Saturday, September 13, 2014

TIFF 2014 Part 2

Toronto International Film Festival logo.svg

Nobody asked for it, but here’s mini-reviews of the last 10 films I saw at TIFF.  At the end is my list of must-see films and those that are well worth your time.
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Two Days, One Night


            Directed by Luc and Jean-Pierre Dardenne and staring Marion Cotillard, I had high hopes going into Two Days, One Night.  I knew it was about a woman who must convince her coworkers to keep her job at the expense of everyone’s bonus, but what I didn’t realize was that the battle would be as much against the woman’s own depression as her coworkers.  Unfortunately for the film, I’ve been helping someone close to me battle their own depression, and this trip was supposed to be a much-needed break from all that.  So, I wasn’t into this film, and it’s entirely not the film’s fault.
            Looking at the film as objectively as I can, it is effective in getting us behind Cotillard’s Sandra.  She seeks out each coworker individually, and although the conversations threaten to become repetitive, you slowly begin to notice the subtle changes in each interaction.  Through this, you’re able to track Sandra’s precarious mental state, which is actually portrayed rather subtly.  While that’s a nice change-up from the more grandiose depictions of the illness, but it never rang true to me.  It was all just a bit too neat for my taste.

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Far From Men


            I’ve only read one book by Albert Camus (The Stranger), but that was enough to clue me in that this movie, based off a Camus short story, would be a challenging piece of work.  It didn’t fail me, delivering a stubbornly complex depiction of two men caught up in the Algerian War.  Touching on issues of ethnic misunderstanding and the far-reaching effects of war, Far From Men gives rich material to its leading duo, played spot-on by Viggo Mortensen and Reda Kateb.  As is common with movies that expand upon short stories, there is some fat that could be chewed off, but as a whole the film plays out as a delicately balanced slow burn.  As important as its script or its actors is its cinematography, used here to convey the emotional lives of the two reticent men.  Algeria appears rough, unforgiving, and undeniably beautiful in this elegantly shot, thought provoking piece.

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Mommy


            A winner of the Special Jury Prize at Cannes, Mommy is filled with daring choices, from the 1:1 screen ratio, the prominent use of familiar pop songs, and the introduction of a world exactly like our own, only with one small legal change.  That last one might not seem very daring, but when you realize how subtly it changes the world around these particular characters, the fact that the legal change is only explained in the beginning and never mentioned again is extraordinary.  In fact, it’s remarkable how much of the film revolves around things unsaid when you take into account the verbosity of two of its leads.  The mother-son pair at the center of Mommy are rough, unrefined people, although the son proves to be the more volatile of the two.  Their neighbor, for reasons only vaguely stated but emotionally understood, becomes enmeshed in their family, and the two women struggle together to correct the path of the troubled son.  The film doesn’t demonize any of the characters, no matter how many wrong turns they make, and lovingly shows the way that families can be made and broken.  This was the only film I’ve seen all year to achieve what Roger Ebert called elevation, to the tune of Oasis’s growling Wonderwall.  Unfortunately, this film just misses all-time greatness with an ending that seems unsure of when to stop.

Ø  Roger Ebert’s blog on elevation can be found at http://www.rogerebert.com/rogers-journal/i-feel-good-i-knew-that-i-would

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Bang Bang Baby


            Bang Bang Baby is your average 1960s sci-fi musical, by which I mean, it’s one of the most original movies I’ve ever seen.  At first, it’s seemingly about a saccharine young woman named Stepphy in small-town Canada who dreams of becoming a singer.  Then a mysterious purple fog is released, and while the townsfolk mutate around her, Stepphy’s idol miraculously gets stuck at her home and falls in love with her.  And you caught that this is all a musical, right?  Stylized to the max, the film is intentionally unrealistic, bathing the actors in light and surrounding them with lush production designs that rival anything seen in Willy Wonka’s factory.  But don’t let the film fool you; there’s a darkness underlying everything, and if the ending means what I think it does, then this is an extraordinarily sad story.  The style was too much for my taste, but I was certainly never bored by this one.

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Tales of the Grim Sleeper


            If you’re like me, then you’ve never heard of the Grim Sleeper before, but fear not, the film gives an overview of the serial killer’s crimes.  Okay, maybe fear some, but not for this film.  Made by accomplished documentarian Nick Broomfield, Tales of the Grim Sleeper explores the streets of south central LA, delving into how this killer was able to remain active for 25 years.  Broomfield and his team talk with friends and family of the accused, neighbors, community activists, and eventually land in the care of a former prostitute named Pam, whose big personality and street connections make the investigation bound along quickly.  Given the material, this a remarkably funny film (thanks Pam), and the methods it uses to lay out its findings are beyond reproach.  Unfortunately, the answers they find are nothing new, and even though their effects are despicable, it leaves the film lacking a punch.

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Revenge of the Green Dragons


            Based on the true story of a 1980’s Chinese street gang, Revenge of the Green Dragons fits comfortably next to every other gangster movie you’ve ever seen.  A young kid is lured into the gang’s web, grows up in its twisted world, and comes to discover how treacherous and unromantic the life really is.  Dragons is entirely competent:  well-filmed, well-acted, etc. This makes it even more disappointing that the filmmakers didn’t reach for more.  Frankly, I’m tired of these violent, troubled men movies.  There’s a million of them, with more being made every day, so settling for the basics isn’t going to impress me.  But hey, Harry Shum Jr. from Glee does shoot people.  Didn’t see that coming.

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Elephant Song


            Adapting a play can be treacherous, what with the small settings, limited number of actors, and the generally wordy screenplays.  Any small mistake can become amplified, as they have nowhere to hide.  Director Charles Binamé expertly handles these complications, turning in a tense cat-and-mouse game between a mentally ill but highly intelligent young man and the psychiatric staff trying to discover the whereabouts of a missing colleague.  The young man clearly knows something, but he’d rather wheedle away at the vulnerable staff than give up the goods.  The central trio, played by Xavier Dolan, Bruce Greenwood, and Catherine Keener, are well-cast, more than capable of handling the loaded dialogue they must quickly spit out.  Kudos also to the cinematography, which employs inventive framing to keep the visuals as interesting as the story.

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The Voices


            Everyone’s favorite director/graphic novelist Marjane Satrapi worked from someone else’s material for the first time in The Voices, a dark, weirdly funny story that will appeal to those who enjoyed 2012’s Cabin in the Woods.  Ryan Reynolds stars as Jerry, a sweet but troubled man who has conversations with his cat Mr. Whiskers, his dog Bosco, and the human heads he keeps stored in the fridge.  Much credit has to go to screenwriter Michael R. Perry, who manages to make Jerry likable despite his homicidal streak.  With much of the story being filtered through Jerry’s skewed perception, Satrapi is able to play with the visuals, jumping between what Jerry sees and the reality of his situation to hilarious effect.  This is an empathetic film, but first and foremost it’s insanely funny.  My major take-away from it:  never trust Mr. Whiskers.

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Laggies


            Another director doing a bit of a change-up is Lynn Shelton, whose films are known for being highly improvised, but here worked with a set script.  Starring Kiera Knightly as Megan, Laggies is about a young adult who never quite grew up.  Sure, she has a master’s degree, but she’s spinning a sign outside her father’s business for money and clearly lagging behind her friends maturity-wise.  She ends up hanging out with a group of teenagers led by Chloë Grace Moretz, which inadvertently jumpstarts Megan’s life.  The premise sounds like something out of the Judd Apatow machine, but that version would have starred a man and been filled with poop jokes.  Instead, Shelton and writer Andrea Seigel create a feel-good, almost fairy tale world, gifting their main character with the space she needs to grow.  Knightly, Moretz, and co-star Sam Rockwell keep you invested in the slightly silly story, and there’s enough good-natured humor peppered in to leave you smiling as you leave the theater.

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The Wanted 18


            Here’s an imperfect but charmingly odd documentary.  At only 75 minutes, The Wanted 18 is a brisk little story of the First Palestinian Intifada, an unarmed civilian insurgency in Israel during the late 80’s and early 90’s.  And who are the titular wanted 18?  Cows, of course.  You see, the activists were trying to become self-sufficient, and brought in 18 cows to start producing their own milk.  This led to the cows being targeted by the Israeli military, a weird footnote in an otherwise dreary conflict.  Told using interviews, recreations, and stop-motion animation, the film starts out embracing its oddity but ends up losing its sense of humor under the weight of it’s serious backdrop.  I wish it had kept the lighter tone, because as the film becomes more and more serious, it falls back on talking heads and visually uninteresting storytelling. 

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My must-sees from the festival:  Mommy, The Voices, Love & Mercy, The Keeping Room

Well worth your time:  Tour de Force, Cake, Far From Men, Laggies, Elephant Song, Tales of the Grim Sleeper, Life in a Fishbowl

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