Archive for the ‘foreign film’ Category

  • Review: The Housemaid (2010)

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    (4/5)

    A touch of domestic thriller, a touch of class struggle, a touch of madness, a touch of eroticism, a touch of mind games, and a touch of WTF – yep, that’s about what I was hoping for out of this film, a remake of a landmark Korean film, controversial upon its 1960 release for its frank sexuality and incisive look at dysfunctional household politics. The eponymous housemaid is the young girl Eun-yi brought into help the existing older cook/maid Byung-sik as Haera, the lady of the house, comes closer to bearing a set of twins. Eun-yi makes fast friends with the family’s young daughter, but relations with the rest of the household are a bit more…complex. Especially after the cocky husband Hoon comes to the maid for sexual gratification in the final weeks of his wife’s pregnancy.

    Things turn from bad to worse after that, as Haera’s mother comes to take care of Eun-yi for fear of scandal. Tied up in all of this is the thoughtlessness of the upper classes, the bitterness of the working class (portrayed by Byung-sik, who is pretty awesome), and the very slim hope that the next generation, represented by the child, may somehow escape this nearly silent but deadly warfare. The balance in the story between the family and their servants is well-done; though the family is obviously infected with entitlement issues and treat their staff with unthinking condescension, they’re not particularly cruel, nor are the staff long-suffering saints. Even though we don’t know precisely the back history between the family and Byung-sik, her bitterness towards them is much more acidic than their treatment of her – her feelings about them are summed up with the acronym R.U.N.S.: “revolting, ugly, nauseating, shameless.” Yet neither side has any thought for change – both take the position that “this is what these people are like” toward the other.

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  • 5 Things the World can Learn from Dogtooth. *MAJOR SPOILERS*

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    “Art is lies that tell the truth.” On one hand it is easy to dismiss such a graphic oddity such as Giorgos Lanthimos Oscar Nominated provocation Dogtooth (David’s Review). On the other, its brand of pitch-black comedy and hybridized cocktail of surrealism and lizard-brain-intellectualism (David Lynch, meet Michael Haneke) does get at exposing some things about how society functions at the microscopic level: Indoctrination and conformity to what you have been taught. Are you Christian because you parents were, because you were born in a certain part of the world? Muslim? Buddhist? Liberal? Conservative? If anything Dogtooth is a bit optimistic that we can all transcend, but boy-oh-boy if you do not have a basic toolkit, you are likely still going to be in a truck-load of trouble.

    Rearing children is and is not dog training.
     
     
    You can argue nature vs. nurture until you are blue in the face, but Dogtooth spends a lot of time equating the discipline of children to obedience training of canines. The title even derives from the made-up concept told from the parents to the children that people become adults when they lose their large incisor, their “dogtooth.” (left or right side is not important.) Cats are the ultimate enemy on the outside (and occasionally the inside) of the family compound. Rubbing the nose in the crime is shown by the assault of a VHS tape (duct taped to father’s hand like a training mitt) after watching forbidden films. The the arc of the film is this: How long can these kids (presumably late teens to early twenties) be stuck at adolescence playing low-stakes children games, collecting stickers (or giving a lick to a body-part as an act of soliciting a gift) before they find a way to grow up, with or without the help of their ‘masters?’ How entrenched in the human psyche is ignorance and submission? Children are bound to explore the extent of their own limits, well beyond any sort of disciplinary action. In short, kids grow up and dogs stay dogs.

    Parenting may be a full time job, but over-parenting is performance art.
     
     
    The lengths that the two parents go to in Dogtooth to raise their 3 children (possibly 4 at one point) sheltered from everything is both inspiring and disturbing. Nobody is more dedicated (or deluded) as these two thinking that they can be the only act of influence on their children’s lives. Horror (and satire) is best executed by taking an aspect of society and exaggerating it beyond recognition. The parents depriving their children of any form of coping mechanism to their emotions (other than some minor rewards and a new set of anxieties and fears) is one of the key sources of conflict in Dogtooth, something underscored by how the female security guard paid to service the son eventually seeds the destruction of the whole family, simply by interacting in brief fits and starts with three children. And some times you should just let your kids watch big American blockbusters such as Jaws, Rocky and Flashdance; if nothing else than it livens up the household charades night. When the security guard is removed from the picture, incest is the only viable option that will keep their sons urges in check and not upset the harmony of the household. Yup, performance-art.

    Xenophobia creates the worst kind of monsters.
     
     
    Watching the youngest daughter get a little miffed at her older brother and slash him with the kitchen knife, or later, offscreen, whack him with a hammer, tends to underscore that willful ignorance and sheltering from any engagement to the outside world is the worst possible thing you can do for human beings. There is a reason for the phrase anti-social behavior. Certain aspects of Japanese culture (one of the most ‘culturally pure countries’ (i.e. Xenophobic) over the centuries have also produced some of the worst atrocities (their treatment of the Chinese and Koreans over centuries), while ‘Fortress America’ operating unilaterally starting with Vietnam and moving into the 21st century has its own brand.

    Xenophobia with a healthy dose of righteousness and hypocrisy is worse.
     
     
    Certainly the worst aspects of religion (from Muslim extremists to the Westboro Baptist Church) are brought about by the leaders preaching one thing and doing something else. When the parents shelter their kids of damning influences of the outside world but need bad pornography to get the romantic spark going in their own relationship, well, what then? Dogtooth never drops the full set of intentions of the two parents with any easy exposition or explanation, but one imagines in their strange minds, they have only the best intentions for their young ones.

    Life Will Find a Way
     
     
    The climactic losing of the ‘dogtooth’ by the eldest demonstrates Jeff Goldblum’s (the mathematician from Jurassic Park) theory that all forms of control will only spur on new levels of inspired biology and instinct. When language and vocabulary show a solution to ‘growing up and getting out of the house’ she is not above speeding things along with a set of running-weights. This scene is graphic and messy and evolution at its best.

    Who would have thought that one 94 minute film that is violent, suspenseful, entertaining, weird and gorgeous to look at could cover such a wide number of topics: Language, Religion, Parenting, Evolution, Sociology, Hollywood Cinema, and the absolute evil nature of cats. It has less than a snowballs chance in hell of winning the Foreign Language statue from the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, but they are onto something for giving this one a nod.

  • Oscars 2010 – Foreign Language Shortlist

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    Well, I’ll be damned…
     

    The candidates for the year’s best (as the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences defines it anyway) foreign language film have been whittled down to nine selections and Japan’s entry Confessions remains standing. Given its flashy style, cynical depiction of the education children are receiving (through both parents and school) and exploitative use of kids doing nasty things to other kids, I was positive it didn’t stand a chance…

    Apparently I’m not that great a prognosticator as it’s still in the running along with another dark horse – Greece’s Dogtooth. Good bets to move on to the final five are Canada’s Incendies, Denmark’s In A Better World (Susanne Bier’s recent winner of a Golden Globe) and Mexico’s Biutiful. More details at oscars.org, but here’s the list of 9:

     

      Algeria – Hors la Loi (“Outside the Law”) by Rachid Bouchareb
      Canada – Incendies by Denis Villeneuve
      Denmark – In a Better World by Susanne Bier
      Greece – Dogtooth by Yorgos Lanthimos
      Japan – Confessions by Tetsuya Nakashima
      Mexico – Biutiful by Alejandro Gonzalez Inarritu
      South Africa – Life, above All by Oliver Schmitz
      Spain – Tambien la Lluvia (“Even the Rain”) by Iciar Bollain
      Sweden – Simple Simon by Andreas Ohman

     

    Over at incontention.com there’s some thought as to why a few of these edgier films made the cut. Two years ago an executive committee was set up specifically to hand pick additional titles to mix things up a bit with those picked by general voters in the category, so one has to assume both Japan and Greece have benefited from these measures. I’d still be surprised (though quite happy) if Confessions made it to the final five, but this category has had its share of surprises over the last few years. Don’t listen to me though…

     

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  • Review: The Secret in Their Eyes

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    Director: Juan José Campanella
    Screenplay: Eduardo Sacheri & Juan José Campanella
    Producers: Mariela Besuievski, Juan José Campanella & Carolina Urbieta
    Starring: Ricardo Darín, Soledad Villamil, Guillermo Francella, Pablo Rago, Javier Godino
    Year: 2009
    Country: Argentina & Spain
    BBFC Certification: 18
    Duration: 129 min

    (4/5)

    The surprise winner of Best Foreign Film at the 2009 Oscars, The Secret of Their Eyes took a while to come to the UK and didn’t get much of a theatrical release, but it’s out now on DVD so I caught up with it to see what all the fuss was about.

    The film begins with a retired legal counsellor in his fifties/sixties (Ricardo Darín) who has decided to spend his later years working on a novel about his past experiences, particularly an unresolved case involving a young woman who was raped and murdered. As the lawyer recontacts his superior (Soledad Villamil), an old flame, to get some more information, we start to find out more about the case through flashbacks and we also delve into the complex relationship between the two of them.

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  • Fruit Loops, Federico Luppi and Firearms: A Frenetic Trailer for Fase 7

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    I missed this disease outbreak film from Argentina by a mere few days at this years Sitges Fantastic Film Festal due to my departure flight being early in the day. Then came the positive reviews to rub a little salt in the wounds. But I can contentedly go into little seizures with this high number of cuts-per-minute trailer. Fans of Guillermo Del Toro’s films will recognize actor Federico Luppi and not unlike Helen Mirren in Red, the filmmakers here have seen fit to let him fire a lot of guns. Furthermore, there have been a lot of good satirical films coming out of Argentina (Nine Queens, The Method) but this is the first time I’ve seen that national cinema do a full-blown, post-apocalyptic one. I am interested.

    The trailer is tucked under the seat.

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  • AFI Fest 2010: Julia’s Eyes

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    (4.5/5)

    When introducing this entry in his producing career, Guillermo Del Toro mentioned a sequence that he had told first-time director Guillem Morales during the scripting process that he simply couldn’t, or shouldn’t, do on film – a twenty-minute sequence where the camera never shows anyone’s face. But Morales held firm and Del Toro trusted him to make it work, and make it work he did. Julia’s Eyes is a conscious throwback to early Italian giallos, the work of early Bava or Argento that walk the line between suspense and horror.

    Julia suffers from a genetic disorder that causes blindness, exacerbated by stress, which can accelerate the loss of sight exponentially. Her sister had the same disorder, and her death opens the film – a death that was quickly ruled suicide by the authorities, but which Julia suspects but cannot prove was murder. As Julia investigates on her own, her sight deteriorates quickly, soon putting her in the same situations that led to her sister’s death, situations that spiral into ever-more disturbing physical and psychological places.

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  • Review: Heartbreaker

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    Director: Pascal Chaumeil
    Screenplay: Laurent Zeitoun, Jeremy Doner & Yohan Gromb
    Producer: Bob Clark
    Starring: Romain Duris, Vanessa Paradis, Julie Ferrier, François Damiens, Héléna Noguerra, Andrew Lincoln
    Year: 2010
    Country: France & Monaco
    BBFC Certification: 15
    Duration: 105 min

    (2.5/5)



    A huge box office success in it’s native France, Heartbreaker is a Gallic spin on the high concept romantic comedy genre made popular in Hollywood recently through the conveyor belt of Katherine Heigl and Matthew McConaughey vehicles.

    Romain Duris plays Alex Lippi, a man with an unusual job. With the help of his sister and her husband, Alex earns his keep as a professional heartbreaker, getting paid by unhappy parents, siblings and close friends to turn women away from their unsuitable boyfriends or husbands. Work is good, with Alex’s charm winning over countless unhappy hearts around the globe, that is until Juliette (Vanessa Paradis) comes along. The problem is that her fiance Jonathan (Andrew Lincoln) seems impossibly perfect and the two appear to be completely in love. How could any man stand in their way? Her father has given Alex and his team only one week to stop Juliette from getting married and to top it all off the mafia are coming down hard on the wannabe Don Juan for the money he owes them.

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  • AFI Fest 2010: Outrage

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    (4/5)

    Here’s my thing with Yakuza films, or really any mafia-style gangster films: I can never, ever manage to keep track of who everybody is, what side they’re on, or why they do what they do to the people they do it to (I mean why specifically in each case; the why generally is fairly obvious). I know that’s partially the point, as loyalties shift and everyone usually has multiple agendas and power plays going on, but I still usually find myself just having to go with it and enjoy it for each moment, at least for the first time viewing. My usual state of mind is something like “okay, I’m not sure who these guys are, but they’re going to rough up that guy, not sure why, but there must be a reason, and OH YEAH VIOLENCE.” Takeshi Kitano’s latest Yakuza film Outrage is pretty much the same, but with even more outrageous kill scenes and bodily injury than I’ve seen before, so I quite enjoyed seeing what new and shocking ways he’d come up each time, even if I was unclear on the details of the shifting familial alliances.

    I won’t even bother trying to synopsize the story, even if I could, because really, that’s not the draw here. It’s a bunch of aging Yakuza bosses getting into petty squabbles that escalate over and over until basically, everybody’s dead. Not a spoiler, because what else would you expect to happen? But even though the film is largely men in suits talking or yelling at each other punctuated by bursts of flamboyant and stylishly shot ultraviolence, I found myself quite engaged and entertained throughout. And by the end, the basics of the families’ relationships to each other was starting to become clearer and with a second viewing, I think I would be able to keep everything straight (especially knowing who’s left standing at the end).

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  • AFI Fest 2010: HaHaHa

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    (4.5/5)

    Someday I’m going to see a South Korean film that isn’t good. That day hasn’t come yet, and it certainly doesn’t come with HaHaHa, a superbly crafted and warmly engaging drama from director Hong Sang-soo, which happened to win the Un Certain Regard prize at Cannes this year. A pair of friends meet for drinks and take the opportunity to reminisce about a city they both spent time at recently, taking turns sharing memories. However, the two men, Moon-kyeong and Joong-sik, don’t realize that they had been frequenting the same places and interacting with the same people. This premise provides an intricate structure upon which Hong interweaves the stories of five or six people as they move in and out of each others’ lives.

    At first, these connections seem incidental – Joong-sik and his poet friend eat at a noodle shop that we know is owned by Moon-kyeong’s mother. Moon-kyeong meets a woman who we later learn is dating the poet (who appears in nearly all of Joong-sik’s memories). This woman, Seong-ok, soon becomes something of the solid thread between the two set of stories, as Moon-kyeong begins falling in love with her even while she continues to see the poet in Joong-sik’s memories. Sometimes the stories get quite close together, as when Moon-kyeong talks with his mother in the kitchen while Joong-sik is passed out drunk in the front room (there is a LOT of drinking in the movie, which got incredibly amusing at times). But throughout most of the movie, they don’t realize what we know all along – that their lives in this town and the stories they are telling are inextricably intertwined.

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  • AFI Fest 2010: Brief Thoughts – Cargo

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    (3.5/5)

    This is not really a review, because by the time AFI’s first entry into the new Midnight section hit, I was beginning to fade a little bit and I don’t feel competent in my grasp of Cargo‘s details to give a full and well-informed review. However, I didn’t want the film to go by without a mention, because it does deserve attention.

    Cargo is the first science fiction film from Switzerland, and also the first feature from its writer/director Ivan Engler. Those two facts make me a little more lenient toward the film, because there is a lot of cool stuff going on here, especially for a national industry and director who don’t have experience with sci-fi. The story concerns a future world where Earth’s resources are depleted and everyone lives on overcrowded space stations, hoping to get enough money to move to Rhea, advertised as a paradise. Our heroine Laura takes a job on a cargo ship – eight years of travel (most of it in cryosleep, but with an eight month on-duty shift to make sure everything’s going fine with the ship) in order to afford to join her sister on Rhea. Predictably, stuff goes wrong, startling truths are uncovered, and dangerous missions are undertaken.

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  • Review: Change of Plans

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    (3.5/5)

    “Everyone pretends they’re fine.” So says one of the characters toward the end of Danièle Thompson’s new ensemble comedy Change of Plans. It’s not a particularly profound statement or one that can’t be found in plenty of other movies, but it does describe pretty accurately the state of affairs among the characters in the film. They first meet attending a dinner party put on by Marie-Laurence (nicknamed ML) and Piotr (played by Micmacs‘ Dany Boon), a married couple struggling a bit with their marriage. The other guests include ML’s sister and her new beau, a potential new boss, some old friends, and a flamenco teacher – in other words, various backgrounds, degrees of connection to ML and Piotr, and a wide range of intimacy with them.

    As they gather for dinner, it becomes clear that potential boss Lucas and his wife Sarah (The Diving Bell and the Butterfly‘s Emmanuelle Seigner) are very not happy together, that friend Melanie is about to leave her husband Alain, that one of the guests has had an affair with ML, and that sister Juliette’s new beau is as old as their father – who, by the way, drops by nearly unannounced, much to Juliette’s chagrin. She hasn’t spoken to him for years. The dinner party continues, focusing on building character, relationships, and drama through dialogue. Dialogue which both hides and reveals each character’s unhappiness, joy, and desire – the ways they’re pretending to be fine and the ways they really are not.

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  • Trailer: Balada Triste (A Sad Trumpet Ballad)

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    A number of us here at Row Three caught Álex De La Iglasia’s Grand Guignol of Circus performers and crazy violence (as a quite satirical metaphor for the Franco Years, naturally), Balada Triste, at TIFF. I believe the love was unanimous. Here is a teaser from the film which features three of its signature images: A gorgeous Trapeze Artist, simply put, one of the most beautiful women on the planet; A disfigured clown with two Machine Guns (a selling point to most adventurous folks of good humour) and just for overkill (and there is plenty of that in the film, in a good way) a clown with a Machete.

    Or for the those wanting to sink more into the mood and extravagance of the film, and more footage of disfigured clowns, there is the lengthier and more poetic and disturbing Italian Trailer which is in a word: AWESOME.

    Seek this one out on the big screen for all the reasons above, and one of the best opening credits sequences of the year!

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