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Archive for the ‘Blogs’ Category

The Last Mistress in the UK - GreenCine Daily

Friday, April 11th, 2008

GreenCine Daily - ”No one familiar with the films of Catherine Breillat will be shocked to learn that her costume drama The Last Mistress, based on Jules Barbey d’Aurevilly’s 19th-century novel Une vieille maîtresse, is more of an out-of-costume drama,” writes Ryan Gilbey in the New Statesman. “What is surprising, after her insufferably woolly studies of sexual power games (Romance, Sex is Comedy, Anatomy of Hell), is that the picture is a model of precision.”

“[I]t is a little like Dangerous Liaisons, though its erotic interludes are more candid, its tragedy more heartfelt, and its dialogue more cerebral, even austere,” suggests the Guardian’s Peter Bradshaw. “It is in fact closer in style and substance to Jacques Rivette’s recent film Ne Touchez Pas la Hache… Catherine Breillat’s movies have never been much liked in this country; she is often dismissed as the sole surviving practitioner of an obsolete art-porn aesthetic. The people who want to deride her may find more ammunition in The Last Mistress, and yet it is an outstandingly intelligent, formally pleasing film, and a fascinating development for Breillat herself.”

“Swiftly and deftly immersing us in the fashions - not just the clothes and decor, but also the changing sexual and social ethics - of the 1830s, Breillat’s meticulous, eloquent script and direction succeed in relating a rich, complex, consistently engrossing story and in providing an insightful commentary on the mores and literary concerns of the time,” writes Geoff Andrew in Time Out. “[Asia] Argento has never been better, [Roxane] Mesquida and the supporting actors are strong, and Fu’ad Aït Aattou is a real find, his androgyne beauty splendidly cast, his début performance subtle and assured.”… [Full Story]


Body of War - GreenCine Daily

Wednesday, April 9th, 2008

GreenCine Daily - ”Drenched in emotion and suffused with good intentions, Body of War is impossible not to like, but difficult to admire,” writes Manohla Dargis in the New York Times. “Produced and directed by Ellen Spiro and Phil Donahue (yes, that Phil Donahue), the movie uses the wrenching story of one American soldier to mount an angry if unfocused jeremiad against the war in Iraq.”

“Body of War is neither the most cinematic nor the most elegantly crafted of recent Iraq War documentaries, but that doesn’t stop it from being one of the most deeply affecting,” writes Scott Foundas in the Voice.

“Body of War is a gut-wrenching documentary experience, though like any effective polemic, it is almost as canny as it is facile in construction,” writes Ed Gonzalez in Slant. “This humane project probably bites off more than it’s able to fully chew in 87 minutes, but it chews well enough: In addition to documenting Thomas’s injuries and how their extent was acerbated by military negligence, it catches startling glimpses of people within his family caught in ideological tug of wars that miraculously don’t get in the way of their love for one another.”… [Full Story]


The Visitor - GreenCine Daily

Tuesday, April 8th, 2008

GreenCine Daily - ”Tom McCarthy’s surprise indie hit The Station Agent was something of a minor miracle,” writes Chris Wisniewski in indieWIRE. “A touching, big-hearted character study propelled by three vibrant performances, The Station Agent distinguished itself with its sensitivity and grace, qualities sorely lacking in an independent film culture that too often prizes the clever, the glib, the cute, and the smug. With his sophomore effort as a writer-director, The Visitor, McCarthy once again proves himself to be refreshingly out-of-step with the indie mainstream, taking an improbable set-up and patiently observing as his damaged but likeable characters work their way through it. Despite its contrivances, the film is a work of quiet, restrained empathy.”

“McCarthy’s movie is less about the trials of illegals in this country as it effects illegals but as it does people like Walter [Richard Jenkins] who are inspired to give a damn about them,” writes Ed Gonzalez in Slant… [Full Story]


Jellyfish - GreenCine Daily

Saturday, April 5th, 2008

GreenCine Daily - ”Predicated on the spectacle of functionally depressed types stuck in mildly ridiculous situations not entirely of their own making, the Israeli ensemble comedy Jellyfish - which won the Caméra d’Or last May at Cannes and was among the highlights of this year’s New Directors / New Films - has an emotional resonance beyond its controlled slapstick and deadpan sight gags,” writes J Hoberman in the Voice, where Michelle Orange talks with Etgar Keret, who’s co-directed the film with Shira Geffen.

Jellyfish “mostly avoids the self-conscious cuteness that is the inevitable side effect of whimsical surrealism, and it explores difficult feelings without descending into easy sentimentality,” writes AO Scott in the New York Times. “The dominant emotion experienced by the movie’s characters seems to be disappointment - the vague, drifting sense of expectations slowly deflating under the pressure of everyday life - but the film’s spirit is refreshingly playful and sweet.”

“Though the film’s reach does often exceed its grasp, particularly when, near the end, Jellyfish delves into the realm of magical realism, the actors are generally capable and endearing enough that it is possible to forgive the filmmakers’ their failed ambitions,” writes Dan Jardine at the House Next Door. “Furthermore, visually, the film is quite striking, as cinematographer Antoine Heberle has a playful style that keeps the sometimes self-conscious symbolism from getting weighted down by its own pretensions.”… [Full Story]


Son of Rambow in the UK - GreenCine Daily

Friday, April 4th, 2008

GreenCine Daily - The Telegraph’s Tim Robey finds Son of Rambow to be “a sweet, slight and vaguely disappointing movie…. If it weren’t so unrelaxed and eager to please, this might have pleased a lot more.”

“Word-of-mouth is reportedly building up behind this amiable British film by writer-director Garth Jennings about a couple of moviestruck kids, marooned in the bland 1980s suburbs, who set out to make their own amateur video sequel to Rambo,” notes the Guardian’s Peter Bradshaw. “I really wanted to like it, and there are some laughs, but the film doesn’t fully earn our sentimental indulgence, and there is a persistent sort of Britfilm lameness, 2-D characterisation and soft-focus comedy.”

“While the script’s whimsical humour recalls Gregory’s Girl, the visual style is very bold, very Rushmore,” writes Ryan Gilbey in the New Statesman. “Just as historians will nod approvingly if the bodices in a period drama have been sewn together with the correct stitching, so anyone who grew up in the 70s and 80s will be oohing and aahing like it’s Bonfire Night during Son of Rambow, marvelling at how the film-makers have got every detail just so.”… [Full Story]


Review: Flight of the Red Balloon - Cinematical

Friday, April 4th, 2008

Cinematical - …Like Hou’s more recent work, Flight of the Red Balloon moves a little more toward international accessibility and away from his early, uniquely Taiwanese stories. It’s of a piece with Café Lumiere (2003), for which Hou was invited to Japan to make a film in tribute to Yasujiro Ozu. For the new film, Hou comes to France to pay tribute to Albert Lamorisse’s legendary and beloved short film The Red Balloon (1956). (It’s not a terribly surprising move, given that French critics and audiences have supported Hou more passionately and for much longer than their American counterparts.) Binoche stars — in a direct reference to The Puppetmaster — as Suzanne, a writer and voice actress with a troupe of puppeteers. While her husband, a screenwriter, is away in Canada (and may or may not ever return), Suzanne hires Song (Song Fang) as a nanny for her son Simon (Simon Iteanu). Song is a Taiwanese film student who decides, while in France, to make a film about red balloons.

Miraculously, a red balloon appears every so often and floats around the Paris skyline, though Simon doesn’t appear to notice. (He plays pinball or video games instead.) The overall narrative is as aimless and wandering as the balloon. Suzanne works hard at the troupe, and she comes home frazzled, having grabbed snacks or dinner from a nearby café. Binoche is simply miraculous in this role, working in a more improvisatory method than she is used to. She’s like a hummingbird, with wild, blonde Texas housewife hair, and low-cut, leopard-skin tops, barely able to stand still or continue a conversation strand for any length of time. She forgets things and waves her hands around to help straighten her thoughts. She does things spontaneously, like move her piano upstairs so that her son’s lessons are more convenient. She allows her downstairs neighbor (also her tenant) to use her stove, but yells at him the next day. Her puppet show — which includes something about boiling the ocean dry — suits her personality perfectly… [Full Story]


The Flight of the Red Balloon - GreenCine Daily

Monday, March 31st, 2008

GreenCine Daily - ”Like his 2004 film Café Lumière, Hou Hsiao-hsien’s sublime new movie The Flight of the Red Balloon finds the director in a foreign country paying homage to another filmmaker,” writes Chris Wisniewski at indieWIRE. “With Lumiere, Yasujiro Ozu was Hou’s reference point and Tokyo his canvas; here, Hou reimagines Albert Lamorisse’s classic 1956 short The Red Balloon as a Parisian family melodrama.”

“A remarkably rich, rewarding, and restful experience, Hou’s latest is a film like no other - in the simplicity of its lines, colors, and framing, and in the complexity of how those elements compound and contextualize its emotional subject matter, The Flight of the Red Balloon can, in my mind, be compared to the works of Matisse,” writes Michael Koresky in Reverse Shot. “Despite this elevation, the film, miraculously, doesn’t feel like an artist’s grand summation, but rather just another in a long line of purely wrought canvases; it never calls attention to its own technique or turns its endless flow of lovely, complicated compositions into recognizable set pieces, and instead allows its three principal characters to navigate its spaces with ease.” [Full Story]


You, the Living in the UK - GreenCine Daily

Friday, March 28th, 2008

GreenCine Daily - ”‘Painterly’ is an overused adjective for films, but here’s one where it makes sense,” writes Peter Bradshaw in the Guardian. “I don’t know of any filmmaker whose work gives the viewer so much incentive and indeed leisure to examine the background of a shot…. You, the Living is a very funny film - though in the darkest possible way. It is a silent comedy, but with words.”

“To call it deadpan is barely to hint at [Roy] Andersson’s style, which he mostly applies to the world of commercials (watch them on YouTube, they’re hilarious),” writes Dave Calhoun in Time Out. “But just when you think the only answer to Andersson’s view of the world – alcoholic couples; depressed psychiatrists; a girl searching for a disappeared rock star who shows her a modicum of affection – is to throw yourself under one of Stockholm’s trams, he unleashes a set-piece that has you marvelling at its choreography or wondering at the sheer ridiculousness of life.”… [Full Story]


SXSW Review: Body of War - Cinematical

Tuesday, March 25th, 2008

Cinematical - The recent U.S. involvement in Iraq has become one of the biggest subjects for documentaries in the past few years, and it’s hard not to feel weary of watching the variety of movies on this topic, no matter how varied and original they might be. Phil Donahue has contributed to the genre with Body of War, a documentary he co-directed with Austin filmmaker Ellen Spiro (Troop 1500). The movie focuses on the effect that the U.S. conflict in Iraq has had on a single soldier.

Body of War combines two threads of narrative. The first thread follows Tomas Young, who enlisted in the U.S. Army on Sept. 13, 2001 as a reaction to the events of Sept. 11. He ends up being deployed to Iraq, and after only a few days in combat is injured — a spinal injury. He’s paralyzed below the chest and is confined to a wheelchair. Tomas, his bride-to-be and his mom all have to get used to dealing with his range of physical problems as a result of this injury: not only can’t he walk, but he’s on an ever-changing variety of medications, he can’t control his body temperature, he vomits frequently, and experiences sexual difficulties. Meanwhile, his experiences have made him passionately anti-war, and he visits Cindy Sheehan’s compound in Crawford, Texas, travels to the offices of several politicians, and speaks out frequently in public [Full Story]


SXSW Review: Heavy Metal in Baghdad - Cinematical

Wednesday, March 19th, 2008

Cinematical - Heavy Metal in Baghdad, which had its US premiere at SXSW, follows Acrassicauda, Iraq’s only (yes, only) heavy metal band, as they try to stay alive and keep making music through the fall of Saddam Hussein and the growing insurgency in the aftermath of the Iraq war. This is the kind of film that makes me tremendously grateful to live in a country where I can freely write about film, or pick up a camera and make one. I can pick up a bass and start a rock band, and I can dress how I like and wear my hair how I like without fear of being shot or arrested.

The members of Acrassicauda, before they moved out of Iraq to Syria and then Turkey, did not have those priveliges. For them, the mere wearing of at Metallica t-shirt, or growing their hair long, or even wearing a goatee, could mark them for harrasment, imprisonment, or death. Filmmakers Eddy Moretti and Suroosh Alvi follow the band from 2003-2006, capturing the band’s hopes, dreams, and attempts to keep the band together amidst mortar fire, car bombs, and the ever-growing threat of persecution for embodying Western ideals through their music [Full Story]

 
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