One Day At A Time
Wednesday, December 18, 2024
Winter Solstice
Tuesday, December 17, 2024
'Red One' A Review
Saturday, December 14, 2024
'The End' A Review
The End is a post-apocalyptic musical about the family of an oil tycoon that live in a bunker in a salt mine. After 20 years of isolation the group accepts a new comer into their group disrupting the status quo.
The ensemble is all incredibly talented and bring those considerable gifts to bear. It's always a joy to see Tilda Swinton and Michael Shannon and they don't disappoint, the supporting cast Bronagh Gallagher, Tim McInnerny, and with less screentime Lennie James all really deliver. The 'kids' George MacKay and Moses Ingram are also adept. All of them, and its very much an ensemble piece, are able to navigate the bizarre stilted tone, the breaking into song, and the scenes of massive emotion with grace and an honesty that really work.
This is co-writer/director Joshua Oppenheimer's first feature and his first work in a decade(following 2014's doc The Look of Silence) and you can tell so much thought and effort went into this. It looks great, presumably mostly on sets with no CGI, it really evokes an actual place and feeling. The musical numbers, if too similar in melody and tempo, are effective, particularly a prolonged Michael Shannon dance sequence and a little tap dance interlude by McInnerny. Overall the production is rich and evocative and bodes well for Oppenheimer's future efforts in narrative film.
The film falls short in the third act and in its overall messaging. First of all it is too long, this glut of "serious" movies that have a 2 1/2 - 3 hour run time is absurd. Not that long runtimes are inherently bad but they have to have a purpose and the pacing needs to be amended accordingly. Here, like in many overlong movies, the film ends multiple times. The pacing drags and as a result interest is lost. There is no real need for it to be this long. The wonderful Shannon dance sequence referenced above very much feels like the end of the movie but then there's another anemic half an hour.
And then there's the messaging, similar to many of these end-of-year overlong serious movies, the message seems to be 'life is bleak' and 'the world is fucked', which 1. is boring, 2. is not entertaining, and 3. no shit. Not that movies with a depressing message can't be compelling but it seems like the industry says only these type of movies are cinema(just look at critics top 10 lists or awards nominations that are just now starting to percolate) and that is simply not true particularly in a time where these same industry people are saying 'movies are struggling'. Art(in this instance cinema) is about hope, it is about transformation, it is about inspiration. And The End is actually kind of on that track for 2/3 of its story, the characters contend with their pasts, their regrets, their culpability, and there seems to be some growth as a result. The work itself seems to be indicating this is the trajectory, this small enclave of what's left of society finally starts to be honest and, finally, begins to make some progress. But then they don't and you can clearly see Oppenheimer's will here, he goes against what the work itself wants to do and forces his embittered nihilistic worldview, a character dies, the rest of the characters compartmentalize and regress and its just feels very contrived dramatically and unsatisfying thematically. The film ultimately falls echoingly flat.
Ambitious, intriguing, haunting, but sour and in the end empty.
Currently in theaters, coming soon to VOD.
Rent It.
Wednesday, December 11, 2024
'Flow' A Review
Flow is an animated adventure about a cat and a flood. In a nameless jungle the cat prowls, tries to steal a fish from a pack of dogs, flees but is interrupted by a massive flood. The cat hops on a boat with a capybara and the two gather other animal friends as they travel towards a distant monolith.
The animation style is simple but rich and the characterization of the animals is complex. There's no dialogue and relatively minimal scoring, its more an experience than a narrative, which is fine although at 90 minutes the film drags, it feels like a short that was expanded into a feature. There's, seemingly, a lot of ideas here(is this a biblical fable? environmental?) but its all rendered in relatively vague, abstract terms in a way that we are meant to interpret.
This is clearly meant to be an adult piece of animation which is commendable although if the animals can sail ships and have sophisticated social interactions it feels kinda silly not to just have them talk. Nonetheless it looks great, is unique, if lacking some thematic oomph.
Interesting if not particularly engaging.
Currently in theaters, coming soon to VOD.
Rent It.
Tuesday, December 10, 2024
In the ecstasy of the present time
the newness intoxicating
Sunday, December 8, 2024
'Super/Man: The Christopher Reeve Story' A Review
Super/Man: The Christopher Reeve Story is a documentary about the life, career, and activism of Christopher Reeve. Through talking head interviews, archival footage, and home movies his story is told.
Although visually conventional(other than an odd, not particularly effective, continued motif of a CGI nude Superman floating through space) the non-linear structure, crisp/smart editing, and stirring(but not overpowering or leading) score pair brilliantly with the subject matter delivering not only one of the best docs of the year but one of the best retrospective celeb portraits of this type ever.
Reeve's story, and by extension his family, is a powerful one. Impactful, insightful, and unique. The telling here is pitch perfect and evokes the same inspiration that not only Reeve's portrayal of Superman did but also his activism later in life.
A portrait of a singular man with an incredible reach.
Currently streaming on Max.
Don't Miss It.
Wednesday, December 4, 2024
'The Last of the Sea Women' A Review
The Last of the Sea Women is a documentary about the haenyeo, a community of women seafood divers in Jeju Island, South Korea. It profiles the women and their current struggle with maintaining their culture/profession given environmental threats.
Beautifully shot with several diving scenes and great moments with the haenyeo themselves the film feels mildly intimate and breezy. The history of the haenyeo is summarized, the culture the haenyeo came from is abbreviated, the environmental issues at play lie mostly passive in the background until the end sequence which is not without its power but also feels somewhat contrived within the structure of the film. These women and their story is powerful and engaging and the film is a solid watch however in aggregate there is a NatGeo kind of sanitized feel about the whole endeavor. There is just clearly so much more here that the film does not get into. More nuance, more richness that the film doesn't have the time(or perhaps interest) to plumb. Even the haenyeo themselves clearly have more to say but their access to speak freely seems constrained.
This is director Sue Kim's first feature length doc and some of its lack of dimension could be a result of this being a freshman effort, she shows promise and knows what to shoot and how and seemingly developed a good relationship with her subjects but there is a kind of a glossy marketability feeling that isn't oppressive but is definitely noticeable, maybe that was out of necessity, Kim needed to sell it. But compare this to something like 2019's Honeyland and it's clear the haenyeo deserve something with more depth, more courage, more artistry.
Incredible subjects but only a decent film.
Currently streaming on Apple TV+.
See It.