ORRFForever
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- Oct 29, 2018
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Thank you.Sure, no problem. Keep in mind, Irish films seldom get picked up for distribution, but if it does and I learn about it, I will for sure let people know.
Thank you.Sure, no problem. Keep in mind, Irish films seldom get picked up for distribution, but if it does and I learn about it, I will for sure let people know.
Based on your reviews, kihei, it sounds like you've been a little let down by the movies you've seen at TIFF.
La Belle Epoque (2019) Directed by Nicolas Bedos 6A
With Victor's long-term marriage to Marianne (Fanny Ardant) falling apart, he (Daniel Auteuil) calls upon a friend of his son's who manufactures elaborate period fantasies for those who can afford them, to concoct a re-creation of when he and Marianne first met and fell in love 30 years ago. The recreation works so well that Victor begins to fall in love with the young actress who plays "Marianne." Things get complicated. While the movie feels like a slight ripoff of Woody Allen's Midnight in Paris, there are plenty of pleasing twists and acidic one-liners that keep everything moving nicely along. La Belle Epoque is a good example of mainstream French comedy these days trying to cash in the nostalgia that many middle-aged people feel toward their long lost youth. But Auteuil and Ardant are at the top of their game and the result is a pleasing diversion, maybe a little too slick for comfort but enjoyable nonetheless.
subtitles
To me, TIFF reflects the year so far--the odd good film but mostly dreck of one kind or another. Long ways to go, though.Based on your reviews, kihei, it sounds like you've been a little let down by the movies you've seen at TIFF.
Hope it gets better for you.To me, TIFF reflects the year so far--the odd good film but mostly dreck of one kind or another. Long ways to go, though.
I know you have to sit thru a LOT of bad movie to get to the good, but you are lucky to be so close to TIFF.
Ema (2019) Directed by Paulo Larrain 7B
Ema (Maria Di Girolamo), a dancer, and her headstrong choreographer husband Gaston (Gael Garcia Bernal) have adopted a small boy. When he acts badly and almost disfigures Ema's sister, Ema sends him back to the orphanage. All their friends and colleagues are outraged--you don'treat a child that way, like throwing a fish back into the sea because you no longer want him. The marriage breaks down and both partners go on a hedonistic binge, hopping in bed with whomever they fancy. All this is communicated in a modernist style that keeps the audience at an emotional distance from the material. I couldn't figure out why director Pablo Larrain was interested in these shallow bimbos. The movie seemed pretentious, superficial and a little silly, an exercise in style for the sake of style. But magically Larraine eventually pulls all the pieces together brilliantly. Rather than looking like some self-centred sociopath, Ema is revealed to have more than a little method to her madness, and in the end, the result is surprising if a bit uncomfortable. Having not seen the ending coming, I have to credit Larrain with a marvelous piece of direction. He also ends up saying some interesting things about the notion of family, personal freedom, and deceptive appearances that cause us to rush to judgement. I do wonder how many people will be willing to stick with Ema and Gaston to the end, but if you do, there is certainly a payoff (my first response was to laugh, which Larrain encourages, but the more everything sunk in, the more clever it all seemed). The style and structure of Ema display the kind of sophisticated manipulation that only very confident and masterful directors are capable of. Basically Ema shows Larrain pulling off a tour de force piece of direction. Even the chilly style serves a purpose.
Best of '19 so far
1) Portrait of a Lady on Fire, Sciamma, France
2) An Elephant Sitting Still, Hu, China
3) Vitalina Varela, Costa, Portugal
4) Ema, Larrain, Chile
5) The Two Popes, Mirelles, Brazil/UK
6) Atlantics, Diop, France/Senegal
7) High Life, Denis, France/US
Since kihei has all of the hoity-toity films covered...
The Queen's Corgi (2019) - 3/10 (Really disliked it)
What an undelight this movie is. For the first 10 minutes (in which Queen Elizabeth acquires a new Corgi puppy and, in montage, raises it), it's actually cute and doesn't look so bad. Then, the Corgis start talking, President Trump arrives at Buckingham Palace and it just gets stupid in a hurry. It would seem like a film suitable for kids, except that the main Corgi is sexually assaulted (by Trump's dog, of course), dogs are thrown in a human-like jail and there's eventually a canine Fight Club (with the requisite dated jokes about not talking about it), a dog that's an exotic dancer and even a cocaine reference. Off-color jokes and situations sabotage what should've been a cute movie. As a Corgi lover, it pains me to say that this is a major dud and not worth wasting time or money on. The animation is gorgeous, if that's any consolation.
Worst of '19 so far
1) The Queen's Corgi, Stassen, Belgium
What the **** did I just read...