Friday, 30 September 2022

Dance & Film: Mythmaking

Nora the Many
dir-prd Stephanie McMann, Eleanor Sikorski, Flora Wellesley Wesley
scr Eleanor Bauer, Stephanie McMann, Eleanor Sikorski, Flora Wellesley Wesley
with Stephanie McMann, Eleanor Sikorski, Flora Wellesley Wesley, Fox Gill-McMann, Eleanor Bauer
music Zeena Parkins
22/UK 1h10
Lilian Baylis Studio, Sadler's Wells, London • 29-30.Sep.22

British dance collective Nora collaborated with American choreographer Eleanor Bauer to workshop the graphic/choreo novel Nora the Many in 2020. And now they have adapted it for the big screen with a superb sense of wit and imagination. It's an experimental film that explores myths and movement in surreal ways that play with improvisation and characterisation, accompanied by a terrific acoustic score by Zeena Parkins.

The story circles around the regulars at Cindy's Bar, where indulgent performance artist Divina (McMann) is "seen by many, liked by few". Her biggest fan is her son Tworden (Wesley), a giant who is the planet to Divina's star. There's also Tina (Sikorski), the distracted bartender; the club night's lively host Lauden (Wesley); regular audience member Alan (Sikorski); and the electric child Elba (Gill-McMann), who lives in the woods.

Conversational voiceovers describe the characters and situations while pondering the larger mysteries surrounding these people, their inter-relationships and their connections to the universe. All of this is delivered in a hilariously deadpan style by performers seem to be improvising their dialog. So as they discuss heavy philosophical and existential ideas, they are grappling with whether to laugh at the absurdity or cry about the deeper meanings. Meanwhile, the visuals often involve freeform dance sequences, from the opening scene in a studio to extended pieces set in the woods.

Through all of this, the performer-filmmakers are challenging the audience to broaden our view of the world, to listen to smells and to doubt the constraints of things like time and gravity. Their witty wordplay is wonderfully provocative, as is how they have fun with cinematic perspective and juxtaposition. And they are also reinterpreting the nature of storytelling itself. In other words, there's a lot to take in over a brisk 70 minutes. But if we can slot in to their goofy internal logic, this collective has the power to broaden the way we see the world.




photos by Nora • 29.Sep.22


Thursday, 29 September 2022

Critical Week: Taking notes

The autumn festival season continues all over the world (London's largest fest starts next week), even as awards season has already begun, with contenders screening for voters. And yes, I need to take notes when I see so many movies in a concentrated period - tricky in the dark, but it helps to write things down even if I struggle to read my dodgy handwriting in the light later. For me, this week's movies included the comedy Mrs Harris Goes to Paris, starring a particularly radiant Lesley Manville. Yes, it's cute and sweet, but it's remarkably never silly or sentimental. A proper gem. And then there was the horror thriller Smile, which will probably top the box office this weekend thanks to horror genre fans. Anchored by a superbly committed performance from Sosie Bacon, it's unnerving, grisly and jumpy but not actually scary.

BEST OUT THIS WEEK:
Argentina, 1985 • Flux Gourmet
Mrs Harris Goes to Paris
Girls Girls Girls • Taming the Garden
ALL REVIEWS >
Meanwhile, Francois Ozon is back with his terrific new film Peter von Kant, a skilful pastiche that's part remake and part biopic about Rainer Werner Fassbinder. Control is a contained thriller from Canada with a limited setting and small cast, and it never quite develops its high concept. From Iceland the dramatic epic Godland is gloomy and gorgeous in equal measure, packed with provocative themes. The French drama Rodeo has a kinetic sense of edgy energy, but a rather simple plot, as it follows a feisty young woman into the masculine world of trick motorbikers. And the kaleidoscopic Egyptian doc-drama Shall I Compare You to a Summer's Day? boldly explores how it feels to be a gay man in the Arab world.

Films to watch this next week include Christian Bale and Margot Robbie in Amsterdam, Sally Hawkins and Steve Coogan in The Lost King, Aubrey Plaza in Emily the Criminal, the Bronte biopic Emily, surreal comedy All Sorts, British drama Big Boys Don't Cry and the comedy Phantom Project.

Thursday, 22 September 2022

Critical Week: Who runs the world

I've only had one actual press screening this week, which seems a bit odd with so many huge movies floating around that need to be seen (to be fair, I saw several of them in Venice). Instead, I managed to catch a special preview at my local Picturehouse of The Woman King, the heavily fictionalised historical epic starring Viola Davis as leader of a 19th century West African all-female army. Even if the film sidesteps some facts, it's a rousing movie that audiences should enjoy, especially with terrific performances from Davis, Lashana Lynch, John Boyega and Thuso Mbedu. And then there were George Clooney and Julia Roberts hamming it up in Ticket to Paradise, a comedy without many actual laughs. But when they're not goofing around, the stars find both chemistry and some surprising dramatic textures.

BEST OUT THIS WEEK:
Blonde • Athena • After Yang
Juniper • In Front of Your Face
ALL REVIEWS >
Smaller films this week included the quietly riveting Irish drama It Is In Us All, starring the superb Cosmo Jarvis; the pointed and perhaps a bit contrived New Zealand drama The Justice of Bunny King, anchored by another terrific performance from Essie Davis; Korean auteur Hong Sangsoo's involving, sensitive and unusually perceptive drama In Front of Your Face; and the warmly engaging doc A Bunch of Amateurs, about a 90-year-old movie-making club in the North of England.

Coming up this next week are Francois Ozon's new film Peter von Kant, the horror thriller Smile, the sci-fi thriller Control, the mystery thriller The Razing, the French drama Rodeo, the Icelandic drama Godland.

Tuesday, 20 September 2022

Stage: Perchance to dream

The Prince
by Abigail Thorn
dir Natasha Rickman
with Abigail Thorn, Joni Ayton-Kent, Mary Malone, Tianna Arnold, Che Walker, Corey Montague-Sholay, Richard Rees, Tyler Luke Cunningham
dramaturg Donnacadh O'Briain
sound design/composer Rodent
lighting Martha Godfrey
costumes Rebecca Cartwright, Lulu Tam
Southwark Playhouse • 15.Sep-8.Oct

Ayton-Kent and Malone
More than just a play, The Prince is a fiendishly clever meta-theatre experience that makes the audience part of the story. We may be observing the show, but we're also watching each other while grappling with our own expectations and preconceptions. Playfully riffing on Shakespeare, actor-writer Abigail Thorn takes us on a deep dive into identity, using comedy and drama to wrestle with issues of family, culture, gender and sexuality. Her approach is so fresh that it can't help but take the breath away.

It opens on Henry IV Part 1, as the King (Walker) rallies his troops, wishing that his son Hal (Montague-Sholay) was a more manly leader like Hotspur (Thorn). The scene is interrupted by perplexed modern-day interloper Jen (Malone), who meets fellow outsider Sam (Ayton-Kent) and discovers that they are trapped in some sort of Shakespearean theatre dimension. As they seek a way out, they can't help but interact with actors who don't realise they're performing a play. For Jen, it's clear that these characters are trapped by what others want them to be: Hal can't admit that he's gay and Hotspur hasn't realised that she's trans.

Thorn and Cunningham
The way this spirals out of control is hilarious, echoing Tom Stoppard's witty spin on Hamlet in Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead, but with a sci-fi style reality-bending twist. Indeed, Thorn also takes a knowing dip into Hamlet in the second act, turning a famous soliloquy into a powerful rumination on the tension between how we see ourselves and how others see us. So while Hotspur's journey to self-acceptance is the central focus of the story, each of the surrounding characters is also confronted by their own identities and how they push their expectations on others.

While the stage design is a fairly simple variation on a chess board, director Natasha Rickman has several surprises up her sleeve as the cast members keep everything in motion, with inventive sound, lighting and costumes that literally add layers of meaning. This is also a show that is essential to set in the round, with the audience providing society's gaze onto the characters, echoed in Jen and Sam's modern-day interventions. There are also several jolting moments that shatter barriers between viewers and performers.

Malone and Thorn
Each actor brings out complexities along the way, pulling us deeper into the story's surprising gyrations. Nuances in the performances are often revelatory, exposing earthy undercurrents while maintaining a involving sense of humour that often merrily tips into the absurd. Thorn's script is packed with masterful wordplay, especially as it pokes fun at Shakespearean dialect. This is a hugely entertaining show that keeps us laughing while provoking us to think in new ways about bigger themes. It's exhilarating theatre that deserves to run and run.

Montague-Sholay and Walker

Ayton-Kent, Cunningham and Thorn

photos by Mark Senior • 19.Sep.22

Friday, 16 September 2022

Critical Week: Take a load off

Returning home to London from Venice, I arrived in a nation in mourning, with a new monarch and prime minister. Meanwhile, I'm grappling with a backlog of festival reviews. Most are written in rough form, so I'm working to get them online bit by bit. And there are also new releases to keep up with.Confess, Fletch is the first film featuring the quick-thinking reporter since those two Chevy Chase movies in the '80s. This one is closer in tone to Gregory McDonald's Fletch novels (I've read a few of them), with Jon Hamm creating a more enjoyably deadpan and less silly take on the character. But the film is perhaps a bit underpowered to launch a new franchise.

BEST OUT THIS WEEK:
Athena • In From the Side
Blonde • Strawberry Mansion
Funny Pages • Casablanca Beats
ALL REVIEWS >
I also caught up with Oliver Hermanus' superb Living, an inventive remake of Kurosawa's Ikiru with a terrific lead role for Bill Nighy as a 1950s London businessman who begins to see things from a new perspective.  There was another offbeat offering from Peter Strickland with the pointedly amusing Flux Gourmet, about musicians who mix sound with food. Asa Butterfield and Gwendoline Christie lead a terrific ensemble cast. Finally, there was the gonzo horror of The Retaliators, an increasingly violent revenge thriller that gleefully preaches a seriously unhelpful message.

Lined up to watch this next week are Viola Davis in The Woman King, George Clooney and Julia Roberts in Ticket to Paradise, Lesley Manville in Mrs Harris Goes to Paris, the British drama It Is In Us All, New Zealand drama The Justice of Bunny King, Korean drama In Front of Your Face, Japanese animation Inu-Oh and the movie club doc A Bunch of Amateurs.

Thursday, 15 September 2022

Dance: Controlling emotions

Family Honour
A Spoken Movement production
artistic direction and choreography Kwame Asafo-Adjei
with Catrina Nisbett, Stefano A Addae, Kwame Asafo-Adjei
producer Deborah Bankole
dramaturg Morpheus
lighting Adam Carrée
sound composition Jack Hobbs, Stefano A Addae, Tyrone Isaac Stewart
Sadler's Wells, London • 14-15.Sep.22

There's a big emotional wave surging through this remarkable hour-long performance piece, which recreates familiar settings with intent. As director, choreographer and dancer, Kwame Asafo-Adjei offers a striking point of view into social issues that are instantly recognisable, performed with precision and skill to bring out some very deep issues relating to expectations that come from families, cultures and religion.

The primary setting is a dinner table, where characters prowl around each other, evoking larger feelings. There are moments of tension, negotiation and many different expressions of domestic violence that confront the audience with the complexities of love, anger, grief and even survival. Performers Nisbett, Addae and Asafo-Adjei take on multiple roles to create a range of interactions with movements that seem to shift back and forward in time, using their full physicality in shapes that create powerful resonance.

On a blank stage flanked by audience members who are encouraged not to just be observers, the performers work with tables, chairs, bowls, windows and doors, deploying them in unexpected ways to shift the attention and provide surprising impact. Their stylised physicality feels both expressive and exact, almost cinematic in the way it speeds up, slows down and echoes around itself, as if what we're watching has been edited somehow for maximum effect.

In addition to exploring how people manipulate and control each other in relationships, moments set in churches depict religious impulses that reflect joy, doubt and condemnation. As the thrumming soundscape adds a remarkably visceral tone to everything, there are also bursts of speech along the way, including preachers sermonising, pointed dialog and some poetic musings. None of this tells the audience how to interpret what's on stage, but it all works together to paint a picture that carries a strong punch to the gut.



photos by Von Fox Productions • 14.Sep.22

Sunday, 11 September 2022

Venezia79: And the winners are...

I saw 43 films at the 79th Venice Film Festival, spread across the various selections, including Competition, Out of Competition, Venice Days, Horizons and International Critics Week. One of my favourites was the documentary All the Beauty and the Bloodshed, which won the Golden Lion for director Laura Poitras (above). Here are the other big winners, followed by my favourites from the festival and then a report on my first proper foray into virtual reality...

A W A R D   W I N N E R S

  • Golden Lion
    : All the Beauty and the Bloodshed
  • Silver Lion: Saint Omer
  • Special Jury Prize: No Bears
  • Director: Luca Guadagnino - Bones and All
  • Screenwriter: Martin McDonagh - The Banshees of Inisherin
  • Actress: Cate Banchett - Tár
  • Actor: Colin Farrell - The Banshees of Inisherin
  • Young Actor: Taylor Russell - Bones and All
  • Debut Film: Alice Diop - Saint Omer
  • Queer Lion: Skin Deep
  • Audience Award: Nezouh
  • Horizons: World War III
  • Venice Days: Blue Jean
  • International Critics Week: Eismayer
  • Fipresci Prize: Argentina, 1985

M Y   B E S T   O F   F E S T

  1. No Bears
    (Jafar Panahi, Iran)
  2. The Banshees of Inisherin (Martin McDonagh, Ireland)
  3. Athena (Romain Gavras, France)
  4. Blonde (Andrew Dominik, US)
  5. Skin Deep (Alex Schaad, Germany)
  6. Tár (Todd Field, US)
  7. All the Beauty and the Bloodshed (Laura Poitras, US)
  8. Blue Jean (Georgia Oakley, UK)
  9. On the Fringe (Juan Diego Botto, Spain)
  10. The Damned Don't Cry (Fyzal Boulifa, Morocco)
The next 10: When the Waves Are Gone (Philippines); Call of God (Kyrgyzstan); Desperate Souls, Dark City and the Legend of Midnight Cowboy (US); Argentina, 1985 (Argentina); Immensity (Italy); Anhell69 (Colombia); Bones and All (US); Wolf and Dog (Portugal); Ordinary Failures (Czech Republic); Dreamin' Wild (US).

~~~~~~~ ~~ ~~~ ~~~~
V E N I C E   I M M E R S I V E

This was by first real experience with virtual reality on a festival level, and it's great to see how far the technology has come. It still has a way to go, mainly in making headsets less intrusive and the imagery crisper. I'd also love to see more narrative projects, but I'm sure those will come. Here's what I saw on the Venezia79 Immersive Island, in order...

Alex Honnold:
The Soloist VR
dir Jonathan Griffith; with Alex Honnold, Nicolas Hojac 22/UK 60m
The technology behind this film is almost as impressive as the seriously supernatural skills of Honnold (Free Solo) as he free-solo climbs a series of insane rock faces in Yosemite, the Dolomites and the French Alps. The camera seems to hang just off the cliff with him, allowing us to look 360 degrees: straight up and down, and also to take in the glorious views. In between the climbs we get to know Honnold as he chats to a journalist and prepares with fellow climber Hojac. So this is a brisk hour, packed with spectacular footage, and definitely not for anyone afraid of heights.

Dazzle: A Re-assembly of Bodies
dir Ruth Gibson, Bruno Martelli, Alexa Pollmann, Bine Roth; with Harry Alexander, Hannah Burfield, Emily Coates, Ruth Gibson, Axelle De Groote, Francesca Orlando, Alice Tatge 22/UK 45m 
Mixing live performance with a virtual experience, this ambitious project puts the audience amid cast members. On arrival we're assigned a role, and I was put in an observational one, sitting on the side watching, which was a bit dull as I wanted the fill experience. In front of me were two dancers in mo-cap suits and two audience members in VR gear with screens that showed the virtual environment they were engaged with. Hopefully next time I get a chance to get more involved. 

All Unsaved Progress Will Be Lost
dir Melanie Courtinat 22/Fr 10m
Using written quotes from people who were told to leave their homes after the Chernobyl incident, this animated virtual reality piece glides through a futuristic landscape under which a meadow of colourful wildflowers wave in the breeze. Up above are what look like concrete overpasses and rising tower blocks. The quotes refer to displacement, clinging to memories in specific places and ultimately to heading out to create a new world. Even immersed in this environment, watching this is a bit passive, but it's packed with pointed moments.

Space Explorers: The ISS Experience - Spacewalkers
dir Felix Lajeunesse, Paul Raphael; with Akihiko Hoshide, Andrew Morgan, Christina Koch, Jessica Meir, Megan McArthur, Luca Parmitano, Oleg Ivanovich Skripochka, Thomas Pesquet 22/Can 10m
Lajeunesse and Raphael sent a 360-degree virtual rig to the International Space Station and, for this experience, attached it to the extending arms outside. The effect is like simply floating in space, between the station and the earth, while astronauts do a series of repairs. Not only is this a fascinatingly detailed glimpse at the exterior of the station (complete with a Spacex capsule docked there), but it's a magnificent way to see how it feels to stare down at our planet, with the sun and moon appearing around the horizons.

Space Explorers: The ISS Experience - Unite
dir Felix Lajeunesse, Paul Raphael; with Christina Koch, Andrew Morgan, Jessica Meir, Luca Parmitano, Hazzaa Almansoori, Alexey Nikolaevich Ovchinin, Oleg Ivanovich Skripochka, Aleksandr Alexandrovich, Skvortsov 22/Can 35m
This time, Lajeunesse and Raphael's camera rig is inside the station, as various astronauts and cosmonauts interact with each other, go about their business, enjoy leisure time and show the viewer around the remarkably cluttered station. How they live and work is riveting to see so up-close and personal, as they share their own thoughts and feelings. And the coming and going of various crew members adds to the atmosphere, giving us a glimpse of the camaraderie and playfulness of these scientific experts who are still in awe when they look down on the Earth from above.

Eggscape
dir German Heller; scr German Heller, Federico Heller, Jorge Tereso 22/Arg 10m
Finally, I thought I'd attempt one of the game experiences, and this one looked particularly intriguing, as the physical site contains a series of tiny sets built with a witty attention to detail. And once you put on the VR headset, they come to life with augmented reality. You control a little egg who collects capsules while dodging obstacles, fighting monsters and trying not to fall off the sets and splat on the floor. It's colourfully animated, wildly inventive and absolutely hilarious. Thankfully they also give you infinite lives so you can make it to the exhilarating ending.

I still have a lot of writing to do, but full reviews of the films will be linked at Shadows VENICE FILM FESTIVAL page as soon as possible.

Saturday, 10 September 2022

Venezia79: Staring at the sky

The 79th Venice Film Festival is holding its final screenings today before handing out awards tonight. I'll report those here tomorrow, along with my own best films of the festival and a report on my immersive/virtual reality experience here. But I'm now done with screenings, and I certainly won't miss having the opening of each movie interrupted by restless and late-arriving audience members who clamber over you right when the lights go out without warning (I have actual bruises) then refuse to settle down or sometimes carry on chatting at full voice. While the ushers shine flashlights in your eyes. In other words, it will be nice to once again be able to settle in and watch how a movie starts. Here are my final films...

The Listener
dir Steve Buscemi; with Tessa Thompson, Rebecca Hall 22/US ***
Anchored around a sensitive performance by Tessa Thompson, with no one else on-screen at all, this is an engaging look at the life of a helpline operator. It's also directed by Steve Buscemi to be achingly picturesque, while Alessandro Camon's script is somewhat overwritten, making each character perhaps too articulate. Combined with the film's cozy production design, this makes everything feel somewhat artificial. But even if the big emotional beats in a series of phone calls are perhaps too tidy, there are continual points of resonance. [Closing film of Venice Days]

The Hanging Sun
dir Francesco Carrozzini; with Jessica Brown Findlay, Alessandro Borghi 22/UK ***.
Based on a Jo Nesbo novel, this British-Italian production is a dark drama with subtle undertones of a thriller. A solid cast brings intriguing textures to the characters and situations, while director Francesco Carrozzini maintains some gently gnawing tension and an earthy sense of connection between people in a community that seems to sit right on the edge of the world. So it's a bit frustrating that Stefano Bises' script never digs very deeply, and also simply abandons at least one major plot thread along the way. [Closing film of Venezia79]

Pearl
dir Ti West; with Mia Goth, David Corenswet 22/US ***.
There's an outrageously heightened style to this bonkers horror comedy, which is a prequel to filmmaker Ti West's previous movie X, this time cowritten with star Mia Goth. The film harks back to classics from The Wizard of Oz to Psycho, but everything is drenched in Technicolor hues. As a story of a young woman who feels trapped by her life, there's some emotional resonance along the way, but the seriously grisly nuttiness continually undercuts this. What remains is an entertainingly nasty tale about the birth of a killer.

No Bears
dir-scr Jafar Panahi; with Jafar Panahi, Vahid Mobasheri 22/Irn ****.
Despite being banned from making movies, master filmmaker Jafar Panahi continues to tell powerful stories about life in Iran. This hugely involving film uses wry humour to capture the absurdities of culture as they have an enormous impact on two love stories. It's also a knowing glimpse into the art of making a movie in such a convoluted place, as well as a deeply personal exploration of the situation for people who are struggling to survive when traditions and borders turn them into desperate refugees.

Full reviews will be linked at Shadows VENICE FILM FESTIVAL page, eventually!  It may take awhile to catch up.


Friday, 9 September 2022

Venezia79: Star power

Things are clearly winding down at the 79th Venice Film Festival, with only two more days of premieres at hand. Everything is feeling even quieter today with the news out of Britain about the death of Queen Elizabeth II, so I know I will be returning to a very sombre city. Meanwhile, the festival carries on. I spent a few hours yesterday at the Venice Immersive island, taking in six virtual reality productions (more on those later). And my jury met last night to discuss the 19 films contending for this year's Queer Lion (we announce our winner tonight). Here are some movie highlights...

Blonde
dir-scr Andrew Dominik; 
with Ana de Armas, Adrien Brody 22/US ****
Andrew Dominik takes a very big swing at the life of Marilyn Monroe, and frankly he'd have been crazy not to do so. It may be reductive to define one of the most iconic stars of all time by her unresolved daddy issues, but this is a complex biopic that takes on several pungent themes head-on. The film is charged with energy and passion, ambitiously visual and anchored by a fiercely layered performance from Ana de Armas. It also has strong things to say about celebrity culture, even as it relentlessly deals in myths.

Call of God
dir-scr Kim Ki-duk; with Abylai Maratov, Zhanel Sergazina 22/Kyr ****
The late Kim Ki-duk only just finished this offbeat romance before he died from covid. It’s an extraordinarily personal riff on how love can be so much like a dream, and occasionally a nightmare. Set in Kyrgyzstan and shot mainly in black and white, the film uses its surreal set-up to keep the audience’s expectations at bay, sending a young couple on a passionate odyssey that seems to encompass years in just a few days. And the film radiates with the idea that love is worth the pain. And that maybe the pain is essential.

Bread and Salt
dir-scr Damian Kocur; with Tymoteusz Bies, Jacek Bies 22/Pol ***
Bracingly shot in observational style, this Polish drama gets up close to its characters even as it neglects the narrative. It's an often harrowing depiction of a small town where young people think it's cool to deal in racism, bigotry and bullying. And the thoughtful central character draws us in, even if his journey remains stubbornly off-camera. Writer-director Damian Kocur has a terrific eye for real-life interaction, so the film has power as a document of a place and time. But stronger storytelling might have made it involving and moving.

Beyond the Wall
dir-scr Vahid Jalilvand; with Navid Mohammadzadeh, Dayana Habibi 22/Irn ***
Unlikely to be screened in its home country, this Iranian drama is a remarkably disturbing depiction of a harshly oppressive police state. But writer-director Vahid Jalilvand doesn't take a straightforward approach, blurring present action with flashbacks and other cutaways to create a more sensory approach to the situation. It's all played at a rather arch volume, including the quieter scenes, where more nuanced performances might have made it easier to identify with the characters. But the film is also bold and chilling.

Full reviews will be linked at Shadows VENICE FILM FESTIVAL page, eventually!


Thursday, 8 September 2022

Venezia79: Happy families

The 79th Venice Film Festival continues to lay out starry red carpets, as I spotted Hugh Jackman, Laura Dern, Zen McGrath (pictured above), plus Vanessa Kirby and writer-director Florian Zeller out there today. I also took advantage of a long gap between two films to head off to the beach for awhile. It was nice to just stroll in the sand and lounge in the shade for a couple of hours. There's just one big premiere left, Ana de Armas in Blonde tomorrow, as the global festival attention shifts to Toronto. But there are still plenty of movies showing on the Lido here. Here are some more highlights...

The Son
dir Florian Zeller; with Hugh Jackman, Laura Dern 22/UK ***
After The Father, writer-director Florian Zeller adapts another of his complex family-centred plays for the big screen, this time a story about a troubled teen and the hoops his parents and stepmother jump through trying to help him. It's a dark story, with only very rare moments of lightness as the characters struggle with ideas they can't quite comprehend, largely because no one can. Clinical depression is an important topic to dramatise, although it means that the plot needs to retain a nagging level of uncertainty.

Dreamin' Wild
dir-scr Bill Pohlad; with Casey Affleck, Noah Jupe 22/US ****
Remaining in musical mode after 2014's Love & Mercy, filmmaker Bill Pohlad tells the true story of how Don and Joe Emerson's eponymous album became a hit some 30 years after it was recorded. It's an involving movie with strong characters, sharply shot and edited to the rhythms of these brothers' soulful-teen tunes. And while the film has a tendency to lean into the sentimental nostalgia, it also offers some knowing insight into family relationships. And it's likely to give birth to a whole new generation of fans.

Saint Omer
dir Alice Diop; with Kayije Kagame, Guslagie Malanga 22/Fr **
There's a terrific story at the centre of this French drama, and it's woven in with some powerful themes and clever juxtapositions. But filmmaker Alice Diop never manages to get out of her head as she puts this onto the screen, so the chilly, inexpressive scenes remain stubbornly out of reach. But it's sharply well shot, and the courtroom drama that the story revolves around is genuinely riveting, stealing focus from the loosely undeveloped plot thread that is clearly meant to be the film's main thrust.

The Damned Don't Cry [Les Damnés Ne Pleurent Pas]
dir-scr Fyzal Boulifa; with Aicha Tebbae, Abdellah El Hajjouji 22/Mor ****
Grounded and earthy, this Moroccan drama finds resonance in a complex relationship between a woman and her teen son. It's the kind of film in which the audience has to work to discover the deeper truths about the events depicted on-screen, with secrets carefully revealed by writer-director Fyzal Boulifa. The story feels bracingly realistic and impossible to predict as it cycles through events that are hopeful and darkly troubling. And this authenticity in the story and characters bravely takes on the system.

Lord of the Ants [Il Signore Delle Formiche]
dir Gianni Amelio; with Luigi Lo Cascio, Elio Germano 22/It ***
Big and melodramatic, this Italian period drama is so locked into its 1960s style that it neglects to provide much insight on its hugely important central topic. This means the film says essentially the same things that were said at the time, even if they weren't shouted loudly enough. It's the true story of a court case in which a gay university professor was tried for plagio, manipulating a student. The injustice is horrific on several levels, and filmmaker Gianni Amelio sharply depicts this. But the dialog waffles through far too much poetry and metaphor.

Full reviews will be linked at Shadows VENICE FILM FESTIVAL page, eventually!


Wednesday, 7 September 2022

Venezia79: Happy trails

Things took a bit of a turn at the mid-point of the 79th Venice Film Festival, as I saw a handful of films that felt a bit underwhelming (see the first three films below). Although even these have elements that make them worth a look. All of the critics are looking decidedly more tired and rumpled at the moment, in need of a good nap. And several are dashing off to Toronto, where the festival starts tomorrow. Meanwhile, I have a bit more free time today and tomorrow, checking out both the festival's immersive (virtual reality) section and the beach! Four more festival highlights below...

Dead for a Dollar
dir-scr Walter Hill; with Christoph Waltz, Willem Dafoe 22/US ***
Choppy and more than a little cheesy, this colour-drained Western from veteran writer-director Walter Hill holds the attention with its quirky characters and situations. There isn't much to the convoluted plot, no story arc to speak of and only cursory nods to a few salient themes. But the dusty imagery is packed with references to Sergio Leone, while the goofy tone evokes fond memories of Blazing Saddles. And there's plenty of fun to be had watching pros like Christoph Waltz and Willem Dafoe casually chomp on the scenery.

On the Fringe [En los Márgenes]
dir Juan Diego Botto; with Penelope Cruz, Luis Tosar 22/Sp ***.
While this drama is centred around a specific political topic in Spain, its repercussions are wider, as are its emotional resonances. Actor-filmmaker Juan Diego Botto takes a look at evictions that have thrown nearly half a million people from their homes, often due to unfair banking practices. The film weaves several story threads together, lightly interconnecting them along the way. The result feels somewhat pushy and relentlessly heightened, with a lot of people flailing angrily at a cruel system. But it's also hugely moving..

Other People's Children [Les Enfants des Autres]
dir-scr Rebecca Zlotowski; with Virginie Efira, Roschdy Zem 22/Fr ***
An intrusive score and unsympathetic characters make this sharply observant French drama difficult to like. Writer-director Rebecca Zlotowski is exploring the resonant feelings of a woman who wants kids, but perhaps may have to settle for being a stepmum. But the carefully constructed script never feels organic, throwing in situations only to punch the theme from another angle. And even if the protagonist is a music teacher, a loudly emotive score is not appropriate. It steamrolls any possible nuance.

Anhell69
dir-scr Theo Montoya; with Camilo Najar, Vitor Gaviria 22/Col ****
Real-life news clips and home video add a gritty edge to this swirly Colombian documentary, which dramatically explores the decades of drug-trade violence that tore the nation apart. Expanding on his short doc Son of Sodom, filmmaker Theo Montoya takes a poetic approach that mixes real-life footage with dramatises scenes. It's visually sumptuous, so beautifully shot and edited that it gets deep under the skin, provoking both thought and emotion. And Montoya calls this a film without borders, without gender.

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