For the benefit of those of you who may eventually be directed here from someone's NYFF rundown, and who may assume that 57/100 amounts to an F.
100-90: Masterpiece, or damn close. Very rare.
89-80: Fanthefucktastic. Near-lock for my year-end top 10 list.
79-70: Definitely something special. Do not miss. Likely list contender.
69-60: Very good, but also flawed or missing some crucial element.
59-50: Didn't quite work for me, but has many redeeming qualities.
49-40: Demerits clearly outweigh merits.
39-30: I really did not enjoy this picture, but talent was involved.
29-20: When will this fucking picture end. When.
19-10: Outright fiasco and/or unwatchably boring.
9-0: One of the worst movies I've ever seen. Very rare.
W/O: I don't know the director and the first two reels (about 35 to 40
minutes) didn't convince me that (s)he has it going on.
Changeling (Clint Eastwood, USA): 67
[As I've argued for over a decade now, Eastwood-as-director, with his
so-called "classical" style that really amounts to a sort of measured
impatience, is only as good as his material. Here, via former Babylon
5 geek J. Michael Straczynski, he's stumbled onto a true-life tale so
absurdly sensational that you can only wonder how on earth it ever fell
into obscurity in the first place. I can easily imagine it inspiring a
much better film than Changeling: a film in which the lead
actress doesn't seem to be in constant battle with the period setting;
a film that finds a way to make its two parallel stories work in
counterpoint long before they dovetail; certainly a film that doesn't
hand over its exposition to a good-hearted, wise-cracking hooker. (I'd
feel sorry for Amy Ryan had I not just seen this.) But the fact
that John Grisham can't write for shit didn't stop me from blazing through
The Firm in six hours flat (in person I demonstrate by muttering
"this is stupid," "this is retarded," "how did this even get published?"
-- all while miming rapidly flipping pages), and likewise I cannot
honestly claim not to have enjoyed this movie, even if it was strictly in
a flabbergasted voyeuristic how-much-more-fucked-up-can-this-get? kind
of way. And while Changeling has plenty of cornball Hollywood
moments, it also repeatedly thwarts audience expectations -- if only by
virtue of sticking to the facts of the actual Wineville case, which was
by no means resolved in a cathartic or crowd-pleasing fashion. I can only
assume that Northcott really did sing "Silent Night" on the gallows in
that quavery terrified voice...because, seriously, who could make that
up?]
The Wrestler (Darren Aronofsky, USA): N/A
[The alarm went off at 8:30 and I thought "Fox Searchlight is gonna
screen this thing a bazillion times over the next couple months" and went
right back to sleep. I'll plug the review in here when I see it.]
Summer Hours (Olivier Assayas, France): 68
[Neat trick Assayas pulls off here, slowly subtracting characters until
it becomes clear that the film's true subjects are all inanimate. And yet
at the same time he gives everyone's feelings their due, discreetly
following the eldest and most sentimental sibling into the bedroom when
he gets all weepy about having to sell the house; letting the other
two justify their decision without writing them off as cold, rootless
global-econ maroons; even halting the Cold Water Redux finale to
give one grandchild a brief moment of longing and regret. As it happens,
my own family (paternal side) has a similar house in Carmel-By-The-Sea
(of Clint-as-Mayor fame), which my dad and six surviving aunts/uncles
opted to keep when their parents died back-to-back in the mid-'90s;
having just spent a weekend there in April and been suffused by childhood
memories, I'm probably unusually receptive to this film's elegiac tone at
the moment, despite having more in common with Binoche's Adrienne than
with Berling's Frédéric (NYC being as far as it's
possible to get from Carmel/San Jose without actually leaving the
continental U.S.). But just the degree to which I'm digressing into
autobiography -- and I haven't even touched upon the living-room couch my
mother wouldn't allow any of us kids to sit on, which pointless
restriction annoyed me so mightily that I later constructed an entire
screenplay around it -- gives you an idea of how potent Assayas' musings
on history and utility prove to be. A very small film, but lovely.]
The Northern Land (João Botelho, Portugal):
12
[Make no mistake: This film is deadly -- a stilted, stultifying pomo
costume drama that makes Oliveira look like Aronofsky. There is no
conceivable projection scenario that would not make me wish myself
elsewhere. But it's possible that I might have found it somewhat less
odious had the Festival not shown it to the press on (reportedly) plain
old DVD, thereby rendering it ass-ugly as well as arm-gnawingly dull.
Projected video has made such impressive leaps and bounds over the past
few years that I'd forgotten how fervently I despise the way that the
consumer-grade version, when blown up in a theatrical setting, flattens
everything into a two-dimensional version of bad 3-D, with actors who (or
rather "that") appear to have been digitally pasted onto unrelated
backdrops. The Northern Land's declamatory theatrics would be
grating enough in a context of visual splendor; presenting it in lo-def
made me feel as if I were being subjected to a two-hour joint
presentation by some high school's A/V Club and Drama Society. It doesn't
help that all of the key female roles are played by Ana Moreira, whose
sole register (see also Transe) is a sort of imperious terror.
When one of her characters approaches a cliff's edge and looks longingly
downward at the waves crashing on the rocks, I could only think "Oh
please."]
Che (Steven Soderbergh, France/Spain): 48
[As movies with no compelling reason to exist go, this one is really
quite good. Soderbergh's shift from freewheeling, widescreen Cuban
triumph to flat, plodding Bolivian nightmare packs the intended
dialectical punch, and you couldn't ask for a less flashy, more committed
portrait of Guevara -- so intent is Del Toro on eschewing mythology that
Che often threatens to recede into the background of his own movie. The
film is scrupulously intelligent, admirably evenhanded, and only very
faintly dull given its extreme length. It's just...why? Granted, I tend
to ask that question of most fact-based films, and almost every biopic,
but usually there's some glimmer of vitality to be found, if only
in the star's evident desperation to win approval and/or an Oscar. Here,
it feels more as if Soderbergh drew the subject "Che Guevara" out of a
hat and then set about finding the most interesting approach he could
think of; never for a moment do you get the sense that he's invested in
the project as anything more than a technical exercise. The film's
champions, e.g. Glenn Kenny, claim that Che is about "process,"
but while we certainly get acquainted with the nuts and bolts of armed
insurrection, such exhaustive cataloguing in no way dovetails with the
grandiose rise|fall structure. (The process is essentially the same in
both campaigns; it's just that the Bolivians refuse to cooperate.) At the
post-screening Q&A, Soderbergh confessed that he hadn't known at the
outset what drew him to Guevara, but that he ultimately came to realize
that for him the film is fundamentally about engagement -- an almost
comical irony, since he couldn't possibly seem more disengaged.]
I'm Gonna Explode (Gerardo Naranjo, Mexico): 62
[Except they're not, is the thing. What they're actually gonna do is
enact the most desultory, useless lovers-on-the-lam scenario ever,
"fleeing" to a tent on the roof of Román's family's posh home and
then sneaking downstairs to almost fuck after everyone leaves.
Their whole adventure could scarcely be more pathetic -- which is pretty
clearly the point, even if nobody seems to have noticed. Pace Michael
Sicinski (who I suspect was distracted by class issues that are largely a
red herring), the film isn't "pseudo-Godardian" but rather an
affectionate piss-take on the very notion of Romantic Youth, one that
doesn't even remotely take its two protagonists' rebellion seriously,
even as it takes the feeling of disaffection that inspires it very
seriously. "And now here's Román Valdez to perform a dramatic
monologue entitled 'See You in Hell'." I mean, come on. Do we need
Christian Slater doing a Jack Nicholson impression? The tricky part was
maintaining our interest in these sad wannabes along their road to
nowhere, and for the most part I thought Naranjo (and his cast) did a
fine job of walking the perilously thin line between blasé and
dull, though obviously others disagree. It falls apart at the end,
admittedly, as these movies are wont to do...but even then, I was
grateful that Maru's fate turns out to be not the dose of cheap irony we
first assume but instead something thoroughly in keeping with the film's
doleful emphasis on fantasies unrealized. drama/mex was more
distinctive, less shaky, but this is still a filmmaker to watch in my
opinion.]
Hunger (Steve McQueen, UK): 59
[Thought McQueen was doing something amazingly daring for a while, but it
turns out to be only semi-daring. Basically, the third act kind of ruins
the movie for me -- partly because that's the point at which it finally
becomes the straightforward Bobby Sands martyrdom saga I'd feared (and
also the point at which McQueen begins trafficking in symbolic
cliché -- I would've preferred an insert of Mel Gibson yelling
"Freedooooooom!" to birds taking wing), but mostly because the last thing
I wanted Hunger to do was return to a strategy of tactile
overload. A conventionally unconventional political drama would devote
most of its first half to discourse and rhetoric, steeping us in the
ideals being fought for by the prisoners as well as the cold rationale
behind the Crown's intransigence; only once we could pass a short quiz on
Special Category Status -- and had become intimately familiar with a cast
of compelling characters -- would the film mutate into an arty, nonverbal
portrait of human suffering. So when the Sands/priest debate kicked off,
and continued well into the next damn reel, I mistakenly thought
(excitedly) that McQueen was doing precisely the opposite: first
abstraction, then ideology. In fact I started to hope -- rather
naïvely, I admit -- that he might not actually depict the hunger
strike at all, that we'd experience it only via its impact on those
outside the prison walls. But no, that scene -- totally gripping in
itself, of course; somewhere Brando and Malden are looking very sheepish
-- functions more like an arch's keystone, and when it's over McQueen
returns to his nearly silent passion play...which, for all its formal
mastery, I must say feels a bit macho in its eagerness to shove our noses
into the Maze's agony and filth. Why were these men prepared to commit
suicide over what was largely a matter of bureaucratic designation? There
is an answer, of course, but you won't find it in this movie, which
is devoted to excrement and bedsores to the exclusion of nearly everything
else.]
Bullet in the Head (Jaime Rosales, Spain/France): 24
[Wish I had the technical know-how to put together the Jaime Rosales
version of, say, Pulp Fiction, just to give you a rough idea of
how bold and unprecedented and ambitious and unbelievably fucking
tedious this movie is. Instead I'll have to attempt it with words. So
imagine that Tarantino's film opens with Travolta and Jackson driving,
except we're watching them from outside the car, through a window. We can
hear traffic noise and planes overhead and maybe the distant thrum of
Kool & The Gang, but we have no idea that Jules and Vincent are
discussing hash bars and the Royale With Cheese. Then we see them
walking and talking in and around an apartment building -- but from a
great distance, so forget any entertaining dialogue about TV pilots or
foot massages. It's just two dudes gabbing about we know not what. Now
jump ahead to the first Bruce Willis scene, same close-up of the back
of Ving Rhames' head, goes on just as long, we can't hear a word he's
saying. Vincent and Mia at Jack Rabbit Slim's but from a mile away,
they're talking animatedly for five minutes, we hear the clatter of
dishes. And on and on and on like that for almost 90 minutes, then
Vincent gets gunned down on the toilet and Butch runs off. The end. I'm
dead serious. That's essentially what Bullet in the Head amounts
to: Terrorists are people too, they do everyday shit when they're not
taking innocent lives, DETAILS WITHHELD. No doubt somebody on the
selection committee will eventually write a long piece declaring it a
masterpiece of mundane voyeurism, but all I saw was a pointless stunt.]
24 City (Jia Zhangke, China/Hong Kong/Japan): 58
[Because I (as usual) went in totally tabula rasa, my reaction to Jia's
latest must perforce be divided into two radically oppositional eras: BJC
and AJC. Before Joan Chen showed up, 24 City struck me as a
fairly staid but nonetheless often engrossing documentary -- yet another
troubling portrait of the New China, but with more direct emotional
access to the average citizen than Jia's semi-detached style generally
permits. The middle-aged woman riding the bus tells her story with a
rough-hewn eloquence that's remarkably moving, and I also got involved
with the dude who mostly wanted to reminisce about getting dumped. ("You
said it first.") Then Joan Chen showed up, and suddenly I didn't know
what I was watching anymore. Was the whole thing a sham, à la
Dadetown? Hard to believe some of the previous interview subjects
were actually actors. Still, I found myself watching the sequences After
Joan Chen with deep suspicion, now fundamentally incapable of connecting
with the film on the simple, visceral BJC level. (Only when Zhao Tao
appeared at the end was I even 100% certain that I hadn't just been
fooled by an amazing Joan Chen lookalike, given the cute bit about her
being nicknamed after a character in one of Chen's early Chinese movies.)
As I wrote a decade ago, in reference to Unmade Beds (which seems
more and more like a watershed movie with each passing year): "It's as if
I wear one pair of glasses for fictional narratives and another pair of
glasses for documentaries, and Barker's film left me unable to determine
which pair of glasses I was supposed to put on, and without glasses my
vision's maybe 20/500, and so I found the entire experience...well,
really darn blurry." Even after going home and looking up other reviews
and whatnot, I still don't really feel like I understand what Jia was
aiming for by abruptly shifting from real testimonies to fictitious ones
-- it doesn't seem to add (or subtract) much from the overall conception,
and both halves of the film seem to me equally hit or miss. Still, it's
exciting to see people in a Jia movie who are more than just tiny figures
blocking our view of some defunct building or scarred landscape, whether
they're actors or not.]
Serbis (Brillante Ma. Mendoza, DGPI;
Phillipines/France): 40
[Not sure I can really improve on the Twitter review: "Here's an
environment. Do you like my environment? Immerse yourself in the
environment I offer you. That is all." Endlessly trailing members of an
extended family up and down the stairs and across the waterlogged floors
of the soft-core porn theater they run, which doubles as a meat market
for Angeles City's gay community, Mendoza winds up going in circles; to
echo Theo's
complaint about Sugar, I saw no particular reason why this movie
couldn't just continue forever in the same rambling yet urgent vein.
Subplots are halfheartedly introduced -- teen pregnancy, a bigamy suit --
but you don't really get the sense that Mendoza cares much. He's more
interested in the graffiti and posters that cover the walls, in the
constant din of traffic that presumably serves to drown out lusty yelps.
(And also, for some reason, in an ugly boil on one dude's ass.) By
contrast, Mendoza's far superior Foster Child, which screened at
New Directors/New Films earlier this year, remains in constant forward
motion (it feels like you see half of Manila), sticks tight to an
immensely sympathetic protagonist, and boasts a much more interesting
project, viz. withholding any trace of melodrama from an emotionally
overwhelming scenario (a professional temp mom preparing to hand a kid
over to its permanent foster parents). Serbis is less strenuously
doc-like and more self-consciously scuzzy, and once I knew the layout
of the building well enough to sketch an accurate map, I felt like my
mission here was pretty much accomplished. Cute goat, though.]
Four Nights With Anna (Jerzy Skolimowski,
Poland/France): 39
[Having already seen this basic lovelorn-stalker scenario realized to
devastating effect by both Patrice Leconte (in Monsieur Hire) and
Krzysztof Kieslowski (in Decalogue Six, only one of the greatest
films ever made), I quickly grew impatient with Skolimowski's lumbering,
faintly comic variation, which takes its protagonist's essentially
infantile nature an unnecessary step further by actually making him
borderline retarded. Imagine this harmless perv as a maladjusted teenage
boy, which he more or less is, and you can see a certain affinity with
the director's superb 1971 coming-of-age tale Deep End -- but
there the similarity ends, alas. Both Deep End and the equally
terrific Moonlighting (1982) are endlessly nuanced, constantly
lobbing little hand grenades of unexpected but entirely credible human
behavior. But 17 years away from the camera seems to have badly rusted
Skolimowski's hinges, comeback ballyhoo notwithstanding. Here, his only
means of distracting us from the poverty of his imagination involves
truly dumbass misdirection: the opening scenes work overtime to persuade
us that we're witnessing the story of a deranged serial killer, and the
screenplay's overall structure is so stupidly contrived that even
Guillermo Arriaga will likely slap his forehead in frustration. Really,
the only interesting thing about Anna is its unusually aggressive
score, which is refreshingly unashamed of its mood-enhancing function; at
a time when most international art films revel in silent austerity, those
shrieking violins seem downright avant-garde, even though that's exactly
what you'd expect from the Hollywood equivalent. If only there were bold,
striking images and/or ideas for them to complement.]
Chouga (Darezhan Omirbaev, France/Kazakhstan): 44
[It's been so long since I read Anna Karenina that at first I
figured I must simply have missed whatever subversive thing Omirbaev was
doing here, especially since this is my first encounter with his work.
But no, as far as I can tell he's merely condensed and flattened Tolstoy's
novel into near-uselessness, although the basic narrative is inherently
involving enough to stave off boredom. Certainly it doesn't help that the
actors playing his equivalents of Anna and Vronsky have all the scorching
sexual chemistry of Howard and Marion Cunningham -- you've never seen so
many ostensibly torrid glances bounce right off the recipient's face and
crawl whimpering into the nearest corner. But I can't say I'm overly
impressed by Omirbaev's formal chops, either. Chouga looks
handsome enough, and its locations are well chosen, especially insofar as
they provide a sense of what passes for great wealth in Kazakhstan. But
the rhythm is plodding, the compositions banal, and Omirbaev's idea of
expressionism is cutting to nature-doc footage of snails copulating
when Chouga and Ablai hook up, or representing Chouga's dwindling options
by having a series of doors literally close in her face, one after the
other. Most of the time, even if I don't like one of NYFF's selections, I
can at least see why other people might consider it remarkable. But what
would excite anyone about this humdrum transplantation is beyond me.]
Afterschool (Antonio Campos, USA): 94
[Remember in Mulholland Dr. when that creepy dude points at the
headshot and says, flatly, "This is the girl"? Try to imagine me heavier
and much more intimidating as I tell you with equally unshakable
certitude: This is the film. All of 23 years old at the time of shooting,
Campos tackles head-on the key subject of the early 21st century, viz.
mediation, and delivers the first movie I've seen that seems to recognize
how drastically the (developed) world has changed in just the last
several years, and the extent to which we're now both starved for
authenticity and dedicated to pretense. What's more, he does so with a
formal control and ingenuity that's nothing short of breathtaking,
especially for a neophyte. Switching deftly back and forth between
panoramic widescreen celluloid and cramped, windowboxed consumer video,
Afterschool deliberately blurs the line between the two: Not only
are the "objective" shots brilliantly artless, forever trained on the
wrong spot or cutting someone in half at the edge of the frame, but much
of the video imagery -- most especially Rob's A/V project, which abruptly
turns from mundane B-roll into something so horrifying it can barely be
processed, much less resolved -- evinces the chilly neutrality of Haneke
or the Asian master-shot school. (And then there are shots that are just
plain stunning, with D.P. Jody Lee Lipes working expressionist miracles
via the tonal contrast between foreground clarity and backgrounds so
magnificently blurred they resemble lost Monets.) Within this unique,
semi-alienating worldview, Campos constructs a portrait of Generation
YouTube (set here in high school, appropriately, but encompassing all
ages) that's somehow at once compassionate and merciless -- which is
to say, utterly true. The scene of Rob tentatively applying lessons
learned from gonzo porn on new girlfriend Amy does in just a handful of
seconds what Larry Clark spent half an hour belaboring in his
Destricted short, and is beautifully counterweighted by his
(Rob's) later act of sweet generosity in giving Amy his shirt to mop up
the post-coital blood. Key moments in the characters' lives wind up
scrutinized on the net hours later -- or they find "alternate takes" of
events they themselves recorded, captured by persons unknown with ethical
imperatives unrecognized. Even minor details cut clean: When Rob calls
his mother to tell her he's not fitting in, her response is so credibly
concerned-yet-destructive that it made me annoyed at the equivalent
moment in Wendy and Lucy all over again. And while at first I
thought Campos had erred in continuing beyond the re-edited memorial
video, his actual ending will haunt me as long as it haunts Rob.
Sorrowfully observing the quest for something real in a terrain of
orchestrated lies, Afterschool never once flinches. This is how we
live.]
[ADDENDUM, THE NEXT DAY: Like most great films, this one appears to be
widely misunderstood. That others don't care for it is fine by me, and
not wholly unexpected given its outsized formal and thematic ambition.
But it does grate a bit when folks don't seem to recognize what Campos
is doing, even as they berate him in the same breath for being overly
explicit. And I want to address some of this stuff while my memory is
still fresh, even though doing so requires a degree of specificity that
I'd rather not inflict on those who haven't seen it (i.e., almost
everyone). Please, come back to the next paragraph post-viewing.
You too Waz.
Okay. Now, take this gibe from Slant's Ed Gonzalez, which was
echoed in a brief conversation I had today with Aaron Hillis: "Robert
(Ezra Miller) joins the new-to-the-curriculum AV club, fucks around with
his hottie partner, Amy (Addison Timlin), choking her just like that
nastycumholes.com chick he likes so much (it's amazing what kids pick up
on these days -- and so quickly too!)." That sarcastic parenthetical
completely ignores this disturbing moment's actual import, which is
nowhere near as facile as Gonzalez suggests...and while Aaron merely felt
(if I understood him correctly) that showing Rob choking Amy was
overkill, he's equally mistaken. The point here is not (just) that Rob is
aping behavior he's seen in a porn video -- though, as I said above, it
does beat hell out of the (inexplicably much-admired) Larry Clark short in
that tiny respect. For this deeply confused kid, the throttling is not
just some random perversion he's eager to assay on anything suitably
nubile. It's an attempt to cut through the bullshit. When we initially
see her, "Cherry Dee" is clearly hiding behind a persona, like most porn
actors; it's almost painfully evident that she's performing for the
camera, doing her best to fulfill male-derived stereotypes of female
sexuality. It's only when her unseen interrogator grabs her by the throat
that she drops the facade and we get a brief glimpse of the actual
scared-shitless girl beneath the manufactured pout and salacious
come-ons. That is what Rob is responding to and attempting to
replicate. He doesn't choke Amy during their (amazingly credible and
virtually unseen) first kiss, when both seem to have forgotten the camera
-- he does it at a moment when Amy is clearly performing, after he's seen
her demeanor abruptly change. It's his painfully awkward attempt to make
her more real. That's what the entire film is about, and if I have a
serious quibble it's that there's a scene in which Campos explicitly
tells us that's what the film is about, having Rob explain to the
guidance counselor what he finds so compelling about found video. You'd
think that would clear up any possible confusion. Apparently not.]
["Ah, one for the boys over at Slant," I thought, and sure
enough. For those not temperamentally inclined to celebrate
uncompromising cine-machismo for its own sake, however, this is pretty
thin gruel, deeply unpleasant without ever coming within spitting
distance of enlightening. Once you've been startled by Raúl
assisting an old woman home and then unexpectedly pummeling her to death
for her TV set, and then seen him pawn the TV in order to fund a replica
of the multicolored Saturday Night Fever dance floor, you're good
to go, literally -- everything that follows is more of the same.
American Psycho didn't really work as a movie, but at least Bret
Easton Ellis had a coherent idea, in that you can readily see the
connection between '80s materialism, Bateman's sadistic violence and the
transformation of Genesis into a Phil Collins solo act. How exactly does
living under Pinochet translate to disco fever? Why are we watching
Tony Manero and not, say, Roy Neary or Luke
Skywalker? I really don't get the sense that Larraín ever
thought that through, and Alfredo Castro's deliberately affectless
performance (uncompromising!) offers no clues. Ultimately, the whole
thing struck me as extravagantly pointless, just arthouse high-concept.
Some claim it's intended as black comedy; if so, the joke is on me.]
The Headless Woman (Lucrecia Martel,
Argentina/France/Italy/Spain): 77
[Simply one of the most confounding filmgoing experiences I've ever had,
and as usual I'm uncertain how a "normal" viewer -- i.e., someone who
hasn't made a point of entering the theater with no advance knowledge of
any kind -- would likely respond. (If you want the full experience and
haven't already encountered a basic plot summary, stop reading now.)
Personally, I entered a fugue state right alongside Vero, drinking in the
oddly unsettling compositions and straining to hear ominous offscreen
noises with roughly the same air of pleasant bewilderment she evinces for
pretty much the entire first half of the movie. As pure filmmaking,
The Headless Woman is indisputably superb, non-stop evocative;
there's scarcely a shot that doesn't throb with ambiguous menace and/or
portent. It's just that when it ended, I didn't know what the hell I'd
just seen. The handful of non-dismissive reviews from Cannes emphasize a
strong political undercurrent -- Andrew O'Hehir, for example, deems it a
"story of unacknowledged class warfare" -- but whether because I myself
am an oblivious dude of privilege (albeit one currently living below the
poverty line; donations to the Keep md'a in New York Fund welcome) or
because I was too enraptured by the general moodiness to notice, this
element made little to no impression on me. Instead, I find that I keep
thinking of Inland Empire, another tale of a wealthy middle-aged
woman who tumbles down an unexplained rabbit hole. (Laura Dern and
María Onetto, it turns out, are almost exactly the same age.) But
where Lynch's overt surrealism and Dern's mannered mutations set my teeth
on edge -- "golly, ain't this bizarre?" -- Onetto's aimless journey as
She With No Noggin is truly the stuff of nightmares, if only because the
lady will not stop smiling. The rest of the world chugs along as
if nothing has happened, but Vero has come unmoored -- a sensation that
we fully share, because Martel cannily stages the accident mere seconds
after introducing the character, so that we know absolutely nothing about
her. She's surprised to discover that she's a dentist, and so are we. Who
is this man now suddenly kissing her? Beats her; beats us. And yet her
reaction to each successive jolt is identical: vaguely warm indulgence.
Nor is there a moment anywhere in the film where she identifiably regains
her sense of self, though it's clearly happened by about the midpoint.
The whole thing is just...weird, in a way that's at once exciting
and discomfiting. I've given it a provisional rating, but check back
around 6 October (after it screens for the press again) for an update.]
The Windmill Movie (Alexander Olch, USA): N/A
[Sorry, but I just couldn't motivate myself to get up at 8:30am to watch
a semi-autobiographical posthumous portrait of an obscure filmmaker and
teacher, reportedly directed by an old friend of Richard Peña's
(this may just be a rumor, but it's a very credible-sounding rumor)
and entitled The Windmill Movie after the subject's family's house
in the Hamptons. I missed Calle Santa Fe last year as well, and
don't much regret it, so I think I've decided that my NYFF completism no
longer extends to tedious-looking documentaries.]
Wendy and Lucy (Kelly Reichardt, USA): 53
[The first warning flag was the sock -- singular because Wendy's only
wearing one of them, a costume decision that immediately struck me as a
way-too-calculated bid for our sympathy. Then came the almost comical
self-righteousness of the supermarket stockboy, who isn't merely keen to
bag a miscreant but seems to be belatedly auditioning for McCain's VP
spot, barfing out sound-bite non sequiturs like "the rules apply equally
to everyone." (What were the hypothetical grounds for favoritism?
Cuteness?) And then the movie just flat-out lost me when (a) Wendy waited
until the cops were driving her away to inform them that her dog was tied
up in front of the market -- Lucy would be her primary concern; she'd be
badgering them before they even left the manager's office -- whereupon
(b) they completely ignored her...because, as we all know, the Man just
don't care, not even about innocent pooches. Let's see Poppy keep her
spirits up in this socio-economic cul-de-sac! (There's even a
rambling homeless dude.) Kindly Walgreen's security guard gets some nice,
tender moments, but you can barely hear him over the sound of modernity's
wheels grinding poor Wendy to bits. The cheap pathos rarely lets up -- I
mean, couldn't her sister and brother-in-law have at least come across as
genuinely concerned (even if not enough to do more than offer
platitudes), rather than as oblivious and obnoxious, respectively? Did we
have to get a sad little insert of the guard's handout (which I had only
assumed to be maybe $20 to begin with, frankly)? Sure, I got choked up at
the end, but only in a shameless Old Yeller kind of way;
comparisons to Umberto D. only reveal that most people don't
understand why De Sica's film is so unbelievably heart-rending. The key
word is "dignity." Wendy and Lucy opts instead for pity, which is
not a road I wanted to see someone as gifted as Reichardt go down.]
The Class (Laurent Cantet, France): 61
[I guess there's just no pleasing me (cue vigorously nodding heads),
because for the first hour, when the film seems wholly dedicated to
observing the student-teacher dynamic in a multiculti Paris classroom, I
found myself admiring its rigor and intelligence but also wishing that
something a little extra-scholastic might happen. Then a narrative
gradually, almost imperceptibly emerged, and suddenly I longed for Cantet
to return to pure pedagogy -- mostly on account of the intense feeling of
déjà vu. Complaining that a two-hour movie can't match
the dizzying depth and cumulative force of an entire season of The
Wire (see also Gomorrah) may seem unfair, but there's no
denying that in its second half, as The Class's anecdotal nature
gets overwhelmed by the question of whether certain problem students are
worth "saving," the film moves into territory that David Simon and his
crew handled with a great deal more complexity and finesse -- in part
because they didn't restrict themselves entirely to the school grounds.
I'm generally in favor of Von Trier-esque "obstructions," but in this
case the sole-location strategy places undue emphasis on François
Bégaudeau, playing (essentially) himself in an adaptation of his
own memoir and coming off as a secular saint with a breaking point.
Accusations of narcissism are perhaps a bit overstated, but there
is something vaguely self-serving about this project, despite a
plot that ultimately pivots on Monsieur Chips' use of a word that the
subtitles translate as "skanks." (Given the reaction of everyone in the
movie, the actual French word must have way more odious connotations.)
It's an uncommonly subdued heroic-teacher drama, inclined to lengthy
digressions about the contemporary relevance of the imperfect subjunctive
(a scene I recalled just yesterday when reading David Fear's review of
Elite Squad, which asks, apropos of BOPE and with an apparently
straight face, "Whom do you call when shit goes down?"; can we please
fucking kill the few lingering remnants of Old English case structure?),
but it still fits the genre, and its many limitations, quite snugly.]