Showing posts with label Foreign Films. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Foreign Films. Show all posts

Thursday, December 12, 2013

My Favorite Things 2013

This year, more so than any other in recent memory, I found myself playing catch-up with last year's "best-of" that I didn't take in much from this calendar year. Basically, I haven't read, listened to or watched enough of anything to make separate lists for each ... so, here's my Top Ten Favorite Things from 2013.

1 & 2. While everyone is talking about AMC, HBO and Showtime and their popular programming, I'm interested in BBC America, which produced two of my favorite television shows this year: Orphan Black and the third season of Luther. One could not find better acting, nor more complicated and well-drawn characters. Bonus: the female characters are strong. Tatiana Maslany (playing 7 characters on Orphan Black) should have been nominated and won an Emmy, and Ruth Wilson (from Luther) is so on point as psychopath Alice Morgan, it actually makes me giddy when she shows up on screen.
3 & 4. The Death of Bees by Lisa O'Donnell and Wave by Sonali Deraniyagala. I wrote reviews of both a while back, so I won't get into it again. Simply, both are books that stay with you.

5 & 6. I have slacked the most this year in the movie department. I have seen only one movie in the theater and about a handful on DVD. My two favorite films of the year are The Way Way Back and the German film Lore. It was theatrically released in 2012, but out on DVD in 2013, so I'm counting it. Lore takes place at the end of World War II and focuses on siblings who've been abandoned by their Nazi-sympathizing parents and now must confront the harsh reality of losing a war and the propaganda they've been fed. Superb performances from a very young cast and a WWII perspective not often told. The Way Way Back also features a younger actor with potential: Liam James (in the role of Duncan). His interactions with Sam Rockwell made this movie.




7. The album that sticks out to me this year is Tomorrow's Harvest by Boards of Canada. I enjoyed many others (from artists Daft Punk, Phoenix, Local Natives, The National, Quadron, Thundercat, and Cut Copy), but this one I enjoyed the whole way through. And I got sucked in. It's ambient, but not boring.

8-11. Even though I enjoyed the above album as a whole, my favorite songs of the year were Trying to Be Cool by Phoenix, Holy by Frightened Rabbit, Diane Young by Vampire Weekend (love, love, love the ending), and Heartbreaks + Setbacks by Thundercat.


Saturday, April 6, 2013

Remembering Roger Ebert

Everyone has a favorite memory of beloved film critic Roger Ebert; whether it's a clever remark he made on his long-running television show, a favored sentence from one of his thousands of movie reviews for the Chicago Sun-Times, a passage from one of his many books, or a cherished personal encounter with a man who was, by all accounts, friendly and approachable and happy to discuss the movies with anyone who was interested.

My own favorite memory of Roger Ebert comes from an old episode of Siskel and Ebert and The Movies that aired sometime in the late '80s. The format of the show was simplicity itself; Roger Ebert and Gene Siskel would alternately introduce a film that was currently playing in theaters, some clips would be shown, the two critics would share their impressions of the film, maybe some banter, and then a verdict would be rendered: thumbs up or thumbs down. That was it. And you always kind of hoped that they'd disagree on the film in question. When the two disagreed, you got a fuller sense of what they really thought of the film, good or bad. There was something charming about the way they wanted each other to appreciate what was unique about a given film, or what made it uniquely awful.

I would've been about ten years old when this particular episode aired. In addition to reviewing whatever Hollywood films were current that week, none of which I remember, there was a review of Alejandro Jodorowsky's film Santa Sangre. And these were, unquestionably, the strangest, most unsettling images I had seen in my life to that point. I remember Ebert, in voice-over, explicating a scene where an armless woman was playing the piano with the aid of her son, who had slipped his arms through the sleeves of his mother's dress. There was something off-kilter in the acting, and the candle-lit set appeared baroque, almost operatic. The succeeding images were dreamlike and menacing, evocative of dark mysteries that I couldn't possibly understand. Needless to say, Ebert gave it a thumbs up.

That peculiar memory resurfaced at the news of Roger's passing, those four or five minutes of a decades-old episode. I've been thinking about that, how appropriate it is that Roger Ebert used his popular weekly TV show to highlight a little-known art-film about magic, vengeance, and religious fanaticism, directed by a Chilean-French filmmaker whose name almost certainly meant nothing to the vast majority of viewers. Roger Ebert loved the movies. Big movies and small ones, great movies and otherwise. Roger Ebert loved the movies. It was an enduring, lifelong love-affair, and we were fortunate to share it with him.

Friday, April 13, 2012

Actor Spotlight: Viggo Mortensen


A brief primer on why Mr. Mortensen is significantly cooler than you are:

  • He is fluent in at least three languages (English, Danish, Spanish), and is conversant in several others. His performance in the 2006 historical film Alatriste is one example of his mastery of the Spanish language.
  • He was married to Exene Cervenka, co-founder of the influential Los Angeles punk band X. This, in itself, places him in a fairly rarefied realm of coolness. To exceed that level of cool, you'd pretty much have to be Exene Cervenka.
  • He is a photographer, painter, musician, and published poet. (These are not vanity projects; his earliest book was published in 1993, long before his role in The Lord of the Rings made him a household name.)
  • He was in Young Guns II. If you don't think that's pretty cool, then you really need to watch Young Guns II. (You don't need to have seen the first Young Guns, and you don't need to care about Westerns.)
  • His brief performance as Lalin, a paraplegic ex-gangster, opposite Al Pacino in Carlito's Way evinced more genuine pathos than any other moment in the entire 144-minute film.
  • He played the role of Lucifer (yes, that Lucifer) in the 1995 film The Prophecy, and managed to not seem completely ridiculous in doing so. No small feat, if you think about it.
  • His performance in A History of Violence, the actor's first collaboration with director David Cronenberg. Mortensen convincingly plays his character as a small-town everyman, until the plot convinces you otherwise.
  • His performance in Eastern Promises, the actor's second collaboration with director David Cronenberg. Look for a false note in Mortensen's portrayal of compromised Russian gangster Nikolai Luzhin. You will not find one.
  • Along with Johnny Depp, he may be the only human being who can get away with curiously sculpted facial hair. (I am not advocating this.)
  • In A Dangerous Method, his most recent collaboration with Cronenberg, he played the towering historical figure Sigmund Freud. His take on the character was nuanced; calculating without seeming calculated; amusing, but without any trace of parody. (I'm legally required to point out that Mortensen's co-star in A Dangerous Method is the Media Corner favorite Michael Fassbender.)
  • He participated in the documentary film The People Speak, in which actors and musicians perform dramatic renditions of the words of every-day Americans. His reading of a letter written by the family of a man who died in the World Trade Center attacks is deeply moving.
  • His performance in The Road, an adaptation of Cormac McCarthy's grim  post-apocalyptic novel. Mortensen powerfully portrays the unnamed father's relentless determination to protect and provide for his son.

Sunday, January 9, 2011

Oscar watch: I Am Love (Io Sono L'amore)

Unfortunately, the plot for I Am Love isn't especially original (a lonely woman, an affair, an unexpected consequence because of the affair, etc.). Sure, there are some underlying themes that are a glimpse at something unique and new, but I don't know that it succeeds. However, there are a few reasons to catch this Italian film.

I Am Love is a pure showcase for Tilda Swinton's talent. She carries the film and if you are a fan of hers, do not miss this. There is a restaurant scene where Swinton's character is immensely enjoying her meal-- a combination of great acting and cinematography. Cinematographer Yorick Le Saux hits the mark with his luminous lighting and the shots of Milan and the Italian countryside instantly make you feel as though you're there. The score, composed by John Adams, is lovely. Minimalism at its best.

Sometimes art for art's sake, or beautiful aesthetics, can be enough. The movie seems like a vacation to Italy; you get a taste of the culture and themes, but are lacking the real depth of habitation. In this instance just sit back and enjoy the view.

Oscar prediction: I Am Love will be nominated for Best Foreign Film, but it is not all around strong enough to win.

I Am Love
Find it in the catalog!

Thursday, August 13, 2009

J'aime les films avec les soustitres!

Translation: I love films with subtitles!

Okay, I don't actually love every foreign film I watch; I needed a catchy title.  I have picked out three foreign films that are pretty darn wonderful and that I think you should try out.  These are ones I've recently seen and they all just happen to be in French.  Don't let the subtitles put you off from seeing a great film.

                                      

Tell No One (Ne le dis à personne)
(French)
Based on the book by Harlen Coben, this was one of my top 5 movies I saw in 2008.  Margot, the wife of pediatrician Alex Beck, was murdered eight years ago.  After some new evidence is unearthed, Alex is once again questioned about the murder.  Then he receives emails from a person claiming to be his wife... is she still alive?  Suspenseful, emotional, heart-pounding, and smart, you'll want to watch Tell No One more than once. 

I've Loved You So Long (Il y a longtemps que je t'aime)
(French)
Kristin Scott Thomas gives an excellent performance as Juliette, who is trying to re-enter society after being in jail for fifteen years.  We don't find out her crime until later in the film, and I won't mention what it is here.  Her parents disowned her and started to tell everyone they only had one daughter when Juliette went to prison.  Juliette's sister, Lea, allows her to come and live with her family, but the husband is worried and hesitant about Juliette being in the house with the kids.  Juliette works toward securing a job and new friends, but her past still haunts her.  Will she be able to continue with her life?

The Class (Entre les murs)
(French)
This movie was just released on DVD this week.  Set in a high school classroom (entre les murs = between the walls) in Paris, France, and shot documentary style it stars teacher François Bégaudeau and regular teenagers from many ethnic backgrounds.  It feels like we are peeking inside a classroom; we see the difficulties teachers must face in dealing with rowdy, uninspired students.  We even see the teachers break down in the faculty lounge.  At one point, though, François sees his students come alive while they work on their autobiographies on the computers.  It seems he finally is getting through to the unmotivated students... at least for the time being.  This is a movie that will stick with you long after the credits roll.
 

Thursday, May 14, 2009

Some foreign film recommendations . . .


In honor of our poll about foreign films (to the right and a little lower), I thought I'd share some recommendations.

Heavy on action and humor (I love the harpist assassins!), you'll forget you're even watching a foreign film:
Kung Fu Hustle Find it in the catalog!

Great characters and setting, with a fulfilling ending:
Amelie Find it in the catalog!

Another action flick (and not too many subtitles):
Run Lola Run Find it in the catalog!

Two well acted and suspensful films:
Read My Lips Find it in the catalog!
The Lives of Others (2006 Foreign Film Oscar winner) Find it in the catalog!

Do you have any foreign films that you'd recommend?