in the film that moved me (and others) to tears, but it is not a maudlin experience.      GRADE-----B

THERESE is a French film dealing with the topic of "female hysteria" in the 1800's and the efforts of a doctor to cure (and perhaps, exploit) her.  The film is controversial to contemporary audiences because of the inherent sexism on display, yet the film is lurid and compelling enough to keep your attention.    GRADE-----B

I recently saw INSIDIOUS (2011) and enjoyed the haunted house/possesed child story immensely--and the ending was a shocking thrill!!!  So I was looking forward to INSIDIOUS Chapter 2.  It picks up where the original left off, and it is thrillingly made, although the plot goes into over drive, and in doing so goes over the top.  Still, I was not bored.  It may be very important to have seen the original film as there are many references to characters and events in the past, and new comers to this film will be lost.     GRADE-----B-

IN A WORLD is a modest but perceptive comedy about the world of voice over and commercial actors.  Written, directed and starring Bell Lake, this amusing film has our heroine competing with her father and her lover for an important preview voice over assignment, meeting other wacky actors, and dealing with the uncertainty of getting paid enough money to make a living.  She, and other characters are also looking for love in the shallow world of Los Angeles.      GRADE------B-

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I saw three silent films (shown recently on TCM) that I'd never seen before, and what a revelation they all were.  THE THIEF OF BAGDAD (1924) stars Douglas Fairbanks as he falls in love with a princess and must preform several deeds to win her hand.  There are lavish sets and costumes and incredible (for its time) special effects.  Fairbanks is amazingly dashing and sympathetic and the long (nearly 2 hours) film made me forget there was no spoken dialogue.  Buster Keaton's masterpiece THE GENERAL has enough plot for several films, yet the film making is funny, clever, and clear.    Set during the Civil War, Keaton is a train conductor who is not accepted to fight for the Confederacy, yet manages to confound the Union soldiers who steal his engine (called GENERAL).  Filmed in Oregon, yet it manages to look very Southern!  The sight gags are amazingly executed and are incredibly dangerous looking!  I also watched Alfred Hitchcock's last silent film THE MANXMAN (1929) and was intrigued at how intense and emotional he made this love story triangle.  Two best friends fall in love with the same woman--a familiar plot but handled in a unique and thoughtful way.    THE THIEF OF BAGDAD and THE GENERAL  each both GRADE------A and THE MANXMAN Grade------B

The bio pic of Jackie Robinson, the first African American base ball player to hit the major league, the film 42 is a pleasure to watch----again.     GRADE----B

Smooth and skillfully suspenseful, Grace Kelly and Cary Grant make Hitchcock's TO CATCH A THIEF (1955) easy on the eye, and the French Riviera is great to look at, too.   GRADE----B

Gary Cooper and Charlton Heston square off in the suspense drama WRECK OF THE MARY DEARE (1959) and Gary Cooper wins.  It's an arresting, engrossing drama based on a true story of a ship that may or may not be involved in illegal activities.     GRADE------B

I saw DONNIE BRASCO (1997) when it first came out, but watching it again, I didn't recall a single scene.  It's a low key "based on a true story" drama about a young cop (Johnny Depp) who goes deep undercover to expose a New York gangster (Al Pacino) who has taken Donnie under his wing.  The actors are good, and the story is well served, but I have to say that the film is so underwhelming that no wonder I didn't remember a single scene from 16 years ago.    GRADE-----B-

Julianne Moore is the main attraction for seeing THE PRIZE WINNER OF DEFIANCE OHIO (2006), another "based on a true story" about a mother of 10 kids who enters hundreds of contests in the late 50's and early 60's and manages to support her family on the winnings.  Her dead beat, alcoholic husband (an unsympathetic Woody Harrelson) works at cross purposes to the family's well being.  I kept wondering, if she is so clever (and lucky), why doesn't she leave him?    GRADE-----B-


 

Friday, August 30, 2013

THE BUTLER, FRUITVALE STATION, THE WOLVERINE, GRANDMASTER, CLOSED CIRCUIT, THE SPECTACULAR NOW, ARTIST and the MODEL, IN A WORLD...plus INSIDIOUS and ROPE

It's late August and the summer has been busy with travel and other activities this years, so here's a quick rundown on what I've been watching in the last four weeks.....


Lee Daniels' THE BUTLER (the director's name is in the title because another film is titled just THE BUTLER) is an effectively strong bio type picture, based on real life, but possible fictionalized (and condensed and idealized much like FORREST GUMP) about the long life of an African American man in service as a butler to a long succession of  American presidents seen dealing with civil rights issues.  Told mostly his eyes, the film is fascinating and powerful at times, a bit sentimental and perhaps exaggerated at other times, but mostly fascinating and moving through out.  The large cast includes stalwarts Oscar winner Forest Whitaker in the title role, Oprah Winfrey as his wife, and Vanessa Redgrave, Mariah Carey, Terrance Howard, Jane Fonda, Cuba Gooding Jr, John Cusack, James Marsden and Alan Richman and many others as political figures and various friends and family.  Considering how much time passes in this film (from the 1950's up to 2009) most of the scenes have an intimate emotional pull and are historically resonant.  Daniels previous film PRECIOUS (2009) was a powerful and insightful Oscar winner--one of the most jolting and profound films of that year.  This new effort is profound in it's own way.  It remains an ambitious and entertaining event, this in spite of the fact that a whopping 39 producers (executive, associate and assistant) are listed in the credits.    GRADE-----A-

Another film based on a true event is quite powerful and fascinating in a different way.  FRUITVALE STATION starts with the filmed video shooting of an unarmed African American man in an Oakland  B.A.R.T station, who had been out that evening with a large group of friends.  The film backtracks to the start of his day, introducing his long suffering girlfriend, his charming 5 year old daughter, his loving mother (whose birthday the family is celebrating on this New Years Eve day), his friends, and his co-workers (although he has recently been fired.)  The film is done in a semi-documentary style and even though we know what the ending will bring, the proceedings are riveting, as we see his world changing and get to know the person behind the man.  My biggest grip is the use of wiggly hand held camera work through nearly a third of the film.  Still, a very worthy effort.     GRADE----B+

THE SPECTACULAR NOW tells the story of teenagers in love, but in a very realistic and honest way.  They are miss matched from the start---she's a super nerdy, serious student, and he's a care free, popular BMOC, but he has a very serious drinking problem which challenges their relationship.  The leads are terrific and the supporting cast is at a high level.        GRADE-----B+

Fans of the new TV series written by Stephen King about a small town encapsuled by an invisible wall (title has slipped my mind) will want to rent the new German film called THE WALL, about a middle aged woman trapped inside this same type of bubble, but the people outside appear to be dead, or at least in a dead like state.  She is forced to live alone among nature and her animals, and the film, which is almost all her narration (in English) is introspective and gripping--a real thought provoker.    GRADE-----B+

Another German film making the art house rounds,  THE HUNT is a superior melodrama set in a small town about a divorced male teacher who suddenly finds himself the center of controversy and hatred because a very young girl has made a false accusation of sexual abuse against him, and even though the facts keep pointing to his innocence, the towns people tighten the grip of anger and frustration.  This an intense film to watch, and opens up discussion about sexual hysteria in our society.     GRADE------B+

The French film THE ARTIST AND THE MODEL is based on a true story set in WWII about an elderly artist's relationship with a 20 year old girl who inspires him to create a nude sculpture of her.  Filmed in lovely black and white, the film, though not terribly dynamic, is very pleasant to watch and the actors, including the old pros Jean Rochefort and Claudia Cardinale are a pleasure.  ....GRADE-------B

The new film by Wong Kar Wai (IN THE MOOD FOR LOVE and  2046) is called THE GRANDMASTER, and is set in the first half of the 20th century when China was invaded by Japan--including just before and after and tells the true story of IP MAN, a famous kung fu, martial arts master who helped unite the North and South regions in their martial arts style.  The film is beautifully filmed, with some arresting scenes of fighting, bones crushing, and stylized violence.
Dramatically, the story of how Ip Man met his wife (she was the daughter of the man who turned over the reigns, so to speak, of the martial arts legacy) and how he become a famous teacher who would eventually meet and train Bruce Lee.  The film is very luxurious to watch, with pleasing scenes of fighting, love, costume and set design and musical score.  It is also quite sentimental in it's approach to the two leads (the handsome Tony Leung and the luminous Ziyi Zhang.)  Dramatically, the film struggles to find it's way, with many characters introduced, then dropped, and many times I was confused as to what exactly the motivations of some of the actions were.  That's been my main complaint of Wong Kar Wai's films for many years.  Lovely to look at, with style galore, but not much meat on the dramatic bones.        GRADE------B

It plays much like a Masterpiece Theatre mystery, and that's not a bad thing.  The new British spy thriller CLOSED CIRCUIT is engrossing to a point, and the actors are fun to watch, but the low key thrills and double crosses are rather routine these days, and I had some trouble understanding some of the motivations of the characters.       GRADE------B

The small American indie comedy IN A WORLD is set in the unique world of voice over actors who work in commercials, previews, cartoons, etc.  Bell Lake wrote and directed and stars in this story of an up and coming v.o. actor who finds herself in competition with her own father for some big event previews.  It's a very entertaining story with some delightful characters, and very amusing jokes and gags, but a day after seeing it, you might not remember much about it.     GRADE------B

DRUG WAR from Hong Kong is a manic cop thriller about chasing down the upper levels of drug king pins, and it certainly is fun and at times exciting to watch.  But in the end, it becomes a bit predictable.  At least in this one (WARNING:SPOILER ALERT----ENDING REVEALED)
every one dies (!) so at least there will be NO sequel.  I think.      GRADE-----B

Recently played (and also from SIFF, as some of the above were) is the stylish looking AIN'T THEM BODIES SAINTS which also suffers from a thin plot beefed up with lots of sunsets, glitzy photography, and longing and long walks, etc.  A woman waits for her imprisoned lover to come get her, but in the meantime she entertains the lonely local sheriff who put him away.    GRADE----B-

Based on the Marvel comic book character, THE WOLVERINE is the least of the films I've seen featuring a super hero (THE AVENGERS from last year is the best).  Hugh Jackman does his best, but the plot made little sense to me, and the back story left me in the fog.  I was really rather bored, yet you can appreciate the special effects.     GRADE-----C+


SEEN ON DVD----------------

Alec Guiness is a master, and another viewing of KIND HEARTS AND CORONETS (1949) confirms that, but the story of a man (Dennis Price) who seeks revenge on a royal family by murdering them all because they mistreated his mother is a masterwork of wit, cleverness, sophistication and low brow laughs.  Guiness plays all the royal family members.     GRADE------A-

THE WOMEN (1939) was written and directed by the great "women's" director George Cukor, and it features a startling array of witty and funny women including Norma Shearer, Rosaland Russell, and Joan Crawford and Mary Boland, among many others.  They mostly speak if double time--it almost makes you miss some of the catty jokes and witty asides, so it's always fun to watch this one a couple of times.       GRADE------B+

Alfred Hitchcock made ROPE (1948) as an experiment  using what seems like a single camera that normally can only hold about 20 minutes of film, but making it seem like one long take.  Based on a play (there's only a single apartment setting---watch how the night sky subtly changes color and mood) this story of a cold hearted murder that takes place just as a fashionable dinner party is about to begin has, with time, become one of his most fascinating films.  Featuring Jimmy Stewart, John Dall and Farley Granger.     GRADE-----B+

After watching THE CONJURING a few weeks ago, I came across a DVD copy of director James Wan's earlier film INSIDIOUS (2010) which plays very well as another haunted house/ possessed child story.  The ending is especially effective, with a jaw dropping final shot cliff hanger.  INSIDIOUS 2 opens in a couple of weeks.  I can't wait.      GRADE--------B

THREE CORNED MOON (1933) is a slight, daffy comedy featuring Claudette Colbert and Mary Boland as a rich family that goes broke in the recession (of 1929) and they must all go to work to pay the mortgage.  Interesting.     GRADE-----B-


Friday, August 2, 2013

Summer Catch-up! STILL MINE, MAN OF STEEL, MONSTERS UNIVERSITY, THE CONJURING, THE HEAT, WORLD WAR Z, STAR TREK: INTO DARKNESS, THE TO DO LIST, plus some duds.

I ended up taking off the month of July for travel, including trips to Denmark (Bornholm Island), Copenhagen, Chicago, Moline, and Portland.  I did still manage to see some films, so here is a capsule of what I saw in the past month.

Top of the heap is a SIFF film that opens today, called STILL MINE, a Canadian production with the incomparable James Cromwell (BABE) and the radiant Genevieve Bujold as a long married couple.  When he realizes that his wife is showing signs of dementia, he decides to build a simple, one level dream house, but runs into resistance from the local county inspectors and his adult children.  This film plays like the anti-AMOUR from last year, with scenes full of emotion and heart and drama, yet the actors refuse to be tempted to dip into sentimentality--making the film all the more effective.  Based on a true story, the film deals with many issues facing the aging and their families.  It is a beautiful, generous film.        GRADE---------A-

A wildly joyful documentary about a lost music punk rock album from the 1970's created by an African American group which suddenly becomes a music sensation in the current music scene.  The film, A BAND CALLED DEATH has much in common with last years SEARCHING FOR SUGARMAN.  There's a lot of heart, humor and discovery in this story, so in spite of the nihilistic title, give this film a chance---you'll love it.          GRADE--------A-

STAR TREK: INTO DARKNESS continues in the style of the terrific jump start film from 2009 STAR TREK, with all the beloved characters very effectively revamping their roles that emulate so wonderfully from the late STAR TREK TV series from the 1960's. Director of the last two films, J.J. Abrams knows how to entertain and thrill, and this is one sequel I can't wait to see again.    GRADE------B+

Surprisingly effective in storytelling, mood creation, and acting, the unexpected hit of the summer just may be THE CONJURING, which tells a familiar story of a true life haunted house (think THE AMITYVILLE HORROR).  The actors are quite good, including Lili Taylor, Vera Farmiga, Ron Livingston and Patrick Wilson, and the film  is smoothly directed and shot, with suspense and tension earned rather than flaunting in your face gore and blood.  The audience was very attentive and transfixed, and I had a chilling good time.     GRADE------B+

Four sommeliers (wine experts) attempt to pass the very difficult exams to become Masters in the exciting and intense documentary called SOMM, which came and went quickly last month.  I suggest requesting it on Netflix or On Demand.  It plays in an informative and entertaining manner.     GRADE-------B+

Mismatched cops are certainly nothing new, and in THE HEAT, Sandra Bullock is still playing the uptight, prissy one, like she did so well in the two MISS CONGENIALITY films, but the great shock and pleasure of THE HEAT is that Melissa McCarthy neatly steals the picture with her filthy , bizarre shocks of profanity and vulgarity,  She really jolts you into laughter and gives the film some much needed energy.  I had much fun watching this one.      GRADE-------B

The new version of the Superman saga called MAN OF STEEL has a dashing, brooding star in Henry Cavill, who gives Superman some sexy and soulful gravitas.  Michael Shannon is an effective villain, and even though much of the action is underplayed and somewhat subtle (!), I was very engrossed.       GRADE-----B

MONSTERS UNIVERSITY is a slick and clever animated "prequel" to Pixar's MONSTERS, INC (2001) but it is not necessary to have seen the earlier film first.  This film tells the story of two opposites who start off disliking each other, but in the end find a fast friendship.  There are a lot of clever, witty lines and situations, and the student monster characters are well voiced by John Goodman, Billy Crystal and Helen Mirren, among others.      GRADE------B

The documentary DIRTY WARS tells of the possibly illegal involvement in the CIA's participating in waging war in the Middle East.  It is informative, sad and frustrating.     GRADE-----B

It's got a BIG budget and a big star (Brad Pitt) and some big special effects, but WORLD WAR Z plays more like a new version of THE HOT SPOT or some other plague out of control drama, than the horrific zombie thriller it is supposed to be.  I was kind of bored.      GRADE-----C+

It never quite transcends the "basic gross out teen sex comedy" genre, but not for the lack of trying.  THE TO DO LIST starts out well, but gets rather tiresome by the "sex is better with the one you love" final theme.     GRADE-----C+

I loved director Danny Boyle's last two films SLUMDOG MILLIONAIRE (2008) and 127 HOURS (2010) but in spite of some interesting technical effects, I was dumb founded by his latest film TRANCE.  The story is so unbelievable and full of contrivances that I lost interest in all the mumbo jumbo psycho babble about hypnosis and memory loss and analysis.  These characters all seemed to love and hate each other at the same time, and there was no one that I cared about.  I did enjoy the soundtrack created by MOBY, however.      GRADE----C

Some folks found the hippie trippy tale of an obnoxious American tourist (an unpleasant Michael Cera) who hooks up with an equally obnoxious free spirit woman called CRYSTAL FAIRY, as they travel with some locals to a deserted beach in Chile to get high on a psychedelic drug amusing, but I was annoyed by these characters, and the herky jerky hand held camera work and awkward improvisations were wince inducing.     GRADE-----D


DVDs watched recently include:

FOREIGN CORRESPONDENT (1940) is Alfred Hitchcock's spy thriller set at the start of  WW2 with Joel McCrea as a reporter caught in a web of conspiracy and traitorism as he falls for the girl whose father seems increasingly suspicious.  Some famous set pieces include an assassination in the rain and the subsequent chase through a sea of black umbrellas, and a suspenseful sequence inside a creaking windmill.   GRADE-------B+

I loved the Broadway musical THE WIZ--the hip music and staging were sensational at the time, so I was quite disappointed when the 1978 film version was released.  Never has a film been so incredibly miscast, especially when you have the lead role of the adolescent girl Dorothy played by the then 34 year old Diana Ross.  She was so totally unbelievable as the teen that I wanted to scream.  It doesn't help that Michael Jackson plays the Scarecrow in such a lame, amateurish manner (he was only 20 at the time), and many of the other "one song stars" over sing or over emote to the point of embarrassment (like Richard Pryor and Lena Horne).  I tried to watch this again on the plane ride back from Amsterdam, and winced all the way home.  It is even worse than I remembered.  Considering how director Sidney Lumet (!!!) managed to mangle the joyfulness of most of the songs, it  may be one of the worst films of all time.       GRADE-------F




Tuesday, June 25, 2013

Favorite SIFF 2013 films, plus openings STORIES WE TELL, WISH YOU WERE HERE, PARADISE: LOVE, THE PURGE, FRANCES HA and THE BLING RING

SIFF ended with a fizzle for me on Saturday May 8th.  The screening of DECODING ANNIE PARKER was cut short at the half hour point by a broken projector. (See review further down the page.)  Then I saw an obscure, intriguing, odd older film that was beautifully restored, called PORT OF SHADOWS (1938), but the plot was rather bizarre, and the story line seemed stretched out, and frankly, I was so tired at that point that the film left me non plussed by the end.    GRADE----C+


So here is a brief listing of my favorite films, in no particular order----and I'll give more info when they open up at theatres later in the year.  You can also see some older previous blogs for more info........

These films were rated A or A-

YOU WILL BE MY SON
TEST
HOUSE WITH A TURRET
TRAILS OF MUHAMMAD ALI
FULL CIRCLE
GIRL WITH 9 WIGS
ALICE WALKER; TRUTH IN BEAUTY
STILL MINE
HALIMA'S PATH
A BAND CALLED DEATH
JIN
STORIES WE TELL
AFTER TILLER
WHAT MAISIE KNEW
FRANCES HA

The following were rated B+ and on any given day could replace any of the above in preference.....

THE WALL
LAST I HEARD
MERCY
BEFORE SNOWFALL
IN THE NAME OF...
OUT IN THE DARK
IMAGINE
INEQUALITY FOR ALL
ATRACO!
LADY IN PARIS
IT'S ALL SO QUIET
ARTIST AND MODEL
THE HUNT
WISH YOU WERE HERE
HORSES OF GOD
UNFINISHED SONG
UNHUNG HERO


Here's what I've seen this past 2 weeks--not much new stuff, but still recovering from 117 SIFF films (my lowest total in many years....).........


Now playing regular engagements from SIFF---

Catch WHAT MAISIE KNEW if you can.  It is an insightful, fascinating contemporary story based on a novel by Henry James, of a young girl being tossed back and forth between her divorcing, embittered parents, played brilliantly by Julianne Moore and Steve Coogan, with the amazing Onata Aprile as the precocious 6 year old.  It really makes you think what kind of adult this child will grow up to be.        GRADE-----A-

Also ending a regular run after a SIFF premiere is FRANCES HA, a comic drama from  director Noah Baumbach (SQUID AND THE WHALE) that features his wife, Greta Gerwig in the lead.  Here is a young woman and struggling dancer trying to grow up to responsible adulthood after college, but she finds the pull of irresponsibility and freedom hard to give up.      GRADE----A-

Also featured during SIFF's opening weekend is Canadian actress/director (GO! and AWAY FROM HER) Sarah Polley's docudrama features her family revealing secrets and mysteries about the family past, in the fascinating and surprising  STORIES WE TELL.  There are some great twists, even up to the final minutes, which will keep you involved.     GRADE----A

Opening for probably a brief run is the Australian thriller WISH YOU WERE HERE, which features a great, nervous, guilty looking performance by Joel Edgerton (WARRIOR, ZERO DARK THIRTY, GREAT GATSBY) as a married man with kids who cannot seem to remember details of the disappearance of his sister-in-law's boyfriend when the four of them were on a drug fueled vacation in Cambodia.  The mystery is slowly revealed and keeps you intrigued for the duration.
GRADE------B+ 

Opening also from SIFF is the first segment of a trilogy called PARADISE : LOVE (soon to be followed by PARADISE : FAITH and PARADISE : HOPE, which are all quite different in theme and tone, with only a thin line of similar characters...)  This one deals with a German woman on vacation in Kenya buying sex from local beach boys.  It is provocative stuff, and lots of flesh (both genders) is on display, as the film tries to show who is the exploiter and the exploited, and often the lines are blurred.  It will make you squirm.        GRADE------B+

I finally caught up with THE BLING RING, director Sophia Coppola's newest film (it was the closing night feature at SIFF) and I have to say that I found it fascinating, as it tells the real life drama of a bunch of privileged high school kids who break into the homes of the rich and famous and go on "shopping" sprees in their HUGE closets.)  Paris Hilton was one of their victims, and she makes a brief appearance as herself in the film--apparently they filmed those sequences in her actual home.  The film has attitude, style, and feels quite topical as it explores the relationships and motives behind these young thieves.          GRADE----B+

The only non-SIFF film I saw this past week is the science fiction thriller THE PURGE, which has a very gutsy premise that you either accept (and like the film) or reject (and probably hate the film.)  I took a leap of faith and swallowed the premise, and really thought there was a lot of challenging ideas floating around.  In the near future, there is one night a year where anything goes---murder, violence, robberies---with out police interference, for various purposes, like revenge, getting hatred out of your system, thrills, prejudice--whatever.  A young rich family lives in a  supposedly well secured community, but when things go wrong (as they are wont to do in films like this,) it becomes a very long night for them, and their relationships towards each other are revealed.  There's a bit too much hand held nonsense, but I was engrossed from beginning to end.          GRADE------B

I finally saw the make up screening last Sunday for DECODING ANNIE PARKER.  The film is being used to raise money for breast cancer research, and comes with commercials (at the beginning) to steer people to get help.  I certainly applaud the film makers efforts for the cause.  However, as a film, DECODING ANNIE PARKER doesn't make much sense.  The film follows  Dr. Mary-Claire King (played with plucky determination by Helen Hunt) as she searches over two decades for the clue to the BRCA1 gene which would link generations of women from the same family as passing down the gene to children.  Inter cut is the story of Annie Parker (effectively played by Samantha Morton)  who struggles with cancer many times in her early thirties.  To it's credit, the film is slickly made and acted, and includes a lot of (sometimes sexual) humor, but the intertwining of these stories is not clear (the two women never met in real life, until the Q&A at the first screening at the Egyptian theatre (RIP Egyptian!!!!!!) and the film has no emotional resolution.      GRADE----C+

Saturday, June 8, 2013

SIFF Wed 6/5 to Fri 6/7--Top films LAST I HEARD, TEST, YOU WILL BE MY SON, HOUSE W/ A TURRET

Heading into the final weekend, some great films to watch, and waiting to be watched.  Here's what I've seen these past 3 days.


American indie film CLUTTER has a promising premise, that being about a woman who is a hoarder--her home is so full of stuff and junk that she is forcing out her adult children as she did with her husband years earlier.  Played by the delightful Carol Kane, the film is faithful to the situations and mental mind set of such sufferers.  Unfortunately, her kids are almost cartoon caricatures (one daughter is practically mute, another daughter wears a dangerous looking eye patch for no apparent reason) and the laughs are very mild.  The script meanders, touching on moving moments and weird situations (neighbors gather,thinking they see the Virgin Mary in a water stain on the garage door)with equal  relevance.  It's also directed a beat too slowly.  Nice try.        GRADE----C+

For those interested in the political upheavals in Mozambique in the 1960s through the 1980s, then COMRADE PRESIDENT is your film.  It is well made with thoughtful talking heads.  For everyone else, it is not electrifying information.      GRADE----C+

The surprisingly effective LAST I HEARD is about an aging mafioso character, very well played by Paul Sorvino, who is released from prison after 20 some years, to find that life is very different outside, and he no longer has the "power" and respect he once held.  There's a lot of tension created by the relationships he has with a helpful neighbor, and his estranged daughter, and the film builds beautifully to a couple of strong, sometimes shocking, scenes.           GRADE------B+

A young man's girlfriend rejects his marriage proposal (in a sad scene caught on video at a baseball game that actually went viral on u-tube within a few days).  ---The reason, she claims, is that his penis was too small.  He sets off around the world with a director and camera man to discover what is big, small and average (and special) about the penis, and seeks remedies for his condition.  This documentary called UNHUNG HERO is informative, very self deprecating, and very very funny, sometimes in a shocking way, but the sold out audience roared with laughter, even as it was gasping from shock.  Very entertaining.     GRADE------B+

Set in a vineyard in Saint-Emillion, France, this gripping modern day melodrama YOU WILL BE MY SON concerns the wealthy owner who does not want his son to inherit his company, for various reasons, and turns to the son of his dying best friend and steward to take over, setting the stage for political intrigue, jealousy, betrayal, and family skeletons to come tumbling forth.  It's a fascinating film, with King Learish overtones.  The one film of SIFF that I didn't want to end.     GRADE------A

A surprisingly effective independent US film about a troupe of dancers in San Francisco in the mid-1980's, when AIDS testing was just beginning.  This film is well acted by an unknown cast (who dance quite well) and it accurately captures a time and place when the spectre of AIDS seemed overwhelming and mysterious.  Called T E S T, the film is also about the testing of friendships and relationships, the struggle for artistic perfection and the importance of human connection. A fine, fine effort.     GRADE-------A-

INVADER is a sleek Spanish film about a doctor in the armed services in Iraq, who survives a deadly ambush, only to find out later that atrocities were involved (those nasty Americans!) and he and his family may be in deep trouble.  The film glosses over the politics and turns into a chase thriller.  Effective for what it is, but perhaps not totally satisfying.     GRADE------B

LAST FLIGHT TO ABUJA from Nigeria, is a send up of AIRPLANE! which of course is a send up of the AIRPORT movies from the 1970's.  I found it amusing for the first 10 minutes, but it gets heavy handed.  The cast is attractive, but the special effects are baloney, and the plot is unbelievable on so many levels.             GRADE------D

As I watched the mediocre G.B.F. (GAY BEST FRIEND) I kept thinking, is this the best film SIFF could come up with for the Gayla! celebration?  If you could even  hear the fast and vapid dialogue as it bounces around the cavernous Egyptyian you were probably distracted from the simplistic and cliched high school situations that TV's GLEE has handled with much greater aplomb for over four years.  Generally, the actors were attractive and fine, but the script was the big let down here.  This film makes the earlier screened THE GEOGRAPHY CLUB feel more and more like a minor masterpiece.      GRADE--------C

A drunken slut has sex about 4 times in the first 45 minutes of NINE FULL MOONS, and even though one time was clearly a rape, she is so out of it each time, she can barely remember what really happened.  There's a lot of hard drinking with all the characters, and I lost interest in the first hour, so I walked out.        GRADE------C

The fine Ukrainian film HOUSE WITH A TURRET  is a triumph of style, cinematography, direction and grace.  The plot concerns a young boy during WWII who must depend on strangers when he becomes stranded in an unfamiliar town on an interrupted train trip with his desperately ill mother to visit his grandfather.  The moving film is quiet and very perceptive.    GRADE-----A-

GO GRANDRIDERS from Taiwan is a documentary about elders who travel by motor bike around the island of Taiwan in 10 days.  The film is exactly what you expect, full of happiness, tears, medical problems, sentimentality,  cheering, reminiscing, and some interesting scenery.    GRADE----B-

From Germany comes a solid drama called FREE FALL about a young married police officer who meets and falls for a gay officer, which of course makes for a lot of tension in his family life and his work life.  It is a familiar theme--I kept thinking of Tom Tykwer's fine film from  two years ago called "3"--but the actors, direction, plotting, cinematography and technical work are all first rate.
GRADE---------B

LOVE IS IN THE AIR is extremely bright and slick French fluff--a comedy about two ex lovers who end up next to each other on a full plane from NYC to Paris, who hate each other, but through extended flash backs we learn the true story of their misunderstandings.  The leads are extremely attractive, and there are enough jokes and sight gags to keep you entertained, but if you normally hate French fluff, the flashy slickness will only irritate you.        GRADE------B-



HIGHLY RECOMMENDED FOR THIS LAST WEEKEND OF SIFF:

CELESTIAL WIVES OF MEADOW MARI, TRIALS OF MUHAMMAD ALI, WISH YOU WERE HERE, LAST I HEARD, HORSES OF GOD, FREE FALL and TEST

The 830pm Saturday TBA at UPTOWN is David Lynch's DUNE
The 8pm Sunday TBA at UPTOWN is David Lynch's  TWIN PEAKS (first Pilot episode)

Tuesday, June 4, 2013

SIFF Sat 1Jun--Tue 4Jun---Best this week-----HORSES OF GOD, WISH YOU WERE HERE, THE HUNT, UNFINISHED SONG sings!

Final week of SIFF, and good stuff keeps coming.  Unfortunately, so does some mediocre stuff.
Here's what I've seen this week so far......

UNFINISHED SONG from Great Britain is having a big opening this summer--I've seen previews for several months.  Fortunately, the film walks a fine balance of drama, comedy and music, and there is a lot of drama that the preview skirts for the music aspect.    But you can't go wrong with Terrance Stamp and Vanessa Redgrave as an elderly couple facing death.  Redgrave sings a stunningly moving version of TRUE COLORS, and Stamp gets great mileage for the (musical) finale.  The sentimentality is kept mostly in check.    GRADE-----B+ 

Another police actioner from Hong Kong, this one is slightly better than the previously reviewed DRUG WAR, but COLD WAR falters in the end by throwing in a couple extra characters quite suddenly, and throws the audience for a loop with a very confusing ending.      GRADE-----C+

AFTERNOON DELIGHT is an indie US film about a young mother who becomes fascinated with a stripper/sex worker that she moves into her lovely Silver Lake home in LA to become a nanny for her child, much to the concern of her female circle of friends and her husband.  The film takes some predictable turns, and some surprising turns, and in the end works honestly to earn the drama and laughs that this situation creates.   I wish the hand held camera work wasn't there, especially in a highly intense sequence contrasting a wine and women night with a boys night out, but it's pretty impressive stuff with especially good actors.     GRADE------B

Following a half dozen young boys in a shanty town outside of Casablanca starting in the early 1990's, the first half hour is dizzy and confusing (using too much hand held nonsense) and it takes a while to sort out who is who.  Just when you have it figured out, the time jumps ahead 9 years when the boys are now young men, and it takes awhile to figure out who is who again. HORSES OF GOD follows their indoctrination into terrorism for the Jihad movement.  The camera work and direction becomes much more stable, to make sure we understand what is going on (?), and the film becomes unsettling and disturbing.     GRADE-----B+

THE FORGOTTEN KINGDOM follows a young "Joberg" man back to Lesotho from the big city to bury his estranged father, where he must learn to love and respect the traditions of the rural life that he left behind many years ago.  The film is smooth, beautifully filmed with great scenery, and creates a subtle irony to his journey.      GRADE------B

THE PLAGUE from Spain is a series of scenes filmed in a documentary style without any plot that show the struggles of poor workers as they struggle with a difficult society, weather and loneliness.  Interesting at times, but by the end it seems pointless, and may put you to sleep if you are not attuned to the characters.    GRADE-----C+

The Australian thriller WISH YOU WERE HERE shows two couples having a wild party in a southeast Asia resort.  When their vacation is over, one of them goes missing, and the film is intriguing and engrossing as the pieces are slowing put back together.  It's a frustrating film at times as some very poor choices are made be each character, but it's fascinatingly acted and directed.      GRADE------B+

The Spanish film ALI features a spoiled teen trying not to repeat the mistakes of her single mother, and I found her to be an unsympathetic and slightly annoying character.  There's not much depth here, but some may enjoy the shallow  situations.        GRADE------C+

It's slick, but the documentary EVERGREEN: ROAD TO LEGALIZATION IN WASHINGTON tells the familiar story (to Washingtonians, at least) of the last election where  possession of small amounts of marijuana were legalized--one of two states in the US to do this (the other is Colorado.)      GRADE-----C+

DOG FLESH from Chile tells a dull, dreary story of a man who in the first 45 minutes brushes his teeth (twice), takes long showers, tries to get his car fixed, puts up a flag, complains about his health, and all this is accomplished with shaky hand held camera in extreme close up--often following the character from behind.  I couldn't take any more, so I walked out,  just before he kills his dog with scalding water, I was informed later.    GRADE------D-

From Denmark comes THE HUNT, the story of a well liked small town man with many friends who finds his life in a downward cycle when a young child  mistakenly admits to having inappropriate sexual touching with this man, and he finds that the town turns on him for being a seeming pedophile, especially when some other children take up the charge.  It's well done and intense, but the theme and story feel overly familiar.     GRADE-------B+







Saturday, June 1, 2013

SIFF Tue 5/28--Fri 5/31 DOCS on ALICE WALKER, MUHAMMAD ALI tops--GIRL W/9 WIGS and FULL CIRCLE

SIFF is like an avalanche for the last two weeks with over 21 films shown EACH DAY at different venues until closing day Sunday 6/9.

Here's what I saw this week---

TEDDY BEARS starts with 3 couples arriving at a dessert home (filmed near Twentynine Palms, CA) for the week, and one of the men claims he wants to have sex with all 3 women this week for "sexual healing" due to the recent death of his mother.  The request is met with suspicion and stony refusals, but triggers lots of discussion among the couples which challenges their relationships.  Late 20 somethings are not always fun to watch, but the bright cast, led by David Krumholtz and Melanie Lynskey are amusing and sympathetic in turns.      GRADE-----B

MUTUAL FRIENDS shares the same 20 something demographic, but lacks the energy, dialogue and charming actors of TEDDY BEARS.  Still it is slickly filmed and some viewers preferred it over the above---but at least TEDDY BEARS plot and dialogue is more organically progressive.     GRADE-----C

SOMM is a clever, informative look at the very few (about 200 worldwide) Master Sommeliers and the intense exam that each must pass to become a Master of wine.     GRADE-----B

GARIBALDI'S LOVERS is a tiresome, frantic Italian "comedy" that finally gels a bit in the last 20 minutes, but by that time it is too late.   GRADE------D+

Based on a true event, A HIJACKING is a slow burn thriller set in the Indian Ocean, as a group of Kenyan pirates take over a cargo ship owned by a big Danish corporation, whose owner  becomes too personally involved in the negotiations that drag out the conflict.  Effective.    GRADE-----B

An amazingly effective U.S. documentary, TRAILS OF MUHAMMAD ALI pulls together political and social events that show how and why the great boxer became such an iconic symbol.   Fascinating stuff.     GRADE-----A-

I walked out of YESTERDAY NEVER ENDS, a static two character talkathon from Spain, after 30 minutes.  Many that stayed referred to it as the FILM THAT NEVER ENDS, although some reportedly liked the ending.   No Grade due to walk out.

Chinese director Zhang Yang (SHOWER 1999) is in full sentimental mode in this entertaining, sometimes maudlin, but heartfelt dramedy called FULL CIRCLE, about some seniors in a retirement center that are determined to put on a show, despite complications and limitations.  For what it is, it is very effective.     GRADE----A- 

Very funny, very dramatic, very slickly produced, THE GIRL WITH NINE WIGS is a German film about a 21 year old who deals with her deadly cancer by creating new personas with wigs and make up, all the while dealing with drug therapy and radiation, friends and family.     GRADE----A

I USED TO BE DARKER is a low budget film about a newly pregnant girl from Ireland who runs away from her parents to visit her aunt and uncle in Baltimore, only to find they are in the process of splitting up.  The sound is not always good--the relatives are a musical bunch, but the film speak some truth to the painful reality of running away from your problems.       GRADE------B

COMRADE KIM GOES FLYING from North Korea is a cheerful, bright looking fantasy propaganda film where everything is lovely, and all your dreams can come true if you work hard enough.  It's silly stuff, but I giggled a lot.     GRADE-----B

The serious French drama THERESE stars Audrey Tautou (AMALIE) as a disturbed wealthy woman who tries to kill her husband.  Good effort and production values, but nothing new, either.    GRADE----B-

From Spain, a young refugee fleeing Franco's Spain becomes a nude model for an aging sculptor who has recently struggled with his lack of creativity in THE ARTIST AND THE MODEL. The film is beautifully shot in black and white, and has a delicate sensibility, with scenes and themes of war, voyeurism, love, death, and art mixed into a pleasing blend.     GRADE-----B+

From Denmark comes IT'S ALL SO QUIET, a somber, reflective film about the loneliness of a rural farmer, who is taking care of his elderly immobile dying father, and finds himself strangely drawn to a friendly dairy trucker.  The lead actor Jeroen Willems is intriguing--he died shortly after filming this gentle thoughtful film.      GRADE-----B+

MARIE KROYER also from Denmark, is a period piece about a woman torn between her mentally disturbed husband, and a younger composer.  It looks fine, but the plotting is familiar, and the film lacks some oomph and passion.      GRADE------C+

A splendid, well made documentary about the famous writer and activist, ALICE WALKER: TRUTH IN BEAUTY informs and provokes thoughtful awareness of social and political issues.  This film is part of a fine trifecta of documentaries about some great African American icons in the United States----see also ANITA and TRAILS OF MUHAMMAD ALI.     GRADE-------A


THIS WEEKEND I WOULD RECOMMEND------ALICE WALKER: TRUTH IN BEAUTY, THE WALL, SOMM, SHORT TERM 12 and INEQUALITY FOR ALL--BUT WARNING, THESE ARE ALL POPULAR, SO GET THERE EARLY.....

Monday, May 27, 2013

SIFF over MEMORIAL DAY WEEKEND: STILL MINE and LADY IN PARIS shine!!!! KALPANA retro dynamic.

Due to time constraints, I didn't get to see all the films I'd hoped to see.  Here's what I saw over the long weekend......


It wasn't on my radar, but I thought I'd spend the day Saturday at the Egyptian, so I started with ATRACO! from Spain and Argentina.  Set in 1955, the convoluted plot of the phony robbery of Eva Peron's famous jewels, which ends tragically, proved to be a delightful surprise.  The sets and costumes were wonderfully atmospheric, and the comic film has style to spare as it roars through it's paces.  A lovely entertainment.    GRADE---B+

Apparently, according to SIFF, if the film that comes after ATRACO! is going to be a sell out, and you want to see it, you must LEAVE ATRACO! sometime before the end, get yourself a  QUEUE card for the next film--in this case TOUCHY FEELY, a local production by Lynn Shelton who has a big following in the Northwest---and then go back to your seat to finish watching ATRACO!  I think that is a rude and obnoxious thing for movie goers whether they want to stay for the next film or not.  I didn't get out of ATRACO! in time for a queue card, so I wasn't allowed back in the theater, even though I'd arrived at 1045am to see ATRACO! and hopefully TOUCHY FEELY, which was slated to start at 1:30pm.  The buzz from full series passholders was definitely negative as people were leaving TF--a group of five women all really disliked it, but of course there were two others that liked it, with reservations.  I doubt I will see it at all with buzz like that, and an experience like that leaves a bad taste in my mouth towards wanting to see the film in general.

SING ME THE SONGS THAT SAY I LOVE YOU is a concert film tribute to the late singer/song writer Kate McGarrigle, featuring excellent performances by her children Rufus and Martha Wainwright, as well as Antony, Norah Jones, Emily Lou Harris and others.  It's very moving and a bit maudlin at times, as the emotions took over, especially with Rufus, who still managed to sound terrific.  But they need to get a better camera person.  A couple of years ago, the McGarrigle's recorded a wonderful DVD of seasonal and Christmas songs called A NOT SO SILENT NIGHT (2009), and I think the same camera person did that film too.  While I'm a big fan of their voices and music, the camera work is poor--giggly, sometimes out of focus, and awkwardly placed.  In SING ME THE SONGS,  many of the shots were from below the singer, and the microphones blocked their faces.  Sometimes the camera was filming people on stage who were not even singing.  In the case of Norah Jones, the camera was filming Rufus' tears and we got precious little views of Nora Jones beautiful rendition of MENDOCINO.     GRADE----B-

DRUG WAR is director Johnnie To's newest high energy police thriller.  The film is non stop action from beginning to end, and it is entertaining to watch, but it feels very familiar, and it is hard to care about any of the characters since they can ALL be described as  "RUTHLESS" and "DRIVEN."  (Cops and drug lords alike.)   Caution:  SPOILER ALERT ahead.   Fortunately, EVERY ONE dies at the end, sparing us another generic sequel.     GRADE------B-

The biggest treat of the weekend for me was STILL MINE, a Canadian film that got some great buzz from an earlier screening.  A radiant Genevieve Bujold, who looks fantastic with out plastic surgery, and the ever reliable James Cromwell play a long married couple in their 80's struggling to stay together in spite of meddlesome but well meaning adult children, dementia and old age ailments, and obstructions regarding a new single level home they are trying to build.  Moving and insightful.     GRADE------A-

IN A WORLD.....takes us into the realm of the voice over (or commercial narration) industry, and was surprisingly witty and amusingly acted by writer/directer Lake Bell, who plays a neurotic character (not unlike you'd find in a Woody Allen film) who struggles to establish herself in an industry where her father and her lover are sexist and her worst competition.  Very likable and a smart comedy.   GRADE-----B

A film from Rwanda is a novelty, but THE PARDON is by a first time director who needs more practice and money.  I've seen a couple films about the genocide, but this film had such bad actors, poor sound, awkward camera work and unsubtle themes that I lost patience after 55 minutes and walked out of the theatre.      GRADE------D+

THE FIFTH SEASON is a fable about a small town where all the crops fail, the chickens won't lay eggs, the cows won't give milk, etc, and so naturally, suspicion and accusations fly, and tragedy occurs in the end.  It's a lot like a Shirley Jackson story, with lots of themes about mob mentality and suspicion of those that are not like us.  The film has a clear, deadpan visual style, and is moody and clever, but not totally satisfying due to the coldness of characters and subject matter.    GRADE---B

Timing issues landed me at a fascinating revival film from India called KALPANA (1948), with a great looking print that had been cleaned up by Martin Scorsese's film restoration project.  There is little plot, but lots of inspired and feverish dancing and singing as it tells the story of a dancer who starts a national academy for the arts and finds himself torn between two women.  I found myself mesmerized by the swinging, thrusting, balletic, inventive dancing, and abstract and noirish art and set direction--much like watching the finale of THE RED SHOES.  This film is in glorious and stylish black and white.    GRADE----A-

A LADY IN PARIS centers on a middle aged home care giver from Estonia who ends up working for a very cranky old woman (the fabulous Jeanne Moreau, who also looks great with out plastic surgery!) and they develop a tentative friendship.  The film has some dark moments, and the acid tongued Moreau gives the film an edgier quality that keeps the film from turning into schmaltzy mush.
GRADE------B+


Friday, May 24, 2013

SIFF FILMS from 21 May (TUESDAY) thru 24 May (FRIDAY)

Here in order of viewing are the films I've seen this week.....

GEOGRAPHY CLUB is based on a local writer's young adult book, and it started out feeling like an ABC After School Special, but the technical quality is good, the characters are memorable, and it begins to feel more like an extended episode of GLEE, with out the music, which for those of us who love GLEE,  is a good thing.   A repressed teen joins up with other gay teens to start a gay alliance group in high school for support from repression, hazing and homophobia.   It's witty, insightful and charming.   GRADE------B

INEQUALITY FOR ALL is a US documentary featuring former Secretary of Labor Robert Reich who lays out in plain English how the widening income gap in America is very detrimental to our society.  GRADE------B+

REDEMPTION STREET---set in Belgrade, this want to be thriller about a young investigative lawyer who suddenly gets in over his head, starts out intriguingly enough, but the final half hour rushes through events (practically in a montage of shots) and the film feels like a three hour plot line that was severely edited to fit a 90 minute slot.  Very unsatisfactory by the end.     GRADE-----C-

HALIMA'S PATH---set in the aftermath of the Croatian war, this emotional, thoughtful story involves two young adults from different faiths (Christian and Muslim) who marry, and how 25 years later that union had tragic effects.  The ending is particularly powerful.    GRADE-----A-

IMAGINE has the blind leading (and teaching) the blind, much to the dismay of the school staff, since the new teacher refuses to use a walking stick, putting himself and his students in danger.  Taken from the POV of the blind, the film is intensely fascinating, forcing the viewer to try to imagine what these students are feeling.     GRADE------B+

SHORTSFEST OPENING NIGHT was a half dozen collection of shorts, some just fine, a couple others just terrific, especially the film which contrasted the birth of a Rwanda woman who has the whole village helping her, and the birth of a seemingly alone woman who wants no help at all.  Both women face a dangerous birth process.  Also quite excellent was the short with Emma Thompson portraying the Queen when an intruder awakens her in her Buckingham bedroom, and based on a true story.  Total GRADE average------B+

TERMS AND CONDITIONS MAY APPLY is a frightening documentary about the civil freedoms we give up everyday by using social networks like Google, Facebook, Twitter, etc, since the government and other agencies have apparently total access to what we do on line.     GRADE----B+

TOGETHER---A Chinese film that has absolutely nothing to say, and does so in the most dull and boring fashion that by the time I walked out at the 55 minute mark, nearly half the theatre had beat me out the door.   You've been warned...... GRADE-------D

Locally filmed, SCRAPPER is a dark, jaunty little film with smooth photography and at least two very strong lead actors, concerning a lonely junk metal collector (an excellent Michael Beach) who teams up with an 18 year old girl with a lot of problems, trying to teach her responsibility and job skills to keep her off the streets.     This is a good solid made in Seattle film.  GRADE------B

A BAND CALLED DEATH---Excellent US documentary in the vein of SEARCHING FOR SUGARMAN, featuring the history and rediscovery of the first black punk band who lived in Detroit in the early 1970's.  The characters are very funny, the history is informative, the music is great, even for those who think they may not like this music.  It's a quality documentary.      GRADE----A-

FATAL is a curious Korean film about a young man who feels guilty about a gang rape he participated in 10 years earlier as a student, and when he meets the young woman later in life, becomes obsessed with purging his guilt---by becoming involved with her!!!!!    GRADE---B

OUT IN THE DARK is an engrossing Israeli film about a closeted gay Palestinian student who becomes involved with an out Israeli lawyer.  The film becomes much more about politics than sex, although  sexuality is used against both protagonists in hateful ways.     GRADE-----B+

JIN is a curious, wonderfully photographed Turkish film about a young female freedom fighter living in the mountains, who, when she tries to reenter society, finds life just as hard and cruel, which drives her back into the forest and mountains.  There is a minimum of dialogue, with vivid and mystical views of nature that lend the film a spiritual quality.  Some may find the film too slow, but I found it (and the lyrical musical score) hypnotic.    GRADE------A-

IN THE NAME OF ....is a Polish film with a remarkably charismatic and good looking lead actor named Andrzej Chyra, who stars as a priest to a small community of troubled boys living on a reformatory farm.  He finds himself attracted to an older boy, and a bored woman tries to seduce him.  His faith in his work and in God becomes shaken, and he turns to drink.  The film deals with the problems of modern day priests in the Catholic faith.  One amazing scene has him drunkenly dancing with a large picture of the Pope.   GRADE------B+

JUST LIKE A WOMAN is a poor, poor man's THELMA AND LOUISE, with both characters running from disappointing marriages, with dreams of becoming-------belly dancers!  The leads are lovely women, but the plot is not very convincing, and although it is easy to watch with some lovely scenes set in the Southwest states, the film evaporates after viewing.      GRADE------C+

IN THE FOG is set in Russia in 1942, and deals with reprisals toward a friend that the villagers think has made a deal with the Germans in order to survive a hanging of resistant fighters.  This is filmed in LLLOOOONNNNGGG  SSSLLLOOOWW takes where nothing of great importance is discussed, and there are numerous tracking shots where the camera follows the back of some one's head for several minutes as they trudge through a forest or down a road or searching for food.  If all those shots were cut, the film would be at least 30 minutes shorter, but still no better.  I dozed several times, only to open my eyes and find that the scene had not changed one bit.  SPOILER ALERT----every one boringly dies by the end, and we don't care a bit.      GRADE-------D+ (the plus is for the good looking production values.)

The oddly entertaining Belgium film THE BROKEN CIRCLE BREAKDOWN is an uncomfortable mixture of passionate love affair, cancer struggles, Bluegrass music, and marriage on the rocks scenes.  The country/bluegrass music is cheerful enough, and I liked the main characters, but the film becomes such a downer of death and sadness that it could become the saddest film of the year.    GRADE-----B-


___________

Heading into the long weekend, here are the best bets-----

Dirty Wars,  OUT IN THE DARK,  Paradise Trilogy (Paradise Love, Paradise Faith, Paradise Hope), GEOGRAPHY CLUB, The Spectacular Now, AFTER TILLER, Anita, C.O.G,  The Punk Singer........
I'm looking forward to LAURENCE ANYWAYS, THE WAY WAY BACK, TOUCHY FEELY and SING ME THE SONGS THAT SAY I LOVE YOU