Saturday, 26 November 2022

On the Road: Can we talk?

This week my main focus has been on family and friends, hanging out and celebrating Thanksgiving in California. Of course, since I grew up in Ecuador, I've also been keeping an eye on the World Cup! And my family had a full Ecuadorian meal instead of turkey, sitting outside in the sunshine. 

I only watched one movie this week: the powerful drama She Said, which traces the true story of two New York Times journalists (played by Carey Mulligan and Zoe Kazan) as they investigate stories of abuse surrounding Harvey Weinstein. It's a must-see film - urgent and powerfully well-made. REVIEW >

There was also a trip to the theatre, seeing Aaron Sorkin's stage adaptation of To Kill a Mockingbird at the Pantages Theatre in Hollywood, starring Richard Thomas. It's a terrific approach to Harper Lee's classic novel, packed with present-day resonance that's strongly played.

Still to come are screenings of films like Damien Chazelle's Babylon, Guillermo Del Toro's Pinocchio, Roald Dahl's Matilda the Musical, Hirokazu Kore-eda's Broker and the war drama Devotion, among other awards contenders before my first nominations ballot deadline on 7th December.

Thursday, 17 November 2022

On the Road: Family time

Hello from sunny Southern California. I'm in Orange County for a couple of weeks visiting my parents, family and friends. And also watching movies, because I can't help myself. Since its movie awards season, there are a lot of screenings on, so I'll be occasionally driving up into Hollywood to see things there. And there are also a few movies in theatres now that haven't opened in the UK yet, such as the first one here, which I saw with my parents yesterday. The other two were films I caught up with on the plane...

Armageddon Time
dir-scr James Gray; with Anne Hathaway, Jeremy Strong 22/US ***.
Filmmaker James Gray makes by far his most personal project yet, tapping into his own childhood for a coming-of-age drama set in 1980 Queens with a plot that plays largely in the subtext. Even as it takes on enormous political and social issues, film has a lovely delicacy, although this subtlety can be challenging for viewers who like to have a clear idea of what the story is trying to say. That said, it bristles with provocative themes, bracingly complex characters and nuanced performances from a strong cast ably anchored by the young teen Banks Repeta.

Clerks III
dir-scr Kevin Smith; with Brian O'Halloran, Jeff Anderson22/US ***.
Kevin Smith revisits his now iconic characters once again for another flurry of nutty antics and snappy movie references. All of the main cast is back, with added cameos, for a meta-comedy that takes a remarkably moving look at middle-aged men grappling with their mortality. Things kick off when Randal (Anderson) has a heart attack and decides it’s finally time to make a movie of his own, enlisting Dante (O'Halloran) and the gang to play themselves. What follows is witty and messy, as expected, with Smith’s charming-scruffy filmmaking quietly revealing a rather sophisticated exploration of ambition, regret and grief. There are plenty of goofy sequences along the way, but the most memorable moments involve nostalgia and big emotions.

Marcel the Shell With Shoes On
dir Dean Fleischer-Camp; voices Jenny Slate, Isabella Rossellini 21/US ****
Disarmingly surreal, this surreal animated romp is so relentlessly charming that its big emotional climax sneaks up on us. It’s the story of a tiny shell named Marcel (Slate) who finds himself alone in a big house with his grandmother Connie (Rossellini) after the owner (Thomas Mann) leaves, inadvertently taking the rest of Marcel's eclectic family with him. Then filmmaker Dean rents the house on Airbnb. He befriends Marcel and starts shooting documentary footage, which goes viral online and attracts the attention of a 60 Minutes producer. Where this goes is wonderfully bonkers, and along the way the amusing details and Marcel’s hilariously sarcastic humour completely win us over, leading to some unexpected moving moments. Watching this micro-gem of a film is pure joy.

In addition to catching up with family and friends (the main purpose of this trip!), while in Southern California I'll also be attending a few awards-consideration screenings, and also seeing some things in cinemas. Over the coming week, I'm looking forward to Sarah Polley's Women Talking, Steven Spielberg's The Fabelmans, Disney's animated Strange World and Damien Chazelle's Babylon. Others are sure to pop up...

Friday, 11 November 2022

Dance: Free expression

Julie Cunningham & Company
Lilian Baylis Studio, Sadler's Wells, London • 10-11.Nov.22

In response to two iconic pieces of Western classical music, Jules Cunningham and company present a queer spin on music that is normally danced traditionally. As a choreographer, Cunningham creates remarkably expressive work that catches nuances of the music in ways that feel almost off-handed. They also convey a remarkable range of very personal emotions, with vivid highs and lows.

M/y-kovsky
choreographer Jules Cunningham
performers Yu-Chien Cheng, Jules Cunningham, Eleanor Perry, Owen Ridley-DeMonick, Stephen Quildan
assistant director/dramaturg Harry Alexander
lighting Imogen Clarke
music Tchaikovsky's Piano Concerto No 1 second movement performed by Berlin Philmarmonic (1996), first movement performed by Orchestre de la Suisse Romande (1975)

Using Tchaikovsky's second movement as this piece's first half, Cunningham and Perry are on-stage acting out cheeky meeting with a roll of paper that becomes what looks like a picnic blanket, feeding into their flirtatious interaction. They then separate, using two more rolls to create bed-like scenarios across the stage, writing notes to each other before reuniting to exchange them. The interaction is never quite what we expect, full of witty twists and turns, performed with mischievous glee.

In the second half, four dancers perform to Tchaikovsky's triumphant first movement, combining classical and modern moves, barefoot in shiny black overalls that allow for some terrific pocket work. The tone shifts with the music, from a soaring march to more darkly emotive moments. Dancers move as a united group then spiral out into individual flourishes or break off in pairs. This use of the space with layers of personal interaction puts a playful spin on a familiar classical piece, including a witty interlude in which Cunningham enters the stage, joining, disrupting and coaxing the action.


Fire bird
choreographer/performer Jules Cunningham
featuring JD Samson
assistant director/dramaturg Joyce Henderson
lighting Imogen Clarke
costume/design Tim Spooner, Jules Cunningham
music Stravinsky's The Firebird performed by Bergen Philharmonic (2012)

With red string zig-zagging above the stage, Cunningham begins against the wall, casting dramatic shadows that seem to fight for dominance, pushing and pulling before they break free of each other. What follows is an epic 40-minute intimate performance that follows the ebb and flow of the music, shifting in tone from energetic expressiveness to contained darkness. The physical strain is considerable, as Cunningham pushes their body to extremes to reveal vulnerability and defiance.

Along the way, a video square appears on a wall showing a recording booth where mumbling vocals are added to the orchestration. Then Cunningham grabs a microphone and hums along while continuing to dance. They also find a pair of trainers in a corner, which allows for even more intense physicality, leading to a very big finish that echoes Stravinsky's musicality. Pretty much every emotion is demonstrated in this piece, with moves that are huge as well as quietly internalised, reacting and interacting to the music while being fearlessly individualistic.

Both of these pieces are powerful to watch, as they take on the nature of dance history itself, rewriting it for a more fluid generation. And while it may sometimes feel a bit meandering, the intensely personal nature of Cunningham's work carries a proper kick.


m/y-kovsky photo by Zbigniew Kotklewicz from an earlier production
fire bird photos by Christa Holka • 10.Nov.22


Thursday, 10 November 2022

Critical Week: Larger than life

It's been a fairly relaxed week at the movies for me, as I've just tried to get caught up on things, posting reviews from autumn festivals and catching up on some films. There are a lot of awards-buzzy movies I haven't seen yet, so there's still a ways to go. One I'd been looking forward to certainly didn't disappoint: Vicky Krieps delivers a wonderfully nuanced performances as Austria's Empress Elisabeth in the inventive and rightfully award-winning biopic Corsage. And a terrific cast brings a more introspective tone to the sequel Black Panther: Wakanda Forever, a blockbuster that I liked better than the first film, mainly because it dodges the usual Marvel pitfalls. 

BEST OUT THIS WEEK:
No Bears • Wakanda Forever
Homebody • Being Thunder
PERHAPS AVOID:
A Couple • Dear Zoe
ALL REVIEWS >
Anya Taylor-Joy, Ralph Fiennes and Nicholas Hoult star in the blackly comical The Menu, which tilts intriguingly from parody into horror. Dustin Hoffman and Sissy Spacek team up with their children Jake Hoffman and Schuyler Fisk in the warmly dramatic romcom Sam & Kate. Romain Duris and Berenice Bejo join director Michel Hazanavicious for the witty and perhaps too-meta zombie movie pastiche Final Cut. Ryan Kwanten goes Blade Runner for the enigmatic futuristic Hong Kong noir Expired. The comedy Homebody creates an unusually knowing body-swap scenario. And the Latin American horror Blood-Red Ox is confusing but packed with clever details.

The Critics' Circle Film Section also held its annual lunch with the British Board of Film Classification, an event that has been virtual for the past two years. It was great to be back in-person again, learning about the BBFC's new endeavours and going through some of the borderline cases over the past year. And it was also nice to be in a room full of critics as well - for the second time in a week after last Thursday's special Critics' Circle all-sections award lunch for Emma Thompson.

Movies to this coming week include Lili Taylor and Jason Schwartzman in the romcom There There, Lukas Dhont's teen drama Close, Costa Rica's drama Clara Sola, the French animated comedy Marcel the Shell with Shoes On, and the Indian action epic RRR. I'm also flying out to Southern California to visit my family and friends for a couple of weeks, and of course to watch more movies too.

Thursday, 3 November 2022

Critical Week: Let's get weird

After two straight months of film festivals, I made the decision to sit out the 30th Raindance Film Fest, which is underway in London this week. It's always packed with great screenings, unsung films often with filmmaker Q&As. But I've needed some mental health space. I also had to prepare for the annual Critics' Circle Services to the Arts award today, which this year went to Emma Thompson. As chair of the Film Section, I sat next to her for lunch and then delivered a speech about her career before she replied with a fabulous speech of her own about the nature of criticism and its impact on her life. There were about 75 members of the Circle in attendance from across all six sections - film, theatre, dance, music, books and art. A superb afternoon.

BEST OUT THIS WEEK:
Causeway • Living
Weird: The Al Yankovic Story
Missing • Utama • Neptune Frost
PERHAPS AVOID:
Dear Zoe
ALL REVIEWS >
Movie-wise, the surprising highlight was the pastiche biopic Weird: The Al Yankovic Story, starring Daniel Radcliffe as the king of parody songs. It's a riotously hilarious film, and the screening was accompanied by a lively launch party for Roku in the UK. Other films included the violent and entertaining action drama Medieval, starring Ben Foster, Michael Caine and Sophie Lowe; the superbly unsettling urban horror drama Nanny, with Anna Diop as a Senegalese woman in New York; the remarkable Sadie Sink in the melodramatic and rather slushy drama Dear Zoe; the latest from Cornish filmmaker Mark Jenkin, the folkloric freak-out Enys Men; and a new inventively nutty mind-bender from Justin Benson and Aaron Moorhead, the paranormal adventure Something in the Dirt.

Movies to watch this next week include the sequel Black Panther: Wakanda Forever, Dustin Hoffman and Sissy Spacek in Sam & Kate, Romain Duris in Final Cut, Latin American horror in Blood-Red Ox, the Australian romance Expired and the surreal comedy Homebody.