Wednesday, July 17, 2013

250 Words or Less: Upstream Color (2013)



No, I didn't really understand the end of Shane Carruth's Primer, but I'll go on record and say that I don't think it needs to be understood—the physical mechanics of its overlapping time-travel narrative (who did what, and when) aren't nearly as important as the dark and delirious feeling of the main character going insane. Essentially, it's a puzzle film where you're intrigued by the gamer as much as the game. Tone and psychology are given even more emphasis—hell, almost all the emphasis—in this, Carruth's long-awaited second film, which conjures a remarkable atmosphere on consumer-grade equipment and resembles nothing so much as a suburban sci-fi geek's version of Eraserhead, Marienbad, or (gulp) Tree of Life. Formally, it's a triumph, edited with such exactitude and uncanny repetition that a detail has just enough time to register before the story moves on then loops back, leaving you wondering how all the details fit. And how do they all fit? Well, it's something about love, and memory, and god, and life, and growing older, and isolation, and other heady hard-sci-fi ideas. It undoubtedly reaches for more than it delivers, and casting himself as the male lead was an inexpressive mistake on the director's part. But this is such an intriguing and well-crafted film—truly "independent" in a way that few notable Sundance films are these days—that I'll still be turning it over in my mind long after cleaner, neater, tighter films have floated away.

4 out of 5 stars.

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Upstream Color is now available on Netflix Instant.  Watch it late at night, with headphones.

Wednesday, July 10, 2013

250 Words or Less: The Bling Ring (2013)



Befitting its style and attitude, there's an in-joke in The Bling Ring before the opening credits are even over. As the titles roll, the camera pans over a table of tacky, gilded accessories, and Sofia Coppola's credit comes just as a necklace that says "Rich Bitch" is in the center of the screen—a graphical placement that essentially reads, from left to right, "written and directed by rich bitch Sofia Coppola." It's an acknowledgement that Coppola, a lifelong Hollywood insider, is very much a part of the very system she's about to satirize, and this nod to insiderism, especially for a story about outsiders squeezing through the back door, works very much to the film's advantage.  Because while a film like The Social Network can't shake off Aaron Sorkin's "those damn kids" attitude towards the age of digital media, The Bling Ring has sympathy for its lost young people who gaze longingly at fame and access.  That's not to say the film approves of their actions—stories with morals are so old-fashioned—but it understands where they get it from, giving the film an approach where huge photos on nightclub walls and songs playing on the radio rise above props and coloration to become as significant as any "real" person on screen. The chief drawback is that the female ring-members are treated more as fashion icons and butts-of-jokes (miniature Paris Hiltons of their own?) than as psychological human beings, which is at first a potent statement, but becomes more and more of a liability as the story ends on the most obvious note in the whole film.

4 out of 5 stars.

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The Bling Ring is now in theaters, having crossed over from limited release to multiplexes.

Thursday, July 4, 2013

250 Words or Less: Behind the Candelabra (2013)



A sequined Santa hat, a slot machine in a living room, pigs-in-a-blanket served on a silver platter, Matt Damon's thong tan-line, Gordon Gekko and Jason Bourne sharing a hot tub—Steven Soderbergh's latest (and reportedly last) film is a sharp vision of American mass culture gone wild, which befits the ironic story of a closeted gay man who spent a career turning his wildest instincts into entertainment for an unwitting hetero audience.  It's a cheeky show biz satire and a very twisted "love story", where genuine love gets so enmeshed with other motives (money, sex, celebrity, emotional codependence) that it's magnificently difficult to gain your bearings, as it should be.  Exhibitionism tangles with privacy, and the heroes (or anti-heroes) seek to recreate the traditional ideal of domestic bliss at the same time they defy it.  Like Soderbergh's earlier and equally coy The Informant!, Candelabra tackles the proceedings with a frequently bemused, empathetic detachment, leaving us unsure about feel about the characters except to marvel that this bizarre story and all its contradictions are part of the American fabric.  But its view of fame is also as creepy as a horror movie.  If you want to know what the Overlook Hotel would look like if it were completely fabulous, Soderbergh has a tracking shot for you.  Unique, tragic, and perversely moving.

4 out of 5 stars.

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Behind the Candelabra recently premiered on HBO because it was deemed too risky for theaters.

Monday, May 27, 2013

REVIEW: Frances Ha (2013)



Given that auteur theory has long since won the war, if not every battle, it's good to give due credit to the role that actors play in collaborative filmmaking.  Auteurist staples like 8 1/2 and Pierrot le fou are essentially films set inside their makers' heads, but owe a tremendous amount of their universality to the performers, who provide a vital link between the man behind the camera and the outside world.  So it's significant that Noah Baumbach, who directed the best autobiographical film of the last decade before falling into a relative slump, found a partner in actress Greta Gerwig.  In Baumbach's previous film, Greenberg, Gerwig (not in the title role) presented a lackadaisical sweetness that put the snark and self-destructive pretension of the hero in relief.  And Frances Ha, for which she co-wrote the screenplay, is her film at least as much as it is his: a union between actress and director that has yielded some of the best results for both.

The summary that IFC, the film's distributor, has kindly posted on IMDb says that it's about a young woman who "throws herself headlong into her dreams."  Well, that's one way of looking at it.  The film is more of an observational shaggy dog story, as Frances (Gerwig) bounces from living space to living space, never able to plant roots anywhere as her friends move on and her lack of direction (and gainful employment) leaves her sputtering behind.  Set amongst the terminally hip, it's very much the same milieu that Lena Dunham taps for Girls, and like that lightning-rod HBO series, Frances Ha is probably not immune to the criticism that it's as self-involved as its characters. But the perspective it maintains is outward-facing and emotionally-attuned (hipsters are people too), and the looseness of structure, which a minority of critics have singled out as a flaw, is actually one of its most sincere saving graces.  Being 27 is nothing if not a series of plans that don't work out, conversations that settle nothing, and trips that end right back at the beginning, and the film captures it with sympathy and humor.  "I don't know if I believe everything I'm saying" is definitely a line of dialogue for our time, and it's vital that Gerwig delivers it without self-awareness.

As for Baumbach, this is easily his most satisfying work since The Squid and the Whale.  As a writer and a director, he understands the way small moments can replace big, "finalizing" climaxes, which is perhaps the best trait of his cinema.  He gives Frances Ha plenty of cinephile cred as well, paying homage to the French New Wave by raiding his Georges Delerue record collection and shooting in black and white, if only because it's easy to forget how beautiful the city looks if you only see it in color.  It's a good sign for 27-year-olds when a film can traffic largely in embarrassment and thwarted desires but still finish on a positive note without feeling forced, or relying (too much) on patently cinematic twists.  If this is indeed a "minor" film (and it is), let it be said that minor triumphs are something else that deserve their dues.  They're how we get by.

4 out of 5 stars.

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Frances Ha is currently in theaters, probably in your small local arthouse with broken seats.

Saturday, February 23, 2013

More Interesting Than The Oscars 2: The Top Films of 2012

  
With the Academy Awards tomorrow, the season of 2012 retrospection comes to close, so in that spirit (and just under the wire), I present my world cinema favorites of the year.  Standard blog rules apply: a film is eligible if it came out in American theaters or if I saw it at a festival, and I'll do a top 12 to cheat and fit more in.  The only big contender this year I haven't seen is Django Unchained, which is not included, but acknowledged in absentia.

So what defined 2012?  It's a fun game of gestalt, spotting patterns between films where none were intended.  Last year, I said that it was a year for the totally bizarre and paradoxical.  2012 certainly had its share of oddities as well—this is, after all, the year when Channing Tatum's abs and Robert Pattinson's prostate became metaphors for the American economy—but what stands out to me most is how so many prominent films this year have been about fiction: that is, art, stories, and the role they play in our lives.  Moonrise Kingdom, Holy Motors, Tabu, Life of Pi, In Another Country, Cloud Atlas, and the Golden Bear winner Caesar Must Die all fit into this in one way or another.  It was also a year for the veterans of American independent cinema: Wes Anderson and Steven Soderbergh did some of their best work; Quentin Tarantino had his biggest box office hit; Richard Linklater held his own; Whit Stillman came out of retirement (the movie wasn't very good, but I'll love him just for that); and P.T. Anderson, for whatever it's worth to you, made The Master.  All we're missing are Todd Haynes and the Coens.

Onward:


12. Life of Pi (Ang Lee, USA)

Some critics have accused this of pandering and proselytizing, and if I agreed, I might be annoyed too.  But while you can walk out with an inspirational message about faith if that's what you're looking for, I see it as a much more conflicted movie about the only way a man can find of coping with horror.  So what may have looked like pandering might actually be empathy—besides, if it were proselytizing, it would be much more pushy, which is a word no one has ever used to describe Ang Lee.  And under his direction, with some of the best photography of the year, the film unfolds like a beautiful picture book.

11. Footnote (Joseph Cedar, Israel)

It's been obscured now by more publicized films, but this satire of academia, Judaica, and family strife was one of the best films to slip quietly into arthouses in the first half of 2012.  It's a comedy, yes, but on a larger level, it's also an acrid story of animosity being passed down through the generations and conflicts that remain intractable when both sides refuse to talk.  And it has the guts not to provide a resolution. 



10. Lincoln (Steven Spielberg, USA)

People I know (myself included) expected this to be bad, and why not?  The trailer looked like an Oscar-bait parody—Daniel Day-Lewis was acting really damn hard, and if the music were stolen from last year's War Horse, we wouldn't have been able to tell the difference.  But always check the credits.  The script by Tony Kushner, full of irony and cheerful cynicism, doesn't cancel out the expected Spielberg vibe; instead, they augment each other in surprising ways.  And so after we see one of America's most beloved presidents resort to such underhanded, questionable tactics, we close on a speech of his lofty ideals.  The result is a movie that's hopeful without being naive, optimistic without being safe.  The concerns about historicity and ethnocentricity are entirely valid.  But this still may be the most morally complex film Spielberg ever made, and the first genuinely provocative political movie to take the Oscar stage in quite some time.

9. Amour (Michael Haneke, Austria)

I never thought I'd have to go to bat for Michael Haneke, but as his latest film won him a second Palme d'Or, I was surprised at the number of serious cinephiles who stepped forward and spoke out against him.  It's not that his critics think he lacks skill—on the contrary, even his detractors tend to agree that he has plenty.  But they object to him on moral grounds: the charge is that he's a sadist, an arrogant manipulator who punishes the audience to "teach them a lesson."  It's true his movies are by and large unpleasant viewing experiences, and something like Amour is unpleasant with a very specific and not at all subtle purpose.  So on the one hand, some backlash is understandable.  Amour not only won the Palme d'Or over a lot of more interesting films, but nothing surprising happens in it, it lacks the ambiguity of Haneke's best work, and when it wins Best Foreign Language Film tomorrow, it'll be because it fits the Academy's platonic ideal of a "foreign film" (and because the Academy is getting old themselves).  But cinema history is full of misanthropes, manipulators, provocateurs, and angry preachers making didactic speeches about problems that can't possibly be solved by movies.  And I don't see why Michael Haneke is any guiltier of aggressive audience-punishment than, say, the Jean-Luc Godard of Week-End, or the Billy Wilder of Ace in the Hole, or the Béla Tarr of The Turin Horse, or the Lars von Trier of just about anything.  Yes, this certainly isn't the "warmer" Michael Haneke that early reviews promised, but the wages of auteurism can be steep, and if it were separated from such a controversial body of work, Amour might be more clearly accepted for what it is: not a masterpiece, but an unflinchingly effective and well-acted two-hander about a topic that rarely gets attention in mainstream film. And if Haneke isn't the right man for empathy, that concern is steamrolled by Emmanuelle Riva and Jean-Louis Trintignant, whose performances give it all the humanity it needs.  And the last 20 minutes are exactly what they need to be.



8. The Master (Paul Thomas Anderson, USA)

This is the one I labored the most over.  Undeniably one of the most high-profile "art films" of the year, it was expected to be a masterpiece and has since been received with an effusive mix of praise, anger, and confusion.  The film is symbolic, yes, but of what?  Here we have a movie about the unreliability of leaders made by one of the most hero-worshiped directors of the day.  I remember seeing a video Q&A with P.T. Anderson from a special 70mm screening of The Master, where he came onstage after the film, apparently high and/or drunk, to answer questions.  As his cinephile fans (who must have waited in line for hours) told him how profoundly they were moved by Magnolia and There Will Be Blood and asked for answers about his most perplexing film to date, he mumbled ambivalent, semi-coherent replies, and ended by wholeheartedly recommending that everyone go see Ted.  If he was doing it on purpose, it may be the year's greatest act of filmmaker performance art, because The Master is ultimately something of a Rorschach blot: a Freudian stew full of implications but with few explicit messages, and bursting with impeccable craft put in the service of some truly odd decisions.  Is it just an exercise, a kind of heavy arthouse jam session?  Part of the reason Boogie Nights is still Anderson's most satisfying movie is that it's a young man's film, the work of a prodigy seeing what he can do behind the camera.  Part of the issue with The Master's reception may be that he's still tinkering (more than ever), but isn't so young anymore.  Personally, what I see in it, or choose to see in it, is a stunning evocation of post-war America, a grand and bizarrely effective psychodrama of man vs. self, and one of the most formally daring films to play in a multiplex in god knows how long.  I'll take it.


7. Oslo, August 31st (Joachim Trier, Norway)

A film about suicide and depression that drains the idea of any bullshit romanticism, which is exactly what's so tragic about it.  The main character's final act—it comes as no surprise—isn't part of a larger metaphor about the meaningless of existence, etc., which is an issue I had with the film's cinematic predecessor, The Fire Within by Louis Malle.  Instead, it very subtly and practically lays out the reasons why this man feels he has no better option.  An intimate drama that's dark without being overbearing—in fact, parts of it are downright warm.  And that's why it sticks with you. 


 
 6. Magic Mike & Haywire (Steven Soderbergh, USA)

There are reasons for calling this a double feature, and not just because it means I get to slip in Haywire, a fun film that couldn't make it on its own.  For starters, it's a playful coincidence that Soderbergh's stripper-with-a-heart-of-gold movie starred a man, while his action revenge flick starred a woman.  But mainly, I take these two together because it shows that in a prolific career often defined by its eclecticism, Soderbergh has just recently hit a strange kind of stride.  In the last five years, his films have shown a continuity of style and theme that is as unified as that of Howard Hawks or Jean Renoir.  This is not to say Soderbergh is as good as them—I'm not entirely sure he wants to be.  He's more of a "post-Hollywood" revisionist in the vein of 1970s Robert Altman.  Since about 2008, he's cranked out a stream of deceptively brainy films that toy with genre conventions and capture a digital snapshot of recession-era America.  The fact that some of his films can be branded by their genre or on-camera talent makes them often misunderstood, as if Magic Mike is 100 minutes of abs, or as if Haywire set out to be a Bourne movie but failed.  Instead, the joke's on us.  He's managed to make very unusual films that get noticed because, on paper, we think we know what to expect.  On screen, they're something very different.  Of course, now that he's hit his stride, he's going to retire.  We should enjoy it while it lasts.



5. Holy Motors (Leos Carax, France)

Holy Motors is sometimes described as being "like Mulholland Dr.", which isn't exactly true, it just happens to be the best way to pitch a film that doesn't make any dramatic sense.  Instead, I'd see it as a dark flipside to the time-honored concept of The Purple Rose of Cairo (or even Last Action Hero), where film characters become aware that they're locked in a movie.  Of course, both of those are comedies, and the characters are able to escape.  Holy Motors is more tragic—it's about a self-aware character who's locked in and stays that way, even if he's not sure anyone is watching anymore.  You more or less have to view the film super-textually to get the full experience, since it's largely meta games, acting set-pieces, and semiotic anarchy.  But taken together, it's an elegy for the "physical mechanisms" of cinema, and it gets you to care about a character while repeatedly questioning how real he is.  2012 hasn't produced a more valuable statement about film, and Denis Lavant gives the performance(s) of the year.




4. In Another Country (Hong Sang-soo, South Korea)

"I'm writing a script to calm my nerves," says the young narrator, and this genuinely strange, unashamedly small, and apparently improvised comedy is truly one of the most peaceful films of the year—practically a home movie made by world-class talents.  It's one story, but really three (or vice-versa), about a French woman named Anne (Isabelle Huppert) who comes to South Korea.  At first, she's a director visiting a film festival.  But what if she's the wife of a wealthy industrialist there to cheat on her husband?  Or a recently dumped woman looking to start over?  So the film is a playful omnibus that sees how the same elements and actors can be shuffled around and play out in different ways.  As everyone struggles to explain themselves without sharing a native tongue (the film's MO, and its comedy), the structure celebrates the many possibilities of life and art, and Huppert proves she can play a character, or three, who isn't a kinky mess.



3. The Turin Horse (Béla Tarr & Agnes Hranitzky, Hungary)

You could call it the downer of the year (any year), but this view of Hell On Earth is also one of the most forceful and articulate visions of 2012, and possibly of the decade.  It's what they call a work of pure cinema, with little dialogue, the barest narrative, and an ever-moving camera (only 30 shots in 146 minutes!).  I can't say I agree with its existence-is-futile-but-death-is-worse pessimism, probably because I believe in Jean Renoir more than Friedrich Nietzsche.  But that also means that when a work of filmmaking so expert and vivid comes along, I can't ignore it either.  Nor should you.



2. Tabu (Miguel Gomes, Portugal)

This festival favorite from Berlinale didn't fully hit me until the second time I saw it.  This is only fair, since it tells its story out of order, so the resonance of the beginning isn't clear until after the end.  (Such is life).  So it is a film of two discrete halves: the first is a dry, ruefully absurd comedy about the loneliness of old age, where days go by at a crawl; the second (a flashback to youth) is a neo-silent film full of exotic locales, lush romanticism, and grand passions, where months go by in a flash.  The style is beguiling, paying tribute to the past while still serving the present.  As a movie about cinema, it may yet be as valuable as Holy Motors.  And as a movie about old age, it beats out Amour.


1. Moonrise Kingdom (Wes Anderson, USA)

Why is this my number 1?  I have my reasons, only one of which is a longtime soft spot for Wes Anderson.  Part of it is that this actually wasn't even close to being my favorite movie of the year when I first saw it, but has grown on me every time I dip back in (particularly for the exquisite ending).  But most of all, I put it up top because in a year with visions as nihilistic and grim as Amour, Oslo, and The Turin Horse, I can't think of another movie that argues so persuasively that everything will be okay.  Life can be rough, and the roughness of early adolescence is something that the film doesn't skimp on.  But it goes on, and the future can be something to look forward to: for the characters, for the movies, and for us.  I'd been hoping Anderson would return to making films set in something remotely resembling the real world.  He hasn't, but he may have provided the skeleton key to his body of work, and has left me waiting to see what comes next.

*****

The Honor Roll: 12 More Films I Enjoyed That Didn't Quite Make the Cut

Bernie (Richard Linklater, USA)

Chronicle (Josh Trank, USA)

Cloud Atlas (Tom Tykwer, Andy Wachowski & Lana Wachowski, USA)

The Deep Blue Sea (Terence Davies, UK)

Here and There (Antonio Mendez Esparza, Mexico)

Night Across the Street (Raúl Ruiz, Chile)

The Queen of Versailles (Lauren Greenfield, USA)

Skyfall (Sam Mendes, USA)

Sleepwalk With Me (Mike Birbiglia, USA)

Student (Darezhan Omirbaev, Kazakhstan) 

Wuthering Heights (Andrea Arnold, UK)

Zero Dark Thirty (Kathryn Bigelow, USA)