Saturday, 28 December 2019
Thursday, 26 December 2019
No. 112. (2019) LITTLE WOMEN. December 22nd.
Film No 112 (2019) December 22nd. 1:45 PM LUNA PALACE Windsor, Nedlands .
"Make it short and spicy. And if your main character is a girl, make sure she is married by the end; or dead". (Jo March gets advice from her editor about what sort of story sells in the mid 1800's).
Louisa May Alcott wrote a novel so iconic in 1868 that there have been hundreds of interpretations from poems, to TV series, adaptations to films and theatre scripts, all with varying success. The novel is a celebration of family, female sensibilities, determination and goodness in general. Greta Gerwig's latest take on Little Women may well stand as the greatest celebration of Alcott's novel of all. It is a masterclass defining all the joy a visit to the cinema can bring.
Gerwig has remained true to the book, but her technique of seamlessly flitting from flashback to real-time gives a dimension so very important for a cinema adaptation of such an iconic story. In particular the Jo (Saoirse Ronan), Amy (Florence Pugh) love, hate chemistry reaps the full benefit of Gerwig's blueprint.
Which brings me to the actors who colour the screen so beautifully in this version. Emma Watson (Meg) and Eliza Scanien (Beth) round out the quartet of March sisters with aplomb. Laura Dern as Mother Marmee captures every ounce of love and empathy needed. The often heartbroken Laurie played by Timothee Chalamet pushes all the right buttons. And so the list broadens. There is barely a player out of place; although the chance for Bob Odenkirk to enhance the fatherly influence is stifled and lacks depth.
I'm certain there is not a better holiday flick doing the rounds here in Australia over Christmas/New Year. And other than a slightly sickly soundtrack which has a "this is how you should feel now" quality, Little Women is close to the most faultless film I've seen in 2019. Gerwig can now be added to my "not be missed" director list. 11GUMS.
Friday, 20 December 2019
No. 111. (2019) THE PEANUT BUTTER FALCON. December 19th.
Film No. 111 (2019) December 19th. 8:00 PM SOMERVILLE Outdoor U.W.A.
"Tyler, I'm going to give you all of my wishes for my birthday." (Zak makes the ultimate sacrifice to his bestest new friend for the day he looks forward to more than any other).
A sweet road movie where predicting the outcome of one scene after the next is never difficult, but where the enjoyment of each prediction is joyfully anticipated because of the sum of its parts. Those parts come in the form of Zak (Zack Gottsagen) a down-syndrome boy who runs away from his repressive institutional life to pursue a dream, the dream to become a wrestler. How is this possible wearing only underpants and caked in soap? He meets Tyler (Shia LaBeouf) who's come upon hard times and needs to escape from pursuing bad guys in a hurry. The odd couple gradually form a lasting friendship via tried and tested means and along the way, take on the company of Eleanor (Dakota Johnson), a carer for Zach at the institution. Yes, it is far-fetched, silly in fact, and gets even sillier by the time the screen fades to black. However there so much charisma pouring from the characters of TPBF, you will not be able to peel your eyes from this heartfelt adventure story. A low-budget gem of an independent film. 9GUMS.
Saturday, 14 December 2019
No. 110. (2019) A BEAUTIFUL DAY IN THE NEIGHBOURHOOD. December 6th.
Film No 110 (2019) Dec. 7th. 10:45 AM LUNA PALACE Leederville.
"Sometimes we have to ask for help and that's okay." (Fred Rogers responds to Lloyd's assertion that Fred likes broken people like himself).
Another film inspired by a true story. Fresh on the heels of the documentary Won't You Be My Neighbour, Marielle Heller (Can You Ever Forgive Me) has taken the legend that is Fred Rogers and crafted a feature film that further emphasises the gentle goodness that is Mr Rogers. Tom Hanks is quite possibly the only actor capable of delivering this gentleness so legitimately. He does it superbly.
Inspired by the 10,000 word article Can You Say ... Hero? (1998) by Tom Junod, A Beautiful Day will warm the hearts of the coldest souls who love cinema. The story goes, Junod, generally a hard-hitting investigative writer, was sent by his editor to do a piece on America's most popular children's T.V. host. Junod had made enemies for Esquire due to his article, Kevin Spacey Has A Secret (yes, before it's time!) in 1997 so to relieve some tension Junod got the gig to meet Rogers thus forming a life-long friendship and yet another cover article.
Matthew Rhys (The Americans) plays Junod as fictional Lloyd Vogel here and shares the star billing with Hanks extremely comfortably. The premise that Vogel is based very loosely on Junod makes sense because there are many emotional and convenient short cuts which make Beautiful Day so touching. Junod hasn't said much but his relationship with his father was never as fractured as the one Vogel would have you believe on screen. "The depiction of our friendship (Rogers) was as close as I could have realistically hoped for" was a key comment made by Junod after his first viewing of the film.
The truth is, Rogers saw that Junod was troubled, mainly professionally, and he wanted to help. He did; Junod wrote an article which reflected the therapy Rogers' had instilled. The friendship was lasting and this very genuine fact is reinforced, if slightly fictitiously, in this very therapeutic, highly entertaining flick. 10GUMS.
Thursday, 12 December 2019
No. 109. (2019) THE DEAD DON"T DIE. December 6th.
Film No. 109 (2019) December 6th. 8:30 PM SOMERVILLE Outdoor U.W.A.
"This is not going to end well." (Officer Ronnie Peterson repeated this phrase a number of times at critical junctures simply to reinforce his feelings for the immediate future).
Jim Jarmusch has taken on most genres when it comes to storytelling for the screen so it was a matter of time before the zombie theme took his fancy.
The Dead Don't Die never takes itself seriously so the deadpan delivery of Bill Murray, playing Chief Cliff Robertson, and the self effacing aura of Officer Patterson (Adam Driver) as they set about solving the gruesome deaths occurring in their sleepy town, Centerville, makes for an amusing premise. And there are plenty of chuckles along the way. Unfortunately it doesn't totally satisfy.
Jarmusch's scripts are always quirky, often silly but never boring. The Dead just simply dies in a final 15 minutes of silliness. The script, the premise, the characters all run out of steam and finish in a pile, quite literally. Never mind, Jarmusch fans, me included, are going to revel in the rest. Look out for Cliff's subtle nuances in his desire to be noticed by Officer Mindy Morrison (Chloe Sevigny), it's a typical Jarmusch side light. 8GUMS.
No. 107. (2019) le VERITA (THE TRUTH). December 2nd.
Film No. 107 (2019) December 2nd. 6:40 PM PALACE CINEMAS Northbridge.
"It's nothing, it is my daughter and her little family." (Fabienne comments on the arrival of her guests, come to be with her at the launch of her much awaited biography).
In this meeting of the heavyweights of French cinema (Deneuve V Binoche) the elder stateswoman takes the honours; with ease it must be said, and for good reason. The script revolves around Fabienne Dangeville (Catherine Deneuve), an aging actor living a life of such self indulgence that family, friends and employees wander around her pampering and hoodwinking her into the insecurities and comforts of her world.
Hirokazu Kore-eda takes on the challenge of another family drama after his Cannes winning, Shoplifters, of 2018. He has an effective but underwhelming style. We are left in no doubt as to where our thoughts and feelings should lie. But as the trailer might suggest, there is no strong powerhouse dramatic tension between daughter Lumir (Binoche) and mother (Deneuve). The true drama is in the tension that could have been. But then again it doesn't try to be anything other than a look into lives so very distant from the norm.
The star studded cast including Ethan Hawke as Lumir's husband Hank, a recovering alcoholic, plus the young Clementine Grenier as their daughter assist in propping up this pleasantly amusing feature. But it is most definitely no Deneuve/Binoche "act-off". 8GUMS.
Saturday, 7 December 2019
No. 108. (2019) 1917. December 5th.
Film No. 108 (2019) December 5th. 6:45 PM EVENT CINEMAS Innaloo.
"...... If you don't we'll lose sixteen hundred men, your brother amongst them ....." (Part of the brief issued to the Lance Corps by General Erinmore just prior to them embarking on their mission).
War films in the main project a message and hope that there never be another; 1917 has a power that encompasses those virtues ten fold. It is my favourite film of 2019, by a long one-shot that not even Birdman could match.
Sam Mendes pays tribute to his grandfather, Alfred Mendes, who told him many stories of his experiences in WWI with the film telling one such story; a story of gripping proportions. The story of Lance Corporal Blake (Dean-Charles Chapman) and LC Schofield (George Mackay) on this day in 1917 over a momentous 12 to 15 hours has our heroes delivering a message beyond no-mans-land to save hundreds of lives, all shot in one take (it wasn't, but that's how it looks). It's brilliant and will become a Remembrance Day icon for years to come.
While the one-take feature film has become a style in contemporary cinema, there has been a self-indulgent quality to some, 21 Brothers, a prime example. Mendes uses the technique to gather us into the high power tense moments never letting us be confused about time and place. 1917 is gripping, sad, joyous, angry, thoughtful, loving and finally reflective. Go see it. 12GUMS.
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