Archive for the ‘Uncategorized’ Category

Whatever Works

June 25, 2009

Whatever Works

Boris Yellnikoff (Larry David) sees the big picture. As a genius who is well versed in Quantum Mechanics, he understands that we are all just beings who are destined to die, and that we should all take whatever slices of life that make us happy. He is also fully aware that somewhere out there, people who paid good money are looking into the bubble and viewing his life. Nobody believes him of course, but that doesn’t mean he won’t let us in.

Boris is a crotchety, cynical old man who believes that people are taking the wrong view on life. People tend to think that others are essentially decent people and will do the right thing when the situation calls for it. He doesn’t buy it, and rails constantly on this point. His friendships are based on allowing him to vent incessantly and then discussing these topics.

Enter Melodie St. Ann Celestine ( Evan Rachel Wood ). A runaway from Mississippi has arrived in the Big Apple to get away from her highly religious parents. Boris thinks her a empty headed zombie who doesn’t have the looks or the brains to last in New York, but he allows her to stay a couple of days to make the decision to go home. Months pass, and its apparent to all that even though she is highly impressionable, she is a good influence on Boris.

When her parents come to town (Patricia Clarkson and Ed Begley, Jr.), they tell tales of searching for her high and low. The police found nothing but dead ends, but they just prayed and found their way to her doorstep. Their time in NYC changes them completely as they are quickly drawn into romantic entanglements that were taboo where they came from.

In the end, its all about finding out what it is that makes you happy. Its not so much your goals, knowledge and standing in life, its got more to do with luck and engaging the world. It does seem to me that this was yet another self-indulgent Woody Allen film thats a an exercise in saying “its fine to do whatever you want.”

Larry David is a person that I can usually only tolerate for small periods of time (personally I was here to watch Evan Rachel Wood). He does effectively channel Woody Allen in this film, which is interesting considering that snippets of his life are played out on screen. The love with a woman a few decades younger than him, the neurotic, high strung awkward man who people seem to want to know and be around.

The screening I was at, it appeared that the film was made in soft focus, there is an almost bubble like view throughout, and this is probably to enforce that “the audience is watching”, but it seemed that I shouldn’t have noticed this fact.

I will say that this is probably his best film in this decade. I laughed at several points and liked the movie as a whole, which is more than I’ve been able to do with his other films in recent memory. But as people seem to like letting me know, my tastes in movies is extremely flawed.

Recommendation: Solid DVD Rental

Movies I will see this week…

June 22, 2009

Whatever Works is Woody Allen’s latest film with Larry David as a crotchety old man and a naïve, impressionable young runaway from the south (Evan Rachel Wood). When her uptight parents, (Patricia Clarkson and Ed Begley, Jr.) arrive to rescue her, they are quickly drawn into wildly unexpected romantic entanglements.

Cheri has Michelle Pfeiffer starring as a ravishing Parisian courtesan who takes a naïve young man half her age – rising British star Rupert Friend — into her boudoir to teach him a thing or two about women.  But of course, he learns all too well and turns out to be her perfect match.

SIFF 2009 Top 10

June 16, 2009

80 films, 31 Countries, 25 days and 4 journals later, here are the SIFF 2009 results:

My Top 10 SIFF Audience Top Ten SIFFool Serious
The Karamazovs Black Dynamite* Departures
Seraphine The Necessities of Life North Face
Terribly Happy (500) Days of Summer* Tears of April*
Moon ZMD:Zombies of Mass Destruction* Seraphine*
Chef’s Special Morris: A Life With Bells On Necessities of Life
Zift North Face The Hurt Locker*
The Hurt Locker Marcello Marcello That Evening Sun
Inju, the Beast in the Shadow Departures Troubled Water
A Woman’s Way Patrik Age 1.5 Moon*
My Suicide Amreeka* Kabei – Our Mother

SIFFool Serious (say Full Series fast) are a group of Passholders who rate all the films they see, and are not affiliated with SIFF.  All see at least 20 films, most see well over 100.  Our ratings are more reliable than the Audience awards simply because of the sheer number of films seen.  Audience awards are skewed because of theater size and audience attendance. These are the ballots I help count every year, and results can be seen at my desk.

* Seen as part of my run.

Country of origin-  I usually attempt to see films from as many countries as possible, but the programmers this year sucked at their scheduling of events.  Too many times did 2+ hour films be pitted against 90 minute films, so seeing a 2 hour film often meant skipping 1 other time slot.  Also, single entry countries like Kazackstan, Krygystan, Turkey and the Czech Republic were pitted against each other in the same timeslot at different theaters, ensuring that audiences would be limited.  This is why I missed out on several films that I have heard were wonderful.

For this the top five countries that I saw films from are:

USA – 25
France – 8
Hong Kong/Spain – 5
Denmark – 4

SIFF 2009 Quick Rankings

June 16, 2009

[1-5 – Waste of Film  ---- 6 – DVD Rental ---- 7-10 – See where you can]

9/10
Chef’s Special (Spain)
Moon (United Kingdom)
Seraphine (France)
Terribly Happy (Denmark)
The Karamazovs (Czech Republic)

8/10
A Woman’s Way (Greece)
Carmo, Hit the Road (Spain)
In the Loop (United Kingdom)
Inju, the Beast in the Shadow (France)
My Suicide (USA)
Swimsuit Issue (Sweden)
The Beast Stalker (Hong Kong)
The Escape (Denmark)
The Hurt Locker (USA)
The Sniper (Hong Kong)
Zift (Bulgaria)

7/10
(500) Days of Summer (USA)
A Wind Blows in the Meadow (Iran)
A Woman in Berlin (Germany)
About Elly (Iran)
American Primitive (USA)
Apron Strings (New Zealand)
Black Dynamite (USA)
Hansel and Gretel (S.Korea)
I Sell the Dead (USA)
Krabat (Germany)
Little Soldier (Denmark)
Sexykiller (Spain)
Stella (France)
Tears of April (Finland)
The Clone Returns Home (Japan)
The Hills Run Red (USA)
The Merry Gentleman (USA)
Wonderful World (USA)
Yes, I Can See Dead People (Hong Kong)
ZMD:Zombies of Mass Destruction (USA)

DVD Rental
$9.99 (Israel)
a girl and a gun (Austria)
Amreeka (USA)
Anarchist’s Wife (Spain)
Beket (Italy)
Birdwatchers (Italy)
Black Dogs Barking (Turkey)
Cold Souls (USA)
Dead Snow (Norway)
Deadgirl (USA)
Downloading Nancy (USA)
Eldorado (Belgium)
Fear Me Not (Denmark)
Fifty Dead Men Walking (United Kingdom)
Four Boxes (USA)
Grace (USA)
Immaculate Conception of Little Dizzle (USA)
Kanchivaram (India)
Katia’s Sister (Netherlands)
Kimjongilia (France)
Miao Miao (Hong Kong)
My Dear Enemy (S.Korea)
Nak (Thailand)
No Puedo Vivir Sin Ti (Taiwan)
OSS 117: Lost in Rio (France)
talhotblond (USA)
The Girl From Monaco (France)
The One-Handed Trick (Spain)
Treeless Mountain (USA)
Warlords (Hong Kong)
Welcome (France)

Waste of Film
33 Scenes from Life (Poland)
Back to the Garden, Flower Power (USA)
Be Calm and Count to Seven (Iran)
California Company Town (USA)
Give Me Your Hand (France)
Hooked (Romania)
Spring Breakdown (USA)
The Baby Formula (Canada)
The Headless Woman (Argentina)
The Missing Person (USA)
The Square (Australia)
We Live in Public (USA)
Yes Men Fix the World(USA)

The Promotion

May 22, 2008

The Promotion

Stars Sean William Scott (Dukes of Hazzard) and John C. Reilly (Walk Hard: The Dewey Cox Story) play rivals Doug and Richard for a promotion to manager of a new grocery store. I wasn’t sure what to expect considering Sean usually plays up the slapstick and absurdity in his comedy roles, and was pleasantly surprised by the tone of the film and the performances by everyone. This is a dark comedy and low-key to the point that it seemed they were conscious of not going too far.

This is a movie about how far you would go for your family. Do you lie, bend the rules, maybe sabotage a rival? How far is too far, and what do you give up personally in the process? The films starts with Doug, a very nice guy who just wants to get along, being the virtual shoo-in for the promotion until Richard, a Canadian who recently re-located with his wife, comes along and is equally qualified. Its an emotional buildup as Doug and Richard try to out-do each other in order to secure the promotion, and you can tell it pains them both because they would likely be good friends otherwise. As they take steps to sabotage the other, each finds themselves in worse positions, with Doug doing the most damage as everything comes to a head before the final decision. Despite the outcome, all parties walk away with positive experiences and the realization that everyone is just trying to put food on the table.

The supporting cast (Fred Armisen, Jenna Fisher, Gil Bellows, Rick Gonzales) deliver memorable performances and sometimes steal scenes from Scott and Reilly. This low-key dark comedy was definitely worth the time to watch. Recommend.

Filmography links and data courtesy of The Internet Movie Database.

Chaos Theory

May 22, 2008

Chaos Theory

Saw this movie on a lark and was pleasantly surprised by the story telling, acting and a film that didn’t go too far to the absurd. It does follow the convention where a series of events causes one involved to overreact badly, sabotaging what they have built up in their life in the process, then spends the rest of the time coming back to a happy medium. With Ryan Reynolds being cast, I was concerned that his over-the-top acting would get in the way, but the writing prevents this romcom from devolving into an absurd farce and comes out as a good film entry on the resume.

The movie opens at a wedding, where the groom is about to overreact to news he received about his soon-to-be wife and Ryan Reynolds (Definitely, Maybe, playing what I consider his best on screen performance to date) steps in to calm the groom down. As Frank Allen, father of the bride, he gives the groom a choice to either allow him to tell a story or to walk out of his daughter’s life forever. Wouldn’t be much of a movie if he walked, now would it?

The story unfolds in a series of flashbacks, but centers on a series of incidents that almost cost him his marriage and life-long friends. As a man with OCD tendencies, Frank has the perfect life, the perfect wife, and a career as a Time-Management professional. On a day where he is to give a conference, a chain of events causes him to question his marriage, his child’s paternity, and what he wants to do with his life. The movie builds towards an awakening that not everything in life can be controlled and that one’s choices when the unexpected happens can have disastrous consequences.

Emily Mortimer (Lars and the Real Girl) and Stuart Townsend (The Best Man) play the other leads as Frank’s wife Susan and best friend Buddy, respectively, and have their sides of the story told throughout the film to balance out Frank’s overreaction. The cast is rounded out with performances by Constance Zimmer, Sarah Chalke, and Matreya Fedor.

I enjoyed this film, loved some of the ideas presented (choosing a marriage partner based on the name of their junk, the idea of lecture circuit groupies, and using lists to dictate actions, among many others) and was pleasantly entertained. Recommend highly.

Filmography links and data courtesy of The Internet Movie Database.