Friday, May 24, 2013

Next Week in Tickets: Films playing Boston 24 May - 30 May 2013

Busier week, as studios start counterprogramming rather than more or less ceding the week to the biggest opening.

  • It's actually sort of an open question which sequel is the weekend's biggest opening - is it The Hangover Part III, in which Bradley Cooper, Ed Helms, and Zach Galifianakis get into more trouble and inevitably run into Ken Jeong? Oh, hey, Heather Graham's back, along with John Goodman and some other new characters. Or is it Fast & Furious 6, which follows up the set-up from the middle of #5's credits, which says that a character killed in #4 is still alive (note: this is completely different from the character killed in #3 who is still alive because Tokyo Drift apparently takes place after... well, next year's planned #7, at least). Luke Evans plays the villain, and Gina Carano is added to a cast that has accumulated Vin Diesel, Paul Walker, Jordana Brewster, Michelle Rodriguez, Tyrese Gibson, Sung Kang, Dwayne Johnson, and Chris Bridges over the course of the series. Both play at the Arlington Capitol, Apple Cinemas, Fenway (including RPX for Fast, and Boston Common).

    The same theaters also have Epic, the newest 3D animated film from Blue Sky and its top director Chris Wedge, a large-scale adventure that comes about from a teenage girl being shrunk to the size of an insect and discovering there's a whole different world down there.
  • Another animated movie opens at Kendall Square with the one-week booking: The Painting is a French film that posits the world inside a painting being alive, only with there being a rigid class system based on how "finished" each person is. And, rejoice, while the afternoon and evening shows are dubbed, the 9:35pm show each night is in the original French with English subtitles!

    There's a lot more opening there, too. Frances Ha is the new film from Noah Baumbach that played IFFBoston; it's in black and white and features Greta Gerwig as the title character, who is suddenly cast out on her own after having been extremely close with her former roommate. What Maisie Knew played a preview series just a few days ago (I saw and quite liked it there); it features Julianne Moore and Steve Coogan as the divorcing parents of the child from whose perspective the audience is told the story.

    There's also a pair from interesting directors: At Any Price comes from Ramin Bahrani, who is best known for micro-budget features featuring amateur actors, but who here has Dennis Quaid and Zac Efron as father and son with different ideas on where to take the family farming business. Deepa Metha adapts a Salman Rushdie novel for Midnight's Children, where two children switched at birth on the day of India's declaration of independence follow parallel/intersecting paths.
  • the Brattle Theatre tests out their new DCP system this week, running Leviathan straight through from Friday to Thursday. It's a documentary from Verena Paravel & Lucien Castaing-Taylor that follows the voyage of a New England commercial fishing boat, apparently in ways nobody has done before.
  • After a few weeks of somewhat confusing schedules, the Coolidge Corner Theatre keeps things relatively simple, with Mud and Stories We Tell staying on the big screens and two other films opening in the smaller rooms: No is in the Goldscreen after stops in Cambridge, Somerville, and Arlington, while Venus and Serena follows the tennis-playing Williams sisters during 2011, when in addition to their sporting challenges, each battled a dangerous illness.

    The midnight show this weekend is the "Cult Cut" Ladies and Gentlemen, The Fabulous Stains, a rare 35mm print of a movie featuring Diane Lane and Laura Dern as punk rock girls in the title band, opening for a band that contains members of the Clash and the Sex Pistols. Another cult classic screens Monday as part of "Big Screen Classics", Richard Linklater's Dazed and Confused
  • The New England Aquarium hasn't booked Star Trek on its genuine IMAX screen (yet), but they are opening a new marine-life documentary: "Penguins 3D" will be playing every other hour (with other movies as double-feature fodder in between). It's... well, it's penguins in IMAX 3D. It looks to be a cut-down version of a longer feature, but I suspect it gets its point across.
  • Because horror fans hate real-life horror, Adam Green will be hosting a Hatchet marathon on Thursday the 30th, which not only features uncensored prints of Hatchet and Hatchet II, but is the first chance to see the new Hatchet III. It's at Theater One in the Revere Hotel (formerly the Stuart Street Playhouse), runs 7pm to 1am, and requires a minimum $25 donation to the One Fund
  • It's the last weekend of Samurai Cinema at the MFA (although the samurai armors will be on exhibition through the beginning of August). It's good stuff, though, with Throne of Blood and Kill! on Friday and Sunday, and Seven Samurai Saturday afternoon. After that, they bring in a pair of documentaries on musicians, although they are very different: Becoming Traviata focuses on the preparations for an upcoming opera, while One Track Heart: The Story of Krishna Das features a rock & roll singer who gave it up to seek enlightenment in the Himalayas. Both play Wednesday the 29th and Thursday the 30th (and through the first week of June); director Jeremy Frindel and Lama Surya Das will be on hand after the Wednesday 5:30pm screening of One Track Heart for a discussion.
  • I believe the Harvard Film Archive had to cancel some of their Raoul Walsh screenings due to weather a few months ago, so they have a sort of encore this weekend, with Band of Angels Friday evening, Northern Pursuit Sunday afternoon, and What Price Glory? Monday night, with the series continuing next weekend. One last Arturo Ripstein film is squeezed into Friday night (Such Is Life rather than the previously scheduled Woman of the Port). They will also have Portugese documentarian Susana de Sousa Dias visiting with two of her films which twist archival footage into a new context: 48 Saturday evening, and Still Life Sunday evening.
  • The Regent Theatre is mostly film this week, with 100 Bloody Acres as the Gathr sneak preview on Tuesday (a horror comedy where the secret ingredient in organic compost is exactly what you think it is). Then from Wednesday to next Friday, they have a three day "Boston Surfs!" Film & Music Festival, which includes shorts, features, and live performances.
  • The ICA has The Alloy Orchestra in town on Saturday the 25th, accompanying two screenings of the rarely-seen (and long considered lost) German Expressionist film From Morning to Midnight.

My plans? Fast & Furious 6 (how did I wind up looking forward to that without seeing any between 1 & 5?), Epic, The Painting en français, Alloy, 100 Bloody Acres, and whatever else I can fit in.

Thursday, May 23, 2013

What Maisie Knew

Although an email from the folks running it claims that this screening at the Regent Theatre in Arlington was the fifth screening in its series, I believe it was the first in the Boston area. The word doesn't seem to have spread on it yet, as there were only about seven of us there.

Well, it was only a chance to see it three days early, but I will say that the Gathr Preview Series does seem to be a pretty good deal - they run four movies a month at $19/month (or $49 for three months), and while the five movies currently listed as coming through the end of June look to be a mixed bag, quality-wise, $4.08 to $4.75 for early screenings early in the week is a pretty decent deal, though they're $10 for non-members.

That's the sales pitch; the other side is that you're talking about Gathr screenings at the Regent. I'm pretty sure that the Regent is a pretty nice place to go for a live show; it's a comfy, 400-500 seat venue in a nice neighborhood with various restaurants, but the projection for this movie looked to be from a Blu-ray, and even though the screen is at the back of a stage, there was still masking on all four sides, not completely giving you the full big-screen experience. After twenty or thirty minutes, I got used to it, but presentation-wise, it's not exactly on a par with how folks who see it in DCP at Landmark will experience it.

On the other side, it's Gathr, and as much as the idea of services like Gathr and Tugg seem full of potential, they don't do a whole lot to promote screenings - this one wasn't even listed on the Regent's website (although next week's entry is). I suspect that they're hoping this series will increase by word of mouth, which will then build a sort of community which will book other screenings, but it looks like a pretty hard thing to bootstrap, truth be told.

Ah, well. I'll be back in Arlington for 100 Bloody Acres on Tuesday; we'll see how many other folks show up and what kind of trend we're looking at.

What Maisie Knew

* * * ¾ (out of four)
Seen 21 May 2013 in the Regent Theatre (Gathr Preview Series, digital)

This modern-day adaptation of Henry James's What Maisie Knew appears to have been somewhat freely adapted from the novel, although not necessarily in the ways one might expect. Divorces and custody battles may have become more common since the book's publication in 1897, but the underlying issues remain all too similar. Capturing perspective in a film means doing things a bit differently, but it's something that this adaptation does very well.

Maisie (Onata Aprile) is six or seven years old, lives in New York City, and has a pretty sweet disposition despite the way her parents fight all the time. It's not long before Susanna (Julianne Moore), a rock star on the downward slope of her career, and Beale (Steve Coogan), an English art dealer whose work frequently takes him out of town, finally split for good. The court awards them joint custody, with each scheduled to have Maisie for ten days at a time. Maisie is somewhat surprised to see her nanny Margo (Joanna Vanderham) when she first arrives at her father's new apartment, which prompts Susanna to respond with her own marriage of convenience, in her case to young bartender Lincoln (Alesander Skarsgård), lest the court find Beale is providing a more stable environment.

Divorce is a rough road for most kids, but it's interesting to see how directors Scott McGehee & David Siegel and screenwriters Nancy Doyne & Caroll Cartwright emphasize certain parts of it. They show Maisie waiting to be picked up a lot, and when she is collected or dropped off, it's almost always by someone in a taxi. Part of this, naturally, is about this specific group of characters living in a city where having your own car is crazy and showing that their daughter is not nearly the first concern that she should be, but it also seems very much to be about showing what an in-between, rootless status Maisie is being stuck into. This divorce is terrible, certainly, but it's something that speaks to almost all splits where children are involved.

Full review on eFilmCritic.

Wednesday, May 22, 2013

This Week Month In Tickets: 22 April 2013 - 19 May 2013

And here I honestly thought that IFFBoston was going to be a "delays stuff three weeks" festival at most, though I guess I didn't really take into account just how many other movies I would get to that needed reviewing. But we're there now, and it feels good to be caught up..

22 April - 28 April
29 April - 5 May
6 May - 12 May
13 May - 19 May

This Week in Tickets

I think I mention it on the Independent Film Festival Boston Opening Night write-up, but due to me being kind of linear, I didn't really start thinking about getting my ducks in a row for that festival until I was finished writing up everything for the Boston Underground Film Festival, which took long enough that the link for press accreditation on IFFBoston's site was gone by the time I tried to use it, so I wound up buying a pass like the civilian I mostly am. I probably could have saved some money and just bought tickets to the 17 movies I wound up seeing, but I like getting to make decisions on the fly too much. Being the first to sit isn't bad, either.

The festival itself was pretty good; only a few movies I loved but plenty I liked. I saw fourteen movies these first five days:

24 April: The Spectacular Now
25 April: Tokyo Waka, Wasteland
26 April: Soft in the Head, A Hijacking
27 April: Secundaria, Night Labor, Computer Chess, Oxyana, V/H/S/2
28 April: The Defector, Remote Area Medical, The Act of Killing, Berberian Sound Studio

I meant to do a little bit more cramming before the event started, but it didn't happen outside of Trance. That's fine; a day to rest up doesn't hurt either.

Trance

* * ¾ (out of four)
Seen 22 April 2013 in Coolidge Corner Theatre #2 (first-run, 35mm)

Wow, it feels like a long time since I've seen Trance, much longer than the actual four weeks. That's got to make it count as a bit of a disappointment, as director Danny Boyle does everything he can to sear its crazy story into the audience's brain with his trademark style of quick-cut, colorful scenes. It just isn't quite good enough.

Give him credit for what he does; this is a movie that spends a lot of time on people sitting around asking each other questions, and even with plenty of flashbacks, that can be kind of a dull process. So while writers Joe Ahearne and John Hodge weave in a fair amount of present-day intrigue, Boyle and his crew do what they can to keep the buried memories of James McAvoy's Simon engrossing. It helps that they get one of McAvoy's more interesting performances, in that even before we start digging into his past, Simon doesn't just seem like the guy more interesting people are contrasted with. Vincent Cassel has long experience playing this sort of tough guy and knows what he's doing, and while she seldom really grabs the screen, I don't know if I'm capable of not liking Rosario Dawson in a movie.

The big issue, I think, is that this is a thriller whose plot is stretched to the breaking point. The high concept of a guy who is part of a heist injuring his head and thus needing to have the location of the stolen painting retrieved via hypnosis is a good one, and I kind of like the question implicit in the resolution of just who among the main characters was abusing and exploiting the others most egregiously. Getting there required twist upon twist, though, some of which did a real number on suspension of disbelief. It took a simple story and made it into a Rube Goldberg device, and that's a perilous thing to do.

This Week in Tickets

First up: The last two days of IFFBoston, which ran a day shorter than it has in recent years. Kind of a bummer, that, but it didn't seem to be for lack of decent movies to show.

29 April: Some Girl(s) & Willow Creek
30 April: In a World...

I got a bit lucky in terms of my movie choice; I could very well have seen Twenty Feet from Stardom during the festival, though it would have meant a bit of back-and-forthing on the Red Line and minimizing my flexibility in other places. Plus, while I didn't outright state a "no performer docs" this year, as the festival wasn't nearly as packed with them as it had been in previous years, that was still kicking around in the back of my mind. Still, I wasn't disappointed to see Talk Cinema pick it up and I actually thought Twenty Feet from Stardom and In a World... made a fine double feature.

In between, well, I'm guessing I watched some baseball, wrote some, and otherwise just wound down before paying the fees necessary (new release + RPX + 3D) to see Iron Man Three on one of the spiffier screens in Boston proper.

Iron Man Three

* * * ¾ (out of four)
Seen 4 May 2013 in Regal Fenway #13 (first-run, 3D RPX DCP)

I kind of love this one, even if it does reveal a few flaws in retrospect. In part, it's because I'm a person who really liked Kiss Kiss Bang Bang and the idea that Marvel decided not just that using their big franchise to re-team Robert Downey Jr. with Shane Black was a good idea, but that they should let him make a Shane Black movie without messing with his voice too much was something that made me smile throughout. But even more, it's that this is a genuinely fun movie. It's got big, crazy action but also a really sharp sense of humor; it gets family-friendly tropes in without feeling like it's neglecting its grown-up audience; and the cast really seems to work well together.

One of the greatest things that I think Black does (along with co-writer Drew Pearce) - and there are many, from the tossed-off explanation of why the Avengers aren't getting involved (the government "doesn't consider this a superhero situation" and by the time Tony realizes it is, it's too late) to how the women have genuinely important roles to clever henchman dialogue - is that he uses the big action sequences not just as spectacle, but as things which really define character:

SPOILERS!

The first time you really notice it is when the Mandarin destroys Tony's mansion, and he tells the Mark 42 to assemble - around Pepper. Would the Tony of even Iron Man 2 have done that? No, he was too much of an egomaniac. But after The Avengers, he not only cares enough about Pepper that getting her to safety is his first priority, he trusts her to do it for herself. Also: This scene shows the proper way to use a piano to take out henchmen - take that, Superman Returns! Then there's the great barrell-of-monkeys scene, which is just an amazing aerial stunt on its own, but which also defines Tony's character perfectly: Faced with thirteen people falling to certain doom and told he can only carry four, he's going to use his brains and technological know-how to figure out a way to save everyone in a non-negotiable time frame. Then, in the big, climactic finale, he tells Pepper he'll catch her, fails, and is then surprised (but not disbelieving) when she pops up and takes the bad guy out herself. It's a great moment showing that they are partners who trust each other that not a lot of couples in action movies really get.

And while we're here in spoiler-land, I've got to say that I kind of like the way the movie handles the Mandarin - or at least, I agree that they couldn't really go any other way. In 2013, you're not going to have a traditional yellow-peril villain, not with China being the fastest-growing economy and movie market in the world, especially not with their DMG Entertainment funding a large chunk of it. So, sure, use the villain most closely associated with the comic book character and potentially tie off the Ten Rings storyline since there's a very real possibility that there will be no Iron Man 4, but do it in a way that makes the ugly xenophobia and nationalism inherent in the character a dangerous distraction. I don't know if it necessarily had to be Ben Kingsley in the role - couldn't they have found some Eurasian actor who could do the requisite funny accent? - unless the idea was that he could be spun as Middle Eastern when the movie plays in China.

Now, bringing up AIM and not having there be a funky yellow beekeepers' outfit in sight, that's a disappointment.

!SRELIOPS

So, all in all, a pretty darn entertaining movie which stands a good chance of being my favorite of the summer - though, happily, it's still early.

This Week in Tickets

And we are back on the horse post-festival! It's more or less a given that if you show a silent movie, I will make every attempt to be there, and the Coolidge's "Sounds of Silents" program is one of my favorites, especially when they bring in Berklee's Film Scoring class. Of course, getting from Burlington to Brookline by 7pm is a challenge, so I always get seats with this sort of view:

 photo IMAG0367_zpsaf362189.jpg

... but it's generally still cool. The students do a nice job, and Our Hospitality certainly doesn't suffer for it. I kind of wish I'd gone to the screening of The Thief of Baghdad at Somerville on the 12th instead of the Red Sox game I did make; not only did I wind up eating a few tickets because getting people rounded up is difficult (and there really isn't a window at Fenway where they'll exchange five seats up in the bleachers for one seat at field level), but it was a pretty crappy loss, too. Coolest thing was that I was one seat diagonally away from the red seat, so... Yeah, not really cool.

To be fair, it was Mother's Day, which leads me to the question... Whose genius idea was it to release Go Goa Gone, Aftershock, and No One Lives on that weekend? I mean, really, who's bringing their moms to that? I mean, sure, Peeples, I can see, but the other three?

Our Hospitality

* * * ½ (out of four)
Seen 6 May 2013 in Coolidge Corner Theatre #1 (Sounds of Silents, digital w/ live music)

It's been a couple of years since I last saw Our Hospitality (with Jeff Rapsis at Somerville), and silent comedies especially can kind of warp in one's mind over time: The really great bits of physical comedy come to stand out, and the dangerous stunts stick as well, while some of the bits that fill time in between kind of fade away or get remembered as funnier than they were. Our Hospitality is still a very funny movie, and indeed among the best of Keaton's pictures to rely on characterization as much as physicality, but some of the bits didn't hit me quite as well this time.

Of course, it could partially be the different score, too. Seeing a silent movie is unique in that something that is such an important part of the experience - and one that's heightened for silents, because it doesn't have to stay out of the way of dialog or sound effects - changes radically between viewings. Our Hospitality is a tricky one, because it's got the dead-serious opening that has to quickly become rather airy comedy before getting kind of dark but just as absurd. The Berklee kids did a pretty good job of it, though, just as Buster did.

My 2011 review on EFC

This Week in Tickets

Stubless: Black Rock at Apple Cinemas #5 (7:45pm, Friday 17 May 2013)

Another lost ticket after the one from a week before, and the surprising thing is that I wasn't even wearing the pants whose pockets seem purpose-designed to spill their contents when sitting in any seat that reclines just a little bit. The next time I go to the store to buy some pants, I'm going to see if the store's employees have recommendations on that subject, or at least have a chair in the changing room where you can test this.

Speaking of seats, the Somerville Theatre tore the seating out of their smaller theaters and replaced them after IFFBoston, something I was happy to check out with The Great Gatsby. Verdict: Nice just for their newness as opposed to being worn out, and probably just enough of an upgrade in width and leg room to make a difference without really hurting capacity. The arrangement is slightly different, as well; where before screen #5 had a big center section and two wings about three seats wide on the other sides of the aisles, they've now all been pressed together,with the aisles along the walls.

Thursday was the Brattle's quickly mounted tribute to Ray Harryhausen with Jason and the Argonauts and the original Clash of the Titans. It yielded a fair amount of polite applause every time Harryhausen's name appeared on-screen, and they got pretty decent prints, too. I won't lie, though - I kind of expected the opening for the Kevin Sorbo Hercules series in front of each of them ("In a time of myth and legend, the ancient gods were petty and cruel, and plagued mankind with suffering. Only one man dared challenge their power...").

Saturday didn't quite work out as planned - I bought a ticket for Star Trek Into Darkness at Jordan's Furniture in Reading online, figuring it would be sold out by the time I got there, but got on the T later than I should have, so as soon as the Orange Line was traveling above ground, I was tracking the bus I'd need to catch on my phone, eventually getting off at Wellington and taking the train back into town when I saw I'd lost the race, settling for seeing it on the lesser Imax-branded screen at Boston Common. Then at night, I cut it pretty close to see Kiss of the Damned, only to have it not show up on the MoviePass app. So, a fair amount of money spent on movies that I shouldn't have had to spend, but the results were OK.

Sunday I slept until noon and didn't even leave the house because I got caught up watching baseball.

The Great Gatsby

* * * (out of four)
Seen 13 May 2013 in Somerville Theatre #5 (first-run, Real-D 3D)

When the trailers for Baz Luhrmann's adaptation of The Great Gatsby started appearing, I was rather intrigued, if only because I remember not enjoying it very much when I read it in high school - and seeing the adaptation starring Robert Redford in Mia Farrow didn't help. Thus, seeing the previews with fast cars, plenty of gaudy production design, well-used 3D, and Leonardo DiCaprio looking almost as energetic and pleased with himself as he did in the concurrent previews for Django Unchained assured me that Luhrmann was doing his damnedest to make this material not boring.

By and large, he succeeds. Gatsby is a blast to watch, making fine use of Luhrmann's tendency toward excess even when he is also making a point about how hollow it is. It can be a tough balancing act; for instance, the the ever-watching eyes from the optometrist's advertisement can be blotted out by the shot showing Manhattan surrounded by a sort of wasteland (which I love). He is just the right guy to understand the vigorous romanticism in Jay Gatsby, who thinks in terms of grand gestures and has managed to build himself up so much that he can't help but trust in his ability to keep making his fantasies real.

As for the problems... Well, the movie is still a version of The Great Gatsby. I love Carey Mulligan and she fits the part of Daisy perfectly, but Daisy is kind of a tough sell to a modern audience; her porcelain weightlessness makes one wonder why this is the girl who causes such an obsession, especially when Elizabeth Debicki as Jordan Baker is standing right next to her all the time. Nick Carraway (Tobey Maguire) is perhaps the template for the frustrating character whose job is to observe the really interesting one from the audience's perspective. And Luhrmann tends to use a lot of F. Scott Fitzgerald's words, which is understandable, but they're always describing something we can see or really should be able to pick up from the characters' expressions or actions, or at least words. When narration is going on, it feels like nothing is happening, and that happens all too often.

Still, it's a beautiful movie that at least gives me the idea that I maybe shouldn't have judged this story so harshly at sixteen, and that's something.

Jason and the Argonauts

* * * ¼ (out of four)
Seen 16 May 2013 in the Brattle Theatre (Ray Harryhausen, 35mm)

I was never a huge Harryhausen fan growing up. We didn't have the television channels, repertory cinemas, or well-stocked video stores that lead a kid to develop a love of this material in my corner of North Yarmouth, Maine, and by the time we did,I was maybe smart enough to be impressed at what he did with the materials available to him, but not necessarily to really imprint on it. It's led me to develop a fairly healthy suspicion of nostalgia which I honestly think serves me pretty well.

But, man, is what he does in Jason and the Argonauts kind of amazing or what? In a lot of ways, it's not so much the meticulous creation of stop-motion animation that does it, but the way he incorporates it: There is great compositing, matching of movement and lighting, and fine attention to detail for when it's necessary for something to be built in two scales. And unlike a lot of effects work, his effects sequences are always well-directed - he knew when sudden and subtle movements were appropriate. It makes for surprisingly seamless work, even to the modern eye.

As to the movie itself.. Well, that's the part where I have a little more trouble. It is, like many of the movies Harryhausen worked on, aimed at a fairly young audience, and it kind of inherits the nonsensical nature of both the original mythology and the relatively unsophisticated nature of that sort of genre film. It also bumps up against a problem mythology-based films have a hard time avoiding - the gods are, by and large, capricious jerks, so trying to fit their actions into a sort of reasonable motivation is almost impossible, while also being so powerful that it's no wonder the classical theater which used them gave us the term deus ex machina.

Still, plenty of fun, with a cast that includes future Bond girl Honor Blackman and future Doctor Who Patrick Troughton.

Clash of the Titans (1981)

* * ¾ (out of four)
Seen 16 May 2013 in the Brattle Theatre (Ray Harryhausen, 35mm)

Before this movie started, I half-jokingly tweeted that it came out in 1981, when I was seven years old and very much enamored of Greek mythology, so why the heck had I not seen it before now? Huh, Mom & Dad?

A few minutes in, I figured the answer was nudity, although apparently this was rated PG from the start, even though in today's environment it would probably get an R for skin (or be re-edited, or more likely still never show a nipple at all) and a PG-13 for violence. It plays as somewhat more adult than Jason and the Argonauts, and I think that's a bit of a downfall for it - the greater intensity of the action and open references to sexuality clash against some of the more broadly played bits (including the goofy robot owl), and the dumb mythological plotting that hurts Jason becomes even more noticeable here.

Still, there's no denying Ray Harryhausen does some pretty amazing things. Calibos, for instance, is an amazing creation, fully good enough in some of the full-bodied scenes to convince me I was seeing a man wearing prosthetics rather than an animated model. Pegasus works; I'd be shocked if the CGI models in the recent mythological movies worked better. And action scenes where animation and live-action have to interact are often pretty seamless.

I can't help but see the flaws now, but I would have eaten this up as a kid. Ah, well.

TranceIFFBoston: The Spectacular NowIFFBoston: Tokyo Waka & WastelandIFFBoston: Soft in the Head & A HijackingIFFBoston: Secundaria, Night Labor, Computer Chess, Oxyana, V/H/S/2IFFBoston: The Defector, Remote Area Medical, The Act of Killing, Berberian Sound Studio

IFFBoston: Some Girl(s) & Willow CreekIFFBoston: In a World...Iron Man ThreeTwenty Feet from Stardom

Our HospitalityNo Place on Earth
Go Goa GoneAftershockPeeplesNo One LivesJays 12, Sox 4


The Great GatsbyJason and the Argonauts & Clash of the TitansBlack RockStar Trek Into DarknessKiss of the Damned

Monday, May 20, 2013

Kiss of the Damned

Semi-serious question here - when the Coolidge gets their DCP installed, just how much of an upgrade will we notice over when they play a Blu-ray like they did for this midnight show of Kiss of the Damned? I'm presuming that they're installing 2K projectors - maybe they'll go 4K, but outside of the big chains, that seems relatively rare - which have roughly the same resolution as the 1080p24 movies encoded on disc, so I'm guessing it's some combination of higher-quality components, greater color depth, and much less compression.

I hope so, because this was definitely Blu-ray; there was a hiccup a few minutes into the first attempt to run the movie, bouncing us to the Oppo player's home screen. It wound up not being disruptive - the movie played without a hitch afterward - but seeing that does sort of change the calculus for whether walking forty minutes and then paying $10 to sit in a sparsely populated theater is a great idea (and actually paying $10, because MoviePass screwed up their listings again). Don't get me wrong, I like putting my peripheral vision to use, but that's not really what I like to see when I'm a sweaty mess from trying to get to a screening on time.

At least I was able to catch the last 66 home. Let me telll you, that bus at 2am is bizarre, just plowing through its route and barely seeming to cast a sideways glance at the stops where it is usually slowing to a crawl.

Kiss of the Damned

* * * (out of four)
Seen 18 May 2013 in Coolidge Corner Theatre #2 (After Midnite Fresh Blood, Blu-ray)

Sexy vampires are a problematic sort of monster; it's very easy for someone telling a story of these creatures to forget that they are monsters at all, getting lost in the beauty and grandeur of these eternally young men and women from another, perhaps more genteel time. Or they go the route of the movies that clearly inspired Xan Cassavetes's Kiss of the Damned, leaning far more heavily on the "sexy" than the "vampire". What makes this one perhaps more worth a watch than its skin-flick ancestors is that Cassavetes has her eye on what sort of monsters walk among the living as well as the dead.

Djuna (Josephine de La Baume) may be a vampire, but she strives not to be a monster. Right now, she's living in the Connecticut estate of Xenia (Anna Mouglalis) - a fellow vampire - where the maid (Ching Valdes-Aran) has a rare blood condition that makes her unappetizing, and there is enough wildlife to slake her thirst. Still, one can't stay cooped up all the time, and while making a trip to the video store, she meets Paolo (Milo Ventimiglia), a screenwriter renting a nearby house to work. They connect, she pulls away, he insists. Soon, Djuna's happier than she's been in decades - at least until her sister Mimi (Roxane Mesquida) shows up, needing a place to stay for a week before heading to vampire rehab in Arizona.

This may be a movie that takes the perspective of the long-lived undead who look at human beings as potentially interesting members of the lower classes, but it's still able to resonate with a living audience because every family or social circle has a Mimi. She's the vampire's vampire, disappearing for long periods and then showing up because she's tapped out, making noises about changing but blazing a path of destruction through the lives of the people who can't or won't turn her away - sometimes because she can't help herself, sometimes with malice aforethought. Cassevetes draws a fairly direct line between Mimi's behavior and alcoholism and other addictions at certain points, though it's less about the simple fact of her desiring something illicit than the patterns of behavior.

Full review on eFilmCritic.

Sunday, May 19, 2013

Star Trek Into Darkness (w/optional spoilery stuff)

This is the second time in as many weeks I've decided to go see a movie out in the suburbs, spent too long writing something for EFC and this blog, and was unable to catch the train fast enough to get me to Malden Station by the time the bus that would take me the final few miles arrived. Last week, it was not getting to Revere in time to see No One Lives, but at least I could fit Peeples in in between. This time, I found myself kind of gambling that the bus would be as late as usual, and of course it wasn't. The bummer is that I bought my ticket online rather than get to Jordan's Furniture in Reading and find them sold out, so I basically ate $14 once I saw that the bus had passed my stop. Got off the train, walked across a subway platform, and headed back to Boston.

I opted to see it on Boston Common's Imax-branded screen, which should amuse my brother Matt, as the same sort of thing happened four years ago. It wasn't horribly expensive, at least - I had $10 on my Stubs card, so even seeing an Imax-branded show, it was just another $6.75 out of pocket. Twenty bucks and more time on the train than I would have liked; could be worse.

Speaking of four years ago, when I saw Star Trek then, I mentioned that it had a lot of flaws that I might have had more of an issue with if the movie hadn't hit my personal sweet spots so well. This time around, well... I'll talk about the end and stuff after the EFC review link.

Star Trek Into Darkness

* * * (out of four)
Seen 18 May 2013 in AMC Boston Common #2 (first-run, Imax-branded digital 3D)

The opening of Star Trek Into Darkness is everything I want from this new incarnation of the franchise: An adventure on a faraway planet that could happily be dropped into the original series except for the big, movie-scale stunts and effects. And while the filmmakers eventually pile on too much of what the series doesn't need, it remains fairly exciting for a good while.

The way that opening plays out leaves Captain James Kirk (Chris Pine) in hot water with Starfleet Command, but an attack on a Starfleet facility in London has Kirk, Spock (Zachary Quinto), McCoy (Karl Urban), Uhura (Zoe Saldana) and the rest of the crew headed into Klingon space to track down John Harrison (Benedict Cumberbatch), the man responsible for the attack. Well, most of the crew - Scotty (Simon Pegg) was relieved after refusing to sign off on the new-model torpedoes that came on board with the new science officer (Alice Eve), and he's not the only one worried about just how far the mission Admiral Marcus (Peter Weller) has sent them on appears to be from the Federation's principles.

An act of terrorism spurring a government into dangerous military action that may run counter to its laws and values, huh? Well, Star Trek did always pride itself on its stories holding a sci-fi mirror up to the real world back in the day, and it's nice to see Into Darkness giving some attention to that part of the legacy after its predecessor was so much about rebuilding the universe respectfully (important and fun in its way, but undeniably inward-looking). Into Darkness has a fair amount of that continuity maintenance stuff, but it's at least got a foundation of a story that could be interesting beyond what it says about the series itself.

Full review on eFilmCritic.

SPOILERS! ALSO: EXTREME NERDERY

As I left the movie, a question crossed my mind: Does the highly-secretive J.J. Abrams realize that he's made a movie where thousands of people die because someone is worried about spoilers?

It's maybe not as direct a connection as I thought it was when old-Spock popped up and told new-Spock that he had avoided sharing details of the future because he didn't want to change the latter's destiny, only to soon see the ship Khan had stolen, the U.S.S. Vengeance (yeah, that's a little on-the-nose) plow through San Francisco, toppling buildings, crushing Alcatraz (a bit bitter about a certain show's failure, J.J.?), etc. I didn't like the latter part anyway - beyond seeming as crass and poorly-placed as the destruction of London in G.I. Joe 2, the big action scene continued with the city looking like this massive disaster wasn't taking place, with none of the CGI people and extras appearing to break stride despite the fact that a starship just fell out of the sky and wiped out a huge chunk of the city- but it's the other half that really bugged me.

It bugged me in part because I hate "destiny". Aside from how invoking it is a cheap way for writers to give something more import than it rightly deserves, it's un-American; we're supposed to earn our positions through the strength of our labor and the sweat on our brows, right? And if it's un-American, it's most certainly un-Vulcan; can't you practically hear Spock dismissing it as a romantic, illogical notion that prevents people from seeking real solutions because they are too focused on a silly superstition?

But in this more specific case, I wonder just what Spock has kept mum about. Is the Doomsday Machine going to consume entire Federation worlds because old-Spock is worried about "destiny", just to name one threat the Enterprise faced during the five-year mission? Is he not going to give Earth warning about V'ger, or let them know that finding some humpback whales might be a good idea? It appears Kronos's moon has already exploded in this timeline (perhaps as a result of the Klingons trying to reverse-engineer Nero's 24th-century Romulan mining ship), but there's still the Borg, the Cardassian Wars, and so much more he could prevent.

And by the movie's logic, he absolutely should be trying to. That is, after all, the theme of the entire movie: When you see a chance to do good, save lives, and help people, you take it. The movie starts with new-Spock lowering himself into an exploding volcano to save the residents of a planet they were surveying, and then Kirk ignoring the Prime Directive to save his friend. Scotty won't back down from his concerns about the torpedoes and later undertakes a clandestine mission off the books, Carol Marcus hacks her way into the Enterprise crew, and pretty much the entire bridge crew pressures Kirk into doing the right thing rather than blindly following orders. Old-Spock holding back is completely counter to its philosophy, and it's a shame he's not called on it.

Of course, he could have been sharing information with Starfleet and just not telling his younger self and friends about it; that would certainly explain why Starfleet had found the Botany Bay and had Khan defrosted long enough to work on stuff for them well before the time when the Enterprise discovered it in the original timeline's "Space Seed". Then, he could have presented that as a counter-argument in favor of the Prime Directive and the like, that by altering the natural order of events, he had helped precipitate this crisis. The movie doesn't get into this, though, even though it's potentially the most interesting question in the movie, science-fictionally.

And wondering how Khan Noonian Singh is running around sort of ignores the question of just how much he's Khan in name only. Overlook the lack of any sort of resemblance between Ricardo Montalban and Benedict Cumberbatch (although the guy the producers originally wanted, Benicio Del Toro, would have been much closer), this Khan is just kind of boring. He's intense and angry and not much else. Where's the charm of Montalban's Khan that seduced this ship's historian, and the grandiosity? He was brought back for the movies because he was fun to watch, which isn't really the case here. Now, sure, circumstances are different - this is a laser-focused Khan putting the fate of his genetically-engineered peers first, executing a plan that doesn't seem to make sense at all (he'd have to predict a lot to figure on Kirk bringing his people to him, and I don't think anyone's that smart) rather than using what resources he has to improvise, but even if that makes sense, it's still a mistake: The fun of both "Space Seed" and The Wrath of Khan is that both Khan and Kirk are smart, cunning warriors both on a battlefield and in sizing opponents up personally. Those things are what made him the closest thing James T. Kirk has to a nemesis, and they're sorely missing.

Instead - and this may be the film's biggest sin - Abrams and company just rely on name recognition. Khan is an alpha villain because we know Khan is an alpha villain. Similarly, two of the biggest moments in the finale - the admittedly clever role-reversal of Kirk being temporarily killed as he tries to stabilize the warp core (in a Kirkishly physical manner, as opposed to Spock's methodical work in Star Trek II) and Spock screaming Khan's name - rely on the audience knowing the previous material, and I kind of think they shouldn't. 2009's Star Trek took great pains to rebuild the franchise as something that could be approached fresh because the fifty years of accumulated history no longer mattered, and suddenly going back to the "prior experience required" mode is, I think, a real mistake.

!SRELIOPS

Now, I admit, these are things that basically are only going to really jump out at someone who has followed the franchise for thirty years and also has a tendency to pull stories apart to see how they work - so, basically, me. But I do think that people notice these things, and that's why I hope that when the next Star Trek movie is done for the fiftieth anniversary, they take it as a chance to truly get back to basics: Adventure in deep space with great effects and a smile, no continuity necessary.

This Fall in TV 2013: Sifting through what the networks will inflict upon us this fall

It's weird - I feel like I'm watching less and less TV, but the DVR still fills up pretty darn quickly. Some of it's because a fair chunk of stuff on cable is pretty good - BBC America and FX, especially. Some of it's just because everything I watch is in HD now and takes up more space. Whatever the reason, I'm watching enough attentively to give some thought to how I want it organized. And so, even though I'm a couple years from doing this on Home Theater Forum (memo to self: modernize links on sidebar), I still like doing overviews.

As per usual, the information comes from The Futon Critic. The bolded selections are the things I plan on watching, the italicized ones I'm considering sampling, and comments follow.

SUNDAY

07:00 - ABC - American's Funniest Home Videos
07:00 - CBS - 60 Minutes
07:00 - Fox - NFL Overrun
07:00 - NBC - Football Night in America

07:30 - Fox - The OT

08:00 - ABC - Once Upon a Time
08:00 - CBS - The Amazing Race
08:00 - Fox - The Simpsons
08:00 - NBC - Sunday Night Football

08:30 - Fox - Bob's Burgers

09:00 - ABC - Revenge
09:00 - CBS - The Good Wife
09:00 - Fox - Family Guy

09:30 - Fox - American Dad

10:00 - ABC - Betrayal
10:00 - CBS - The Mentalist

* I'm kind of surprised that ABC's not putting SHIELD here, although if Once Upon a Time is doing well enough to rate a spin-off, they might as well not mess with the night. It is kind of strange to see so much stability on one night, especially one so important. Although, with it being the most-watched night of the week, maybe there's just enough audience to go around.


MONDAY

08:00 - ABC - Dancing with the Stars
08:00 - CBS - How I Met Your Mother
08:00 - CW - Hart of Dixie
08:00 - Fox - Bones
08:00 - NBC - The Voice

08:30 - CBS - We Are Men

09:00 - CBS - 2 Broke Girls
09:00 - CW - Beauty and the Beast
09:00 - Fox - Sleepy Hollow

09:30 - CBS - Mom

10:00 - ABC - Castle
10:00 - CBS - Hostages
10:00 - NBC - The Blacklist

* Man, does Sleepy Hollow look dumb. And yet, Fox is apparently giving it a big push.

* Nice cast on We Are Men (Jerry O'Connell, Kal Penn, Tony Shalhoub). A bit worrying that they're all in supporting roles.

* Hostages looks to be the first of a trend of self-contained series popping up this year, set to run 15 episodes, presumably with the idea of turning a lot of the cast over next year, 24-style.

* The Blacklist is described as an "action thriller" starring James Spader as a most-wanted criminal who turns state's evidence. The pilot is directed by Joe Carnahan, so that's got potential.


TUESDAY

08:00 - ABC - Marvel's Agents of SHIELD
08:00 - CBS - NCIS
08:00 - CW - The Originals
08:00 - Fox - Dads
08:00 - NBC - The Biggest Loser

08:30 - Fox - Brooklyn Nine-Nine

09:00 - ABC - The Goldbergs
09:00 - CBS - NCIS: Los Angeles
09:00 - CW - Supernatural
09:00 - Fox - New Girl
09:00 - NBC - The Voice results

09:30 - ABC - Trophy Wife
09:30 - Fox - The Mindy Project

10:00 - ABC - Lucky 7
10:00 - CBS - Person of Interest
10:00 - NBC - Chicago Fire

* The very idea that there's something like SHIELD out there seems crazy to me - an in-continuity tie-in to an ongoing movie series? Honestly, the fact that Marvel's cranking out two interconnected superhero movies per year is strange enough. And now this. Go figure.

* I liked Michael Shur's "Fire Joe Morgan" (under the name Ken Tremendous) blog when it was a thing, and enjoy him talking sports, but never got interested in any of his TV work. Brooklyn Nine-Nine might change that; it's got some folks I like, especially Andre Braugher. Trophy Wife has a nice cast too, with Malin Ackerman in the title role and support from Bradley Whitford and Natalie Morales, and since I miss The Middlemen and The Good Guys...

* Hands up, folks who saw Supernatural running nine years, especially considering the showrunner stepped back after they finished the first storyline after five years. ... Hands down, liars.


WEDNESDAY

08:00 - ABC - The Middle
08:00 - CBS - Survivor
08:00 - CW - Arrow
08:00 - Fox - The X Factor
08:00 - NBC - Revolution

08:30 - ABC - Back in the Game

09:00 - ABC - Modern Family
09:00 - CBS - Criminal Minds
09:00 - CW - The Tomorrow People
09:00 - NBC - Law & Order: Special Victims Unit

09:30 - ABC - Super Fun Night

10:00 - ABC - Nashville
10:00 - CBS - CSI: Crime Scene Investigation
10:00 - NBC - Ironside

* I managed two episodes of Revolution before I couldn't handle the bad science.

* The Tomorrow People could be interesting, although it doesn't appear to have anything to do with the two previous shows with that name. Ironside is obviously a new version of the Raymond Burr series. I'm not a big fan of Blair Underwood, but a new mystery series interests me.


THURSDAY

08:00 - ABC - Once Upon a Time in Wonderland
08:00 - CBS - The Big Bang Theory
08:00 - CW - The Vampire Diaries
08:00 - Fox - The X Factor Results
08:00 - NBC - Parks & Recreation

08:30 - CBS - The Millers
08:30 - NBC - Welcome to the Family

09:00 - ABC - Grey's Anatomy
09:00 - CBS - The Crazy Ones
09:00 - CW - Reign
09:00 - Fox - Glee
09:00 - NBC - Sean Saves the World

08:30 - CBS - Two and a Half Men
09:30 - NBC - The Michael J. Fox Show

10:00 - ABC - Scandal
10:00 - CBS - Elementary
10:00 - NBC - Parenthood

* Hey, Elementary has been pretty good! They did a pretty nice job of establishing their version of Holmes & Watson and then bringing in stuff from the canon as the series went on. I'm pleased.

* Aw, I was kind of hoping that Super Clyde, the show with Rupert Grint as a would-be superhero and Stephen Fry as his butler/sidekick, would be paired with The Big Bang Theory. Instead, CBS and NBC split a night of sitcoms with nifty casts: The Crazy Ones has Robin Williams and Sarah Michelle Gellar; The Michael J. Fox show is self-explanatory; and The Millers has Will Arnett, Beau Bridges, and Margo Martindale. Selfishly, I kind of hope The Millers and Michael J. Fox are cancelled so that The Americans can have Martindale back and The Good Wife can reclaim Fox.


FRIDAY

08:00 - ABC - Last Man Standing
08:00 - CBS - Undercover Boss
08:00 - CW - The Carrie Diaries
08:00 - Fox - Junior Masterchef
08:00 - NBC - Dateline NBC

08:30 - ABC - The Neighbors

09:00 - ABC - Shark Tank
09:00 - CBS - Hawaii Five-0
09:00 - CW - American's Next Top Model
09:00 - Fox - Sleepy Hollow reruns
09:00 - NBC - Grimm

10:00 - ABC - 20/20
10:00 - CBS - Blue Bloods
10:00 -NBC - Dracula

* Junior Masterchef creeps me the heck out. Who the heck wants to expose kids to Gordon Ramsey?


SATURDAY

08:00 - ABC - Saturday Night College Football
08:00 - CBS - Repeats (Comedy)
08:00 - Fox - Sports Saturday
08:00 - NBC - Repeats

08:00 - CBS - Repeats (Comedy)

09:00 - CBS - Repeats (Crime)
09:00 - NBC - Repeats

10:00 - CBS - 48 Hours Mystery
10:00 - NBC - Repeats

11:00 - Fox - Animation Domination High-Def

* Animation Domination includes an Axe Cop series. In.


THE BENCH - ABC
Killer Women
Mind Games
Mixology
The Quest
Resurrection

* Steve Zahn and Christian Slater is a nice cast in Mind Games; of the rest, Resurrection looks kind of interesting, but it's an ongoing-mystery that will be stretched out forever.


THE BENCH - CBS
Friends with Better Lives
Intelligence (tentatively Monday 10pm)
Mike & Molly
Reckless

* CBS isn't cool, but you don't have to be when people just keep watching.


THE BENCH - CW
Famous in 12
Nikita
The 100
Star-Crossed

* Apparently, Nikita is coming back because the head of the CW figures it's worth giving a show that lasted a few years a short season to wrap things up as long as they're still programming Fridays. I guess that can help build some brand loyalty.

* Two youth-oriented sci-fi series in The 100 and Star-Crossed, which is interesting, as the thing they're most likely to replace is The Tomorrow People. If at first you don't succeed...


THE BENCH - FOX
Almost Human (tentatively Monday 8pm)
American Idol (tentatively Wednesday & Thursday 8pm)
Enlisted (tentatively Friday 9:30pm)
The Following (tentatively Monday 9pm)
Gang Related
Murder Police
Raising Hope (tentatively Friday 9pm)
Rake (tentatively Thursday 9pm)
Surviving Jack
24
Us & Them
Wayward Pines

* Fox has some of the moves planned as "late fall" - Almost Human bumping Bones to Friday, where it will be joined by Raising Hope and Enlisted. So, no blaming baseball when the expensive sci-fi series with a nice pedigree (the Fringe crew, director Brad Anderson) doesn't happen.

* They're also apparently considering the full-year season again (something they did a lot of in their early years) - Gang Related, Wayward Pines, and the return of 24 are all being planned to start in early May and run into the summer. Interested in all of them - 24 will apparently be real-time but skipping hours, Gang Related is directed by Allen Hughes with a neat cast, and Wayward Pines is coming from M. Night Shamalayn, who still interests me.

* Us & Them is Jason Ritter and Alexis Bledel, and this sounds like a nifty pairing.


THE BENCH - NBC
About a Boy (tentatively Tuesday 9pm)
American Dream Builders (tentatively Sunday 8pm)
Believe (tentatively Sunday 9pm)
Celebrity Apprentice (?)
Chicago PD
Crisis (tentatively Sunday 10pm)
Crossbones (tentatively Friday 10pm)
The Family Guide (tentatively Tuesday 9:30pm)
Food Fighters
Hannibal (?)
The Million Second Quiz
The Night Shift
Saturday Night Live repeats (tentatively Saturday 10pm)
The Sing-Off
Undateable

* Good lord, but is NBC a mess - they haven't decided whether to bring a couple shows back, they've got a bunch of unscripted shows coming, and almost as many interesting pilots with interesting people. Still, it looks like an almost-complete relaunch after football and the Olympics.

* Believe comes from J.J. Abrams and Alfonso Cuaron, with Cuaron actually writing and directing the pilot, so... Yeah, I'll take a look at a show from the guy behind Children of Men and Gravity. A super-powered 10-year-old girl in the lead is at least an unusual hook, too.

* Crisis is going to be self-contained, right? Anyway, it's got a very nice cast and Phillip Noyce on the pilot.

* Crossbones is John Malkovich as Blackbeard. Sounds insane, but I will take it.


So, it looks like I'll still have a fair amount of time to see movies, although there are enough interesting things coming to keep one's eye out for.

Saturday, May 18, 2013

Black Rock

Another week, another independent horror/thriller playing in theater #5 at Fresh Pond Apple Cinemas, just like last week. Not that I'm complaining; I like that someone is getting these movies out there, and now that Apple seems to be pretty much independent, maybe it's something the new owners like doing and they'll stick with it so enough for it to get some traction. There were only four of us in the 7:45pm show Friday night, so I don't know how how quickly it's building. It's the kind of thing that could use a little bootstrapping, I think - make sure there's a preview for Black Rock in front of Aftershock and one for American Mary in front of Black Rock, and maybe this starts building to something.

Of course, the issue might be finding 35mm previews to attach; I've got no idea how many of those studios send out these days, or whether multiplexes just have to settle for what they get attached to prints. Heck, for that matter, I'm mildly curious about getting previews for digital projection is like - do studios ship them on hard drives, or do they each have an exhibitors-only server where previews are available for download? Do links to previews clutter a theater manager's email like so much spam? Or is it mostly stuff that's "attached" to the DCPs, or at least stored on the same hard drive.

However it works, I figure it couldn't hurt to make indie/foreign genre stuff part of Apple Cinemas' identity and really build it as something you're not getting at any of the fancier multiplexes. After all, with the FEI places nearby and other screens just a little way down the Red Line, it couldn't hurt to have an identity beyond the place that plays Bollywood movies.

Black Rock

* * ¼ (out of four)
Seen 17 May 2013 in Apple Cinemas #5 (first-run, 35mm)

When building a survival-in-the-wild thriller, most writers start with something like Black Rock and then add stuff - elaborate kills, extra plot twists, maybe some sort of weird backdrop. That's the usual path, but the makers of this movie come from an indie/minimalist background, so what they come up with is simple but quirky and kind of messy like their comedies and dramas. It's an odd combination of pro-grade talent and do-it-yourself technique.

Things start with friends Sarah (Kate Bosworth) and Louise (Lake Bell) heading to the small Maine town where they grew up for a weekend on an island where they used to camp as kids. Lou is surprised to see Abby (Katie Aselton) waiting for them; though the three used to be tight, there's a reason Abby and Lou haven't spoken in years. Sarah convinces them to stick around, and while seeing a group of hunters on the island is a bit of a surprise, Derek (Jay Paulson) is the kid brother of one of their old classmates and his buddies Henry (Will Bouvier) and Alex (Anslem Richardson) seem okay, if standoffish. That won't last.

Aselton directs and also supplied the story that husband Mark Duplass fleshed out into a screenplay, and that story is not complicated at all: What the audience can suss out about Sarah, Louise, and Abby in their first scene together is pretty much all they need to know, and the dynamic with the guys is even simpler. It's just enough to get things rolling and give the cast some room to work, but there's a difference between simple and oversimplified that Aselton and company generally stay on the right side of.

Full review on eFilmCritic.

Friday, May 17, 2013

Next Week in Tickets: Films playing Boston 17 May - 23 May 2013

It's midnight as I start writing this, but I've got a burger's worth of energy in me and want to have the next week's movies sorted out by the time I go to bed in time to get up tomorrow morning. Can the relatively limited slate help me out there?

  • Having just one thing really open wide makes it a bit easier; for the most part, if something is leaving a multiplex, it's to make room for Star Trek Into Darkness. That would be the follow-up to the pretty darn great Trek refresh from 2009, with added Benedict Cumberbatch as the villain and Alice Eve as Carol Marcus. It grabs 2D and 3D screens at Somerville, Boston Common (including Imax), Fenway (including RPX), and Apple Cinemas (which I guess is what we call Fresh Pond now, even if there's no signage yet); it appears to be 3D-only at Jordan's Furniture. That's a bit of a bummer, since pieces of the movie were shot with the big IMAX cameras, but it's not native 3D; here's hoping that the Aquarium will pick it up on genuine horizontally-fed 70mm film sometime later this summer.

    It's not quite the only thing opening at the multiplexes; Boston Common gives a screen to The Iceman, which played IFFBoston a couple of weeks ago but was sort of out of the way because it was the only thing at the Revere Hotel. It tells the story of a killer-for-hire (Michael Shannon) who kept his actual job secret from his wife (Winona Ryder) and family. One screen there and one at Kendall Square. Apple Cinemas has some indie horror for the second week in a row, with Black Rock grabbing a screen. Katie Aselton directs and stars alongside Lake Bell and Kate Bosworth as three old friends who go to an island off the coast of Maine only to wind up hunted. Could be interesting; Aselton's The Freebie was much better than it had any reason to be and indie favorite Mark Duplass worked on the script. It's not clear how trustworthy Apple's website is, but it looks like they're planning on making tweeners like this (too small for the downtown multiplexes, not tony enough for the boutique houses) a regular thing, with American Mary on the schedule for the end of the month. Worth encouraging!
  • Kendall Square, as mentioned, is opening The Iceman; they're also getting another couple of IFFBoston selections. Stories We Tell (which also opens at the Coolidge) is an intriguing-looking documentary from Sarah Polley, which focuses on her digging into her own family history upon learning certain things about her mother. Polley's done a lot of interesting things in a career that started young, and I've heard great things about this one. I can vouch for Sightseers personally; I saw it while on vacation last December and Ben Wheatley's latest black comedy is as hilarious as it is dark. It's listed as having a one-week booking, so get there.

    They're also getting a movie that didn't play IFFBoston; Love Is All You Need features Pierce Brosnan as a widower living in Denmark who falls in with the mother of his son's wife-to-be (Trine Dyrholm) as they head to the wedding in Italy. It should look nice, at the very least. Speaking of pretty, there are screenings of the fully-restored Elizabeth Taylor Cleopatra on Wednesday the 22nd. As it's about four hours long, there will only be two screenings (1pm and 7pm), displacing The Reluctant Fundamentalist for the day.
  • Following a sort of chain, The Coolidge Corner Theatre also gets Stories We Tell, with Tuesday's 7pm showing an "Off the Couch" screening introduced by members of the Boston Psychoanalytic Society who will discuss it afterward. They also open another documentary, Scatter My Ashes at Bergdorf's, that looks inside the Bergdorf Goodman clothing store. It bounces between all four screens over the course of the week, so check where it's playing before you go so you know whether there are 500 seats available or 14 (The Source Family stays in small rooms, Stories We Tell in big ones, with Mud bouncing around too).

    One of the midnight screenings changes depending on the day as well - Kiss of the Damned plays in the screening room Friday night and in moviehouse 2 on Sunday. That one's a new release with beautiful vampiresses whose world is turned upside down when one falls for a mortal man. It's on a smaller screen Friday because that's when the monthly screening of The Room plays on a larger one (I get the impression that the theater is pretty sick of it, but people keep coming). The main midnight is Tank Girl, which I remember as being pretty awesome, and nobody even knew who Jet Girl Naomi Watts was yet. Also: Lori Petty as the title character and Ice-T as a kangaroo-man. 35mm.

    In less-insane (but still fantatical) special engagements, the Goethe-Institut German film on Sunday morning is Summer Love, with Nina Hoss (from Barbara) as a woman who, having just moved in with the man she loves, wakes up several years in the past with a second chance at her first love. Monday night's Science On Screen program is Terminator 2: Judgment Day in genuine 35mm. Bonus: Thad Starner will be around to introduce it and talk wearable technology afterward; he coined the term "augmented reality" and is one of the guys working on Google Glass.
  • the Brattle Theatre will only be open during the weekend; they'll be spending Monday through Thursday installing that gear we helped them buy with their Kickstarter (DCP projection, new HVAC system). Writer Neil Gaiman & musician Amanda Palmer were involved in that, so the theater is there's for the weekend. There will be double features of movies based on Gaiman's Coraline and Stardust Friday night and Saturday/Sunday afternoon, and double features of movies they'd like to share with each other and us. Saturday, Neil introduces Peter Greenaway's Drowning by Numbers (archival 35mm) and Amanda introduces Alejandro Jodorowsky's Santa Sangre (also archive 35mm). On Sunday, Neil's movie is Lindsay Anderson's If... (digital) while Amanda chooses Philippe de Broca's King of Hearts. Weekend passes are available, too.
  • All Things Horror's monthly screening is on Saturday the 18th, and while it could be lost in the shuffle of their recent charity screening, Dr. Franeknstein's Wax Museum of the Hungry Dead looks like fun; it's shot locally and looks to have plenty of sex, gore, and comedy.
  • The MFA's film program is still rocking the Samurai Cinema, with Rashomon on Friday, Three Outlaw Samurai and Taboo on Saturday, Yojimbo at various times on Friday, Saturday, and Sunday, and Seven Samurai on Thursday the 23rd. They've also got three screenings as part of Together Boston: "Sneaker Museum Presents Style Wars Friday afternoon, Wrong Saturday afternoon, and We Are Modeselektor on Sunday afternoon.
  • The Harvard Film Archive has the second week of Revelations of a Fallen World - The Cinema of Arturo Pirpstein this weekend. Ripstein and frequent collaborator Paz Alicia Garciadiego will be present for the Saturday, Sunday, and Monday evening shows, and some of the programs will be unsubtitled; follow the link for more information.
  • The Regent Theatre has been hosting a play for the past few weeks, but starts mixing their shows up again this weekend, including some film. They've got two traveling short-film festivals coming this week, with the 4th Annual Ciclismo Classico Bike Travel Film Festival on Monday and the "LOL Laugh Out Loud" Short Film Festival on Thursday. In between - though it's not listed on their website - Gathr will be have the first screening in a weekly preview series there onTuesday the 21st. The first screening is What Maisie Knew, with Julianne Moore and Steve Coogan as a couple whose divorce is shown from the perspective of their seven-year-old daughter.
  • The Arlington Capitol isn't opening any new movies on Friday, but they will be picking up The Place Beyond the Pines as it leaves Somerville and The Company You Keep as it leaves Kendall Square. They're also one of a whole bunch of theaters opening The Hangover Part III on Wednesday; here's hoping the screenwriters' original plans of killing the characters off goes through!


My plans? Star Trek, Black Rock, What Maisie Knew, probably Kiss of the Damned and/or Stories We Tell.