As Christmas approaches, a severe depressed teacher is suddenly stuck with a pressing burden, to monitor the activities and structure the days of a small group of children at a private school.
Thursday, December 5, 2024
The Holdovers
Tuesday, August 6, 2024
Les quatre cents coups (The 400 Blows)
An unhinged imagination mendaciously prone feverishly flows with mischievous delinquency, in a time less alternatively accommodating when harsh punishments still prevailed.
Monday, November 13, 2023
Good Morning, Miss Dove
The age old fascination with dependability and routine, as applied to flourishing bucolic life, through tranquil age and consistency, intergenerationally sustained.
Tuesday, July 11, 2023
Lean on Me
I must admit to knowing little about the daily operations of American schools, I've seen various films and read books presenting snapshots, but I remain largely unfamiliar with concrete details.
Tuesday, March 28, 2023
Night after Night
Having achieved everything he could have hoped for from his prestigious local nightclub, a determined renaissance gangster seeks to improve his diction and grammar (George Raft as Joe Anton).
Tuesday, February 14, 2023
Sounder
Friday, February 10, 2023
Top Gun: Maverick
In terms of successful careers, of maintaining an enviable cool for 35 to 40 years, Tom Cruise is practically in a class of his own, only Tom Hanks perhaps as comparable, it's incredible how many solid films they've made in my lifetime.
Tuesday, September 27, 2022
Charlie's Country
An aging Indigenous hunter goes about his daily business (David Gulpilil as Charlie), peacefully reacting to impositions which have radically transformed his life.
Tuesday, June 21, 2022
Coda
A determined family diligent and vigorous emphatically fishes the unforgiving seas, overflowing with versatile camaraderie they make ends meet with vast productivity.
Tuesday, January 11, 2022
Larry Crowne
At times I forget that there are so many films out there that don't involve combat or defiance or shenanigans or intergalactic discord, beyond belovéd well-meaning tender-hearted Christmas films, known to many as romantic comedies, I don't spend enough time watching them, although I've never had much of an interest.
Friday, December 18, 2020
Klaus
Tuesday, November 12, 2019
The Death and Life of John F. Donovan
Years later, transformed into an assertive young man, the fan discusses their correspondence with a none-too-keen reporter.
For something as innocent as a literary exchange, frail controversy abounds, the boy's life at school assailed, the star denying any involvement.
He was transitioning at the time to augmented cultured renown, replete with haywire strained theatrics, and their accompanying dis/enchantments.
As isolated feelings shocked and enervated, he became increasingly fraught and torn.
Both troubled penpals engage in heated exchanges with their mothers, youthful angst exploding, less dramatic knots unnerving.
Neither quite at home yet settled.
Pronounced and blunt misgivings.
The Death and Life of John F. Donovan tills new mainstream ground, its innovative form both strength and weakness, as thought duels with emotive viscerals.
Impassioned feeling erupts at times, defined by aggrieved adolescence, and it makes an impact inasmuch as it startles, and critiques with unhinged fury.
These scenes aptly reflect wild destructive rage, and they make dismal embittered sense, and they're rarely encountered with such derisive vehemence, like sure sighted succinct storms.
When I think about the scenes, their style indeed seems quite well-chosen, especially if you've ever lost or seen someone lose your/their temper, and let loose vitriolic condemnation.
But they're a classic example of honest hands-on realism clashing with deceptive fantasy, insofar as the raw echoing sincerity doesn't fit the upscale production.
I can't criticize them for being histrionic because the situations they dispute are akin to exaggeration, but it's still discomforting to watch as they shriek and tantrum, and the poor mother looks on despondent.
Dolan's arguably a master of such scenes and it's nice to see they weren't held back, to see him workin' his style pseudo-studio, and I'm wondering if a rushed schedule left him directing in haste, because his more independent features capture such frenzies with ironic delicacy, and leave you overwhelmed with comatose disbelief.
A learning experience.
A stepping stone.
Who knows what happened here?
It's a cool enough story that's super melodramatic.
But the abrupt pace lacks the composure of his earlier work.
So it depends on how you like your melodrama.
I like refined melodramatic ridiculousness.
Missed the boat on John F. Donovan I'm afraid.
Tuesday, September 17, 2019
Nezha zhi motong jiangshi (Ne Zha)
He seeks friendship yet is prone to mischief and can't comprehend why he's consistently rebuked, which leads to volatile discontent declarations, and generalized feelings of mutual disaffection.
His parents are uncertain of how to raise their malcontent offspring, and trust a hedonistic immortal to both guide and provide active care.
But he responds too precociously to his loosely structured lessons, and the results are both disconcerting and counterproductive, things becoming much worse when he learns he'll live only three short years, and is indeed frenetically fated, to unleash wanton reviled ill-repute.
He meets his counterpart one day, who is destined for greener pastures, seaside pastures, a god of water secretly raised by dragons, who's also inquisitive and young, and seeking to make trusted oddball friends.
The divine proclamations which indisputably govern their predetermined constitutions have been cast in immaterial chrome, yet they're determined to follow different paths, to make their own fates, randomly preconditioned.
Listen for The Terminator theme music.
It's super deep, this Nezha zhi motong jiangshi (Ne Zha), with its lone bemused disposition, abounding with intricate detail, as it contemplates counterintuition.
In action, while it calisthenically unreels, as hyper-reactive as its nimble namesake, as unrestrictive as leaps and bounds.
Part tragedy as it generates sympathy for a youngster who can't help but cause destruction, yet longs for someone to play with, who isn't afraid of him, or easily duped.
Part comedy as symbiotic shenanigans cerebrally startle and delicately sway.
It's as if predictability were vehemently critiqued by innocent gifted youth, aware of their otherworldly powers and dismissive of fate and forecast.
As if it's comic that ties bind no matter how much agency's secured, and tragic that you exist apart especially if you're born romantic.
To be fated for mystic fortunes adds pressure to attempts to chill, as youth imagines the outer world while taxing mundane rhapsodics.
Nezha (Lü Yanting) gives 'er despite scorn and protest, as misinterpretation confounds.
The film's must-see animation for lovers of fantasy and robust storytelling.
Extraordinarily complex and profound.
Still innocent enough for younger audiences.
Downright quizzical.
Epically nuanced.
Friday, July 5, 2019
The Grizzlies
Strong hunters still persevere, establishing direct links with their ancient descendants.
And some students see the benefits of rigorous study, even if practical applications don't readily present themselves.
It truly is another world, a diverse alternative spirituality.
Inaccessible by road.
Blanketed by the midnight sun.
A somewhat naive teacher lands in this far off realm, unaware of local realities yet determined to make a difference.
He's clueless as the film begins but isn't hardhearted or dismissive.
He listens to local concerns and adjusts his teaching style accordingly.
Well-versed in lacrosse lore, he decides to start up a local team, his dedication and tenacity inspiring local youth, who are hesitant to join yet still curious.
Sports can help combat substance abuse in any community inasmuch as they encourage constructive goals.
If the choice is between loosing oneself in booze and drugs or joining a team that builds character through discipline, I'll take the latter every time.
It's not that simple in The Grizzlies because the community isn't affluent and economic hardships present conflicting responsibilities.
Some kids can't play on a team because they're needed at home, and since the lacrosse team is something new, some families and teachers have troubling believing in its positive effects.
During a town meeting where the team tries to obtain funds to attend a tournament down South, many citizens voice reasonable concerns in opposition, and it's a situation where no one's really right or wrong, but some options take precedence over others.
It's tough to see the benefits of alternative ideas at times and easy to dismiss them. They may seem like they conflict with time honoured traditions at first because they still haven't found a way to culturally co-exist amongst them, and putting food on the table's top priority without a doubt, and sometimes playing games can seem just a little bit silly.
Sports can be a bit ra-ra at times but they promote teamwork, healthy living, interdependence, and communal strength.
They make a huge difference for the lives of the kids in The Grizzlies, and open up doors many residents thought had been shut, permanently.
The North needs dedicated teachers like Russ Shephard (Ben Schnetzer) who are humble enough to adapt to local customs which can teach them to become community leaders.
The North has so much to offer and living there's an experience like none other.
If students have trouble seeing the benefits of education in remote Northern communities, perhaps focusing on astronomy could make a difference.
The night sky is as practical in the North as a transit system is in a city.
I don't see why astronomy can't be used to synthesize the study of math, art, sport and science.
There are endless applications.
Relevant in any age.
Friday, December 14, 2018
Clara
The loss of a loved one, the end of a marriage, caught up in one's work, cold obsession wears thin.
Pedagogically anyway, those are the kinds of unimaginative questions purposeless fools think up in bland appeals to flippant provocation, having nothing that drives them themselves they seek recognition in blasé slander, as they rigidly capsize then flounder away.
No matter.
Perhaps Dr. Isaac Bruno (Patrick J. Adams) did need a break, but his uninterrupted logical obsession does lead to prosperous discoveries.
With Clara (Troian Bellisario), an independent spirit emboldening itinerant fascination, having travelled the globe she applies to work with Dr. Bruno, bringing passion and impulse and style to their studies, cooly adopting romantic methods, warmly embracing emotions age old.
Imaginary numbers.
Heart.
Spawn of the universe interdimensionally abstracting to practically envision passage, spiritual transference incorporeally transmitting commensurate extraterrestrial caches, juxtaposed entities interpreting as one coyly generating crinkly bifrost, the bond of the inexplicable reciting interplanetary sun drenched dawns.
Sci-fi love, intergalactically conceptualized, resoundingly researched, indiscriminately developed.
This Clara, Akash Sherman's Clara, true synthesis of art and science, like a seashell or desert haze.
Posing questions with no reasonable response, intercessions padded feasible parlance, cool realistic bonsai that values stoic discipline, charmed cogent romance which denotes with precision.
With academically inclined composed characters well suited to dreamy wild cards, Clara contrasts teaching with research, the lab with the world at large, objective analysis with inspired intuition, and dismal grief with resilient hope.
Dr. Durant (Ennis Esmer) and Dr. Bruno's approaches to higher education complement each other well, and even though misfortune has ended Dr. Jenkins (Kristen Hager) and Dr. Bruno's marriage, they still maintain a professional relationship as time slowly goes by.
Alternative thinking and experimental readings lead to rational conclusions which reclassify ontological taxonomies.
I have no idea how to find them, or contact them, but there must be other lifeforms out there.
I don't know how much should be spent trying to find them.
But hopefully some's spent on dolphins, improbability.
The sea.
Tuesday, September 25, 2018
Juliet, Naked
Duncan Thomson (Chris O'Dowd) is quite successful for someone who's become even more enamoured with the music of his youth as he's aged, a rare highly-specialized peculiarity who's found both stimulating employment and an irresistible mate without having to adjust his lifestyle, at all, like an uncompromised established radical nerd god I suppose, who may have been diagnosed autistic if he hadn't learned to tame distracting obsessions, level-headed if not unique, examining non-Dickensian media pedagogically throughout the day.
Annie Platt (Rose Byrne) is also a success yet puts up with more bullshit than most women I know would for five minutes. She's spent too many years acquiescing and it's unfortunately resulted in stalemate.
When suddenly, as if a rival divinity decided to mystify his or her earthly spiritual contemporaries, she writes a critical review of the artist Duncan fetishizes, and shortly thereafter, that very same singer/songwriter, one Tucker Crowe (Ethan Hawke), makes first intuitive contact.
Crowe's soon visiting town after attending an hospitable family reunion close by (he's from the States and Annie lives in Britain), and the two hit it off even though/because they're both rather charmingly unsure of themselves.
Multiple characters offering myriad commentaries accompany them as they exchange goods, stewing an atypical bourgeois pot roast of sorts which narratively generates free-flowing conceptual sustenance.
From Annie's worldly lesbian sister (Lily Brazier as Ros Platt) to her town's mayoral sensation (Phil Davis as Mayor Terry Barton) to the subject of an old school photograph (Ninette Finch) to Tucker's thoughtful son Jackson (Azhy Robertson), an active international urbanely pastoral assertive inoffensive multigenerational cluster thoughtfully protrudes, constant flux radiating concerted solitude, domestic clutches loosening vows seized.
Unmarried vows.
Whatever.
The main characters aren't one-dimensional pin-ups either, evolving crises and resurgent settlements interrogatively finagling initial semantic outlines, as a matter of psychological flexibility openly conciliated, in spite of pretence recalled.
Tucker Crowe isn't ideal or anything, but he's changed and is much more responsible than he used to be.
Breakdowns still regularly accompany his daily regimen, often brought on by legitimate grievances cunningly wielded by jaded yet prosperous former lovers.
Wives, partners, fans.
Children he's never met.
Duncan is a bit of a douche but you still feel for him when Crowe bluntly and insensitively ignores his questions, even if from Crowe's point of view he's that guy.
Juliet, Naked is a laidback multilayered serious comedic piece of exceptional screenwriting (Evgenia Peretz, Jim Taylor, and Tamara Jenkins), convincing personalities innocently/frankly/charitably/maturely/helplessly/judiciously observing otherworldly circumstances, while remaining committed to personal affairs which romanticize anaesthetic sensation.
Dozens of cool little ideas and points of view expertly weaved into a funny unconcerned profound teacup tapestry.
It doesn't acknowledge how ridiculous it all sounds.
Adroitly so.
I'll keep coming back to the hospital scene again and again, which was much too short.
Perfectly timed ending though.
Friday, April 21, 2017
Boost
Hakeem's obligations leave him isolated, exhausted.
Duties to family, co-workers, culture, and friends, excruciatingly conflict as they seek the knowledge he's acquired.
But the only way to placate them without self-destructing is to expressly keep things zipped, zigzagged.
With staggering composure.
And multilateral calm.
Repercussions abound in Darren Curtis's Boost after two adolescents screw things up for hardened car thieves.
A slight taste of the spectacle leaves them ostentatiously entwined.
Balancing the headstrong with the pensive, the excessive with the shaved, Boost interrogates responsibility while matriculating resolve.
Demonstrating a sound understanding of the youthful confines of age, it fairly investigates cultural mis/conceptions to dialectically dis/integrate cunning hardboiled c(l)ues.
If you move here I wouldn't worry so much about becoming a Canadian, about fitting in.
It's one of those things where the more you try to do it, the less integrated you become.
Unless you're filthy rich.
Before you've lived through a couple of Winters people tend to doubt you'll hang around.
And after you have they may still not be that curious.
But they like to see familiar faces.
Have brief chats once in a while.
Even pay attention sometimes.
Like moving to most countries I suppose.
With a bitterly cold Winter.
If you're active though, and join some organizations and contribute something, you'll meet people.
Just give it some time.
Be patient.
And don't stress about it.
Friday, March 10, 2017
Forushande (The Salesman)
His wife's willing to forgive.
Emad (Shahab Hosseini) spends so much time thinking vengeful thoughts that he overlooks Rana's (Taraneh Alidoosti) suffering as rage slowly consumes him.
She was the victim, she was the one who was attacked, but throughout Asghar Farhadi's The Salesman Emad is more concerned with personal honour.
He critiques the system within which he was nurtured but is still a product of that system and when the real clashes with his noble imagination the sublime does not judiciously compensate.
Women shortsightedly relegated to a subservient role.
The salesperson interrogates to enlighten yet struggles as he surfaces.
The film brilliantly examines his tortured soul, but is also a product of its circumstances, and focuses far less time on the feminine.
A purgatorial predicament.
Igniting bitter flames.
Tuesday, May 10, 2016
The Dark Horse
Solemnity.
Mana's (James Rolleston) father (Wayne Hapi as Ariki) survived by joining a violent gang.
It's the life he knows and he wants his son to become a member so that he can feel safe as he dies believing he'll be taken care of.
His son loathes the senseless brutal thuggery however and doesn't want to live a life of crime.
His uncle Genesis (Cliff Curtis) is a brilliant chess player who also possesses an exhaustive understanding of his culture's mythology but may have never held a job and can hardly take care of himself.
Nevertheless, as he finds purpose helping to manage an after school club for disadvantaged youth, telling them stories and teaching them chess in preparation for a tournament, his nephew gravitates towards his civility as his father's partners become increasingly aggressive.
Ariki has told his brother to stay away from his son, and their ensuing dialectic, brashly shy and modestly brave, disputatiously contends for Mana's future, both of them eventually accepting that they need to acknowledge his own individualistic dreams.
The Dark Horse beautifully elevates the constructive art of teaching while harshly contrasting it with stark economic bellows, Olympian highs and devastating punishments masterfully articulated with naive bracing culpability.
Life without opportunity can be eviscerating so I don't stubbornly fault people for making desperate decisions, although I do commend those who struggle in different ways, creating something durable and friendly in a culture of bitter cynicism.
You feel bad for all the participants involved accept Mutt (Barry Te Hira) who's clearly evil.
Building a community from nothing, nurturing hope and togetherness through board games and puzzles as opposed to drugs and alcohol; something to think about.
Genesis is a character who sticks with you, clearly ill-equipped to deal with the quotidian yet exceptionally gifted at enlivening the imaginary.
An artist you know.
Perhaps the best kind.
Friday, October 16, 2015
The Walk
With the unknown.
The exponential.
High-wire walking between the twin towers.
Nitroglycerin.
At the break of dawn.
Again, a team, symphonic accomplices, taking great risks to accomplish the legendary, photographic amorous mathematical mingling, caught up in the surge, improvised precise romantics.
Hijinks.
It's an entertaining performance, The Walk, its subject matter providing inspirational added value, tenderly heightening taut peculiarities, the underground's apex, transcending on cue.
Joseph Gordon-Levitt (Philippe Petit) holds it together.
He exuberantly functions as both starving artist and master of ceremonies to conjure an athletic tribute to will and determination, like you're seated in the front row of a stealth big top, ideal showpersonship, nimbly navigating in stride.
In English and French.
Walking the line, North to South, back again, wild card or integral force?
You decide.
Although The Walk isn't exactly cultivating fallow artistic ground, it's still permeated by intense awe inspiring wonder, like gelatin or spontaneous friendship, swaying and blowing with the breeze.
It seems like Zemeckis was genuinely concerned with fascinatingly presenting a down to earth yet wily crowd pleasing sentiment, and with the cast and crew energetically on board, and the climax pressurizing the audacious, I found little to critique about this film, caught between two worlds, a Parisian New Yorker's lexicon.