Wednesday, January 9, 2019

If Beale Street Could Talk: Barry Jenkins


[This piece was originally published for the monthly newsletter for the First Presbyterian Church of Delray]

“The Holy Ghost will cause that child to shrivel up in your womb,” the mother hisses at the terrified young woman. It echoes like a gunshot in the tiny Harlem apartment where the Rivers family had invited the Hunt’s over to announce that their nineteen year old daughter Tish would be having their son Fonny’s child. There had never been much love between Tish and Fonny’s mother, the imperious Mrs. Hunt, but nobody could have predicted the cruelty, the inhumanity, the evil of her response. “I guess you call your lustful action love,” she continues,” I don’t. I always knew that you would be the destruction of my son. You have a demon in you—I always knew it.” The poison sprays from her lips as she curses the young woman she’s known her whole life—the same woman who grew up with her young Fonny as a sister, sharing the same schools, the same baths, the same love and affection from their community. Yet now, blinded by her zealotry and horror towards Tish having a child out of wedlock, all she can see is a harlot. And so she screams and rages to destroy this already scared young woman in a cloud of righteous fury.

There are many poignant layers to Barry Jenkins’ revelatory adaptation of James Baldwin’s novel If Beale Street Could Talk: the ghettoization of African-American communities, the victimization of black male bodies, the devaluation of black female ones, the possibility of love and hope despite inhabiting a broken, racist world. Yet it’s this difficult, nauseating scene in the Rivers family’s living room that speaks to one of the more under-appreciated undercurrents of the film: the difference between religion that restricts and religion that restores. On the one side, we have the “holy roller” Mrs. Hunt and her equally judgmental daughters who rage against Tish’s getting pregnant in this, their only scene. The set-up closely mimics the Pericope Adulterae, or the story of Jesus and the woman taken in adultery from the seventh and eighth chapters of the Gospel of John: they’re quick to persecute the woman, but are happily oblivious to the fact that it takes two to tango and that the man is equally at fault. In fact, Mrs. Hunt explicitly says in the same breath that she damns Tish that God has already forgiven her son. This is Christianity stripped of all the compassion and mercy that separates the message of Jesus from all the other world religions.

But it’s far from the only depiction of faith in If Beale Street Could Talk. There are two other scenes where characters pray, and they’re both notably at tables before meals. The first is when Fonny meets up with an old friend named Daniel after he’s released from a two-year prison stint for a crime he was wrongly accused of. Daniel spends much of his visit reliving the dehumanizing trauma of his incarceration as Fonny silently sits and listens. The second time is when Tish visits Fonny in prison with their young son after Fonny decides to accept a plea deal for a shorter sentence on a false rape charge. Both scenes see damaged, wrongfully accused men reaching out for closeness with loved ones, and both end with meals provided by Tish, the first a sumptuous feast of pork and cornbread, the second a paltry handful of snack cakes. Yet both are spiritual healings made explicitly religious by Tish’s insistence on praying before they eat. Here we see the holy communion of believers sanctified by the grace of a God who watches and listens, who shares in our pain and suffering.

As Christians, we are called to address the brokenness of the world and not flinch from it, to love the sinner while hating the sin. We all have a choice, then: will we love or judge; will we heal or punish; will we be Christians of the living room, or Christians of the kitchen table?

Rating: 9/10

Friday, January 4, 2019

Bumblebee: Travis Knight


You guys, why didn’t ANY of you tell me that Travis Knight's Bumblebee was a live-action Iron Giant remake with a coat of Transformers paint? I mean, it’s fine. But it’s so obviously The Iron Giant. The beats are almost identical; there's even a scene where the broken-hearted alien machine with memory problems goes berserk on a military force after mistakenly thinking they killed their precocious child companion. And that’s...really all I have to say about this movie. Still though, it was nice to see a Transformers movie that didn't actively hate its audience.

Rating: 6/10

Monday, December 31, 2018

The Band's Visit: Eran Kolirin


I came to Eran Kolirin's The Band's Visit in kind of a round-about way. I originally saw the Broadway musical with my dad a few months ago. We both loved it, so I bought the original film version for Christmas. Having watched it together, I think we can both agree that the musical was better, but it's still a gorgeous and poignant film about loss and love between strangers in a strange land. It's very, very slow, but it's the rare kind of slow that lets you sink into its textures and rhythms instead of insisting on stilted stasis. Just a wonderful film. And hey! The lead actor in this movie was the same guy we saw on Broadway! Neat!

Rating: 8/10

Hereditary: Ari Aster


Whatcha want from me? Ari Aster's one of the best horror films ever made and easily the best of 2018.

Rating: 9/10

Saturday, December 29, 2018

Mary Poppins Returns: Rob Marshall


I don’t think I can be objective on this one, guys. The original Mary Poppins is such an emotionally charged part of my childhood that I honestly teared up when Dick Van Dyke mentioned “two tuppence for the pigeon lady.” But bottom line: Rob Marshall's Mary Poppins Returns was sweet. Not all of it worked as well as I think the filmmakers hoped—I love Meryl but WOW her Topsy Turvey number was dreadful and unnecessary—but the parts that work REALLY worked. The china vase sequence made my chest hurt for the old days of 2-D Disney animation. (Well, that and Emily Blunt in a bob-cut. I’m only HUMAN, guys!) But it’s obvious the people who made this film didn’t treat it like a cynical cash grab or hollow franchise installment. There’s a lotta love in this film, and it shows.

Rating: 6/10

Wednesday, December 26, 2018

Welcome to Marwen: Robert Zemeckis


To read this review, go to: https://www.theyoungfolks.com/film/128129/welcome-to-marwen-movie-review-an-embarrassing-disaster-all-around/.

Rating: 4/10

Tuesday, December 25, 2018

Hearts Beat Loud: Brett Haley


Capping of this Christmas by watching Brett Haley's Hearts Beat Loud. My, but this film sure is comfy. Ted Danson works the bar, the only music that exists is hipster indie, all the sunshine is gentle and happy, and Nick Offerman's ASMR-purring voice suffuses all. It's delightful. This movie is also a blatant fantasy. A struggling small business owner being friends and possibly lovers with his landlady who's eager to help him keep his shop (located in prime Brooklyn real estate)? A "band" hitting it big with one song on Spotify? But that's fine; it's okay for some films to be breezy, happy sits where everything turns out okay because nothing much was actually threatened in the first place. Would definitely watch this film again on a chilly, rainy day while wrapped in a blanket with a cup of hot cocoa.

Rating: 7/10

Monday, December 24, 2018

Blindspotting: Carlos López Estrada


It shouldn’t be possible for somebody’s debut feature to be this good. Granted, director Carlos López Estrada has been in the game making music videos for years. But in a year dominated by some of the heaviest hitters in black American filmmaking—Spike Lee! Ryan Coogler! Barry Jenkins!—it was Estrada who released perhaps the definitive statement on American race relations with his first film Blindspotting, a manic genre-hopping kaleidoscope of hope, hate, healing, and fury set in Oakland, California. Wildly veering between stoic social problem cinema, irreverent comedy, and urban fantasia, the film juggles every tone and emotion in the book without dropping any of them. A scene where a trio of hotboxing friends yank an endless supply of handguns from hammerspace to jokingly intimidate their parolee buddy can cut to one where a toddler is discovered by his parents playfully fiddling with a cocked and loaded pistol without missing a beat: this is indeed a universe where we can envision Looney Tune silliness co-existing with deathly serious fears of a young child accidentally blowing their head off. And Estrada makes it look so damn easy. Not since Tarantino has their been such an auspicious first film.

Rating: 9/10

Sunday, December 23, 2018

Shirkers: Sandi Tan


Not since David Farrier and Dylan Reeve Tickled (2016) have I seen such a bizarre, consistently surprising documentary as Sandi Tan's Shirkers, the story of one of the first indie Singaporean films, the starry-eyed girls who made it, and the creepy American man who stole it all from them. (Haven't seen Three Identical Strangers yet. Don't @ me.) It's both a detective story of what happened and a ghost story mourning childhoods, dreams, and lives long lost or murdered. It's at once a self-interrogation of director Sandi Tan's foibles as a friend and filmmaker and a ghastly screech at the predatory man who used (and perhaps abused) her and threw her away on a whim. And sorry Orson Welles, but this is the best documentary of 2018 examining the surreal production of a long-lost film decades in the making. And can we please crowdfund a full restoration of Shirkers complete with reconstructed audio track? I want this more than the completion of every single unfinished Welles project out there.

Rating: 8/10

Saturday, December 22, 2018

Aquaman: James Wan


Saw James Wan's Aquaman. I can’t remember the last time I saw a live-action superhero film I thought was legitimately beautiful. The scene of Arthur and Mera flare-diving into the trench might be the most hypnotic image in a blockbuster since the Godzilla parachuting scene. My crowd gasped.
Unfortunately the story is as pedestrian as they come. It feels like the second part of a trilogy stuck on fast-forward: lots of blunt force expository world-building, bland characterizations, comedic banter that felt half-hearted even for the superhero genre. But it doesn’t really matter? The world-building might be the best of any superhero film. I’d buy an art book breaking down all the different kingdoms. Plus, the fight scenes are AMAZING. The Sicily rooftop fight is an all-timer for the genre. It’s not as good as Wonder Woman, but it’s still great. I’ve always said that DC made more interesting movies than Marvel. The problem is they’ve only recently started to be GOOD ones. This one is the latest move in the right direction.

Rating: 7/10

Wednesday, December 19, 2018

Happy as Lazzaro: Alice Rohrwacher


So...Happy as Lazzaro. That was interesting. I'm a cold hard sucker for European class dramas, and for the first half it looks like Alice Rohrwacher dropped a Holy Fool from a folk story into a colorized Dovzhenko film. It's clear Rohrwacher is trying to make some commentary on European class and society, but she kind of shoots herself in the foot by making Lazzaro's fellow sharecroppers almost as cruel as their landlords in the first half. Maybe it's a statement on the human condition? And but the fairy tale overtones, specifically the wolf motif, detract from that somehow by elevating it to the realm of fantasy. It's a beautiful, well-acted film, and I can't say there was ever a point where I wasn't enjoying it on a scene-by-scene basis. But as a whole it leaves me with nothing but a giant question mark.

Rating: 7/10

Jia Zhangke, A Guy from Fenyang: Walter Salles


To read this review, go to: https://mubi.com/notebook/posts/a-touch-of-jia-zhangke.

Rating: 7/10

The Quake: John Andreas Andersen


To read this review, go to: https://www.theyoungfolks.com/review/127732/the-quake-movie-review-norways-new-disaster-film-barely-registers-on-the-richter-scale/.

Rating: 4/10

Islam & the Future of Tolerance: Desh Amila, Jay Shapiro


To read this review, go to: https://www.theyoungfolks.com/review/127755/islam-the-future-of-tolerance/.

Rating: 7/10

Roma: Alfonso Cuarón


[The following was written for the monthly newsletter for the First Presbyterian Church of Del Ray.]

To watch Alfonso Cuarón’s Roma is to be gently lowered into the warm bath of the director’s memories. Happy memories of growing up in the middle class neighborhood of Colonia Roma in the 1970s, back when the wealthy Europeans who’d built lavish French-style mansions had fled to better neighborhoods, abandoning their spacious houses for well-to-do Mestizo families and their servants. Sad memories of watching his parents’ marriage crumble, helpless to do anything as their family fell further and further apart. Scary memories of earthquakes, social unrest, and US-backed death squads. Safe memories of his Mixtec maid waking him in the mornings, walking him from school in the afternoons, tucking him into bed at night. He’s taken these memories, the good and the bad, and shaped them like a potter into a work of unforgettable beauty.

Though the film features a kaleidoscopic array of POVs, it follows, more often than not, the day-to-day life of Cleo (first-time actress Yalitza Aparicio), the live-in maid of biochemist Sofia (Marina de Tavira), doctor Antonio (Fernando Grediaga), and their four children. For the first hour the film lulls us into the routine of her day-to-day life, cooking and cleaning the house, caring for the children, waiting on Sofia and Antonio. On her off days she travels into the bustling center of Mexico City with her friend, fellow maid Adela (Nancy García), and their two boyfriends. After one of these outings she discovers her boyfriend, martial artist Fermín (Jorge Antonio Guerrero), has gotten her pregnant. When she tells him, he runs out on her, leaving her to face motherhood alone. At home, her mistress Sofia is having her own romantic issues—she knows Antonio is cheating on her and has a mental breakdown when his “business trip” to Quebec stretches from a few days to six months.

As the two women try to figure out their futures without their absent partners, Caurón treats us to a number of devastating set-pieces: a country outing to the house of a wealthy American family on New Year’s Eve turns tragic when a nearby forest catches fire and the drunken revelers struggle to put it out; a trip to buy a crib for Cleo’s child gets interrupted by the 1971 Corpus Christi massacre where CIA-trained shock troops nicknamed “Los Halcones” opened fire on pro-democracy protestors; a sojourn to the beach almost becomes deadly when two of Sofia’s children get swept out to sea by an unexpected current. Through it all Caurón, who served as his own cinematographer, keeps his camera steady and level, preferring long, uninterrupted shots where the camera moves almost exclusively via horizontal tracking to the left or right. The result is a feeling of audience omnipresence, making us feel both outside yet intimately familiar with the goings-on in the characters’ lives as they drift in and out of the spacious frames like worker ants in a nest.

Though written as a love letter to Caurón’s real-life nanny growing up—one of Sofia’s children, an introverted blond-haired boy, is even strongly suggested to be a director surrogate—the central dynamic of the film isn’t the one between Cleo and the children. Surprisingly, it’s not even that of Cleo and her unborn child. Instead, it could be seen as the relationship between Cleo and Sofia, two women cruelly tossed aside by their men with no financial support. At first there’s the worry that class differences will keep the two women apart; indeed, in one scene Sofia heartlessly blames Cleo for failing to keep one of her children from eavesdropping on a telephone call where she confesses the details of Antonio’s affair. But time and again the two women come through for each other, giving the other the love and support the world otherwise refuses them. It culminates one of the most soul-shattering group hugs in cinema history, where the whole family embraces a weeping Cleo while Sofia assures her again and again that they all love her. Watching this scene of two women normally kept apart by racial and economic circumstances, it’s impossible not to remember the Apostle Paul’s insistence in the Epistle to the Galatians that “there is neither Jew nor Gentile, neither slave nor free, nor is there male and female, for you are all one in Christ Jesus.” For all its transcendent loveliness and power, it is perhaps this illustration of Christ-like love that makes Roma more than just a great film—it makes it an essential one.

A Bread Factory, Parts One and Two: Patrick Wang


To read this review, go to: https://www.theyoungfolks.com/review/127986/patrick-wang-a-bread-factory/.

Rating: 8/10

Sunday, December 16, 2018

Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse: Peter Ramsey, Robert Persichetti Jr., Rodney Rothman


Hey, does anybody remember when super-hero movies used to be fun? Well, Phil Lord and Christopher Miller do, since their new film Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse is every bit a gung-ho, giddy celebration of old school comic flair and emotion as it is a raucous new entry in the Spider-Man macro-franchise. Everything, from the animation to the character work, is both dripping with fan service yet instantly accessible to newcomers unfamiliar with the bevy of new characters being introduced. The only problem is that it falls victim to the banality of traditional super-hero origin stories. For all it's stylistic pyrotechnics, it's still a Spider-Man story we've seen dozens of times. Hopefully the next one will improve on that.

Rating: 8/10

Thursday, December 13, 2018

Minding the Gap: Bing Liu


Well, this one was a kick in the teeth. What starts as a sunny film reminiscing on the sun-dappled youths of a trio of skateboarders morphs into one of the most searing, blistering examinations of Rust Belt decline, racism, and domestic abuse in American society in recent memory. Bing Liu's Minding the Gap came out of nowhere this year, astonishing critics who responded by naming it one of the best documentaries of 2018. And there's much to admire: the candidness of the interviews, even when going into subjects like giving and getting beatings; the amazing cinematography captured on skateboards; the immaculate editing that weaves a seamless tapestry of flashbacks and present observations. It's also a documentary about the making of the documentary, as Liu frequently turns the camera on himself and admits during an interview with his mother that he's using the film to help him heal from the domestic abuse he suffered as a child. The film is stunning, but one has to ask: where does Liu go from here as a filmmaker?

Rating: 8/10

Sunday, December 9, 2018

Beata Virgo Viscera: Scout Tafoya


When I was a boy, my father became friends with a pilot with owned a Cessna he kept in a small airfield tucked away a few miles from our house in Doylestown, Pennsylvania. One day, a year or two after 9/11, he took us on a flight spanning the roughly eighty miles from our Bucks county suburb to the island of Manhattan. Along the way we could look down and see the totality of America: fractal-like suburbs pockmarked with swimming pools; empty farm fields of different colors covering the countryside like a quilt; blasted industrial wastelands of rubble and coal. Finally New York City loomed in front of us like a beacon of civilization. And it was right then that my dad’s friend told us he’d have to turn around, since the US Armed Forces had been on constant alert since the attacks and had standing orders to shoot down any aircraft that came too close to the city’s airspace. As John Mellencamp might say: “But ain’t that America?” You fly close enough to the dream and the dream threatens to shoot you down. But this brand of Icarus-esque nihilism has always percolated beneath our collective national subconscious. And as director Scout Tafoya argues in his stunning new film Beata Virgo Viscera, nowhere does that resigned desperation shine through more than in our films about aviators, airports, and aircrafts. Boldly compressing nearly 80 years of American cinema, the film transports viewers into a liminal fugue-state as it weaves footage from everything from high art films to cheap porno schlock with everything in between. This might be the first time Douglas Sirk and Coleman Francis have ever been compared unironically. Yet marvel how he points out how both films use rural airports in The Tarnished Angels (1957) and The Skydivers (1963) as stages for doomed romances between burnt-out adrenaline junkies cast aside by a country in the midst of a post-war nervous breakdown. For Tafoya, midcentury thrill-seeking stunt pilots were national tulpas conjured by an existential Jungian need for the freedom Pax Americana denied so many, and their self-destruction self-ordained acts of self-worship. Culminating in a dazzling half-hour montage of ordinary Americans living their insignificant lives set to John Adams’ Grand Pianolo Music, Tafoya fossilizes the American zeitgeist of hope and failure into a cinematic daguerreotype worthy of Bill Morrison.

Rating: 8/10

Friday, December 7, 2018

Anna and the Apocalypse: John McPhail


There's an infectious energy to John McPhail's Anna and the Apocalypse, a certain kind of f**k-it-let's-do-it energy one rarely gets from more polished films. This one at times feels like a group of high school drama kids and amateur horror filmmakers somehow managed to get hold of some money, a camera, and a legitimately impressive score. For the first thirty minutes it's a delightful spasm of feel-good silliness mixed with the right blend of sincerity. Then the zombies hit and it becomes a more straightforward zombie film. All well and good. But it frequently forgets it's a musical, going 10-15 minutes at a time without any music. But the ultimate problem with the film is that it both wants to send-up and make fun of zombie survival tropes while also earnestly clinging to them, resulting in many clunky scenes of forced character and relationship development that felt old hat a mere year or two after George A. Romero hit the scene. Still, it's fine fun. And boy, can't those kids sing!

Rating: 6/10

Sunday, December 2, 2018

The Ballad of Gregorio Cortez: Robert M. Young


To read this review, go to: http://theretroset.com/corridos-and-fairy-tales-storytelling-in-the-princess-bride-and-the-ballad-of-gregorio-cortez/.

Rating: 8/10

The Princess Bride: Rob Reiner


To read this review, go to: http://theretroset.com/corridos-and-fairy-tales-storytelling-in-the-princess-bride-and-the-ballad-of-gregorio-cortez/.

Rating: 9/10

Saturday, December 1, 2018

The Favourite: Yorgos Lanthimos


I can think of no better review for Yorgos Lanthimos’ The Favourite than the man sitting next to me in the theater audibly gasping four different times at the cinematography. Perhaps more than any other 2018 original release, I enjoyed the physical act of watching this film: of marveling at the amorphous mise en scène; of drinking in stately hallways drowned in natural backlighting or claustrophobic drawing rooms peppered solely with candlelight; of bedchambers and forest roads stretched like taffy by fisheye lens in one shot yet flattened by anamorphic ones in the next. I’ve seen many detractors complain that Lanthimos’ restlessly unmoored camera and schizophrenic lens selection were hollow stylistic flourishes. But as a firm believer that style IS substance, I found the choices a bold rejection of the cinematic language traditionally associated with European dramas set among 17th-19th century aristocracy, films which so often prefer calm, stasis, and decorum over bold expressiveness (this is partly what made Stanley Kubrick’s Barry Lyndon with its stunning frame compositions and candlelight sequences seem such an atypical revelation). This stylistic renunciation matches his contempt for historical verisimilitude vis-à-vis his subjects: Queen Anne (Olivia Colman), her favorite Sarah Churchill (Rachel Weisz), and court upstart Abigail Hill (Emma Stone). Rejecting modern reassessments of Queen Anne as a stubborn, conflicted, yet decisive force in a tumultuous era of political evolution, the film portrays the monarch as an impulsive, impetuous buffoon deadened and psychologically savaged by a lifetime of grief. She’s less human being than prop to be manipulated and controlled in the erotic power struggles between Sarah and Abigail. This is all in keeping with Lanthimos’ career-long obsession with cold-blooded power inversions in universes devoid of moral centers (notably he removes all reference to the religion and faith that proved such integral parts of Anne’s life, going so far as to depict a wedding sans clergyman). Watching it, I was struck for the first time how much his movies remind me of Paul Verhoeven, both his misanthropic Danish thrillers and his equally misanthropic Hollywood blockbusters—both treat emotional innocence and sincerity with sneering contempt; anyone who CAN assume power over others has the inherent right to so long as nobody can stop them. This gets to the heart of The Favourite: it’s not a Queen Anne story. It’s a Lanthimos story using Queen Anne and her retinue like action figures.

Rating: 8/10

Ralph Breaks the Internet: Rich Moore, Phil Johnston


I like Ralph Breaks the Internet exponentially more than the first Wreck-It-Ralph film from 2012. The main reason is that it doesn't pretend to be a Ralph movie when in actuality it's a Vanellope von Schweetz with an unusually long prologue. This is a buddy film where Ralph and Vanellope embark on a quest, learn about the world, and most importantly, learn about each other. What truly surprised me was how clever and smart the third act was, particularly with its explicit observations on self-destructive behavior and the fact that sometimes friends grow apart and that can, in fact, be a good thing. Plus, the scenes with the Disney Princesses stole the show. I want an entire movie of nothing but them getting into shenanigans.

Rating: 7/10

Sunday, November 25, 2018

Lovers of the Arctic Circle: Julio Médem


Julio Médem's Lovers of the Arctic Circle is an oneiric phantasm, a poetic fever dream of forbidden love more Möbius strip than movie. Charting the life-long love affair between step-siblings Otto and Ana, the film swirls and sways as it charts the disparate coincidences, cosmic chances, and karmic phenomena that seem to pull them apart and bring them back together. This is a film of cyclical images and actions--airplanes, both paper and real; car crashes; palindromic names--as well as memories that are repeated from the viewpoints of conflicting observers, such as a ski accident that's remembered differently by Ana and Otto. Curiously, the film doesn't try to decode which of these recollections is the right one because neither can be truly "right" in the eyes of a film that sees memory and reality as equally malleable and plastic. But at its heart, the film is a romantic melodrama, something that my (admittedly cursory) glance at then-contemporary critical appraisals seemed to miss. It's gorgeous, haunting, more than a bit perverted, and maddening.

Rating: 9/10

Can You Ever Forgive Me?: Marielle Heller







Rating: 7/10

Saturday, November 24, 2018

May the Devil Take You: Timo Tjahjanto


To read this review, go to: https://www.theyoungfolks.com/review/127414/may-the-devil-take-you-is-a-satisfying-gruesome-tribute-to-haunted-house-chillers/.

Rating: 7/10

The City That Sold America: Ky Dickens


To read this review, go to: http://www.unseenfilms.net/2018/11/nate-hood-on-city-that-sold-america-208.html.

Rating: 6/10

Overlord: Julius Avery


It was a mean trick for J. J. Abrams and Paramount Pictures to make a pitch-perfect Wolfenstein movie and not tell anybody. It was an even dirtier trick for them to bury it in early November under a false name with a lukewarm, underwhelming advertising campaign. Here I sit in the aftermath, trying to wrap my head around Julius Avery’s Overlord, a film that scratches a very particular itch I doubt many people know needs scratching. Centering on a ragtag group of conspicuously multiracial 82nd Airborne paratroopers—the United States Armed Forces weren’t actually desegregated until 1948—the film begins much like a Samuel Fuller infantry flick bloated with a proper Hollywood budget, watching as they parachute from an exploding bomber behind enemy lines in occupied France. Their mission: invade a small village and neutralize a Nazi radio tower, thereby freeing Allied air support for the Normandy invasion. Avery holds his cards close to his chest at first, luring us in with several white-knuckle sequences of infantry heroics that wouldn’t feel out of place in an HBO miniseries. (The Fuller comparisons are particularly strong in a minefield sequence reminiscent of Fixed Bayonets! and in their gruff, cynical CO who seems the lost cousin of Gene Evans’ Sergeant Zack in The Steel Helmet.) But when they finally get to the village, mad science starts to bleed through the realism as they discover that the tower is actually a front for a secret Nazi laboratory hard at work on an immortality serum. Before we can get our bearings the paratroopers are fighting literal Nazi zombies, complete with all the gleeful, exploitative carnage such a preposterous scenario would suggest. Overlord is a perfect example of great execution trumping originality, as the script leans hard on stock characters that were worn out by the late 40s: the mama’s boy hero with an unflappable moral code, the French peasant woman who aids the GIs, the monstrous SS officer, the plump, bespectacled Nazi scientist. They even have a gum-chewing, wise-cracking Italian! But the pleasure in Overlord comes from Avery’s wide-eyed enthusiasm for his absurd material, playing everything—even the bits about Nazi zombies—completely straight. We never get the sense that he’s rolling his eyes at anything, even when a super-powered Nazi fistfights a super-powered paratrooper in the third act. Overlord is the rare genre film done perfectly right.

Rating: 8/10

The Grinch: Scott Mosier, Yarrow Cheney


In the The Grinch, the Who's down in Whoville sing “God Rest Ye Merry Gentlemen” and sing the verse about Jesus. Which means that in this universe there was a Who Jesus Christ. And since there are no other population centers shown, we can only assume that Whoville was where he was crucified. It makes you wonder what Dr. Seuss' in-universe version of Christianity might be like. Even more, it makes you wonder what the Whoville Bible is like. You think it's written in rhyme?

What happened next, well in Whoville they say/That Jesus the Christ came back the third day.”

Seriously though, this new Grinch movie isn’t terrible, just sorta blasé and unnecessary. Like most Illumination films, the art direction and individual gags can be inspired. But they still have no idea how to tell original, meaningful stories without wholesale stealing from better films. A lot of the slapstick worked really well! But it was in service of a poorly told story. Did we really need to give Cindy Lou Who a gang of elementary school troublemakers? Did we need that fat reindeer character and his story arc?

Rating: 5/10

Friday, November 23, 2018

The Sorrow and the Pity: Marcel Ophüls


Marcel Ophüls's The Sorrow and the Pity is a towering, exhausting work of documentary that stands alongside Alain Resnais's Night and Fog (1956) and Claude Lanzmann's Shoah (1985) as one of the seminal cinematic texts on Nazism during World War Two. But while those two latter films focused on the Holocaust, The Sorrow and the Pity turns to a less clear-cut subject: the Nazi occupation of France. During Ophüls' dizzying arrays of interviews with survivors, instigators, and bystanders, he portrays a populace equally--if not more--eager to collaborate and ignore the Germans than to actively resist them. The general theme emerges that people will do anything to justify their own comfort, even if it involves turning a blind eye to an occupying force that executes innocent people in the streets. Horrifying. Necessary. Essential.

Rating: 9/10

Wednesday, November 21, 2018

Widows: Steve McQueen


In some alternate reality, Steve McQueen’s Widows would be a tight, schlocky 85-minute 70s thriller, helmed by some second-string director with a fourth-string budget, destined for a crepuscular half-life of midnight revivals and wistful blog retrospectives. Instead, it’s a languid, measured 10s prestige noir with murderer’s row of Hollywood A-listers in front of and behind the camera. It might masquerade as a heist film about a group of widows pulling off a job after their husbands are all killed in a robbery-gone-wrong, but this is a steely-eyed interrogation of a city. That city: Chicago, microcosm of America—den of racial disharmony, economic disparity, police brutality, and less-than-good people forced to do worse-than-bad things. McQueen has stated that the film was his dream project for years, and there are many scenes where he unleashes his inner adolescent, conjuring scenes of pulpy excess and brutality. (Usually these come at the hands of Daniel Kaluuya as a ruthless mob enforcer with an dizzying repertoire of ways to humiliate, torture, and kill targets. A scene where he executes two lazy henchman while making them beatbox is bowel-drainingly chilling.) But McQueen has the instincts of a painter, not a clockmaker, and effective thrillers need the talents of the latter, not the former. And while he may mimic Michael Mann’s need to excavate the psychological interiors of his players, McQueen has none of Mann’s equally obsessive drive to construct gripping set-pieces. The central heist is treated like a bit of unfinished business late in the third act, taking no more than five minutes in which time one character is shot, two killed, and four betrayed. But unlike other directors who would’ve made the suddenness and brutality of the sting some nihilistic point about fate or human nature—consider the anti-climactic yet Shakespearean denouement of Martin Scorsese’s The Departed (2006)—the heist feels brief because McQueen appears to have cared little about it. But his unflinching examinations of gender and race makes us forgive this, especially considering his fastidious craftsmanship. Few directors know better where to put the camera and when and how to move it; and one tracking shot of a bickering politician’s car driving the one mile between desiccated projects and a palatial planned community on the same street is worth any number of thrilling heist scenes by lesser directors.

Rating: 7/10

Saturday, November 17, 2018

The Night Comes for Us: Timo Tjahjanto


Watched Timo Tjahjanto's The Night Comes for Us and...holy crap, you guys. This combined with the Raid series proves that Indonesia appears to be the up-and-coming Mecca for gritty, gruesome, and inventive action movies. Boiler-plate plot: a hitman leaves the Triad after refusing to kill a little girl, all the other Triad hitmen try to hunt him down. But it's the execution what makes it. Timo Tjahjanto isn't so much a director as a butcher, meticulously devising the most horrific ways the human body can be smashed, bashed, sliced, diced, chopped, cubed, torn, and thrashed. And sometimes all while the people on fire are on fire! Some of the cinematography reminds me of the 80s neon chic of Michael Mann or early John Woo, but never so much that it becomes overbearing. Everything here serves first and foremost to better frame the pulse-pounding violence. This is my favorite kind of action movie: one where the characters get battle damage. By the end, all the characters are hobbling around, barely able to keep their limbs from falling off or their organs from falling out. It raises the stakes more than if they were invincible.

Rating: 8/10

Thursday, November 15, 2018

A Little Wisdom: Yuqi Kang


Yuqi Kang's A Little Wisdom moves at the rhythmic of monastic life itself. Slow, meditative, measured, it regards the young boys, particularly the two precocious brothers at its core, at a Nepali Buddhist monastery as they play and fight, grow and learn. Actually it's mostly the fighting and playing--but that's the point. Instead of fully separating the boys from the world of sin, the monastery seems to have created one on a micro level, one they must navigate on their own. We realize this is a microcosm of the world in a Buddhist sense—full of pain, suffering, cruelty, but the truth (the Buddha way) surrounds them, if only they can see past the illusion of childish things. It's a nice film. A bit long an unfocused, though.

Rating: 7/10

Monday, November 12, 2018

Pyaasa: Guru Dutt


Watched Guru Dutt's Pyaasa (1957) on Mubi. Watching this, I'm reminded that non-Satyajit Ray cinema from the Indian subcontinent is one of my most embarrassing blind spots as a critic. I wish I was more familiar with classical Bollywood modes of storytelling and of genre syncretism. This is a brutally cynical romantic melodrama that occasionally veers into wacky comedy, particularly a number of shtick pieces involving an over-eager street masseur. It flagrantly mixes tone and technique, too. There's a suicide attempt at a bridge at night that feels ripped from German Expressionism. Elsewhere, there's a dream sequence between two lovers that looks consciously modeled after classic Hollywood musicals à la Astaire/Rogers. My modern Western film lens tells me I should be leery of the plot which boils down to a misunderstood male genius getting supported by a hooker with a heart of gold. But it feels like there's a specifically Indian cultural context I'm missing. Again, I can't help underscoring just how nasty and cynical this film is. There's a plot where two brothers plot to keep their brother--the hero--locked in an insane asylum so they can profit off his poetry (long story). That's something out of a Von Trier film.

Rating: 7/10

Exit: Karen Winther


To read this review, go to: http://www.unseenfilms.net/2018/11/nate-hood-on-exit-2018-doc-nyc-2018.html.

Rating: 7/10

Hillbilly: Sally Rubin, Ashley York


To read this review, go to: http://www.unseenfilms.net/2018/11/nate-hood-looks-at-hillbilly-2018-doc.html.

Rating: 5/10

Decade of Fire: Vivian Vazquez, Gretchen Hildebran


To read this review, go to: http://www.unseenfilms.net/2018/11/nate-hood-ponders-decade-of-fire-2018.html.

Rating: 7/10

Grit: Sasha Friedlander, Cynthia Wade


To read this review, go to: http://www.unseenfilms.net/2018/11/natehood-on-grit2018-doc-nyc-2018.html.

Rating: 7/10

Beautiful Boy: Felix Van Groeningen


[This piece was originally written for the newsletter of First Presbyterian Church of Del Ray.]

It shouldn’t—it couldn’t—have happened to them. They might not have been wealthy, but they were well off. The father was a writer, one of the few who could afford a comfortable living off his work with a book here, a Rolling Stones article there. They had a beautiful house on the California coast, far removed from the scuzzy streets and slums of nearby San Francisco. Theirs was a cozy life of books, music, and finger paints floating through an endless Indian summer; in short, the perfect environment to raise healthy, happy children. They were affluent, intelligent, loving, and to put an uncomfortable point to it, white. So why, then, was their eldest son, their precious Nic Sheff—aspiring writer and artist, lover of F. Scott Fitzgerald and David Bowie, teenage prodigy accepted to six colleges—found in an alley with a needle in his arm?

This incredulity lurks at the heart of Felix Van Groeningen’s astonishing Beautiful Boy, an adaption of David Sheff’s real-life memoir Beautiful Boy: A Father’s Journey Through His Son’s Addiction. There have been many incredible films about addiction, but few have ever turned such a knowing gaze towards not just the addict, but the people who love them, specifically the emotional and psychological toll of caring for somebody they know they can’t truly help. In fact, the addicted son Nic, brilliantly played by Timothée Chalamet, is merely a supporting character, drifting in and out of the film, stealing the POV for maybe 5-10 minutes at a time before returning it to the actual protagonist, his father David. If Chalamet dazzles with his portrayal of a self-loathing addict, then Steve Carrell gives the performance of his career as a father perpetually cycling through the five stages of grief. We see his initial denial when he interrogates his son after he goes missing for two days and returns withdrawn and shivering. We see his anger as he explodes at Nic for being stupid, his ex-wife in Los Angeles for not being present in his life, at himself for not being a better father. We see him bargaining with his son, agreeing to pay for his college if he attends a detox clinic and spends half a year in a halfway house. We see his depression as Nic relapses and OD’s again and again, breaking promise after promise. And finally, tragically, horrifically, we see his acceptance that he will never cure Nic and that the son, the beautiful boy he held in his arms as a newborn and raised to manhood with his own two hands, may have been dead this entire time.

Noted film critic Matt Zoller Seitz commented that the film Beautiful Boy reminded him of the most was William Friedkin’s The Exorcist (1973), as both center on parents struggling to save a child who seems possessed by evil forces, and indeed it’s easy to see otherworldly, supernatural horror in David’s eyes as Nic melts into a demonic gargoyle of hatred whenever he refuses to lend him money or demands he clean himself up. But in writing his memoir, David Sheff realized was that addiction does more than turn addicts into monsters, it strips the humanity from their support group as well. In one of the most telling scenes in the movie, a tearful Nic calls his dad and asks if he can come home for the umpteenth time after robbing their house for drug money and watching a friend overdose in an alley. An exhausted David gives him a flat, dead-eyed no. He can’t take it anymore. He’s not strong enough to survive watching his son kill himself and betray his family again.

Miraculously, in real life Nic survived his ordeal and has been sober for several years, even writing his own memoir from which Van Groeningen borrowed heavily. But let’s not kid ourselves—as residents of one of the national epicenters of the opioid crisis, we know the day-to-day reality of living with and around addicts and that the success rate for recovery is miniscule. The catharsis in Beautiful Boy, then, comes less from the triumph of Nic’s recovery (which is in fact largely glossed over at the end), and more in recognition of the emotional exhaustion addiction leaves behind on bystanders. Knowing and loving an addict is difficult, superhuman work. But you don’t have to do it alone.

Consider one of the many scenes in the film where David attends an An-Anon meeting with Nic. Hanging above the empty auditorium is a banner emphasizing the three C’s of recovery: you didn’t CAUSE it, you can’t CONTROL it, and you can’t CURE it. The key is understanding that the banner speaks for both patient and sponsors alike. It’s not your fault. It’s not their fault. Remember: acceptance is the first step in recovery.

Sunday, November 11, 2018

Venom: Ruben Fleischer


Finally saw Ruben Fleischer's Venom. Whatta trainwreck. It wants to be this gritty, hard-R story that SAYS THING about the evils of CAPITALISM and ADDICTION. The problem is that it only really works when it embraces its destiny as a campy slapstick buddy comedy. I totally get why so many audiences liked it: once it gets going, it has a charming irreverent humor that feels more organic than all the eye-rolling sarcasm of James Gunn’s films. Eddie and Venom’s relationship was genuinely entertaining and fun to watch! The problem is that to get there it has to slog through the blandest, most paint-by-numbers first act I think I’ve ever seen in a superhero origin story. And even after it gets going the story beats could be predicted by a toddler. Given the stupid amount of money it made, a sequel is inevitable. Hopefully this time it’ll focus more on the Eddie/Venom dynamic that audiences actually enjoyed instead of rote save-the-world, science-is-evil story beats.

Rating: 5/10

Saturday, November 10, 2018

Wild Guitar: Ray Dennis Steckler


Watching Ray Dennis Steckler's Wild Guitar (1962). This movie is a delicious dope-hit of early 60s style-for-style's-sake pulp. It might have intended to be a B-movie, but it's ten times smarter and cooler than it thinks it is. The whole scene of Arch Hall Sr. talking to his small army of taste-making teenagers is more cynically nasty than any number of smirking movies about the evils of the Man, man. And you know? Arch Hall Jr.'s music ain't that bad, either. Blue-eyed rockabilly polished to a glaring sheen that loses none of its pop catchiness. Well, everything except "Vickie" which sounds like a bleary-eyed NyQuil ballad played at half-speed.

Rating: 7/10

Thursday, November 8, 2018

See You Tomorrow, God Willing: Ainara Vera


To read this review, go to: http://www.unseenfilms.net/2018/11/nate-hood-on-see-you-tomorrow-god.html.

Rating: 6/10

The Other Side of the Wind: Orson Welles


To read this review, go to: https://www.theyoungfolks.com/review/127008/the-other-side-of-the-wind-sees-long-awaited-lost-film-is-a-tired-yet-furious-bridge-burning/.

Rating: 6/10

Monday, November 5, 2018

Suspiria: Luca Guadagnino


Someone on twitter once said that Dario Argento’s Suspiria (1977) didn’t really have a story, plot, or characters. Instead, it was a film of architecture—of somnambulants wandering its labyrinthine dance studio, discovering rooms and corridors that can not and should not really exist. If this is true, then Luca Guadagnino’s remake is a film of dance—of ecstatic movement and rhythm, of limbs stretched and torn this way and that to unheard drumbeats from before the dawn of (wo)man. Guadagnino and cinematographer Sayombhu Mukdeeprom have created a filmic space where the camera becomes a dancer itself, swirling in a ceaseless pas de deux with the performers as it dollies and tracks, zooms and whip pans even in moments of relative stillness. It echoes one of the story’s central ideas: that movement is an expression not just of self, but an invocation of the very forces of nature. By overindulging in stylistic camera flourishes that would make a film student blush, Guadagnino appears to be invoking the full force of cinema itself in this stunningly realized maximalist phantasm. Trading Argento’s fever-dream colors for washed out Brutalist palettes and his steady succession of gory kill centerpieces for, at most, only three moments (though excruciatingly prolonged ones) of explicit carnage, this remake seeks to transform the original film into a political fable set in 1977 Berlin, transforming the central witch coven from an army of wicked demons to a thinly veiled metaphor for post-Nazi Germany. Does Guadagnino succeed? Not precisely. His pretenses towards venerating the rebirth of a pre-patriarchy woman’s cult in the wake of the Holocaust as anathema to a national zeitgeist perforated with political violence and social upheaval have the effect of gendering Nazi war crimes—and political instability itself—as inherently masculine, erasing German women of wartime culpability. At best, this was a simple miscalculation on Guadagnino’s part, a moment of a talented director biting off more than he could thematically chew. But at worst, it’s disturbingly regressive and reactionary. Still, the film’s missteps are outnumbered by its wonders, chiefly in its back-breaking choreography (unlike the original, this one contains a good deal of actual dancing), razor-wire tension, and marvelous performances. I, for one, would not be surprised if Tilda Swinton became the first person in history to be nominated for Best Actress, Best Actor, and Best Supporting Actress for the same movie.

Rating: 7/10

Saturday, November 3, 2018

Nostalghia: Andrei Tarkovsky


To read this review, go to: http://theretroset.com/they-wont-let-you-go-home-again-tarkovskys-nostalghia-and-his-quest-for-self-realization/.

Rating: 6/10

Andrei Rublev: Andrei Tarkovsky


To read this review, go to: http://theretroset.com/andrei-rublev-and-what-hate-has-wrought/.

Rating: 9/10

Thursday, November 1, 2018

All About My Mother: Pedro Almodóvar


Ever now and then I get around to watching another Pedro Almodóvar movie. And each time it feels like I'm rediscovering the cinema. All About My Mother is the latest revelation I've come across: a story about dead sons, newborn sons, old mothers, new mothers, old women, new women. Filled with equal parts knowing camp and earnest sincerity, it toes the line between self-parody and serious drama without tipping over the edge. I wish I had the time (and outlet) to write about how this film is deeply, DEEPLY Catholic. The various uses of transvestites impregnation (virgin birth), explicit miracles, play-acting as worship...it might be his most explicitly religious film.

Rating: 9/10

Friday, October 26, 2018

It Follows: David Robert Mitchell


I finally, finally, finally saw David Robert Mitchell's It Follows. It's a fascinating blend of 50s teen monster movies à la The Blob (1958) and The Great Gila Monster (1959), 70s slashers, and, bizarrely, coke-slathered 80s techno-sludge. An unusual mish-mash of aesthetics that somehow works! Mostly. As with so, so many 00s and 10s horror films, it constructs rules and lore surrounding the supernatural which it scrupulously follows to the letter until the third act climax where the rule-book gets thrown out the window so the heroes can brute force the big bad out of their lives. It pissed me off when Gore Verbinski did it with The Ring (2002), it pissed me off when the Final Destination movies did it, it pissed me off whenever the Saw movies ignored the point of Jigsaw's games so it could indulge in more death scenes, and it pissed me off here. If anything, it served to help me appreciate how much more of a masterpiece Jennifer Kent's The Babadook--released the same year--was. It created rules and stuck to them, right down to its inevitable and controversial conclusion. Still, it's a welcome piece of pop-horror. Legitimately amazed it hasn't become a franchise.

Rating: 8/10

Sunday, October 21, 2018

A Star is Born: Bradley Cooper


Rating: 7/10