Monday, July 16, 2012

MOONRISE KINGDOM



Oddly beautiful. Wes Anderson.’s Moonrise Kingdom, with Benjamin Britten’s Variations on a Henry Purcell Theme as soundtrack, is in itself, an orchestral piece. All actions are pictorial and musical compositions and variations on the main theme – adolescent love.

Set in a 1965’s scout camp, the movie takes to the skies the lives of two adolescents, outcasts from expected, proper, where hypocrisy is in some way needed, society. The two twelve year old youngsters, boy and girl, fall in love and run away together. They are persecuted, trapped, separated only to run away again ‘til the final, possibly fatal outcome when they are presented with an alternative – the trust in the world of grown up people. They choose wisely, inappropriately for their age. Shakespeare’s Romeo and Juliet are given a different ending, a less probable one, a happy one.

Director Wes Anderson leaves nothing to chance, a perfect ensemble of cast and crew. Superb photography and music set a mood a little too close to grotesque. Still, a work of art.

Cast and crew:

Moonrise Kingdom (2012)

Director: Wes Anderson

Cast: Bruce Willis, Edward Norton, Kara Hayward, Jared Gilman, Bill Murray, Bob Balabam (narrator)…

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eRVM0fOsp9c
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_eOI3AamSm8

Tuesday, July 3, 2012

LE PRÉNOM




Laughter, poetry and overcoming prejudice. These are the pillars of an excellent comedy by Alexandre de La Patellière and Mathieu Delaporte: Le Prénom, based on a play. A couple invites friends and family over for a quiet dinner. The living room becomes the stage for five people: two couples and a charming musician wrongly believed by all to be gay. Troubles begin when one of the men announces his decision of naming his son to be born Adolphe, with a ph and not an F, a prank. Very much like Carnage, by Roman Polanski, the people who stay in the room argue in ups and downs, exposing their prejudices and their hypocritical politically correct statements. However, not like Polanski who merely deconstructs society to point out its faults, in Le Prénom the character the least expected, the baby’s father, considered by the rest of the group as rough, gives a step forward in a speech about freedom of thinking and tolerance that reminds us of Charlie Chaplin’s in The Great Dictator – a reference actually used in the film.

Another charming reference would be Wagner’s Tannhauser, the story of a knight unhappily in love with Venus. She comes down to the gate of Olympus to welcome him in, when despair is taking away his vital strength. A story that finds mortal representation in the most gentle and open minded of all characters, the musician. It is the final revelation of the arguing, his love affair with a much older woman, the baby’s grandmother. Being looked up by the musician as Venus, she comes down to him, to the gate of her garden, in a foggy night, to welcome him when he finally yields to love and doom.

Artfully directed, Le Prénom is a serious comedy, with a happy ending, spiced by the French irreverence. A delight not to be missed.

Cast and Crew:

LE PRÉNOM (2012)
France
Directors: Alexandre de La Patellière et Mathieu Delaporte
Cast: Patric Bruel, Valérie Benguigui, Charles Berling, Guillaume de Tonquedec…

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9bgb5_kVR4E
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-7etjqZmAGs











Tuesday, February 7, 2012

THE ARTIST, directed by Michel Hazanavicius



“And God said: so there be light… and there was light”. There was the most complete and achieved film of the past two decades, the Big Bang of the twenty first century – The Artist, by French director Michel Hazanavicius.
Publicized as the new approach of the silent movie style, it reveals to be anything but silent, not only because sound is added to some of the scenes, but also because it shouts its message wide and clear, glamorously.

It has been my belief, long past, that Times of tragedy and crisis produce the finest works of art, the boldest ideas, the deepest feelings. Our time has alienated Man from culture and sensibility. Big achievements pass disregarded. Polite habits, such as people remaining in the exhibition room ‘til the end of the credits, for instance, became ignored, even unknown. Good manners and politeness are not simply rules, they are habits born of passion, from surviving needs, from society balance. Yet, it has remained a mystery how once all those habits are gone and forgotten, they spring again, defying present tendencies. Watching The Artist I got my answer – greatness breeds greatness. As the credits rolled up the screen, none of the spectators moved. They produced no sound. They stayed to the very last line not by choice, but because they could not leave. They were in ecstasy.

The story of a silent movies actor George Valentin who becomes unemployed as sound becomes the new fashion, The Artist is, in fact, and above all, a surrealistic film. That is brought to our attention, by the director, right in the beginning, when the hero goes behind the screen and watches the movie from the other side, inverted like in a mirror. The theme and that small passage are the structure, simple as it should be. All the rest, is the expression of that structure. Every detail serves a purpose, including the billboards of cinema Theatres that are related to the state of mind of the hero in each scene. Valentin’s dog, a remarkable touch, is the stress of that state of mind, mimicking the actor’s gestures in a playful spirit, being also his link to life, even in the worst moment, the hand of Fate. In fact, Destiny is the invisible character who builds a bridge between the past and the future. While still a big star, George Valentin opens way in the film industry for a young striving girl Peggy Miller. When Valentin looses the world, Peggy becomes “the new flesh” in the era of sound, she rescues him, in the same way the Dog does, with love and brightness. And here is where Fate sends a message to Mankind. By helping Peggy in the past, Valentin saves his future self. Here, a subtle homage to Bernard Hermann, composer of Hitchcock’s Vertigo music. As Peggy rushes to save Valentin, realizing he may be about to commit suicide, one can listen to Scene d’Amour. Why the choice? Because Hitchcock's was the story of a women who lived twice and died twice. George Valentin too, lives two lives, one in the era of silent movies and the other when sound fills the screen. But unlike Vertigo, the story of George Valentin has a happy ending. Destiny speaks again, one must let go of the past, though not forgetting it, to build the future.

When Peggy and Valentin winn the challenge, playing a musical, the director shouts “Silence, camera, Action!”the scene is cut, and the movie ends. An ironic choice of expression, since Valentin is shooting his first film with sound.
Aesthetically irreprehensible, with a perfect beat, a brilliant cast, and a flawlessly structured story that encloses both humour and drama, The Artist is the first feature film of director Michel Hazanavivius, a turning point.

Cast and Crew:

Director: Michel Hazanavicius, a director with studies in Fine-Art who started his career directing commercials.
Music Composer: Ludovic Bource
Cast: Jean Dujardin (George Valentin), Bérenice Bejo (Peggy Miller), John Goodman (Al Zimmer), James Cromwell (Clifton), Uggy (the dog)…


Wednesday, January 11, 2012

CARNAGE, directed by Roman Polansky



An abrupt opening, an abrupt ending. Yet, a masterpiece. Carnage, directed by Roman Polansky, was a courageous bet on screen, for not only the subject had been approached by other great directors in the past, but also because it is unlikely that the audience remain attached to their seats watching four people closed in the same room for nearly all the seventy nine minutes of screening. In this case, the bet was won.

Fifty years before Carnage’s release, Buñuel presented The Exterminating Angel, the story of a group of people who cannot leave a room though nothing physical is holding them prisoners. In a closed universe, they start showing mutual antagonism and uncivilized tendencies. Polansky uses the same principle deviating the stress in the plot. The story is not about the fact that people cannot leave the room, which leads to animosity, but about people who cannot leave the room because of that animosity. Two couples meet to settle a fighting between their children. After the very first and short scene with the two boys quarrel, shot from a distance, the parents’ meeting is introduced already in the middle of a conversation. Trying to be civil about the problem, they end up stooping to the children’s level and showing insulting behaviour. All the dynamic of Human Nature is described with accuracy and simplicity in tilting friendly and unfriendly responses.

The film ends just at it begins. The couples’ conversation is suspended. With children, no feeling is permanent, only the consequences of their actions. And, as the credits flow in the screen, the boys in the park are friends again. Finally, a sweet metaphor of the plot: a lady walks her little dog. As they go around in circles, never persevering in a steady path, we cannot tell who is leading the stroll.

Kate Winslet and Christoph Waltz play the parents of the boy attacker, Jodie Foster and John C. Reilly the parents of the boy attacked. A perfect choice.

Cast and Crew:

Carnage (2011)

Director Roman Polansky

Duration 79 min

Cast: Kate Winslet, Christoph Waltz, Jodie Foster, John C. Reilly


Friday, September 16, 2011

Midnight in Paris, ditected by Woody Allen

Midnight in Paris is the hour of dreams. Woody Allen's latest film is the renewed ascending curve of an outstanding career with fewer downs than ups.
Back to the splendour of his earlier films, such as Radio Days or Manhattan, Allen did not put all his bets on a lesser remake of a proved success. Midnight in Paris is an original approach of an unprejudiced director.

A Man is engaged to be married and goes to Paris, with his fiancée. If Paris is the city of love and fascination, it is also the city of truth, the place where one encounters oneself, and becomes out of love with the wrong person. But in this surrealist film, love is merely a scenery for bold, yet tastefully discrete, magic events. Gil is a man who believes the age of gold to be in the past and never in the present or the future. He walks about nostalgia shops, and dreams of the twenties. Lost in an alley and sleepless, alone and bored with his constantly present pseudo-intellectual fiancée’s friend, he is suddenly taken in an old taxi, at the strike of midnight, to the real twenties where he meets his greatest idols: Cole Porter, Jean Cocteau, Buñuel, Man Ray, Picasso, Dali, Zelda and Scott Fitzgerald, Hemingway… and Adriana. Every night he stands in the same alley and every time he enters a parallel universe. He falls in love with his twenties female similar, a woman for whom the golden age was the last decade of the nineteenth century. And here, the story jumps into a farer past, the Paris of Lautrec, Degas, Gauguin, Offenbach.

The stroke of genius of the director is far from the common final revelation that makes one return to real life. No, the only revelation is the fact that Gil overcomes his fixation through Adriana choices and actions. She chooses to stay in the nineteenth century stating that the past is the place to be, whilst he realizes that each person belongs to their own time.

Unlike The Purple Rose of Cairo, where the main character accepts the ugliness of reality after leaving the universe of dreams, Gil sees the beauty of it for the first time, as he crosses a bridge, side by side to his soul mate, a French girl who, like him, loves to walk in the rain.

Let’s do it, let’s fall in love, by Cole Porter is the main musical theme, and does the job marvellously.
A note should be made to a less achieved filming of present Paris. Being himself a lover of the old days, Woody Allen captures the light of Paris past as it is represented in paintings. But he fails to grasp the essence of real Parisian light, or even Spain’s (Vicky, Christina, Barcelona). Though living in Europe, Woody Allen is heartedly American, he shoots New York with brilliancy, but hardly the rest of the world.

Yet, once again, regardless of his passion for the old, Woody Allen answers with the future, when the Present asks a question.






http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=atLg2wQQxvU

Cast and crew

Woody Allen’s long time searched alter-ego, Owen Wilson plays Gil in the main role.
Other roles: Yves Heck as Cole Porter, Adrian Brody as Dali, Corey Stoll as Hemingway, Allison Pill and Tom Hiddleston as Zelda and F. Scott Fitzgerald, Marcial Di Fonzo Bo as Picasso, Tom Cordier as Man Ray, Adrien de Van as Buñuel, François Rostain as Degas, Marion Cottillard as Adriana, Rachel McAdams as Inez (Gil’s fiancée), Michael Sheen as Paul (Inez pseudo-intellectual friend), Léa Seydoux as Gabrielle (Gil’s true love)…
Director: Woody Allen
Written by Woody Allen

Thursday, August 11, 2011

A MAN FOR ALL SEASONS, directed by Fred Zinnemann

A Man For All Seasons, directed by Fred Zinnemann is the story of Sir Thomas More, an English scholar from the sixteenth century, a Man who died for a principle. His death did not change the ways of his world, or even served future justice. No, as Tolstoy said, much later, where there is a court justice is lost. Such was the case of Sir Thomas More.

The Plot:
Henry VIII wishes to divorce Catherine of Aragon and marry Anne Boleyn a whim that partly contributed to the independence of England from the Catholic Church. For every drastic change, old laws must be destroyed and new laws written. But new laws must be created for valid reasons, not for personal interests. The system is transformed when its ways no longer support justice. Henry VIII wants a new world that holds his whish and not necessarily England’s. Only one Man stands between the king and that change, and that is Sir Thomas More, respected by all, followed by all, the monarch’s conscience. But a king of few principles needs only to eliminate that conscience. Sir Thomas is taken to trial as traitor. He is condemned.

Paul Scofield plays Sir Thomas More with the brilliancy that makes one substitute the real character by the fictional in one’s mind. Leo Genn achieved the same mastery playing Petronius in Mervyn LeRoy’s Qvo-Vadis (1951). Orson Welles played a very credible Cardinal Wolsey. John Hurt became Richard Rich, undistinguished from a true villain. Robert Shaw was wisely discrete playing the grotesque Henry VIII.

Why then, a film that enhances the curse that hits men who are defenders of noble principles, integrity, honesty becomes not dark but a redeemer of Mankind? For the same reason martyrs do: Death adds immortality to that courage, and above all to those principles.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6nSx0_9TZww
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A-nJR15e0F4





Cast and crew:

1966
Directed by Fred Zinnemann
Based on a play by Robert Bolt A Man For All Seasons
Music by Georges Delerue
Cast: Paul Scofield (Sir Thomas More), Robert Shaw (Henry VIII), Orson Welles (Cardinal Wolsey), John Hurt (Richard Rich), Nigel Davenport (the Duke of Norfolk), Leo McKern (Thomas Cromwell), Wendy Hiller (Sir Thomas’ wife Alice), Susannah York (Sit Thomas’ daughter Margaret)…

Friday, March 4, 2011

THE NAKED JUNGLE, directed by Byron Haskin

There is a man isolated in the South American jungle. He owns a cacao plantation, a land stolen inch by inch to the Rio Negro river. Though being away from civilization since his boyish years, this man hasn’t forgotten its luxuries and refinement. In fact, he is determined to build his own kind of civilization in the middle of the jungle where everything brought there was never touched by any hands but his. A wife is part of that dream. But being unable to leave the plantation, he asks his New Orleaner brother to find one for him, a marriage by proxy. And so, a woman of great charm, refinement, sophistication, arrives to Rio Negro, brought by a boat along with her fashionable luggage. A perfect wife, full of wits, knowledge, bravery, beauty. Too perfect, Leiningen, the plantation owner, begins to think.
Here begins the tension of the story, as Leiningen tries to unwrap, day by day, the hidden fault of his new arrived wife. There is one, in fact, but in his eyes only. A second amount of tension is added to the story. The couple’s drama becomes somehow less important before a real threat. The worst creature God created is coming: :Marabunta – the killer ant that destroys and eats everything that stands in its passage, including people. Trying to save the plantation and their own lives, Leiningen and his wife find love, and truly meet for the first time.
Charton Heston plays Leiningen and Eleonor Parker his wife, a victorious choice by director Byron Haskin.
The music by Daniele Amfitheatrof is masterly combined with the frightening sound of the jungle. A special reference should be made to costume designer Edith Head, a brilliant work that adds the right shade of colour to the scenes, making a match of beauty and horror.
Most of the shooting was made in Florida, a detail that reveals a faultless scenery construction.
The Naked Jungle will strip your soul and overwhelm you again and again.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-FUk7q9N8BM

Cast and crew:

Charton Heston (Christopher Leiningen), Eleonor Parker (Joanna Leiningen), William Conrad (Commissioner), Abraham Sofaer (Incacha)…

Directed by Byron Haskin
Produced by George Pal
Music by Daniele Amfitheatrof
Screenplay by Ranald MacDougall