Archive for April, 2011

  • M-SPIFF 2011 Review: Cracks

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    Director: Jordan Scott
    Screenplay: Ben Court, Caroline Ip, Jordan Scott
    Novel: Sheila Kohler
    Producers: Rosalie Swedlin, Christine Vachon, Julie Payne, Andrew Lowe, Kwesi Dickson
    Starring: Eva Green, Imogen Poots, Juno Temple, María Valverde
    Country of Origin: Ireland
    MPAA Rating: NR
    Running time: 104 min.

     

    [this review was originally drafted for the 2010 Toronto International Film Festival]

    I wish that the Harry Potter franchise had even half the energy and youthful confusion on display in this boarding school film. The directorial debut of Jordan Scott (yes, daughter of Ridley) proving that a flair for memorable visuals may just be a genetic trait. After following a similar path as her father and (and her more freneticly inclined uncle Tony, who along with his brother is a producer on the film), by way of directing videos and commercials in the UK. The title, Cracks comes pregnant with meaning and comfortably easy to digest narrative that is not without a few surprises. Whether you go with the vulgar interpretation of adult and sexual awaking of young girls (with all the wild and nubile young flesh on frolicking around on display, this is going to be a favorite for the pervy-types) or the more polite inference to the initial crumblings of the status quo for an institution that looks, by its imposing architecture and stern faced matrons, to be timeless, or even perhaps the British slang for ‘a joke.’ I’m sure Ms. Scott was aiming for all three, which collectivelly give even the most casual filmgoer a number of things to nibble on while the story sashays around and through various expectations and cliches.

    In an Irish boarding school for orphaned girls, life runs and swims to the rhythms of Cosmopolitan and sexy teacher and diving coach, Ms. G. (Eva Green as glamorous and sexy as she was in Bernardo Bertolucci’s The Dreamers or the James Bond reboot). Green’s entrance to the picture, a haughty and perhaps even suggestive stroll down the middle of the aisle during choir, is a memorable one, usually reserved for the new student rather than the teacher. Ms. G regales the girls with stories of her travels around the world, and generally espousing a carpe diem attitude, with proclamations along the line of, “Desire is the most important thing in life!” – the desire to achieve, the desire to live life to its fullest she seems an odd fit in comparison to the rest of the staff and matrons of the school. Exactly the type of mentor that these girls would be inclined to remember decades down the road as an inspiration. But the story told here is not so simple as that. When an exotic new girl, Fiamma of Spanish aristocratic descent (Gasp! She is Roman Catholic!) joins the ranks (intriguingly, banished? Exiled? Simply boarded for a while?) it throws the lives of the girls into disarray. Di, the team captain of the diving team does the thing usually seen in this sort of tale. She bullies, threatens and makes no bones about asserting her authority in a number of potentially humiliating ways. Having done a fair bit of travel, and ‘lived’ more than the average student of the class, Fiamma and her haughtiness is curiously indulged by Ms. G all the while making more subtle attempts to bring the ‘princess’ into the fold.

    The trials and tribulations, for both the students and their unorthodox teacher, gradually are brought to a boil that subverts many of the typical paths in either a coming of age story or a typical ‘school-girl dormitory’ tale. But this is not a mystery of the Picnic at Hanging Rock variety, but instead offers strange and confusing peeks at adult complexities; things kept on the outside of the hermetically sealed school. Notions of who the ‘villain’ is or forgiveness for youthful transgressions are thrown out the window in favour of an honest-to-goodness learning experience wrapped beautifully and satisfyingly in a fairy tale. The slow-motion and underwater photography offers suggestions of the amniotic state the girls are in, with the promise of the ‘butterflies’ they are to become. But it is also cold, harsh and more than a little frightening to make those large dives into chilly spring waters. Scott wraps her images in high melodrama, magical realism and yet still retains the basic power of a confused young girl. It has the rawness and restless energy of Heavenly Creatures (and supporting actress, Imogen Poots (28 Weeks Later…) in a vital supporting role is as good a stand in as any for a young Kate Winslet, and for that matter, Di has a few loose similarites to Melanie Lynskey’s Pauline Charater. And Jordon Scott is worthy of comparison to Peter Jackson as he came into his own in the 1990s and of the legacy left from her famous family. On second thought, perhaps a better analogue would be Sophia Coppola. Either way, Scott has a big future ahead of her if she keeps makes films like ths one, and hey, the Potter Franchise needs someone to close up the series…

    [In the Q&A that followed the screening Scott mentioned that she has 'the boarding' school thing out of her system, but I would indeed like to see her take on a similar tale of lost innocence leading towards a grim future, Kazou Ishiguro's Never Let Me Go; although that is currently in production with Mark Romanek (One Hour Photo) directing.]

  • Video Review: Scre4m

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    Our Friends over at the Substream have been calling upon team Mamo! to do some of their video content. Matt Brown gives a fair and balanced look at Scre4m (“Scra-Form”) and implores you to watch Michael Powell’s Peeping Tom.

  • Go, Speed Racer, Go

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    Just for fun on a Sunday, you can see how an 8 year old boy and a 6 year old girl react to a first time viewing of The Wachowski Brothers critically slagged but mightily interesting Speed Racer after catching it in the Cinema (at Toronto Underground’s Defending the Indefensible Series). Expect more (‘adult’) conversation on this weeks cinecast, but for now children’s perspective on the mach-speed-eye-candy. The video is embedded below. Enjoy.

  • Review: I Love You Phillip Morris

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    Gay. Gay, gay, gay, gay, gay. That’s how Jim Carrey’s character Steven Russell describes himself in I Love You Phillip Morris, the long delayed romantic dramedy from Bad Santa writers Glenn Ficarra and John Requa. Based on the real life story of Steven Russell, a Georgia born conman and multiple prison escapee, the film tracks the unlikely romance between Russell and his cellmate Phillip Morris (Ewan McGregor), the man who Russell would eventually break out of prison no less than four times in attempts to be reunited with. A rare American film not afraid to offer a frank depiction of a homosexual relationship, the movie had a difficult post production that included significant re-editing and trouble finding wide distribution. The belief that the film, featuring two big Hollywood stars, might be “too gay” for mainstream audiences kept it from reaching Australian cinemas for almost two years, but now that the movie has finally arrived it proves itself well worth the wait. Both a sensational comedy and a surprisingly affecting love story, I Love You Phillip Morris is an unmissable film that will entertain and move viewers gay and straight alike.

    With plenty of great laughs for those with dark or dirty senses of humour, the first act of the film whisks breezily over Stevens’ childhood, marriage, self-outing and early days as a conman and then a prison inmate. A devout Christian until a near fatal car accident causes him to re-assess his life, the film uses Steven to make fun of both middle-American conservatism and liberal gay culture, without ever being mean or judgmental towards either side. Most of the films more explicit gay content is played for comedy, but never in a way that is homophobic (a la the more successful I Now Pronounce You Chuck and Larry, amongst many others). I Love You Phillip Morris also reminds us of the natural comedic talents of the much maligned Jim Carrey. His performance is by no means a revelation – people who hate his normal goofy-faced shtick won’t be won over by this film – but this is some of the best material Carrey has worked with in over a decade, and his work in the film reflects it. Lesley Mann is also hilarious in her small role as Russell’s ex-wife, supportive of her former husband’s new lifestyle in spite of her Christian beliefs.
    » Read the rest of the entry..

  • M-SPIFF 2011 Review: The Troll Hunter

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    Director: André Øvredal
    Writer: André Øvredal
    Producers: Sveinung Golimo, John M. Jacobsen
    Starring: Otto Jespersen
    Country of Origin: Norway
    MPAA Rating: NR
    Running time: 90 min.

    (4/5)

     

    The Minneapolis Film Festival is not exactly known for their genre fare. Though on opening night of 2011, they kicked that myth right out of the way big time with The Troll Hunter, a Cloverfield-like romp through the beautiful countryside of Norway where menacing trolls lurk through the forest at night waiting to pick off anyone unfortunate enough to cross paths with the beast(s).

    Shot in a veritae, found footage style, the picture reminds very much of something like The Blair Witch project in that it is a student film crew wandering and running for their lives through the woods. The film is not scary in the slightest. It’s got excitement and thrills but if it’s terror you’re looking for this ain’t your movie. It’s more like a Jurassic Park thrill ride than anything else. Though lots of comparisons to many great films could be drawn, The Troll Hunter very much has it’s own unique vibe and subject matter. We’ve seen vampires, zombies and werewolves thousands of times over the past 30 years, but I can’t remember seeing (or even hearing about) any movie that tackles the troll mythology like this one does. And no, Troll 2 does not count.
    » Read the rest of the entry..

  • Friday One Sheet: Boutique Romero

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    The boutique poster market has been growing in leaps and bounds. Kicked off by Tyler Stout et al. and the Alamo Drafthouse, this little niche has been spreading steadily for years. There are several great designers right here in Toronto, including Justin Erickson of Phantom City Creative who did all those lovely one-sheets for Twitch’s Back to the 80s series. This one, for George Romero’s classic Night of the Living Dead, is $25, and golly, I’m tempted to buy it.

  • Screen Shot Quiz #222

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    The goal of the screen shot quiz it not to just guess what the movie is that the screen shot is from but to encourage discussion on the film. Feel free to shout out in the comments what the movie is and then provide an opinion or some thoughts on the movie. Oh and the first person who gets the movie right wins our respect.

  • Review: Cave of Forgotten Dreams [3D]

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    Director: Werner Herzog (Rescue Dawn, Grizzly Man, Fitzcarraldo, Aguirre: The Wrath of God, Nosferatu)
    Writer: Werner Herzog
    Producer: Erik Nelson
    MPAA Rating: G
    Running time: 90 min.

    (4.5/5)

    We all know the masses are (finally!) starting to get worn from the cinematic replication of three dimensions by forcing us to wear glasses and pay more money just to get a headache inducing picture that is dimmer and blurrier than a standard movie. The reasons are varied from shitty up-conversion to gimmicky B-class movies. But leave it to a legend in his own time, someone like Werner Herzog for example, to look at a technological tool and ask, “how can I use this tool in a way that will legitimately be of benefit to the audience? How can I give them something they’d never be able to see otherwise and something that actually needs to be shown with depth and perspective in order to show meaning and heart; as opposed to a flying fish or a sword fight?”

    Now granted, Herzog may have just gotten lucky with the fact that people (at least anyone for a couple of generations) literally won’t ever be able to see these caves again with their own eyes. The cave of forgotten dreams (Chauvet Cave in Southern France) is to be sealed up and away from any prying eyes of the public for the foreseeable future. So this is it folks. If you’d like to see an astonishing piece of history, this is your last chance; and his name is Werner Herzog.

    » Read the rest of the entry..

  • Trailer: Stake Land

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    Jim Mickle, you put Zombies in my Vampire movie, wait, you put Vampires in my Zombie movie. Stake Land (Kurt’s Review) was well deserving of the TIFF Midnight Madness Audience Choice Award in 2010. The film is a thoughtful and intense post-apocalyptic road-movie, which begs the question on who should really be getting the gig writing and directing The Walking Dead if they wish things to improve in that series in subsequent seasons. The film has a great John Carpenter vibe leavened with a hint of the higher production values afforded the likes of John Hillcoat and Terrence Malick. It is nice to see that this trailer makes a bold announcement of Stake Land’s visceral tone and sense of humour within the genre. Like the director and his co-writer (and lead actor) Nick Damici’s low-budget debut film, Mulberry Street, there is no bones about being an unabashed genre effort, but they know how to inject a lot of wit, style, brains and heart in the proceedings.

    Trailer (and initial teaser) are tucked under the seat.
    » Read the rest of the entry..

  • Screen Shot Quiz #221

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    The goal of the screen shot quiz it not to just guess what the movie is that the screen shot is from but to encourage discussion on the film. Feel free to shout out in the comments what the movie is and then provide an opinion or some thoughts on the movie. Oh and the first person who gets the movie right wins our respect.

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