OhCaptainMyCaptain
Registered User
If Marvel films are theme parks, The Irishman is the equivalent of this:
Lol!
Funny though, because I actually enjoyed The Irishman.
If Marvel films are theme parks, The Irishman is the equivalent of this:
Elle (2016) Directed by Paul Verhoeven 8B
I stayed away from Elle at TIFF after hearing some bad word of mouth about it. On these boards, Mario Lemieux fan 66, with whom I agree roughly 80% of the time, absolutely eviscerated the film, giving it a 0/10 rating. You could say that I went in with very low expectations. Quelle surprise, I loved it. Elle is a very unconventional movie about a rape victim. In the first scene of the movie, Michelle is brutally raped, picks herself up, dusts herself off, and then resolutely tries to not let what just happened affect her very much. And, though she takes sensible precautions, the rape indeed doesn't affect her all that much--on the surface. However, the influence of the violence perpetrated upon her is as subtle as Michelle's behaviour is unpredictable. I took what followed to be one of the darkest comic films of the year, a movie about one very particular woman's approach to misogyny, agency and revenge. To be sure, Elle isn't comic all the time--it sprinkles humour around judiciously, but the overall effect for me was bracing and insightful rather than boring or disgusting. It helps that Isabelle Huppert once again, and for the second time this year (Things to Come), takes a complex not always sympathetic character and makes her totally human and endlessly fascinating. A great actress for decades, she may be on a career high this year. But the movie has more to offer than Huppert at the top of her game. The edgy material, especially as it applies to the kinds of flaws exhibited by herself and others, is certainly risky, often damning, but somehow the movie never gets heavy-handed. Director Paul Verhoeven provides assured, elegant direction and establishes just the right tone--neither too serious, nor too flippant. People may behave monstrously at times, as most do in this movie, but they are not all cut from the same cloth. We all just have to make fine distinctions. I enjoyed Elle immensely.
I realize I am in the minority on this one, but I thought Elle was a terrific, albeit provocative, movie, coming in at #6 for 2016 for me. Here's an edited version of the review that I wrote at the time. Great year for Huppert, whose Things to Come came in at #2 for the year behind Moonlight for me.
Red Turtle and Paterson are two lovely films from that year. If you pick either of those or both up sometime, I would be very curious to see what you think of them. I feel like you and I are pretty much swimming in the same waters, we just often prefer different fish.I'm glad you enjoyed it, I wanted to - and it feels like it should have been my kind of film - but nah... Haven't seen Things to Come, but it does look pretty good. If I have a chance I'll try to see it. Like you, I used to watch everything coming out of the important festivals, but it's been almost 10 years of hibernation for me. A quick look through my stuff tells me that my favorite film of 2016 was Nocturnal Animals at 9/10, followed by Moonlight and American Honey at 7/10, but I really haven't seen much.
Red Turtle and Paterson are two lovely films from that year. If you pick either of those or both up sometime, I would be very curious to see what you think of them. I feel like you and I are pretty much swimming in the same waters, we just often prefer different fish.
Red Turtle and Paterson are two lovely films from that year. If you pick either of those or both up sometime, I would be very curious to see what you think of them. I feel like you and I are pretty much swimming in the same waters, we just often prefer different fish.
Oh, and Ana de Armas will be a massive super star.