Saturday, November 16, 2013

Steve McQueen Ensures that You Will Never Forget Solomon Northup's Story and the Horrors of 1840s as Seen in "12 Years A Slave" (2013)


It's been 7 days since I have seen Steve McQueen's masterpiece and not a day has gone by without an imprint of an image from that time of torture. Using the word "master" doesn't ring the same way. Even when used for a neutral reference, such as the recent Tennis Master tournament. "Master" now brings images of the highest form of human-executed injustice. Brings up the evil portrayal of Masters in America's 1840s, so brilliantly and disturbingly demonstrated by Michael Fassbender (and hey, what a director-actor duo, this is the third McQueen - Fassbender partnership). Just now, as I was taking some pomegranate, another image came to mind. The despair and hope of Solomon Northup's attempt to use rasberry leftover juice as writing ink. Let me warn you. You will suffer throughout the 2 hours of the film. There is no good time of the week or time of the day to see it. It will mark you. As Manohla Dargis says "The Blood and Tears, not the Magnolias". But then, once you digest the immediate effects of the torture on screen (perhaps the most viciously displayed ever), you will then start to process all the malignant and unjust dynamics that marked that horrendous period. And the will to survive. An Oscar frontrunner for sure. Eliofor for leading role, Fassbender for supporting, cinematography is supreme,...everything. "I don't want to survive, I want to live." p.s. Brad Pitt's appearance - really? And when the credits rolled at the beginning I thought he actually had a supporting role. That was a 7 minute (tops?) guest appearance.

Tuesday, October 15, 2013

NYFF 2013: Own, Love your Moments, with or without Time Travelling Power in "About Time" (2013)


Oh, cmon you cynical critics. There is every bit of magic and the right dose of, if you must call it, cliche, and every bit of reminder of the power of love and family and tradition (that is more in more in short supply in this overdigitized and overplanned era), that Richard Curtis brings to us. If you really look for it, yes there is some syrup (i.e. pourings of heartfelt elements), but you have to leave your biases and skepticism at the door. Perhaps I am a sucker for these "Love Actually" types of movies, but I praise a film that makes me laugh, smile, cry, remember, want to go back and travel in time and know the exact moment I would want to change, and smile again because there are pockets of triumph when we follow who we love and smile again by believing that family is the strongest and most immortal gift we can have. And more in defense of the critics - it is not a perfectly mixed Curtis-romanse recipe. Because formula-type movies do not just perfectly fall into place like "About Time".

NYFF 2013: The Getaway Life You Choose, Passively or Actively..."In the Darkroom" (2013)


Friday, April 26, 2013

"If You Ride Like Lightning, You're Gonna Crash Like Thunder", Cianfrance's "Place Beyond the Pines" (2012) Triptych is Ripping


Some movies are meant to be made. By that director, with those actors, with those stories. "The Place Beyond the Pines" is one of those movies. The ripping and gripping start captivates you, but also worries you, for what is to come. The powerful force of three motorcyclists, racing in a closed circular space, serves almost as a premonition of the intensity, randomness and destiny of events and consequences that will forever bind three generations. In honor of Roger Ebert, whose last review (or one of the last reviews) was the "Pines", I borrow this powerful description of the ouverture and the finale that keeps bouncing in your mind after the movie closes: "The man straps on his helmet and climbs on his motorcycle, and he and two other daredevils are soon zipping past and around each other inside that metal cage, racing around and around and upside down, defying gravity and all common sense. We end the movie with another young man on another motorbike, racing to avoid his fate, blissfully unaware the path he has chosen is most likely to take him to the very place he wants to avoid. It is a final shot of heartbreaking perfection."

Thursday, January 24, 2013

Live From Park City: Sundance 2013 Coverage - Revolutions, Sex & Cocaine in London, Balkan War-Wounds, Hallucinogenic Chilean Road Trips and Keeping the Spark Alive in a Deeply Committed Long-Term Love


For the record: waking on January mornings, on very little sleep, with the rays of Park City sun, mountain air in your lungs and pure white snow as one of the first overwhelming sights when you step outside, heading on your way to a morning screening or a slope, is unquestionably one of the best things in life. Instant energy, inspiration, drive, immersion in serendipitous Sundance makings is your engine for all of the festival days. Now, onto to the cinematic highlights. By the time you landed on my obscure, hidden blog, you would have already read or experienced the buzz: sex, politics and almost an equal number of women film directors. Three (“Before Midnight”, “Crystal Fairy”, “Look of Love”) out of the six movies viewed (yes, only six, very hungry for more) had explicit nudity. Many more contain flesh, such as Daniel Radcliffe’s much talked about sex scene in “Kill Your Darlings” , “Lovelace” which showcases the story of a porn star, James Franco’s “Interior. Leather Bar.” on the sexually explicit, gay and S&M film as well as another Franco film “Kink” about sex, submission and pornographic business, “Two Mothers” about forbidden, morally questionable attractions, a secret affair in “A Teacher”, and of course, Sundance’s most buzzed films “Don John’s Addiction” and the list goes on.
BEFORE MIDNIGHT (RICHARD LINKLATER) Enough of sex, onto love. “Before Midnight”, one of the most anticipated festival screenings, marked the return of the Sundance festival darling, Richard Linklater, almost twenty years later after the world-wide success of “Before Sunrise” (premiered in 1995), followed by the “Before Sunset” sequel. Linklater, Hawke and Delpy live up to impossible expectations in “Before Midnight”. And they deliver absolute perfection, the one you could not even imagine as perfection, but once you see it, you know it. A world premiere that was 18 years in the making, embodying the richness, charms and difficulty of keeping the spark in long-term committed romantic relations. We meet Celine and Jesse on a late summer day in Greece, both in their 40s, pondering the eternal questions of lifelong love and the difficulty in preserving it in the way it originated amidst the avalanche of obligations, expectations, life complications, disappointments and pasts that come in the way. Humor, naturalism, honesty, argumentative climax, lightness, heaviness, Greek sun, identity, the complexity and simplicity of true longlasting love that permeates all generations. In the Q&A session of the world premiere, Linklater emphasized the naturalism that graces each scene of the film, a reflection of the natural symbiotic artistic bond between what he calls now a “middle-aged threesome couple” – Linklater, Deply and Hawke, who jointly wrote and re-wrote and tweaked each line in the screenplay. Delpy adds: “Weirdly enough, we rehearse a lot and when we see that a sentence doesn’t feel natural the way it was written, we rewrite it to feel natural like the speaking way of talking.” Best Original Screenplay of the year (and beyond).
CIRCLES (SRDJAN GOLUBOVIC) Tracing the lifelong guilt and grief triggered by one act of heroism in war-torn Bosnia in 1993, where a Serbian soldier (Marko) loses his life while saving the life of a Bosnian shopkeeper. Twelve years after the tragic incident, “Circles” questions the ripple effects that can be provoked by the good and the bad. The closed or open circles that define an individual’s life. The war wounds remain, but each survivor has a choice of living with revenge and debilitating grief or redemption and reconciliation. Note (Award update): winner of the World Cinema Dramatic Special Jury Award (along with “Pussy Riot” for the World Documentary section of the award).
LOOK OF LOVE (MICHAEL WINTERBOTTOM) Masterfully chronicling the scandalous and erotic life and career of Paul Raymond, Britain’s pioneer and king of “gentlemen’s clubs” and later on, owner of an empire of clubs and erotic magazines (as well as ample real estate). A nightlife treat for the eyes (and be ready to be awed by the beauty of Fiona, the character that plays Paul Raymond’s second or third most important woman in his life. The first being his daughter, the anchor of the film).
THE SQUARE (JEHANE NOUJAIM) As the unrests, clashes and deaths and injuries of innocent civilians in Egypt continue even as of today, Noujaim’s documentary “The Square” (Al Midan), represents an even more timely and urgent chronicle of the revolution and the hardships and bravery of revolutionaries fighting for a better Egypt for now more than 2 years. Tahrir Square is the epicenter of the documentary, emanating hope, power of youthful idealism and revolutionary spirit as the fall of Mubarak is documented, but then changing its nature as the disappointments of the transitional period start to emerge. Khalid Abdalla (who was also present at the screening), embodies the revolutionary spirit, with the documented portrayal of an untiring fight for political change and reform. Note (Award update): winner of the World Cinema Documentary Audience Award – truly deserving award (the world premiere screenings in Park City received standing ovations).
CRYSTAL FAIRY (SEBASTIAN SILVA) Take note of a director-actor partnership – Michael Cera, the film's star and Sebastian Silva, the Chilean director, are debuting two films at this year’s Sundance Festival (“Crystal Fairy” and “Magic Magic”). Crystal Fairy is a road trip movie, following a group of friends (three very handsome Chileans and an American) driving around Chile, in search of the San Pedro cactus with hallucinogenic properties, with the sole goal of ultimately living the mescaline experience together once they reach a beach destination. Along the way, or better said, at the beginning of the trip, an accidentally invited hippie very nude female joins them (Crystal Fairy aka Hairy Fairy mid-way through the trip). Free-spirited search for life’s natural highs. Note (Award update): winner of the Directing Award – World Cinema Dramatic
Honorable mention: The Machine Which Makes Everything Disappear – A Georgian gem showcasing individual vignettes in the form of an interview audition that becomes much more than that; Pussy Riot – A Punk Prayer – because the revolutionary movement was too important not to document. Unhonorable mention: The Meteor – note to self and caution to festivalgoers - read the film synopsis VERY CAREFULLY if it is part of the “New Frontier”. Without warning, the film was a compilation of one of the most depressing voiceovers and stories, dialogue-less and potentially conducive to a collective suicide by its first audience. Yes, there were some impressive images on screen (waterfalls and amateurish Terrence Malick-esque presentation of natural beauty), but that didn’t compensate for the uninvited depressive abstractionism. Watchlist (hoping the release dates are very soon): Don Jon’s Addiction, Running from Crazy, Lovelace, Kill Your Darlings, jObs, Two Mothers, Afternoon Delight, Ain’t Them Bodies Saints, Big Sur, Breathe In, The East, The Necessary Death of Charlie Countryman, Very Good Girls, The Way, Way Back, The Crash Reel, Pandora’s Promise, We Steal Secrets: The Story of Wikileaks, Concussion, Emanuel and the Truth About Fishes, The Spectacular Now, Manhunt, Lasting.