Monday, July 27, 2009

BREAKING NEWS: London Film Festival 2009

The opening film for this year's London Film Festival has been announced

Wes Anderson's stop-motion animated adaptation of Roald Dahl's Fantastic Mr Fox will have its world premiere on October 14th, opening the festival just 9 days before it is released in cinemas around the UK.

Festival director Sandra Hebron said: "Wes Anderson's boundless invention and meticulous film making craft find perfect expression in this imaginative and hugely enjoyable version of a much loved story. We are delighted to open our festival with Fantastic Mr. Fox, and thrilled to host its world premiere."

Anderson had this to say on having the film's world premiere at LFF: "Fantastic Mr. Fox is a British film - based on a Roald Dahl book, set in the UK, produced in the UK - and so I am especially pleased to have been invited to be the opening night movie of this year's London Film Festival. We had a wonderful experience at the LFF with my previous film, and I am eagerly looking forward to introducing Fantastic Mr. Fox to the world in this wonderful venue."

The rest of LFF's 2009 programme will be announced on September 9th, the festival runs from October 14th - 29th

Saturday, July 25, 2009

Review Post 36: Antichrist

ANTICHRIST
DIR: Lars Von Trier
CAST: Willem Dafoe, Charlotte Gainsbourg



Antichrist is an extraordinary film; I have no idea if I liked it.

The story has been very well reported in the press, but for the record: A couple, known only as He (Dafoe) and She (Gainsbourg) lose their two year old son Nic when he falls out of a window while they make love in another room. She goes into a deep depression following the loss, and begins to suffer anxiety attacks. He, a therapist, decides that her doctors are overmedicating her and as therapy he takes her to place that scares her most - their cabin in the woods, known as Eden. There things go from bad to worse as she begins to slip further from reality.

Where do you begin with a film like Antichrist? So much has been said and written about it in the few short weeks since its controversial Cannes bow that what was (and is) a Danish art film about grief and pain has become much more - the most discussed release of the week, if not the year. People have called for it to be cut and banned, and even discussed whether its uncut release renders censorship pointless. In all of this hysteria the film itself has become curiously lost. So let’s bring it back to the film, and start by saying this: Antichrist is not the film you’ve read about in the tabloids. Its violence is nasty and personal and disturbing, but it is also very brief, essential to the film, and no more graphic than any 18 rated violence.

With that said; if that’s what Antichrist isn’t, what is it? The first word that comes to mind is beautiful. That might sound odd given what’s been reported about it. It was once said that film is truth 24 times a second, that’s patently rubbish, but Antichrist is art 24 times a second. Almost every shot of this visually stunning film could hang quite justifiably on the walls of any art gallery. In collaboration with his DP Anthony Dod Mantle, Lars Von Trier has created one of the most ravishing looking films of the 21st century to date. Here’s a promise: the Oscars will get at least one thing wrong in 2010, because Antichrist won’t even be nominated for Best Cinematography. The first five minutes are absolutely astounding. In gorgeously crisp monochrome Von Trier captures He and She making love in super slow motion as their young son climbs on a chair and falls out of a window to his death. Every shot is so well chosen, creating a mounting sense of both eroticism and dread as the sex moves closer to climax and the child moves closer to doom. Von Trier also uses this prologue to introduce both his themes and his chapter titles, lingering on three toy soldiers who are named Grief, Pain and Despair.

If you’re expecting an out and out horror film then for about 80 minutes in the middle of Antichrist you are going to be puzzled. For the most part that’s just not what the film is, rather it is a meditation on those three chapter headings. Von Trier says (and one should always take anything that comes after those three words with a liberal pinch of salt) that he wrote this film in the midst of a deep depression. Whether or not that’s true Antichrist certainly contains the most visceral, and perhaps the most realistic, portrayal of clinical depression that I’ve seen. It’s here - especially in the chapter of the film titled Grief - that Charlotte Gainsbourg’s performance which, to widespread surprise, won her the Best Actress prize at Cannes, really shows itself as the extraordinary piece of work that it is. She’s incredibly convincing as this woman who seems completely hollowed out by grief and remorse over her son’s death. She throws herself into the part body and soul. The panic attacks are truly terrifying (and, having suffered from them myself, I can tell you they are also completely realistic), as is the way she inflicts pain on herself, turning to both sex and violence - smashing her own head into the toilet bowl for instance - in order to feel something, anything, else. It is astounding work, completely committed, and disturbing and thrilling to watch in almost equal measure.


Great as Gainsbourg is, and as much as this is her film, let that take nothing away from Willem Dafoe. His is the less showy role; the voice of reason and latterly, intriguingly in a film often accused of misogyny, the victim, but Dafoe too gives an extremely committed and absolutely real performance. His character is perhaps underwritten, but Dafoe is such a consummate actor that he’s able to suggest layers, like his own simmering grief about the loss of the child, that were almost certainly not there on the page. It’s a generous performance, ceding the spotlight to his co-star, but in its grounded realism it also allows Gainsbourg to go as far off the deep end as she can, without shattering the film’s odd credibility.

Some people, notably mostly people who haven’t actually seen it, have dismissed Antichrist as a meaningless collection of horrors. Others have attempted to ascribe all sorts of meaning. There are religious interpretations, psychological interpretations, psychosexual interpretations, political interpretations, there’s the idea that it’s all an elaborate practical joke by Von Trier. All of these ideas are valid, except for the idea that it has no meaning at all, but for me Antichrist is perhaps best defined by something another filmmaker said about his film. Confronted with the charge that Martyrs was simply ‘torture porn’ Pascal Laugier said that it isn’t a film about torture “It’s a film about pain”. That, to me, seems to be what Antichrist is most definitely about. It’s about the pain of guilt, loss, regret, fear and anxiety, and of course it is about physical pain. For much of its running time Antichrist feels like a scream, be that a scream of sexual ecstasy, the scream of a child, a scream of loss, a scream of terror or a scream of pain. It’s a film concerned with the primal nature of people, and pain is the way it expresses that.

In a film about pain violence is always going to have a part to play, and certainly that’s true of Antichrist. The visuals, for the most part, aren’t all that graphic (and in one case they aren’t very convincing, though whether that’s deliberate is anybody’s guess). Several of the key moments of violence occur just off screen, and are thus more felt than they are seen, as in a moment that will have every man in the audience crossing their legs. The most infamous shot in the film is that of Gainsbourg’s character giving herself, in very convincing close up, with a rusty pair of scissors, a clitoridectomy. It is, as you would expect, absolutely appalling and unspeakably, almost palpably, painful to watch and yet it, and the shot that immediately precedes it (a flashback to the prologue) are the key moments of the film. Far from being the sensational, exploitative shot that the film’s detractors would have it be it is the ultimate expression of the theme of the Gainsbourg character’s extreme sexual guilt. It makes absolute sense that a woman going as mad she is at this point, driven by the guilt of having been in the throes of sexual ecstasy as her son died, would mutilate her sexual organs. You can accuse Lars Von Trier of a lot of things with this movie, but that shot is meant seriously, and is essential to the effect of the film.

You can see Von Trier’s mischievous sense of humour at work in this film though. The chapter in which the violence kicks off is subtitled (after a thesis that Gainsbourg’s character has been working on) Gynocide. Then there’s the fox. The fox got some laughs at the screening I was at (and, yes, that’s a perfectly reasonable way to respond to a shot of a disembowelled fox saying “Chaos reigns”) but to me it was less a joke and more Von Trier saying, ‘okay, you’ve made it this far, but from here on all bets are off’. All bets are very definitely off after that, as the film’s tone becomes ever more hysterical, rising to a fever pitch crescendo with THAT shot. At times Antichrist plays like the last cinematic gasp of a man completely losing his marbles, to the point at which, though I think it’s a brilliant film, I can’t honestly tell you if Von Trier is a genius or a lunatic (the truth, perhaps, lies somewhere in the middle).


Yet for all its madness, all the completely overblown content of its last 20 minutes, this is a deeply serious and deeply thoughtful film. The imagery is rich with metaphor, for instance the poster image of Dafoe and Gainsbourg having sex among the roots of a tree, under which lie myriad naked bodies, is this nature pulling them into hell? Is it a reference to the tarot card of the fornicators? Is it something Lars thought would look good? Is it all of the above? These are the questions that Antichrist raises over and over. Is She mad? Is She bad? Whichever she is has she always been so? Von Trier doesn’t tip his hand, he clearly wants to provoke with this film, with its themes as much as with its sex and violence. In that respect Antichrist is an out and out triumph. It is one of the most fascinating and richest films I’ve seen for years, people will be discussing and dissecting this film long after the likes of Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen and The Proposal have been forgotten.

Can I recommend it? Well to say that I liked it wouldn't be true, I lurched out, staggered by it. On the whole it presents a similar problem to Gaspar Noe’s similarly brilliant, and similarly difficult, IRREVERSIBLE. Artistically it is a masterpiece, but I’m not sure who it’s for. It’s probably too arty for gorehounds and too violent for the arthouse crowd. It’s a film that asks a lot of an audience and promises them few rewards in return. It’s brilliant and beautiful but its also assaultive and disturbing. I’ll promise you this much: you may love Antichrist, you may hate it, but you won’t be ambivalent towards it and you certainly won’t forget it any time soon. That’s a great deal more than you can say of most movies.

Review Post 35: Moon / Just Another Love Story

MOON
DIR: Duncan Jones
CAST: Sam Rockwell, Kevin Spacey



Sam Bell (Rockwell) is coming to the end of a three-year contract as the one person tending to a mining operation on the moon, and he’s looking forward to going home to his wife and young daughter. After one of the mining machines breaks down Sam goes out to repair it, and crashes his vehicle. He is woken in the medical bay by Gerty (Spacey), the computer that looks after him and assists him. Later Sam goes to investigate the crash, returning with the unconscious body of a man who appears to be Sam Bell.

The first feature by commercial director Jones, Moon is real throwback. In the last twenty years sci-fi has come, largely, to be a genre dominated by spectacle, with special effects often substituting for such small considerations as plot, dialogue and character. Moon chucks much of that out, creating an insular and believable world, using special effects only to place us in that world and to tell the story, and taking the form of an intense character study rather than a wham-bam action movie. In order for this to work, particularly given that for most of the running time he is the only person on screen, you have to have a great actor in your leading role, and Jones certainly has that in Sam Rockwell.

Rockwell is one of those actors that casual moviegoers might recognize as ‘that guy from that thing’, but he’s never, despite sterling work on screen over more than a decade now, had a real breakout role. That’s a real shame, because he’s one of the most consistently interesting actors in America right now. The role of Sam Bell was written expressly for Rockwell, and he is quite brilliant in it. He totally inhabits the guy, making him entirely engaging, which makes the film’s first 20 minutes, in which all there is to see is Sam going about his day by day routine on the base, some of its most absorbing. It’s when, a bit later, Rockwell is playing two Sam Bells that you really get to see how good he is. The two characters are totally different - he even holds himself differently - but they are also, remarkably, recognisably the same person. That’s a tough line to walk, and Rockwell walks it with skill and confidence in every scene. Kevin Spacey is also good value, vacillating between dry humour and menace in his characterful performance as onboard computer Gerty. It may be the best work he’s done in some years.

What works less well is the screenplay. After an intriguing setup the central mystery is solved rather too quickly, and the answer revealed to be the most obvious answer possible. Thereafter, though it thankfully doesn’t become a totally different film, as Danny Boyle’s otherwise excellent Sunshine did for its last half hour, Moon descends into plodding predictability which saw me ticking off sequences and plot points one after another. It’s a real shame, because for the first 45 minutes or so it seems that Moon might, potentially, be a classic.

You can’t take anything away from Duncan Jones though. Made for an astonishingly paltry £5 million, Moon looks fantastic. The special effects are easily on a par with films made for 20 times this budget, and add greatly to the atmosphere of the movie while the set design, though extremely reminiscent of Alien among others, has a sort of chilling clinical beauty to it that really works for the film. Despite budgetary and location limitations Jones makes Moon a film with a visual identity very much its own, even when the story begins to plod the film always sucks you in with its visuals. It bodes very well for Jones’ future.

Though this is far from the perfect slice of sci-fi that many reviews have pegged it as, it is an interesting film, a film with ideas. It’s also a film with an exceptional central performance, from an actor who hasn’t really got his dues, and it’s a fine calling card for a man who looks set to become an interesting filmmaker. All of these are good enough reasons to recommend, despite reservations, that you take a trip to the Moon.


KAERLIGHED PA FILM
[JUST ANOTHER LOVE STORY]
DIR: Ole Bornedal
CAST: Anders W. Berthelsen, Rebecka Hemse,
Nikolaj Lie Kaas, Charlotte Fich



Danish director Ole Bornedal’s latest is perhaps best summed up by this extract from his director’s statement. “I have attempted to create an unrestrained piece of modern drama, which - while seriously derailing - is still recognisable to us in the inner chambers of our souls.” Imagine a film noir - one, frankly, with a very unsatisfying mystery - written and directed with all the crashing pretentiousness that that statement implies and you’ve a pretty good idea what watching this film is like. The basic story sees family man Jonas (Berthelsen) find himself involved with a woman whose car crash he witnesses when he goes to the hospital to see that she’s okay, and goes along when her family assume that he’s her old boyfriend. When Julia (Hemse) wakes, blind and with amnesia, Jonas continues to say that he is the mysterious Sebastian (Lie Kaas).

On the face of it Just Another Love Story is brilliantly made. It often looks stunning, with slick and sometimes surprising visuals in which Bornedal shows off a style very much his own. The performances are also excellent, with the whole cast contributing fine low-key work, which runs counter to the film’s often overblown tone. The problem isn’t so much the constituent parts of the film as it is the way it is put together. Bornedal seems to have this need to show you everything, so rather than just let a character talk about his fantasies he has to show them to you in badly rendered and purposeless cutaways. Rather than just letting a character disappear for a scare he shows them going. Rather than just letting you realise the plot has come full circle he replays almost the entire opening scene. Rather than let you fill in the hinted at detail of a key relationship he shows flashbacks. It begins, at a certain point, to feel like Ole Bornedal thinks you are too stupid to understand his film without signposts.

It’s a relentlessly over the top film; the plot, even for noir, seems outlandish. Bornedal’s penchant for extremely literal visuals and over the top dialogue, which seldom sounds like anything real people say, makes for an odd mix even before you add in the performances. I can’t fault Anders W Berthelsen, Rebecka Hemse, Nikolaj Lie Kaas or Charlotte Fich (who plays Jonas’ wife), they each give a fiercely committed, down to earth and dramatically satisfying performance, and Berthelsen and Fich create a truly rare convincing on screen marriage, but their acting seems teleported in from another film.

I have no clue what Ole Bornedal is trying to do here. Just Another Love Story is great to look at, but as a whole it’s a confused and often irritating mess. I arrived at every plot twist long before the film did and was just bored for much of its running time.

News: 25/7

NEW POSTERS


GI Joe, Prince of Persia: The Sands of Time (x2),
A Nightmare on Elm Street (2010), Jonah Hex, Alice in Wonderland

ONE, TWO, FREDDY’S COMIN’ FOR YOU

The first pictures of Jackie Earle Haley as Freddy Kruger, in Platinum Dunes 2010 remake of Wes Craven’s franchise birthing classic, emerged this week. Both the poster (above) and this first still have much of Freddy’s face shrouded in shadow, but they suggest something very much like the Freddy of old. Which begs the question that dogs all remakes. Why bother? Okay you don’t want to upset the old fans, but really, can’t you make the character a BIT different if you are reinventing him? Perhaps the final reveal will show that the re-design is more profound than this suggests, but so far I’m uninspired by what I’m seeing.

JEFF BRIDGES IS AWESOME

Here’s Jeff Bridges mucking around on the set of Tron: Legacy [formerly known as Tron 2.0, Tr2n and just plain Tron]. He’s got his Tron costume on, along with the cardigan he wore as The Dude in The Big Lebowski and is clearly having a bit of fun channeling The Dude for the amusement of cast and crew, a fun first image for Tron: Legacy.

RETURN OF THE DRAGON
It is total fairytale nonsense, but I’ve got a bit of a soft spot for Dragon: The Bruce Lee Story. However, Lee’s family were unhappy with the film. Now his widow Linda has sold the rights to the story of Lee’s life to Chinese producers who intend to make a trilogy of biopics, the first will cast an unknown as Lee and focus on his teenage years and his training with the legendary Yip Man.



BBFC DECISIONS

Afterschool [Contains strong sex and sex references]
Dead Snow [Contains very strong bloody violence]


Orphan [Contains strong sex, language and bloody violence]
Mega Shark Vs Giant Octopus [Contains strong language and moderate fantasy horror]
The Godfather [Contains strong violence]
District 9 [Contains one use of very strong language and strong bloody violence]
Cracks [Contains moderate nudity and sexual obsession theme]
Funny People [Contains strong language, sex and sex references]
Sin Nombre [Contains strong violence and language]
Mesrine: Killer Instinct [Contains strong violence, language and sex]


The Invention of Lying [Contains moderate comic sex references]
GI Joe: The Rise of Cobra [Contains moderate violence]


Aliens in the Attic [Contains misuse of fireworks and mild language and violence]

ON DVD MONDAY

Watchmen, Il Divo, The Coffin Joe Collection, The Hal Hartley Collection

AT CINEMAS FRIDAY


Coco Before Chanel, Crossing Over, G Force 3D
Land of the Lost, Rumba, The Taking of Pelham 123