My personal film reviews for the 2007 FFM.
Monday, September 3, 2007
Festival Summary, Rankings, Awards
We did see films that digested well with the juries:
Special Grand Prix of the jury :
NOODLE by Ayelet Menahemi (Israël)
Golden Zenith for the Best First Fiction Feature Film :
LA CAJA (THE WOODEN BOX) by Juan Carlos Falcón (Spain)
Bronze Zenith for the First Fiction Feature Film :
DONG SUN (BAMBOO SHOOTS) by Jian Yi (China)
Special Mention in the First Feature Film Category:
WIND MAN by Khuat Akhmetov (Russie)
Jonathan’s lineup and ranking, with my comments in brackets, is as follows:
Buy the DVD:
01- Galilee Eskimos (Israel)
01- Noodle (Israel)
03- Wind Man (Russia) (I’d put Wind Man first, but let’s not quibble).
Rent the DVD:
04- Flying Lesson (Italy, UK, France, India)
05- The Wooden Box (Spain, Portugal)
06- Dong Sun (China)
07- Where Are You Going Moshe? (Morocco, Canada) (Not for me, thanks).
Watch on TV:
08- All the Days Before Tomorrow (United States, Canada)
09- 53 Winter Days (Spain)
10- L's Revolt (Bulgaria)
Watch on TV and don't worry about missing a few minutes because you were channel-surfing:
11- The Mamiya Brothers (Japan)
12- Oh-Oku, The Women of the Inner Palace (Japan)
13- Mein Führer (Germany)
14- Dark Corners of the Shelves (Japan)
15- Kuro-Obi (Japan)
16- Férfiakt (Hungary)
Keep channel-surfing:
None
Shorts:
Rewind is the one that stood out for me.
Documentaries (in no particular order):
In the Shadow of the Moon (United States) (YES! I’ll probably buy this one)
Meat Loaf: Search for Paradise (United States) (rent!)
Running With Arnold (United States) (see it one way or another, really!)
The Quest for the Missing Piece (Israel) cute…especially if you’re from a group that practices male circumcision, and/or are LGBT-minded.
That’s it, folks! We had fun – we’re tired and glad it’s over, but sad that we’ll have to wait until August, 2008 for the next batch of International films. Thanks to my dear husband Jonathan for sharing the festival with me, and for Cinemoo for introducing it to me all those years ago!
Day Eleven - September 3
Ok, I guess holding this up to Kurasowa’s Ran as a gold standard might be a bit harsh, but we both found this brilliantly coloured, but impossibly slow drama too soap opera-ish, and just too long. With two hours to play with, surely we could have had a bit more court intrigue? Set in the Tokugawa Ietsugu period (1709-1716 (one of many Tokugawa shoguns) in Edo, the Japanese city later renamed Tokyo), it’s the usual suspects of love, betrayal, jealousy, court machinations between rival groups jostling for control, running along in slow motion so you know it to be very authentic. No, actually, most Japanese films are two hours long – must be some sort of theatre programming thing. Anyway, a child shogun is advised by a former Noh actor in this version (taking some liberties with historical fact), placing his mother (a non-noble concubine) and mother’s protector in direct opposition to the late shogun’s widow and mother. I’d say mediocre TV fare – so sorry. Pretty pictures, though.
Day Ten - Sunday, September 2
www.imdb.com/title/tt0772892/
Brings new meaning to “I spit on your grave.” What seems to be a somber film about revenge is actually a hilarious, dark comedic farce about revenge. Shot in the Canary islands, under an unflinching sun and camera, the story takes place in a poor seaside fishing community in the 1960’s. A new widow, hidden away for most of her life by her husband, who was a corrupt market inspector, suddenly needs her neighbours to help with the wake and funeral. Everyone seems to have been hurt by her late husband, and they all want revenge on his corpse, or some of the money he stole from them. The widow’s blameless, and gradually begins to realize that he was a far larger monster than the horrible husband she knew. The characterizations are priceless – just one example the prostitute cousin of the downstairs neighbour. You’d swear she’s a transvestite or a transsexual – I cracked up when a personal quote from Antonia San Juan, the actress who played the part, actually addresses this question. A definite must-see.
Mamiya Kyoudai (The Mamiya Brothers). Director: Yoshimitsu Morita. Japan (2006) 119 min, Japanese with English subtitles.
www.imdb.com/title/tt0777932/
An very, very light comedy about adult brothers who share a Tokyo apartment and have average jobs, but are so impossibly geeky that they are still single (no, they’re not gay). Akinubo’s a school janitor, and Tetsunobu is a beer taster at a brewery. They vow to have a curry party and invite young ladies from their respective jobs, in the hopes of finding someone to marry. I was expecting light comedy, but this was positively helium.
Almost two hours of excruciatingly light comedy with just a dash of drama. Will our two good guys find heterosexual bliss by the end? I’d be channel surfing for something else and not worrying about what I missed while doing so with this one, as Jonathan said. I concur.
Day Nine - Saturday, September 1
A goldfish with a very bitter existence and a very foul mouth tries to end it all...and discovers his desire to live too late. Nothing outstanding to say about the animation or the story.
Noodle. Director: Ayelet Menahemi. Israel (2007). 95 min, Hebrew and Mandarin with English subtitles.
www.imdb.com/title/tt0892332/
I won’t be surprised if this one wins the popular vote, if not some other prize. Menahemi’s seamlessly directed story of a twice-widowed 38 yr-old Israeli flight attendant Mili, still grieving and bitter, who discovers that her cleaning lady was an illegal Chinese immigrant who’s been deported by the authorities. Only problem? Her six year old son, who can only say “I am a Chinese boy” in Hebrew, is sitting in Mili’s apartment. Mili’s sarcastic and ironic sister Gila, who has the most hilarious lines in the film with her sharp tongue, but warm heart, is hardly hiding her own hurt, going through the breakup of her marriage to Mili’s co-worker Izzy. Mili’s good friends with her brother-in-law and doesn’t see the attraction Izzy has for her. Told by a friend that their “Noodle”, as the boy’s nicknamed, is stateless, with no papers and born in Israel, and that it would take years to have him repatriated to China, Mili, who is childless herself, surprises everyone, herself most of all, with a dangerous plan to get the boy back to his mother in Beijing. The back story with Mati, a former childhood neighbour, now well-known author, who happens to speak Chinese, completes the attraction-confusion requirement for the plot. Films about abandonment, especially of children or pets, play right to the heart. Noodle delivers, with the requisite happy ending.
L’Oro rosso (short film). Director: Cesare Fragnelli. Italy (2007). 13 min, Italian with English subtitles.
A little girl’s bedtime story about the farmer and the tomatoes haunts the mother with her memories of forced sexual favours in return for getting her husband a job with the local farmer. No rotten tomatoes in this one.
53 días de invierno (53 Winter Days). Director: Judith Colell. Spain (2006). 91min, Spanish with English subtitles.
www.imdb.com/title/tt0778596/
The long, dark night of the soul. three people at a bus shelter, when a man abandons a dog in front of them. Winter in Madrid with three very different stories. A single middle-aged teacher, just returning to work after being attacked by students in the high school where she teaches, tries to deal with her panic attacks. She helps out an old woman in her building when the abandoned dogs that the lady cares for are taken away from her. A young woman, a celloist just selected for a quartet, is in a relationship with her teacher, who, unbeknownst to her is married. She lives with her mother, who is still inconsolable after her husband left her for a younger woman. And a poor man, the one who took home the dog for his son, has a wife expecting twins. His job as a security guard in a store barely covers what he needs. When he loses his job (over a stupid act that he tried in order to give his wife something as a gesture of love), he’s unable to overcome his shame and takes to living on the street, while secretly watching his family. Another film themed on learning to look outside of one’s grief and see another’s, and forgiveness. Very dark, very depressing, but after the long, dark night of the soul, as spring comes around, there is hope. Jonathan found this one very difficult to take, but I found it meaty...satisfying in its range of emotional tension, but perhaps with a slightly overly facile resolution. Still, in all, very good.
Saturday, September 1, 2007
Day Eight - Friday, August 31
This entire film is shown in reverse, with the narrative running forwards. A blind safecracker agrees to a deadly game of Russian roulette with his two fellow robbers, after a job nets them a huge haul in diamonds. After all, what advantage can a blind man have? A one-trick pony that succeeds completely. I’d say it’s the best short I’ve seen so far.
Lezioni Di Volo (Flying Lessons). Director: Francesca Archibugi. Italy—United Kingdom—India—France (2007). 106 min, Italian with English subtitles.
www.imdb.com/title/tt0447659/
Two spoiled, disaffected 18 year old Roman friends, both having failed their high school final exams, are given a chance to go find themselves. “Pollo” (diminutive for Apollonio, but a reference to "chicken") is Jewish, although completely secular, and his closest friend “Curry” is an adopted Indian boy. Their rich parents agree to send them both on a trip to India so Curry can find his roots (he was adopted from an orphanage, when his birth mother couldn’t care for him). The trip takes an unexpected turn due to their naiveté and becomes something that no one planned. Poyo falls in love with a 35(ish) yr old doctor working for World Aid in a desert region, who is still romantically attached to her absent doctor husband. Curry starts to discover his Indian roots. Back home, Poyo’s father is ill, and both sets of parents wrestle with relationship difficulties. This coming-of-age story has nice cinematography, competent acting, and almost believable serendipitous happenstance.
Meat Loaf: In Search of Paradise. Director: Bruce David Klein. United States (2007)
90 min, English.
www.imdb.com/title/tt1034080/
If you like documentaries about bigger-than-life rock stars, this one will deliver. Meat Loaf has been roaring out the songs for forty years now (!) with his brand of theatrical rock songs - not many people haven’t heard his major ranked songs “I can see Paradise by the Dashboard Light” “Two out of Three Ain’t Bad”, and “I would do anything for Love (But I won’t do that)”. He’s has sold over 35 million albums, and finally, at 59, let a film maker follow him around for a few weeks at the start of his 2007 World Tour. We see Meat and his hard working band and production group (some whom have been with him for between 15 to 30 years), through the pre-tour rehearsals on a L.A. soundstage, to the Canadian portion of the tour. While a bit of biographical information is included to place things historically, it’s really about where Meat Loaf is today, and his creative, collaborative process. A very good portrait of an artist who’s very perfectionism to deliver the best show he can for his audience constantly wears him out. I’m not a huge Meat Loaf fan, but have enjoyed his big hits since the first ones hit the charts in 1976, and I totally enjoyed this film. Scheduled for a U.S. theatrical release in January, 2008. Note: shot in HD, and probably the clearest "print" of any film we've seen so far!
Day Seven - Thursday, August 30
Macrophotography is used to explore the earthworm’s vital part in the cycle of soil regeneration. A rather slimy and er..tasty film – since an earthworm’s defecation is shown several times. Not for the sensitive stomach, particularly just after a meal. Interestingly, soil over-use has resulted in a reduction of the number of earthworms, from 250 per cubic meter of soil, down to 50. Floods in Europe have been attributed to fields that no longer are as porous with the lack of earthworms – one worm tunnels about 15 or 17 lengths in a day. And vineyards use copper, a metal additive that is toxic to earthworms. Now you know.
Technical note: sadly, this year, the Festival seems to have decided that for non-HD video productions, the video projector is set to “stretch” mode for films with a 4:3 ratio (traditional TV format). This results in really bad distortion in the left and right thirds of the screen…it’s as if you’re watching the film through a prism when there’s a pan, or an object moves from one side to the other. It can be vertigo inducing at times...
Mein Führer – Die Wirklich Wahrste Wahrheit Über Adolf Hitler (My Führer – The Truly Truest Truth About Adolf Hitler). Director: Dani Levy. Germany (2007) 95 min, German with English subtitles.
www.imdb.com/title/tt0780568/
Jonathan wanted to see this satire, and initially I didn’t, but eventually went along. I didn’t have to walk out (something I promised if I found the Holocaust diminished in any way). Well, I didn’t have to worry. Other reviewers have already talked about how this is sort of first for German cinema, where sensitivity about the Holocaust and a fear of still being taken for Nazis, has so far kept German directors from treating the Holocaust as satire or comedy (think of Life is Beautiful). Dani Levy, purportedly himself from a Jewish (Swiss) family, weaves a fantastic, improbable tale of a Jewish actor who had helped Hilter in the 1930’s with his speeches, who has now been forcefully relocated to a concentration camp. He's brought back to try to help Hitler regain his confidence for a big speech in the last days of the European war. Levy sets up several hilarious scenarios between Professor Adolf Israel Grünbaum and Hitler, and Hitler with Eva Braun, but downplay the Nazi’s Final Solution, whatever Hitler might be doing with “this filthy Jew”. However, the incredulous “Sorry about the Final Solution, Grünbaum, don’t take it personally…” is funny once, but seems to be an apology for the satire after a few times. There’s a bit of a whiff of the TV series Hogan’s Heroes, but much darker, and without the happy endings.
Finemachiya Moché (Where Are You Going Moshe?). Director: Hassan Benjelloun.
Morocco—Canada (2007) 90 min, Arabic with English subtitles.
A nice little story that purports to be an example of the Jewish (Sephardic) exodus from Morocco to Israel, France, and Canada in the early 1960’s. The best propoganda films tell a compelling story and slide in the message in a palatable form.
Mustapha, the manager (and soon to be owner) of the only bar in the town of Bejjad, has a problem. Most of the Jews are leaving, with Morocco’s independence and recent death of their King, "who was a protector of Jews". The town council, under the urging of the local Imam, will have the bar closed unless one non-Muslim remains in town, since the bar license is conditional on this point. Never mind that many local Muslims frequent the bar, and could care less what the Imam wants. Mustapha concocts a plan (at the suggestion of his son Hassan) to convince Shlomo, the local musician, to stay.
Without talking to some of my Sephardic connections about their families' emigration, I can’t say how accurate is he portrait of Jews being fully part of the community, not only being tolerated, but accepted, since I'm not Sephardic. But it seems to fly in the face with why the majority of Moroccan Jews left, with only 3000 left there today. The film’s reality is that Bejjad was a Moroccan “Mayberry” village, with everyone (well, almost everyone) having no bad feelings about the Jews. Mustapha’s son is even dating Shlomo’s daughter (although on the sly, since it wouldn’t really be accepted). So while the “portrait” of life there seems all happy, it seems the reasons for the majority of Jews leaving is placed on their unease about the political situation, counsel from their rabbi about returning to their biblical "home", and external pressure from “Zionists” to emigrate to Israel. Many of them don't want to go, since it means leaving their Muslim friends.
This seems to go against the prevailing evidence, which is Jews were leaving because of increasing and often government sanctioned discrimination, which rose significantly after the formation of Israel in 1948. This “it’s the Zionists fault” subtext is carried off mostly with subtlety, but some stand out as obvious editorializing, such as when some of the town businessmen talking about the exodus say Israel is facilitating emigration of Moroccan Jews to help “fill the country”. This is placed in the context of gossip, with more and more outlandish statements, like “…the Europeans are trading Jews like money”. These statements are shown to be a minority view, as is the feeling on the part of one of the Muslim Moroccan town councilmen that the Jews “. . .aren’t really Moroccan, so if they go, we’ll have more jobs for Moroccans.”
So the Moroccan Jews are shown making a perilous journey to Israel. Through Shlomo’s daughter’s letters, we learn that “…it’s always too hot, I’m always looking for shade. We prefer to speak in Arabic, but we have to learn Hebrew. We don’t get hired in Israel unless there’s no Ashkenazi (European) Jews available” [although this discrimination was and still is to some extent true]. Israel is said to be “a trap”, most of the Moroccans would prefer to go on to France and also Canada – Moshe’s daughter ultimately marries David, one of the emigration “facilitators” that accompanied her group of émigrés, and then they in turn emigrate to Marseilles. Hassan ultimately tells this information, hidden from Shlomo by Mustapha, since he fears Shlomo leaving. Hassan could care less, since Rachel is lost to him now.
Even the “happy ending”, where Shlomo eventually leaves for Marseilles to live with his family, seems to have a subtext. In Casablanca, he runs across the village idiot Berbeq’ha being taunted by kids in the streets and beaten. He wasn’t able to emigrate on to Israel with the others, and was despondent that that he wouldn’t be allowed to go fight in the Army and that “they’d lose the war” without him. The film’s closing scene is in Mustapha’s bar in Bejjad, with the required one Jew to keep the bar open, the happy “General” Berbeq’ha, in a fake uniform, seated in the bar, with an eye patch over his now blind left eye. A subtle parody of the late Moshe Dayan, perhaps? However, in the film’s reality, he’s happy, the remaining (Muslim) patrons of the bar and its owner are all happy, despite the best attempts by the pleasure-denying Imam.
The political rhetoric at the very end of the film then nicely outs the apparent agenda behind it. In mentioning about Israel’s 2006 incursion into Lebanon, where “some of the attackers where originally from Morocco, the film asks ‘what would have happened if the Arab world hadn’t let go of its children? How might have things gone then?’” If it weren't for this rather blatant editorializing, one might have discounted all of the other signs as just as part of the narrative, but it contextualizes everything before.
My guess is the film’s final political statement represents a form of the more benign pan-Arabic feeling about Jews that one can find today, which is that as long as Jews were a powerless minority within Arab culture, with no ambitions towards statehood, there was no quarrel, and they were a (mostly integrated) part of the Arabic world. This sort of echoes the less virulent anti-Israel sentiments which typically go along the lines of “A united Palestine, with Arabs naturally as a majority, with Jews as a protected minority within it, would be perfectly acceptable to the Arab world.”
Thursday, August 30, 2007
Day Six - Wednesday, August 29
Emilka Placze (Emily Cries) (short film). Director: Rafael Kapelinski. Poland (2007).
33 min, Polish with English subtitles.
Stephen is 18, and it’s the eve of Martial law being declared in 1982 in Poland. He’s in love with Emily, who’s dad is a policeman. Shot in black and white and depressingly somber. Stephen slowly woos Emily with dance lessons, and she breaks off an affair with the high school coach. A depressingly dark character sketch of the period – sad, and without much hope. And one minute of summary narration about what happens to all the principals after Communism in Eastern Europe falls.
Behikvot Hahatiha Hahasera (The Quest for the Missing Piece). Director: Oded Lotan (this is his first feature documentary). Israel (2007) 52 min, Hebrew and German with English subtitles.
www.imdb.com/title/tt0984219/
Lotan’s first person “search” for his missing foreskin is the premise for an often humourous exploration about the practice of male circumcision. Being Jewish and Gay, and very secular (like most Israelis), he wants to know why most still adhere to this custom. Interviews with his mother, sister and brother-in-law (with a newborn son), his German husband (who is uncircumcised) are very personal, but he goes out and interviews others…young Russian émigrés in the Israeli army who opt for the procedure to fit in (they are practicing Jews), a group of people who refuse to circumcise their sons (and meet behind closed doors to avoid confrontations). Discussions with a psychologist explain tribal customs and the act of collective identity, and with a German Christian minister on why Christians don’t circumcise (since Jesus was). Muslims, Jews, a lot of North Americans, South Koreans, and Philipinos do – totaling about 1/5th of males worldwide. Traditional ‘bris’ are shown, along with the hospital procedure, and even more interesting, Arabic friends back in Germany having their version of the ritual with their 7 year old son – sort of a Muslim version of the Bar Mitzvah, where the boy becomes a “man”. It sort of makes the Bar Mitzvah physical task of holding up a Torah for about five minutes at 13 years of age (with the threat of fasting for 40 days and 40 nights if you drop it) seem like, well, child’s play. Jonathan and I both were squeamish and averted our eyes at all the injecting of anesthetic and slicing...the idea of someone willfully cutting a “perfectly good piece” off of one’s body, especially from the penis (it’s the male fear of castration, I suppose) just abhors us both, and this despite only one of us having been "cut". Towards the end, Lotan's search for the Mohel (ritual circumciser) that did the job on him, but he’s long deceased. However, an interesting conversation ensures with the late mohel’s elderly son and daughter-in-law. In all, an interesting sociological study. Probably destined to be on a documentary TV channel near you…
Wednesday, August 29, 2007
Day Five - Tuesday, August 28
www.imdb.com/title/tt0925248/
For anyone who followed the Apollo space program and the moon landings, or who is interested in spaceflight, this is a must see. The director gathered all of the surviving astronauts of the program (they’re all in their late 70’s or 80’s) that he could and let them talk in their own words. This candid, moving, and often funny testimony is coupled with stunning remastered archival NASA film footage, much of it never shown before. In all, nine flights went to the moon, and the men who went are still the only humans to have traveled to an alien world. Neil Armstrong, the first man to walk on the moon, did, of course, not participate, as he’s been reclusive about his role for decades. But there is a lot of meaty interviews here, with Michael Collins being particularly eloquent (he was command module pilot of Apollo 11, the only member who didn’t get to land on the moon during that first historic flight). Other standouts from among the nine out of 26 astronauts who went to the moon in the film (with 25 surviving), are Buzz Aldrin (second to walk on the moon), Jim Lovell (command module pilot of Apollo 8, and more famously the commander of Apollo 13), and Alan Bean (click the links if you never learned or don’t remember the significance of the various flights).
Like a lot of people all over the world at that time, I was enthralled with the space program – I scrapbooked every article out of my dad’s Time magazines and New York newspapers that he read daily. I had the model spacecraft, the books, even the G.I. Joe Mercury Astronaut and capsule, complete with a 45rpm record of John Glenn’s audio recording during his flight. So this film was a particular joy, to revisit these men, all very human, despite their amazing exploits that elevated them to national and international heroes. They’re all from the older school of astronauts, having the Right Stuff. And indeed, listening to them talk about how very on the bleeding edge all of the technology was then, all of the unknowns, and risks they were taking, fully cognizant of the odds of making it back alive, brought back the sense of wonder and amazement that I had as an eight-year old boy. What started truthfully as a political race between the U.S. and the U.S.S.R., in the end became, for a brief time, something a good portion of the world looked up at as a noble adventure.
Day Four - Monday, August 27
Japanese science fiction anime tends to veer towards the childish. Combined with the ever present cheap electronic keyboard schmaltzy background music (a problem with most Japanese films), and a horrific English language dub, this tale of earth descendants trying to return the now mythical home planet is a groaner.
Tana-no-Sumi (The Dark Corners of the Shelves). Director: Hajime Kadoi. Japan (2007) 81 min, Japanese with English subtitles.
www.imdb.com/title/tt1031975/
Yasuo runs a toy store with his second wife Hideko. One day, a woman buys a marked-down toy from a corner shelf…and turns out to be Yasuo’s former wife, Yoko. Yoko had run out on Yasuo when their son Tsuyoshi was less than one year old. Tsuyoshi’s never known a mother other than Hideko, and Yoko, who’s been reassigned as an insurance salesperson to the district, is obsessed with watching her son. She’s also not happy with her relationship with her boss Shindo, a younger man who wants to marry her.
A workaday film adaption of a novel. It’s a Japanese “chick flick” version of the type of movie of the week fare that TV networks like LifeTimeTV (a woman-centric digital channel) offer up to their viewers. The story’s revolves more around Yasuo, and his bitterness over Yoko’s abandonment of him and his son, but the strongest character is the stepmother Hikedo, a woman who is barren, and yet is totally devoted to her adopted son and her husband. It is she who ultimately gives Yoko a chance to spend a bit of time with her son, so Yoko can have some resolution and move on with her life. Competent but nothing that shines brightly on this one.
Day Three - Sunday, August 26th
A hilarious film about an ultra-Orthodox (“frume”) young rabbi, just settling into his new job at a synagogue, who seems to be excessively strict with his congregation as a reaction to finding his own faith weakening. Counseled by his childhood friend, a Catholic priest, to “live a little”, he entertains a fascination with a black female vocalist he’s seen on TV by attending a rave where she’s singing, on a Friday night after Sabbath services. The results are more than he bargained for, but God moves in mysterious ways… Very cute, and well executed. It was funny to all, but a plotzer to any Jews in the audience. Much laughing ensued.
Eskimosim ba Galil (The Galilee Eskimos). Director: Jonathan Paz. Israel (2007)
99 min, Hebrew with English subtitles
www.imdb.com/title/tt0910890/
A bittersweet film about a dozen or so octogenarian Kibbutz founding members, now comfortable in their dotage, who awaken one morning to find that everyone else has left, taking anything they could with them, and left the elders behind. Heavily in debt, the Kibbutz was sold off to the bank in return for writing off the debt, but no one told anyone about the old folk left behind. A big surprise for the bank and the investor buying the property on the Lebanese border for his ambitious casino resort plans. The remaining seniors, all socialist from the founding days of Israel and the Kibbutzim movement, rally to become self-sufficient once again, and stave off the builders intent with destroying their home. There’s even plans to become a commercial success and keep the Kibbutz going. But there is also a sense of impending doom, where the choices are armed rebellion, or acquiescence to the offer of a plush seniors residence when they leave. The last weeks are spent reliving all the sweet and sad moments of their lives. The director’s parents were Kibbutzim, and it’s a loving portrait of the beginnings and eventual decline of the original idea of the Kibbutz, and of society’s casual disregard of its elders. So far, my favourite film, with Wind Man coming in second.
All the Days Before Tomorrow. Director: François Dompierre (his first feature film).
United States—Canada (2007) 100 min, English
www.imdb.com/title/tt0439115/
Wes is quiet, academic. Alison is the opposite, and is the former almost girlfiend. She’s leaving L.A. in the morning to return to her boyfriend in Toyko, but wants to spend the evening. Wes is ambivalent but agrees finally, and the night is spent in reflection of what happened through extended flashbacks. We’re also party to Wes’s dreams, where he’s visited by what he calls his “angel”, who has the “right” but cryptic answer to all of his questions, played by Richard Roundtree. They say “opposites attract”, but I just can’t fathom the interest Wes has in vapid Alison. It seems they’re both lost to each other, and Alison’s moved on to a listless relationship with her Tokyo boyfriend. As for Wes not having made the move at the right time (you know how it is, if you become friends too intimately, it’s rare that things can jump to the sexual like they can when you first meet), I kept wondering if he’s truly just a metrosexual or is a closeted gay guy. But then, he wouldn’t be the first well-groomed geek straight guy who misreads the moment because he’s overanalyzing things. A well-made first feature film by a Montreal raised, L.A. educated (UCLA Film school?) Dompierre, but Wing Man flies circles around it. Beautiful scenery of southern Utah (which is, in truth why Jonathan and I went to see this film, since we had a one-week road trip to the Grand Canyon, and Zion National Park, among other places during our last “west coast” trip in 2006). I also wondered about the funding he raised...there is SO MUCH SMOKING in this film (as much as in Japanese films, where's it's notoriously bad), could it have been Big Tobacco?
Buntat Na L. (L's Revolt). Director: Kiran Kolarov. Bulgaria (2006) 115 min, Bulgarian with English subtitles
On the eve of his graduation from language school, bored with life in Communist Bulgaria, Loris tries to defect to the West and is caught. Imprisoned as a political prisoner, he’s subjected to brutal torture and humiliation, but learns to survive. Given amnesty after 1989, he quickly falls in with ex-prison mates, some criminals, some politicals, and the former deputy warden, now a mobster. Seemingly happy with just being one of the “carrier-pigeons” (driver/gopher) for the mobster, his main job is escorting high-class prostitutes to clients. A Russian woman about his age, reduced to being a whore, befriends him. And things aren’t going to well with his boss starting to require that he and his buddies fetch and bury bodies, or help with the kidnapping of a local girl. When he draws the line at being party to a murder, he revolts yet again, thinking he can fight and flee once more. But you can only kill a few top mobsters before you’re going to get whacked yourself, and Loris has never learned to quell his arrogance.
We really weren’t prepared for this film – the description was sufficiently vague that the film's wholesale nihilist decent into post-Communist criminal anarchy, which had mired a good portion of the former Soviet Eastern Bloc, and of course, Russia itself, was a bit of a surprise for us. It just kept getting darker and darker. The body count isn’t legendary, but the casual brutality got to me. And yet, the story moves along at a pace where you aren’t bored. I almost started rooting for Loris to make it through to the end (no spoilers here), given him being the hero and the anti-hero of sorts. Is Koralov critiquing Bulgarian society’s decent in organized crime (a la Juzo Itami’s famous ‘war’ with the Yakuza?), in depicting Loris as Bulgaria’s modern alienated soul traumatized between the former brutality of the unyielding Party line and the even more brutal mobsters that now have control? Maybe I’m just reading too much into it…
Tuesday, August 28, 2007
Day Two - Saturday, August 25
A short worthy of a Twilight Zone story. What sort of personal and collective hell awaits those trailer park trash that abuse their blameless children? 19 minutes of collective retribution, in which they are towed, sealed in their trailers, to a dessert, to die of heat exhaustion. Isn’t it so nice that we feel smug in our collective judgment of a deserving punishment.
Kuro-Obi (Black Belt). Director: Shunichi Nagasaki. Japan (2006) 95 min, Japanese with English subtitles.
www.imdb.com/title/tt1084019/
Cinemoo saw this one with us, and offers this review:
Japan's answer to the Chinese kung fu movies .. a karate movie. set in the 1930s .. the disciples of a karate sensei are conscripted into the military police to teach them the martial art .. one explores the "dark side" of his ability, the other continues on the more spiritual route. There is corruption in the military police, there is organized crime, with appropriate caricatures to make it easy for the audience. the film is stylized, almost an animation using real actors. however it is worth seeing .. for the scenery and the choreographed fights .. before the screening, there was a karate demonstration in the theatre .. what's the rasping all about ?
Wonderful word in a subtitle: gormless
After the show, we stopped at the food court on our way to the other theatre (we'd normally, and lazily, take the metro the few blocks east, but it [was] closed because of cracks in an access tunnel infra-structure that have got several downtown blocks sealed off) .. anyway, back to the food court: we noticed the entire cast of the film were sitting near us (and several even got their lunch where i did at Tiki Ming) .. they had a press conference that afternoon because the film is entered in the festival's official competition.
Wind Man. Director: Khuat Akhmetov (this is his first film)
Russia (2007) 95 min, Russian with English subtitles.
Cinemoo saw this one with us and offers this review:
The blurb: during a wind storm, an old man with wings falls from the sky to a small village on the steppe. He is filthy and doesn't speak. Identified as an angel, he is given a "residence" in a young family's chicken coop and is befriended by their son who calls him Grampa Wind. The film looks at how different people react to the presence of this stranger .. My initial reaction at reading the blurb was the Gabriel García Márquez story, a very old man with enormous wings.
Another link on the story. It had its own movie a few years ago .. but this Russian film is even more sinister ... though it has its share of stock comic characters, death itself seems to be wandering around the edges of this microcosm of our larger society …
The story has a moral: some things that fall from the sky are benign; some are not.
See it if you have a chance to.
I second Cinemoo’s review, and would add that the Magic realism, coupled with the Russian central Asian location make for a dreamlike otherworld-ness that works. A wonderful first effort that would shame many a seasoned director’s ability.
How to Survive a Fall From 35,000 Feet (short film). Director: James Ricker. Canada (2007) 3 min, English.
Cynical air travelers and the flying-challenged will both find comfort from this tongue-in-cheek “manual” on how to survive being sucked out of an airliner.
Running with Arnold. Director: Dan Cox (this is his first feature documentary).
United States (2007) 72 min, English.
www.imdb.com/title/tt0386757/
A very unflattering look at “Ahr-Nold” the "Guvernator" ex-Terminator’s climb to political stature as the governor of California. Narrated by actor Alec Baldwin, noted cause-celebre of the Left. If you weren’t scared by Schwarzenegger’s rise to power, fame, and money, culminating in his political ambitions, this film, which shows him even more of a puppet of Right-wing corporate interests than Bush, will scare you silly. Don’t be blindsided by his apparent soft stance on social conservatism (supporting stem-cell research, and gay civil unions). Includes a mini-lesson on the Recall procedure in California, and how it gave Arnold the edge to get in over Gov. Davis. The dirty tricks used to silence women coming forward to complain of his history of sexual abuse are right up there with the best of the Republican Party’s Karl Rove tactics. And, don’t think they haven’t given up on changing the U.S. Constitution so Arnold (Austrian-born) could run for the Presidency. A must see for any political junkie or California resident. Or if you adored his films...*cough*
Day One, Friday, August 24th
Back again this year with 20 films to see, a few with my friend Cinemoo, who will guest review some films that all three of us are seeing.
Tibor, a heterosexual writer in middle-age angst, on the rocks with his actress wife, gets ‘marked’ by Zsolt, a 19 year old street hustler. Out of ennui, more than anything, he decides to indulge Zsolt and himself with an affair, not realizing just how much of a liar and a thief the boy is. Gay sex is not unknown to Tibor, who had a brief youthful affair with an older, famous writer, and it’s the old story of youthful beauty reawakening feelings of lust mistaken as love. Unfortunately for Tibor, he thinks he’s in control and can manage the relationship as a tryst with a female prostitute, to his literary advantage, but Zsolt is toying with him, on levels that go deeper than the writer’s willing to acknowledge. And his wife, starved for affection, preoccupied with her fading looks and declining career, thinks that it’s a young lady that has her husband's affections, and flirts with Zsolt, who’s been introduced to her as a young writer Tibor’s mentoring. Everything starts to unravel… If anything, the film’s a parable on mid-life ennui and the dangers therein – where not even a writer’s ego is strong enough to rein in the last wild testosterone-fueled flailing against the inevitable slide towards entropy and death. Darkly filmed in
Dong Sun (Bamboo Shoots). Director: Jian Yi (this is his first feature film).