Showing posts with label movie chatter. Show all posts
Showing posts with label movie chatter. Show all posts

March 6, 2013

Last Year at the Movies

Holy shit, what a year of movies we just had.

Like last year, I decided to hold off on my 'Year in Film' wrap-up post until after the Oscars (the theory being that movie years don't follow the calendar, they run from statuette to statuette), and given the high quality of some of the films I've seen in January and February, I'm more convinced than ever that it's the right move.

The last couple of times I've sat down to write a post like this, I've gone back over what I've seen, picked my five favourite movies and done a paragraph or two on each of them ... this year I came up with a list of fifteen movies I want to talk about, and I did it without even blinking. That's how good a year it's been.

(As is always gonna be the case when you live in Australia, there are some oddities due to the timing of release dates. A Separation won an Oscar last year, but we didn't see it until April; while at the other end of the spectrum, I saw The Hunt, War Witch and Sleepless Night at the Film Festival, and none of them have actually come out yet. To keep it simple for myself, I just stuck to 'Did I see it this year? Yes? Then it bloody well counts.')

So, to business ...


Watching Amour feels kind of like having a spike driven through your heart ... and I swear I mean that in a good way. I have rarely seen/read/heard/experienced in any art form, a more sympathetic, clear-eyed, honest, and fucking heart-breaking depiction of what love truly is. It's so beautiful that it hurts, and so painful that it becomes sublime. This is truly an extraordinary work of art.

The vast, vast majority of films about love are about the first initial passion, the time when you've just met and you can't get enough of each other, and the heat and excitement are still there. There's a quote from one of my favourite novels, Captain Corelli's Mandolin, which runs thus: 'Love is not breathlessness, it is not excitement, it is not the promulgation of promises of eternal passion, it is not the desire to mate every second minute of the day, it is not lying awake at night imagining that he is kissing every cranny of your body [...] That is just being "in love", which any fool can do. Love itself is what is left over when being in love has burned away, and this is both an art and a fortunate accident.'

Amour examines the meaning and consequences of true devotion in a way I've never quite seen before. It's a very small, limited film (with very few exceptions we never leave the apartment shared by Anne and Georges, the elderly couple at its core), but that microscopic nature means that every detail is freighted with meaning. When Georges helps Anne off with her coat, when Anne fetches Georges a soft-boiled egg, it's recognisably part of the to and fro of forming a life together. Then, when Anne becomes unwell, suddenly the tiny details of their life become difficult, become less serene and more painful: Georges helping Anne hike up her underwear after she's gone to the toilet, or Anne sending Georges from the bedroom once she's settled because she doesn't want him to feel responsible for her 24/7. And as Anne's body slowly succumbs to illness and her indignities mount up, their devotion to each other doesn't lessen. What starts as Georges cutting up Anne's food because she can't use a knife and fork, becomes learning how to roll her to put on a diaper, becomes ... well, I won't say. Their devotion is tested, yes, and there are moments when it is found wanting, but always their love for each other brings them back into harmony. Even at the outer extreme of pain and suffering, Georges can calm Anne down and stop her crying simply by holding her hand.

Michael Haneke's previous films have often left me a bit cold. They're too cerebral, too clinical. Here that wasn't a problem, and I think it's thanks in large part to the simply astonishing performances of Emmanuelle Riva and Jean-Louis Trintignant. It is difficult to convey just how good they are in these roles. And Haneke, as both writer and director, exhibits a humane and compassionate care for the subjects of his film that he's often disregarded. Amour is still around in cinemas at the moment, and I urge everybody to see it. I shouldn't say this kind of thing ahead of time, but I have no doubt that this will stand as Haneke's masterwork, and will be remembered as one of the key films of this, or any, time.




Thomas Vinterberg's The Hunt is an incredible film, but defining its genius is quite hard: it tells a fairly simple story incredibly well. It's not a film with obvious bells and whistles, and it's not a film with a strong directorial style: one of my comments coming out was that one of the masters of 40's or 50's cinema could have made exactly the same film in exactly the same way. Vinterberg takes a kind of classical approach, using great camera positioning, great lighting and great editing to allow his suite of magnificent actors to shine. Sometimes that's all there is to it (ha, I say 'all there is' like that's easy!).

Mads Mikkelsen (who is seriously one of the best actors in the world; if you only know him as Le Chiffre from Casino Royale then do yourself a favour and look him up) is Lucas, a kindergarten teacher in a small town in rural Denmark. He's separated from his wife, and doesn't get to see his teenage son as much as he would like. He knows everybody in town, and they all know him. Among his students are the children of some of his best friends. It's a quiet, comfortable life, one where every day is much like the last, and where Lucas' routines carry him through his moments of sadness or loneliness. Until the daughter of his best friend falsely accuses him of molesting her (there is no doubt the accusation is false, but Vinterberg is clever enough to give the girl clear psychological reasons for her lie) and all fucking hell breaks loose.

The way the fallout is handled, and the way that every character, from the most vicious to the most (seemingly) well-meaning deals with it, make up the bulk of the film. Slowly, as word filters through the town, Lucas becomes a pariah. All his relationships, everything he thought he could rely on, it's all slowly beaten down and destroyed. He tries as hard as he can to remain upright, to keep his chin in the air, but as events spiral down and down this becomes impossible. It's one of those incredible movies in which everything that happens is both A) the only thing that could have happened, but also B) a surprise. When a plot point is both unexpected, but also retrospectively inevitable, I consider that to be screenwriting of the highest order. And The Hunt does it again and again and again. Without giving too much away, the film's ending is absolutely devastating, though not in a way I ever could have predicted.

It's finally coming out in Australia in May, apparently, and I'd urge everyone to see it if they can. It's not exactly a pleasant time at the movies, but it is a brilliant film.



Like the two films above, A Separation, directed by Asghar Farhadi, is a fairly small-scale, intimate drama. I love movies that simply take strongly-defined characters, put them in a complicated situation, and then sort of sit back and let all the drama come from the way different people react to their shared circumstances. A Separation is a brilliantly structured script, because everything about how it plays out is present from the beginning, yet it manages to be endlessly surprising, and genuinely tense. Like The Hunt, it manages that trick of being unexpected, but also having the way things turn out feel like the only way things could ever possibly have turned out.

Nader (Payman Maadi) and Simin (Leila Hatami) are still in love with each other, but she's desperate to emigrate to the U.S. to give their daughter a better chance in life, while he's devoted to his ailing father and refuses to contemplate it. When they are denied a divorce and remain stuck in Tehran, Simin moves out. To help look after his father, Nader hires a nurse/cleaning woman who is lower class, and also intensely religious. Slowly, but with horrible inevitability, the characters pull in different directions and the story becomes an ever-tightening downward spiral of confrontations and lies and contradictions. It's remarkable how much drama Farhadi can wring out of a small handful of people acting at cross-purposes ... but given that's the very basis of drama, maybe it's not so remarkable after all.

The other thing worth mentioning about A Separation is the way that, even though it barely ever interacts with a larger Iranian society outside the family's apartment (and never makes mention of Iranian politics at all), it still presents a compelling and critical portrait of present-day Tehran. The whole film is drenched in an atmosphere of tension, double-dealing and religiosity (both genuine and purposefully feigned), and manages to give extraordinary insight into the character of Iran without ever making that the film's focus. All the performances are brilliant, and Farhadi's use of his camera is fantastic as well, slinking around Nader's apartment and always showing us just a little less than we want to see.



Look, I love Point Break. But if you'd told me back then that Kathryn Bigelow would evolve into a filmmaker of such mastery and subtlety that she could make Zero Dark Thirty, I doubt I'd have believed you (I also would have been about ten years old, and you'd be a time-traveler, so whatever...). Here all her skills with genre and action are present, but they're at the service of a story that's deeply ambiguous and (however much the characters try to hide their feelings) that's emotionally fraught.

Telling the long, slow story of the search for Osama bin Laden, Zero Dark Thirty doesn't flinch from detailing the horrors of its time. Scenes of torture, locations that don't officially exist, prisoners who are too valuable to be on any manifest: the moral black holes that America's intelligence services fell through in the years after the World Trade Center attacks are portrayed with a refreshingly dispassionate eye, forcing the audience to examine how complicit we are as we watch these characters work. Aside from the interrogation scenes shared between Jason Clarke and Reda Kateb, which are both extraordinarily well done and painful to watch, there's a brilliant moment, more than halfway through the film, in which a handful of characters (including Jessica Chastain's Maya, the forceful, obsessive protagonist) watch President Obama give a TV interview. In his answers, Obama condemns the use of torture, saying he wants America to regain its moral standing in the world ... and our characters are watching him with looks of utter disgust on their faces. Which is confronting as hell, because you find yourself thinking "I was rooting for you people ... who the fuck are you?"

Bigelow doesn't let her characters off the hook, and she doesn't let us off either. Another example comes in the final raid on bin Laden's Abbottabad compound. The marines involved don't take any chances: standing over a wounded enemy, they shoot them repeatedly to make sure they stay down. Again, it's confronting as hell: however much you understand the logic, people in movies aren't supposed to behave like this, and we'd all like to believe that people in real life don't behave like this either. Though the marines take this act as a given, there's one brief shot of one of the marines letting his emotions play across his face after shooting a man to make sure he's dead. It's the briefest of moments, but it speaks volumes about the horrible compromises America (and its allies) were willing to make.

A lot of people will dislike Zero Dark Thirty because it doesn't mesh with their political views. I think it's pretty telling that both liberals and conservatives have condemned it (for different reasons, obviously): when you're pissing off both sides of politics, you must be doing something right. Right? Personally, I loved following the intricate web of half-facts and suppositions, I loved the way a lot of the more surprising and 'un-movie-ish' elements just had to come direct from real life, and I loved the way it didn't talk down to us. Its critique of the America it's depicting is subtle, but it's certainly there (the very last scene makes that abundantly clear, I'd have thought).



If the plots of those first four movies all follow a relentless, remorseless logic, Holy Motors is the joker in the pack. It's a wild, surreal ride, one in which you need to work hard to discover your own meanings, and make your own connections. A mysterious gentleman, played by the incredible chameleon Denis Lavant, travels across Paris in a limousine, on his way to nine appointments. At each stop, he must become a new character and play out a scene. He begins as a banker, and becomes in turn an elderly female beggar, a motion-captured monster, a diabolical green-suited nutcase, a scuzzy hitman and his victim, a bewildered father to a teenage girl, an accordian maestro, a dying uncle, an old lover, and a father to a family of apes.

Almost all the segments deal in some respect with death and grief (and those that don't are all about parenthood, and responsibility). After my first viewing I found out that Leos Carax, the writer/director, had made the film in response to the death of his long-term partner, who was also the mother of his child. Seeing it a second time armed with that knowledge, the entire film suddenly clicked into place for me. Don't get me wrong, I'd loved it first time around, but now I felt I could grasp, not just what I was projecting onto the movie, but what Carax's intentions may have been. The prologue in particular (which features Carax himself waking up in an exitless room, discovering a hidden door in the wall, and going through it to find himself in a cinema, where he can watch what is about to unfold) suddenly seemed a vital component of the whole, rather than simply a brief introduction. Oh, and I just realised: Lavant's character (when he's in the limo, between assignments) is named M. Oscar ... which is a corruption of LeOS CARax. Shiiiiiiit ...

Ordinarily, I'm a guy who is drawn to narrative. The machinations of a well-constructed plot are usually where I get my cinematic pleasures. Holy Motors flies in the face of that: it operates with dream logic, with symbolism, with imagery loaded with meaning that remains undefined and impossible to describe ... yet it manages to make perfect emotional sense. Walking out I was humbled, and exhilarated, but somehow not confused (and seriously, I should have been confused). I'm not sure exactly how Carax pulled that off, but I know I'll watch Holy Motors many more times trying to figure it out.



Margaret begins with one of the most harrowing scenes I've ever seen: Anna Paquin's Lisa sorta kinda causes a woman to get hit by a bus. As the woman bleeds to death in her arms, and a crowd gathers around them (some trying to be helpful, some trying and failing, some just gawking), the fact the woman's daughter is also named Lisa leads to confusion, angst, and a profound moment of emotional connection.

How Lisa, a pretty ordinary teenage girl, smarter than most but still young and wilful and convinced of her own righteousness, deals with the emotional fallout of that experience constitutes the bulk of the movie. We see her at school, arguing politics and literature in her classrooms and crushing on one of her teachers; we see her at home, chafing against her mother and investing too much hope in her absentee dad; we see her investigating the life of the woman who died, and getting to know her friends; and we see her decide the bus driver should be brought to justice.

This film is a huge, sprawling beast, sending tentacles of subplots out in all sorts of unusual and unexpected directions, but it works because it's still ultimately following Lisa's emotional path. Unable to deal with what happened, she lashes out in every possible direction, sometimes in ways that seemingly have nothing to do with the accident. But it's always, always about her guilt, and about her futile and misguided attempts to come to terms with what she saw, and heard, and said. The very non-logic of her actions is somehow the most realistic thing about the film: Lisa might be the most psychologically real character I've ever seen in a movie. It's an incredible tightrope that writer/director Kenneth Lonergan walks: Lisa's actions make no logical sense, but in a way that makes perfect psychological sense. It's really a great movie, but not one that's easy to watch, or to describe. Instead I'll just say: watch it!



One of my pet theories that I've had for a while is that there's no reason why the only kinds of movies (and books) we ever get in fantasy settings are adventure movies. In literature there's a tradition of what's called 'Magical Realism', which is basically a hoity-toity way of saying 'wacky, fantastical shit happens, but it's still serious, you get me?' Beasts of the Southern Wild is one of the best realised examples I've seen of a cinematic equivalent to Magical Realism.

It's set in The Bathtub, a bayou landscape that is both powerfully original and obviously inspired by the swamps of rural Louisiana. A levee wall divides the haves, with their industries and cities and smoke, and the have-nots, content to fish and drink and throw raucous holidays for no damn reason. After a massive storm, The Bathtub sinks beneath the water and the few remaining residents struggle to survive; meanwhile a group of Aurochs have unthawed from the South Pole and are slowly making their way North.

But honestly, all of that is merely background to the real story, which is about the relationship between Hushpuppy (Quvenzhané Wallis) and her proud, defiant father Wink (Dwight Henry). Director Benh Zeitlin dares to give us a parental relationship that isn't honey and roses: Wink is an angry alcoholic, he disappears for days at a time, and he teaches Hushpuppy about the world in a way that really only ever swings between being rough and being harsh. They are two fierce characters, and their bond is just as ferocious as they are. They live on the same parcel of land, but in two separate trailers, only coming together for meals. When Wink goes missing, Hushpuppy fends for herself, and it isn't too different from her life when he's around. In one fantastic sequence, she deliberately sets her trailer alight and hides, watching her dad frantically search for her, as if testing how much he cares. Later, after they've been forcibly evacuated to a shelter beyond the levee, Hushpuppy's been forced into a freshly laundered Sunday School dress and had her hair combed: when Wink sees his daughter tamed it's the final straw for him, and he plans an escape.

Beautifully acted (Wallis gives one of those child performances, on a par with Keisha Castle-Hughes in Whale Rider; Henry matches her, rippling with anger and frustration, but also able to draw on deep reserves of joy and love), and featuring some stunning imagery, the thing that really sends this film over the top is the score. Some of the music, inspired equally by New Orleans jazz and the finger-pickin' country and western of the swamps, is absolutely stunning.



It takes a brave, brave man to make Django Unchained, and Quentin Tarantino is seriously as brave as they come.

Django is definitely a companion piece to Inglourious Basterds, but to my mind it's more successful because it has more of an emotional kick. If I was guessing, I'd suggest it's because, as an American, race relations in the U.S. is a topic perhaps closer to his hear. Either way, after spending the Kill Bills and Death Proof learning a whole bunch of kick-ass genre skills, the way he's now deploying those skills to make art that is both deadly serious and wickedly entertaining makes him one unique motherfucker.

All the cast are superb: Jamie Foxx manages to seem of the time, then comes into his own as a modern man over the course of the film; Christoph Waltz charms our boots off; and Leonardo DiCaprio makes his plantation owner both evil and sinisterly charming. But the standouts are Samuel L. Jackson, having the courage to give a nuanced portrayal of a particular kind of weakness, and Kerry Washington, who manages to give Django something worth fighting for (and the audience something to root for) in very little screen time.

It was a bit wooly around the edges, for sure (we really could have done without the LeQuint Dickey employees, I think), but it's still the bravest, most audacious movie about race in America that I've seen in a long while. That it's funny as fuck is a bonus, and that it manages to be quite moving as well makes it, honestly, one of Tarantino's very best. With his filmography, that's a hell of a compliment.



Occasionally a film is so enigmatic that I find it difficult to write about. The Master defies easy categorisation, or easy anything, really. When Freddie Quell (Joaquin Phoenix, giving an incredible, close-mouthed, hunch-backed performance) leaves the army at the end of World War II he's clearly suffering from what we today would know as post-traumatic stress disorder. There are only two things on his mind: women, and turning any god-damn thing he can find into booze and drinking it until he passes out. When he comes into the orbit of Lancaster Dodd (Philip Seymour Hoffman), a man intent on starting his own self-help style religion, Dodd takes him on as his ultimate project. Dodd spends the rest of the movie trying to heal Quell, whose issues are so primal that they remain stubbornly un-heal-able.

The intricate, complex dance that these two characters weave between them is something to behold. Paul Thomas Anderson went all the way down the rabbit-hole on this one, never for a second deigning to give his audience an easy, or even comfortable, moment. It's dark, and darkly funny, and oblique, and absolutely beautiful. Some might have wanted it to be more critical of Scientology (Dodd is clearly based on L. Ron Hubbard), but Anderson remains fairly even-handed because, frankly, I don't think that's what he was interested in. It's the way that Quell's primal mind can't be tamed that fascinates him, and the way that the challenge of that is at once so necessary and so hurtful for Dodd and his ambitions.

Look, it's coming out on DVD next week, so maybe I'll have a better understanding of it (and be better able to discuss it) soon. Until then, I'll just say that it's a brilliantly made puzzle, and months after my one and only viewing, it's stayed right at the forefront of my mind.



War Witch was one of those MIFF movies that I was worried would disappear without a trace, and which I'd never have a chance to see again. Happily, it got nominated for the Best Foreign Language Film Oscar, which usually means we'll see it at cinemas sometime soon, or at the very least that it'll get a DVD release.

Though written and directed by a Canadian, it's set in an unspecified African nation that is being torn to pieces by a civil war. When rebels destroy her village and kill her parents, Komona, a girl of about twelve or thirteen, is taken and forced to become a soldier. Soon after, she realises she can speak with the dead (some of the sequences when she does are spooky as hell), and use what they tell her to aid her cause. Eventually the rebel leader starts consulting her like an oracle, but all she wants to do is escape, along with the albino warlock she's fallen in love with.

The supernatural/spiritual elements are presented totally straight: there's never any suggestion that Komona isn't seeing what the film shows her seeing. What's great about it is that despite that, there's still an inner, psychological explanation for why she's been granted her gift, and the denouement works perfectly on both levels. When Komona stops being a pawn and takes action in her own right, it's as both a witch and a lost and frightened girl, and her action heals her in both ways.

The structure of the film feels kind of meandering and plotless, until a revelation with twenty minutes to go makes you understand why it's been presented in that way. The film is about Komona discovering what she has to do to bury the ghosts of her past (and literally bury the ghosts that she's seeing): it's only at that moment of discovery that we in the audience come to know where she's been heading this whole time. I could see people being put off by the slow, oblique way that it plays out, but it worked perfectly on me.



The Cabin in the Woods is kind of a miracle: who knew there could be more to say about the whole 'slasher movie featuring teens in a remote locale' thing? The script is breathtaking in its chutzpah, not just deconstructing the entire genre of American horror movies, but actually tying every American horror movie into one grand tradition and one ultimate story (we also briefly get a glimpse of deconstruction of horror flicks from all over the world, and it's hilarious). If you don't know the film's genius conceit, I'm not sure if I should give it away or not. So, look, I urge you to see this movie if you haven't already, and if you want to go in unspoiled, scroll down right now to the next photograph. Deal?

Okay, so Cabin basically reveals that every horror film we've ever seen has been orchestrated by an underground government department responsible for sacrificing innocent blood to appease endlessly slumbering 'Old Gods'. As we watch, we get two movies: the first is a fairly standard, by the numbers 'zombies attacking kids in a cabin' movie, but it's made fresh because we also see the bored, bickering civil servants who are pulling the strings (played by the perfectly cast Richard Jenkins and Bradley Whitford). The underground segments are dryly hilarious, and the running commentary they provide on the above-ground horror story is note-perfect.

Where the film truly lifts into all-timer territory is in the last fifteen minutes or so. Once our last couple of teens figure out what's going on and penetrate the underground facility, all hell breaks loose in one of the most fun (and also most batshit fucking insane) sequences I've ever seen. It is seriously extraordinary that a film can be so intensely pleasurable, but also keep giving pointed commentary about how and why we watch horror movies, and the way we react to the characters within them. I'm not particularly a horror aficionado, and since Shaun of the Dead I kinda figured the horror/comedy thing was played out. I was delighted to be wrong.



If for no other reason, Sleepless Night deserves a spot on this list for featuring by far the best hand-to-hand fight scene I've seen in a movie in years (since, maybe, Matt Damon and Marton Csokas in Bourne Supremacy? Can anyone think of a great one that's more recent?). It takes place in an industrial kitchen, and it's fucking brutal. The best thing about it, though, is that the guys actually get hurt. Over the course of the fight they slow down, their breathing comes harder, they get groggy and they weaken dramatically. I highly recommend it for any lover of action cinema: I know it's kind of shallow to say this, but ... it's awesome.

Thankfully, the rest of the film matches that sequence by being a taut, pacy, clever little thriller. Set in one location, a gigantic nightclub, over a well-defined period of time, one night, Sleepless Night uses those (seeming) limitations to its advantage. All the characters have hidden depths and secret agendas, the interpersonal relationships are complicated and ever-evolving, and (until the kitchen, anyway) it's much much more about smarts than about brute force. An American version (which is apparently already on the way) would undoubtedly feature a heap of automatic weaponry, and bullets flying all over the place. Here, there are only a handful of guns in the entire thing, and each individual bullet fired is a huge moment. Makes all the difference.



Polisse was another absolutely cracking French cop movie, and it succeeded by having the audacity to be almost purely a drama, rather than a thriller. To portray just how hectic and brutal it is being a part of the French police's child protection unit, the writer/director Maiwenn doesn't let any one storyline sink in before the next one arrives. There's hardly any children (or parents) who feature in more than one scene: we meet them, get a tiny glimpse into their lives, and then they're gone. This has the effect of making the movie much more about the cops than about their cases, and lets us understand how difficult it is to keep caring, case after case, day after day. When, late in the film, the unit cracks and starts laughing their heads off at a particularly dimwitted teenage rape victim, you can totally understand why.

The episodic nature of the film, coupled with the large ensemble cast, mean that inevitably some segments work better than others. Joeystarr (pictured above, who was also in Sleepless Night) and Marina Fois were the stand-outs, while a couple of the more bland, handsome young white guys had their characters' kind of disappear into the wall. When it was at it's best, though, it was completely riveting. By the end you're exhausted by the never-ending parade of sadness, just as the characters are. It's not an easy film, particularly, but it is a great one.



A new Wes Anderson movie is always an event for me, I friggin' love the guy, and Moonrise Kingdom didn't disappoint. It featured all of his hallmarks: whimsy and quirk, symmetrical compositions, a retro soundtrack, and painstaking and particular design work. But it was the true beating heart underneath it all that made Moonrise special. Despite all his stylistic tics, it's the generous, big-hearted nature of his movies that makes them special in my opinion. They're as gorgeous in their themes and messages as they are in their look, which is saying a lot.

Some people can find Anderson's work too full of affectation to be moved by it, but honestly, I've never had that problem. Even The Life Aquatic and Darjeeling Limited worked beautifully for me (those two, in my completely unscientific poll of friends and family, seem to be the ones that least struck a chord with audiences). Anderson making a film about first love? Perfect.

Jared Gilman and Kara Heyward were fantastic as the kids, being cute as heck without being cutesy, and completely selling their (puppy) love. The rest of the huge cast do fantastic work throughout, with Bruce Willis and Edward Norton the stand-outs. Willis nails his character's world-weariness (but seemed in control of it, unlike most of his recent action movies, when he's just seemed weary), and Norton did well to convey the sadness and loneliness at the heart of his (essentially comic) obsessed scoutmaster.



The backlash against Argo has been building for a while, and now that it's won Best Picture at the Oscars it will certainly come to be reviled in certain quarters. That's just the way shit goes. But fuck 'em: Argo is a really good film, the kind of canny political thriller that Hollywood seemingly forgot how to make sometime around 1978. All the cast (yes, even Affleck) do good work, but I want to give special mention to Scoot McNairy, who's fast becoming my favourite character actor of his generation, and to Bryan Cranston, who is surely now the ultimate 'wear a suit and deliver exposition' guy working. Seriously, he could find a way to turn reading the phonebook into an interesting character.

Those criticising the film for ignoring Iranians aren't giving enough weight to the opening credits, which resonate through the rest of the movie, and to the character of Sahar, the housekeeper. She only had a handful of scenes, to be sure, but the climax of her story was a massive gut-punch, pulling the rug out from under our happy ending.

One of the real joys for me with this film was some of the tiny details, the kind of thing that must have been true because you'd never have thought of it otherwise. Smashing visa plates with a hammer. Orphans being tasked with piecing together shredded documents. The guy at the Iranian embassy not having new visa stamps yet, and crossing out the word 'Kingdom' to write in 'Islamic Republic'. The alcohol service on the plane being stopped when you enter Iranian airspace, a detail that pays off big time in the finale. All those little things helped the whole movie ring true, and if there were occasional sour notes (cop cars on the runway chasing a plane? Really?) they were more than overwhelmed by what the film did well.


***

Whew! When you throw in the various charms/delights/gut-punches/horrors/freak-outs of: Sound of My Voice, The Perks of Being a Wallflower, The Intouchables, Monsieur Lazhar, Coriolanus, Anna Karenina, Margin Call, A Royal Affair, Lincoln, Killing Them Softly, The King of Devil's Island, Looper, Safety Not Guaranteed, Compliance, 50/50, Robot and Frank, A Dangerous Method, The Grey and 21 Jump Street (yes, really), you've got yourself a hell of a year at the movies. Any of those could easily have found themselves on the fringes of my top five in a weak year, in 2012 they're sadly reduced to being meat and potatoes. They're all worth a look if you find the time.

To cap it off in even more spectacular style, I had a great MIFF this year too, and as well as the films I discussed in depth above, if the opportunity to see any of Ace Attorney, The Ambassador, Flicker, Carre Blanc, Chicken With Plums or Caesar Must Die comes your way, take it.

If 2012 was missing anything, it was probably a really kick-arse animated film: I rate Wreck-It Ralph the best of this year's crop but it's merely good, not great. After the pretty so-so Brave I'm hoping Pixar can return to form soon. It's harsh to demand Wall*E or The Incredibles every time, but the bar's only that high because they set it there.

Also, while we all know 95% of action blockbusters are unmitigated crap (I was gonna list all the dreadful ones I saw this year, but just looking at the titles started to depress me), a truly great one does come along every so often. If The Avengers hadn't started so sluggishly, or if The Dark Knight Rises hadn't been so oddly, thoughtlessly half-arsed at critical moments, they could have been it. Don't get me wrong, I really enjoyed watching both of those as part of a packed, enthusiastic opening night audience. At home on DVD, however, the flaws in each become much more noticeable, and I won't be returning to them the way I do Die Hard or Aliens or The Matrix or Inception or Spiderman 2 (fuck you, Sam Raimi rules). Sorry superhero fans, but The Hunger Games was probably the best big-budget action-adventure of the year.

Whew again! Without wanting to be too mean about it, good luck topping that, 2013!

Cheers, JC.

February 26, 2013

The 2013 Oscars (part two)

Thank fuck for Argo.

When fucking Life of Pi won Best Director for Ang Lee, I got flat out angry. Then I got scared: was it going to carry that momentum into a throoughly undeserved Best Picture win? Luckily, beardy Ben Affleck and crew were on hand to extract Oscar from a bad situation, and get it back safe and sound.

I'm probably being unfair to Life of Pi, and to Mr. Lee, but I found it to be shallow nonsense, which purported to have grand insights and which actually had no fucking insight at all. It deserved to win for VFX, and while I didn't love that it got up for cinematography, I could at least understand the thinking. Score? I don't remember a bar, but okay, I'll take your word for it. But Best Director of the year? In this year of brilliant movies? Nuh-uh, no way, not a hope in hell. Still, the major fuck-up with the director category happened with the nominations, this minor fuck-up was just the exclamation point.

Elsewhere, Jennifer Lawrence managed to be graceless with so much grace that I kind of forgave her for not really deserving to win (and I've always, always been terrified of those stairs on behalf of dazed winners ...). Quentin pulled it out for screenplay, which was awesome, and I loved his speech ... but they do know they've got to give him director someday, don't they? Are they gonna pull a Scorsese and keep him waiting for another twenty years? LincolnLes Mis and Anna Karenina split Production Design, Make-up and Costume between them, which seems more amicable than going to the mattresses, I guess.

In the supporting categories, Christoph Waltz was a bit of a shock, and Anne Hathaway really wasn't ... though to all those bitching about how she acted surprised in her speech: is she supposed to get up there and be all like 'Yeah, we all knew this was coming, right?' What option does she have?

Seth Macfarlane was just kind of ... meh as host. We could've done with less self-referential humour: jokes about yourself as host can work okay once or twice in the opening monologue, but four hours of them and it starts to get pretty god-damn old. As do jokes about how long the show is running: making those jokes makes the show run longer, for fuck's sake. But he wasn't a James Franco-style disaster (Anne Hathaway deserves none of the blame for that debacle, in my opinion), which has to be a plus. Kind of.

Oh, and Daniel Day-Lewis seems to exist on a plane of awesomeness that is beyond all of us mere mortals. In one speech he had probably the three best lines of the night and man, he's just so fucking cool.

Oh, and Russell Crowe, walking out on stage to sing after being bagged mercilessly from every corner for his singing: ballsiest bastard ever.

And that's that for another year (I won my battle with junk food, by the way, in case you were concerned).

Cheers, JC.

February 25, 2013

The 2013 Oscars (part one)

Ordinarily I watch the Oscars while on the couch in my pyjamas eating junk food. Damn this diet, the junk food is out this year, and I get the feeling I'm really gonna miss it (how entertaining is this show when you're not buzzing on a sugar high?). A friend suggested that I should get out of my pyjamas first thing in the morning, to put a nice psychological break between me and my usual Oscars routine ... but it's midday now, and it hasn't happened yet.


BEST PICTURE

Usually you can draw a line through anything which is nominated for Best Picture which isn't also nominated for Best Director. This year, though, the Director nominations fucked up big time, so the list of movies with snubbed directors (Argo, Django Unchained, Zero Dark Thirty) is incredibly strong. At the same time, films with no realistic shot did get Director nominations (Amour, which is too arty; Beasts of the Southern Wild, which is too not Hollywood; Life of Pi, which is too shit), so everything's all up for grabs. Argo is cleaning up all the lead-in awards, and Lincoln has the kind of pedigree Oscar loves, so I suspect it will come down to those two.

I liked both of those movies a lot, but there are two films nominated that I consider flat-out fucking masterpieces: Zero Dark Thirty and Amour. I'm assuming Michael Haneke's slow drama about old people dying has no chance (too real, too painful), but Zero Dark Thirty has a genuine shot, I think, so that's what I'm rooting for. I doubt they'll give it to two Kathryn Bigelow war(ish) movies in a row, but you never know.

Honestly, so long as they keep it away from Silver Linings Playbook, Life of Pi or Les Miserables, the rest are all very good movies, and I'm kind of not fussed who ends up taking it out. They'd all be fairly worthy.

My hope: Amour or Zero Dark Thirty
My prediction: Argo


BEST DIRECTOR

It's gotta be Spielberg for LincolnMichael Haneke for Amour and Benh Zeitlin for Beasts both deserve it more, I think, but their films are just too odd and unwieldy for Oscar voters (though apparently the demographics of the Academy skews heavily towards 'old as fuck', so maybe Haneke and his paean to approaching death has more of a chance than I'm giving it). I'm dismissing David O. Russell for Silver Linings and Ang Lee for Pi because, frankly, those films weren't good enough for them to deserve jack shit. So Spielberg is left by a process of elimination. Kathryn Bigelow, Ben Affleck and Quentin Tarantino can feel a bit cheesed off that they missed nominations (and their presence would have made for a more interesting field), but Spielberg did good work this year, so I'm happy for him to collect another win. At least Lincoln wasn't no fucking War Horse.

My hope: Michael Haneke
My prediction: Steven Spielberg


BEST ACTOR

Daniel Day-Lewis will win. That's a given, surely? The most respected actor in the world, playing the most respected man in American history ... hell, he'd won this Oscar before they even started shooting. If there's any chance of a shock, it's probably our Hugh for Les Mis, which in a way is fair enough. You could count the movie stars who can do what he did in that movie on one finger (evidence: Russell Crowe's spectacular failure in the same film). The performance I really loved, though, was Joaquin Phoenix in The Master. Bizarre, hypnotic, transcendent, whatever you want to call it, he was frickin' amazing. In the absence of nominations for a pair of brilliant French performances (Denis Lavant in Holy Motors, Jean-Louis Trintignant in Amour), Phoenix is a clear stand-out in this field. Shame that doesn't seem to be what matters. Bradley Cooper and Denzel Washington, on the other hand, are simply making up the numbers.

My hope: Joaquin Phoenix
My prediction: Daniel Day-Lewis


BEST ACTRESS

Jennifer Lawrence seems to be the front-runner for this one, for Silver Linings Playbook, and if she wins, I'll admit it, this would be the award that would piss me off a bit. She was charismatic as hell, sure, but her character was pretty one-note, a classic Manic Pixie Dream Girl who hinted at having greater depths but never actually revealed them. Quvenzhane Wallis is a gag nomination, and Naomi Watts (who did nothing but suffer) surely has been completely shown up by Emmanuelle Riva (who did nothing but suffer, but made it into something beautiful and sublime). Riva, for Amour, or Jessica Chastain, for Zero Dark Thirty, were both dead-set brilliant in their respective movies, but I fear they were both too subtle for the academy. There's acting, and then there's ACTING!!1!, and I fear they're gonna be seduced by the latter, and by Lawrence.

My hope: Jessica Chastain or Emmanuelle Riva
My prediction: Jennifer Lawrence


SUPPORTING ACTOR/TRESS

Supporting Actress is all about Anne Hathaway this year. She sung a couple of songs, she made us all cry, she's paid her dues, she's the shortest of short priced favourites (seriously, sportsbet has her paying $1.01; in a five horse race, that's ridiculous). And honestly, in this field, I won't mind (too much): Sally Field, Helen Hunt and Jacki Weaver were all fine, but none of them knocked my socks off either. The only worthy adversary for 'Crusher' Hathaway is Amy Adams for The Master, but again, obviousness is gonna beat subtlety, I fear.

Best Supporting Bloke is a bit more wide open. Using the process of elimination, Tommy Lee Jones is probably the favourite, and his performance in Lincoln was a hell of a lot of fun (and very nearly the best thing about the movie). Philip Seymour Hoffman, Alan Arkin and Christoph Waltz all won Oscars pretty recently, and I doubt the academy will love any of their performances enough to feel they deserve a second so soon. Which leaves Robert De Niro as the main contender, but surely they can't give a guy an Oscar just for (finally) deciding to start acting again? Can they?

My hopes: Amy Adams and Philip Seymour Hoffman
My predictions: Anne Hathaway and Tommy Lee Jones


ORIGINAL & ADAPTED SCREENPLAY

In the Original Screenplay list, I'm pretty comfortable dismissing the chances of John Gatins, for Flight, and Wes Anderson, for Moonrise Kingdom, simply because they're barely up for anything else, and that's just not the way this shit works (though a massive part of me wants to see Wes Anderson give an acceptance speech). After that, it gets interesting: Tarantino is up for Django, Haneke is up for Amour, and Mark Boal is up for Zero Dark Thirty. Everybody wants to see Quentin on that stage, but I suspect Django is a bit wild and dangerous for the academy to  give it a tick. Haneke's not a realistic shot at the Director gong, but they do sometimes use the screenplay awards as 'encouragement Oscars', basically saying "Look, we're not gonna give you one of the really big ones, but keep doing what you're doing, it's good stuff!" I wouldn't be surprised if Haneke actually pulls this one out. Mark Boal, on the other hand, won for Hurt Locker just a few years ago, which might count against him. So the academy has to choose: the uber-violent wise-cracker; the haughty European master; or a not particularly well known recent winner? I honestly don't know which way it'll go.

Adapted Screenplay is a little simpler. Chris Terrio is gonna win for Argo. You could make a case for Tony Kushner for breathing life into Lincoln, and I'm a little worried about David Magee (for Pi) and David O. Russell (for Silver Linings) winning 'encouragement Oscars' on behalf of their strangely well-liked films. But Argo is gonna win it. Terrio has won every lead-in award of note, and it's not possible that the film wins Best Picture without snagging either Director or Screenplay ... and Affleck's not nominated, so it has to win here.

My hopes: Mark Boal or Michael Haneke, and Chris Terrio
My predictions: Quentin Tarantino and Chris Terrio


ELSEWHERE

I suspect Life of Pi is gonna take out Visual Effects, which is probably fair. The CG tiger was pretty amazing. Anna Karenina, Lincoln and Les Mis are gonna go to the mattresses over Costume, and probably over Production Design as well, unless Pi can nip in and grab it by being stylised, rather than ye-olde-looking. If Hitchcock wins for Make-Up I will get genuinely angry, because Hopkins' prosthetic jowls were absolutely fucking terrible. Skyfall (from, um, Skyfall) is the only nominated song that anybody remembers, so it's a shoo-in (and will apparently be the first ever Bond theme to win the Oscar ... incredible!), and Amour surely wins Foreign Language Film given it's the only one nominated for other shit too. Zero Dark Thirty ought to win Editing, but Argo will probably take this one out too.

Cinematography is interesting. Roger Deakins (Skyfall) deserves it: despite my reservations about that movie, it was undeniably beautiful to look at in a way that Bond has just never been. But cinematography is a big award, and I'm not sure you can win it without also being up for the other biggies. If Deakins doesn't pull it out, it'll probably fall to Claudio Miranda for Life of Pi, because again, obviousness beats subtlety.


So there you go, I'm now one more lonely blogger pissing his Oscar predictions into the wind. I'll be back later for a debrief, but for now you'll have to excuse me, the couch is calling.

(Don't think about popcorn. Don't think about popcorn. Don't think about popcorn. Aagh, I thought about it.)

Cheers, JC.


currently reading: The Glass Bead Game by Herman Hesse
books to go: 72

August 20, 2012

MIFF 2012, Mhghdrfqxhzz! (part four)

Bleurghelblahrgelbleurgh. So ... tired. So ... many ... movies. After I finish writing this and post it up, I think I'm going to lie down for a while. But I made it through, God damn it. 28 movies in 17 days is the final reckoning (which honestly doesn't sound that impressive when you say it like that ... there's gotta be a way of making those numbers seem more epic).



My only animated film of the festival, Metropia is (I think) Swedish in origin, but it was kind of an international stew: it had cast members from all over the Northern Hemisphere (including Stellan and Alexander Skarsgaard, giving their performances in different accents!). In a dystopian future, every underground rail system in Europe has been joined together, and super-fast trains make continent-wide travel a possibility. There's also a conspiracy involving mind-control dandruff shampoo. And ... and ... yeah, okay, I've been trying for twenty minutes to write a plot summary, but I don't think I can, because it made no God-damn sense. It was super stylish, and great to look at if you can handle a movie that's 95% different shades of dank grey. I don't even really know how to describe the animation style: it was kind of flat, like South Park or something, but photo-real at the same time. Unfortunately it was pretty much incomprehensible, and thus pretty boring.



From Senegal, The Pirogue tells the story of a fisherman coerced into captaining a frail vessel filled with immigrants up the coast of Africa and across the mouth of the Mediterranean to Spain. The voyage doesn't go well: inclement weather, in-fighting amongst the various factions of passengers, and the crappiness of the boat itself, all combine to cast them adrift in the Atlantic. It's obviously a really dramatic subject, and certain scenes in the movie were jaw-dropping in their horribleness. Unfortunately it was too episodic and too simplistic to have the emotional punch it should have. And while some of the actors were great, others were pitching their performances well over the top. Interesting moments, but not a good film.



Okay, I made the point in one of my other MIFF round-up posts that FILM-MAKERS NEED TO KNOW HOW LONG THEIR MOVIE OUGHT TO BE. The guy that made In The Fog, a WWII drama from Belarus, had no friggin' idea. In Nazi-held territory, two partisans sneak up to a house in the forest, determined to mete out justice to the suspected collaborator who lives there. When the execution doesn't go according to plan, the three men have to journey through the forest together, and at the same time we get a series of extended flashbacks, explaining how each of them has arrived at this moment in time. There's plenty of meaty drama there (and the flashback explaining why the guy is suspected of being a collaborator is gut-wrenching) but it's kinda ruined by the glacial pace, the insistence on lengthy 'walking through forest' shots that add nothing to the story, and the way the two other flashbacks don't illuminate anything about the main thread of the story. Like The Pirogue, there were moments that suggested a much better movie lurking beneath the surface, but it was buried in pretentious twaddle.



And then here it was, two days from the end, that the best film of the festival showed up. From Denmark, Thomas Vinterberg's searing, horrifying, The Hunt is about a kindergarten teacher who is falsely accused of paedophilia. As an entire town gets caught up in the hysteria that the accusations cause, lifelong relationships are destroyed and previously unbreakable trusts are shattered. There is nothing about this film that wasn't brilliant: every single actor is remarkable, giving everybody in the enormous ensemble the depth of a fully fleshed out interior life; the direction is clear and graceful, telling the story with perfect elegance but without ever intruding on the audience's notice; the cinematography is equally good, dancing on the line between being beautiful and being unstudied; and the script is almost miraculous in the way that it combines air-tight cause and effect storytelling, a rigorous dedication to 'realness', and an ability to find symbolic meaning in everyday life. This film was basically perfect, and I'm sure I'll be talking about it again when the time comes to write about the best movies of 2012. The Hunt is a bonafide masterpiece, and I urge everyone to see it if you can.



Last year I saw and very much enjoyed a Korean gangster movie called The Yellow Sea (though to be fair, it ran off the rails a bit towards the end), so I thought I'd give Nameless Gangster: Rules of the Time a crack this year, in the hope it might be just as entertaining. Unfortunately, this one felt really tonally scattered, never quite sure if it ought to be a broad farce, or high melodrama, or something in between. After getting fired, an inept loudmouth of a customs officer decides to try and use some of his family connections to become a gangster. As crap as he is at basically everything, he still manages to worm his way into a position of power in the gang of his great nephew, from which point he starts fucking everything up. The film was at its best when it was a comedy: the protagonist's wimpiness offered plenty of laughs as he tried and failed to adapt to the gangster lifestyle. When it reached for drama, though, it was hard to give a damn. Having treated the whole story as mere comedy, it suddenly seemed a bit unfair when bombastic music came on and I was expected to care deeply about this bumbling prat's fate. Also hampering the film was the fact that the crime story, with double and triple and quadruple crosses aplenty, just didn't make a lick of damn sense!



The writer and actor Brit Marling was one of the people behind Another Earth, one of my favourite films at MIFF 2011. She was back again this year, co-writing and starring in Sound of my Voice, about two dating quasi-journalists infiltrating a cult that is led by a young woman who claims to have time-travelled from the future. Like Another Earth, Voice is a low-budget indie drama with a bit of a sic-fi bent, and it's just as good (if not better) than the first film. The scenes inside the cult are filled with genuine mystery and a real sense of unease, and the further the journalists (and the audience) go, the more questions get raised. Apart from Marling, who played the cult leader with an eerie stillness, I don't know any of the other actors but they're all uniformly fantastic (especially Christopher Denham as the guy who starts out the more cynical of the two journos, but doesn't end that way). As things get weirder and the stakes get higher, the central couple's relationship fractures under the strain, and for about the last half an hour I was watching with my hand over my mouth. It's a stifling, sad, almost unbearably tense little film, and well worth a look.



Christos Tsiolkas' Dead Europe is a magnificent novel, but I already told you that months ago. When I heard there was going to be an adaptation, I was filled with equal parts anticipation and dread: I knew if they got it right, it could be brilliant, but if they got it wrong, it could very easily be a disaster of cosmic proportions. How did they go in the end? Honestly, Dead Europe pretty much splits the middle between those two extremes. It only took about five minutes for me to understand that they'd taken a chainsaw to the plot of the book (which isn't necessarily a bad thing), so I was able to let go of my expectations. And for the most part, their new, slimmed down version of the story worked quite well. It was a wonderfully atmospheric film, the music and cinematography combining to make us feel like the main character's doom was haunting him from the moment he stepped off his plane in Greece. Though episodic, the film doled out just enough information, and made just enough sense, for me to hang with it for most of its running time ... then unfortunately they blew the ending in spectacular fashion. Just as everything's coming to a head, and the plot and themes demand some kind of resolution, the film just cops out in the most infuriating way. I don't want to go into more detail, because that would spoil the ending, but it's flat-out disastrous. If the projector had broken down five minutes from the end, I'd have rated it a pretty good film; as is, I can only consider it a missed opportunity.

And that, mhghdrfqxhzz, is that. This was a pretty fantastic MIFF for me, I'd rate about half the films I saw as sitting somewhere between 'good' and 'great' on John's Scale Of Movie's Worth. Trust me when I tell you that proportion is pretty extraordinary. The Hunt and War Witch were the stand-outs, but there are heaps of films tied for third place. Guessing a film's quality based on the tiny blurb in the festival guide is a fool's game, but this year I got a lot of stuff right (umm ... does that make me a fool?). Anyways, thanks for reading, I'm off to bed.

Cheers, JC.

August 16, 2012

MIFF 2012, Mudhaphuqazz! (part three)

Entering week two, I'd come down with my usual case of the MIFF sniffles. Spending hour after hour sharing a room with five hundred strangers at the tail end of winter, it's pretty much guaranteed that you're gonna get sick at some point. So far it hasn't stopped me seeing any movies (which means I'm passing the germs on to others in my turn ...) but the reviews are probably going to get more negative, because I feel like shit!



Speaking of shit, Faust was a massive mis-fire on every level. This bizarre, nonsensical, almost slapstick re-telling of the Faust legend just made no sense whatsoever, and was excruciating to sit through. The plot swung between being non-existent or being incoherent, the acting was horribly over the top (it was like they thought they were in a panto or something), the changes to the original story were brazen betrayals of the material, and the director made some ridiculous stylistic choices which were horribly intrusive. Absolutely nothing worked. If you ever get a chance to see this film, run really hard in the opposite direction.



Beyond the Hills was a hard film to categorise: so much about it was so good, yet there were a handful of things that just didn't work at all. A woman in her early twenties travels to a church in the remote Romanian countryside to convince her best friend, who's now a novice nun, to leave with her. The collision between the modern world and the unyielding faith of the nuns is fascinating, and handled with an elegant touch. Unfortunately the film (which has a fairly slight story, in the end) is way too long. Through the middle section, as the visiting girl and the local priest push each other further and further in their conflicting ideals, it gets super repetitive. The bleak Romanian landscapes are beautifully shot, but man, I wish I'd seen less of them. Take out maybe half an hour, and this would have been one of the films of the festival. As is, I think it's a wasted opportunity.



My second Takashi Miike film of the festival (he made Ace Attorney as well; apparently he makes three or four movies a year) was called Hara-Kiri: Death of a Samurai. (Guess how it ends ...) A period film, it's about a wandering samurai who, finding himself with no useful work in a time of peace, visits a lord's castle to ask permission to commit an honourable suicide. As the samurai and the lord talk through his request, it becomes clear there's a whole lot more to his mission than meets the eye, and a series of extended flashbacks fill us in on what's actually going on. Everything we see in the castle itself is fascinating, as these strong-willed men explore the very edges of their rigid honour codes. It's also gorgeous to look at: whoever does his production design needs kudos in a big way (though the 3D they shot in was completely useless). Unfortunately, the flashback sequences (one of them in particular) are much too long, and they stop the narrative momentum of the story dead. I can see why they're there: some of the info disclosed in them is absolutely vital to our understanding of the story. They just needed to be much more economical in giving us that info, so we could get back to the castle and the main story without the film losing its drive. It's such a shame, because there was so much to like about this movie, but (like Beyond the Hills) it was much longer than it should have been. If there's one lesson for film-makers from my experiences at this festival so far, it'd be that you've gotta know how long your film should be.



On the other hand, Sleepless Night, a French thriller set almost entirely in a huge nightclub, was a real find. A deceptively complicated little film, it gets great mileage out of putting a bunch of well-defined characters into a situation, then using the ways their motivations come into conflict to drive the film from one action set-piece to the next. The script was brilliantly structured, one scene leading inexorably to the next as the good guys bad guys, and sorta-kinda-both guys put their plans and counter-plans into action. The fights were brilliantly directed as well (unlike the vast majority of contemporary action movies), one showdown in an industrial kitchen having an incredible visceral punch to it. A brutal, well-directed, brilliantly structured, self-contained action thriller, leavened with moments of organic humour ... honestly, it kinda reminded me of Die Hard, and that's very high praise, because Die Hard is basically the king of 'brilliantly structured self-contained thrillers'. Obviously it's not going to be to everyone's taste, but if you dig action movies, give this one a try. It won't disappoint.



A fascinating Iranian buddy movie, Facing Mirrors is a devastating critique of the inflexible moral codes that rule that country. Rana is driving her husband's cab while he's in prison; one day she picks up Adineh (or Eddie), a pre-op transsexual trying to flee the country to escape an arranged marriage. As the two overcome their initial distrust and open up to each other, the sexual politics underpinning Iranian society are laid bare, and held up for analysis. Two great performances from the leads (particularly from Shayesteh Irani, fucking fearless and totally convincing as Adineh/Eddie) and a subtle, slow-burn to their burgeoning friendship made this one a real highlight.



The word 'quirky', when used to describe a film, usually leads to either awesomeness or disaster, and rarely to anything in between. Although 'awesome' might be over-stating things a bit, Safety Not Guaranteed definitely fell on the right side of the ledger. An indie sci-fi romantic drama comedy thing (man, is that a mash-up of every single genre? If it had somehow managed to also be a sword 'n' sandals western, I think they could have made history...), the film-makers had the good sense to base their bizarre, fantastical plot elements on a grounding of sympathetic, believably damaged characters (okay, it's not that believable that Aubrey Plaza, who's basically my dream woman, is playing a friendless loser, but I'll forgive it that one flaw). Each of the four main characters has their own personal journey of discovery, and it's in the way those stories collide and lend each other deeper meaning that the film really shines. It's more than the sum of its parts ... and it's also very funny, which helps a lot. This one will definitely be hitting cinemas at some point I reckon (code for: it's American), see it if you get a chance. It was lovely.



From Hong Kong, Vulgaria was silly and funny and, yes, vulgar, and left most of the cinema in stitches. Those who didn't like it, though, took great pleasure in walking out in an ostentatious huff: it's that kind of a film. During a Q&A at a university, a bumbling, inept film producer recounts the many disasters that dogged the making of his latest film. The wild story includes bestiality-obsessed gangsters, vain elderly former porn stars, an eye-popping oral sex technique, exploding body parts, a videogame that simulates masturbation, and a sexual harassment case based on an unfortunately misheard word. It's pretty much batshit crazy, but it's also a whole heap of raucous fun.

21 films down, 7 to go. I can make it! Oh God, can I make it? The MIFF sniffles are turning into something worse, and (like last year) I suspect there'll be at least one day when I just have to stay in bed and let the movies carry on without me. Hope not, though, there's still a few films left that are among my most anticipated flicks of the whole festival. Wish me luck! And if you sat/sit next to me and I give you a cold, I'm really sorry.

Cheers, JC.