Screen Daily - A handsome, widescreen cinematic essay on modes of perception amongst those raised in the TV-internet age, Afterschool marks out 24-year-old America’s Antonio Campos as a film-maker to watch. This prep-school-set study of virtual influence on human behaviour and culpability is somewhat schematic and underpopulated, however, and its dark subject matter may stifle commercial interest.
Unnecessarily long at two hours, Afterschool’s somewhat amateurish cast is led by Ezra Miller as Robert, an insecure, “sensitive” student who, like his two dorm-mates, is hooked on computer images. The most seminal are violent porn scenes, and the resulting fantasies begin to cloud the boy’s already-compromised mind. (He picks up medication from the school shrink, himself a dodgy character.) When he accidentally videos two 17-year-old twin sisters dying from a dose of drugs, the resulting film sets off paranoia among teachers and students.
Campos, who has several shorts under his belt, favours long takes and slight camera movements to advance his story line. The look is clean, nearly symmetrical, a relative of the US remake of Funny Games. The sterile feel helps advance the more bloody scenes but, as a tradeoff, makes the overall film appear a bit financially strapped. Yet the aesthetic is spare; the director pays homage to veteran documentarian Frederick Wiseman, who chose to let events happen before a waiting camera rather than force them to occur in the interest of efficiency… [Full Story]












GreenCine Daily - ”The latest chapter in Jia Zhangke’s chronicles of modern Chinese history is certain to reinforce the director’s status as an international arthouse icon,” writes Dan Fainaru, reviewing 24 City for Screen Daily.
GreenCine Daily - ”Freedom of speech and freedom of the press versus religious grievances are explored to edifying effect in It’s Hard Being Loved By Jerks,” writes Lisa Nesselson in Screen Daily. “This lively, intelligently-structured documentary chronicles the suit brought by Muslim organisations against French satirical weekly Charlie Hebdo after the irreverent paper, famed for its own stable of political cartoonists, published 12 allegedly-insulting Danish cartoon interpretations of the Prophet Muhammad…. This dense, Daniel Leconte-directed documentary boasts eloquent protagonists, high stakes and a certain measure of suspense: will the values of a secular democracy whose law on free speech dates back to 1789 trump broader fears of upsetting Islamic fundamentalists?”
GreenCine Daily - ”Crossover hits from Flanders are rare and Flemish working-class romantic comedies even less so, but director Christophe van Rompaey may have actually made both when he made his feature film debut Aanrijding in Moscou (Moscow, Belgium),” writes Boyd van Hoeij at european-films.net. “Especially during its first hour, the Flemish box office sensation toys with cliché material with such an assured sense of direction and such a strong screenplay that it simply is a pleasure to watch.”
GreenCine Daily - ”Drinking, smoking and whoring ain’t what they used to be in Boogie, Radu Muntean’s attenuated reflection on friends whose paths since high school have taken starkly different routes,” writes Jay Weissberg for Variety.
GreenCine Daily - ”Twelve years after co-directing Foreign Land, filmmakers Walter Salles and Daniela Thomas have returned to update their portrait of urban Brazil, which they left in the economic throes of president Fernando Collor,” writes Deborah Young in the Hollywood Reporter.
GreenCine Daily - ”Brit helmer Thomas Clay’s sophomore feature, Soi Cowboy, demonstrates a growing maturity,” writes Leslie Felperin in Variety.
Cinematical - Boxing is a brutal sport. Does that mean you have to be a brute to succeed in it? Mike Tyson was the youngest ever heavyweight champion in the world; when he stepped into the ring, it was as if he was in absolute control over everything that happened. And when he stepped out, it was as if he had no control over anything that happened. He had a marriage implode in public. He served three years in prison for rape. He became a nightmare-parody of himself, pathetic and terrifying, telling challengers he would eat their children. And now, as seen in James Toback’s documentary Tyson, he is older, sadder, sober, off drugs and out of the fight game, trying to battle things you cannot simply strike with your fists.
GreenCine Daily - ”The only parts of Woody Allen’s Vicky Cristina Barcelona that really and truly feel alive and crackling are the Spanish-language scenes between Javier Bardem and Penélope Cruz,” writes Jeffrey Wells.
GreenCine Daily - ”‘Now that is a movie!’ I exclaimed to a friend on exiting this morning’s screening of Arnaud Desplechin’s Un Conte De Noël (A Christmas Story [site]).”


