Saturday, May 17, 2025

Sew Torn

Huh, looks like I lost the Alamo order card I took my notes on, so while I can tell you that's writer/director/editor Freddy Macdonald on the left, I forget the name of the person on the right asking the questions. Macdonald described him as the film's CFO, and I'll bet everyone else could remember his name because it was a sort of odd screening - I feel like just about everyone else in the theater knew Macdonald or someone in the production, if not being actual family, and Q&A was added to to this show because this was the day most folks could make it even though it was only scheduled for Saturday when booked.

Kind of fun, if mostly kind of chatty, like everyone mostly wanted their favorite stories retold. They were fun stories, from how Freddy is actually Fred Macdonald V, and his co-writer "Fred" is Fred IV; I gather Fred III was either in the audience or watching remotely. The folks in rural Sweden were, apparently, enormously accommodating: The cute little car in the movie is something Freddy's mother saw while her own was in the shop there, the asked the garage owner for the owner and asked her if they could use it, back in 2020 or so when the original proof-of-concept short was shot, and they re-used it again in the feature. But, also, the owner of a small shop was very excited to have it blown up for a movie. Apparently, if you've got a good pyro crew, you can basically replace the windows a couple of times and do this with very little damage!

So, this movie is booked through Wednesday at the Drafthouse in the seaport, and not a lot of tickets sold for most of the non-Q&A screenings. Monday to Wednesday are matinees, because heaven forbid a small movie booked for a week get some word-of-mouth (a problem with both Alamon and AMC, locally), so jump on it if thread-based Rube Goldberg action sounds good to you (although, thinking about it, I wonder whether bringing it out the same weekend as a Final Destination movie is canny or a way to get it overlooked).


Sew Torn

* * * (out of four)
Seen 16 May 2025 in Alamo Drafthouse Seaport #3 (first-run, laser DCP)
Where to stream it (when available) , or get the soundtrack at Amazon

Sew Torn basically has one trick, but its makers are really exceptional at executing that trick. Plenty good enough to make up for anything else that might be wobbly, at least.

After a number of contradictory flash-forwards, the audience meets "Mobile Seamstress" Barbara Duggen (Eve Connolly), who has inherited the shop her mother started and the apartment above it, and it's going about as well as specialty retail does these days, with no walk-ins and just one appointment, to make some final alterations to the wedding dress of Grace Vessler (Caroline Goodall), whose third marriage has to be perfect. On the way back to the shop, she encounters a drug deal gone bad, both buyer (Calum Worthy) and seller (Thomas Douglas) crawling along the road to reach guns and a bag of money. She figures she has three choices - commit the perfect crime, call the police, or just drive off - and the film shows the audience each of them, including how the buyer's gangster father (John Lynch) shows up to potentially ruin everything.

The first of these three alternative possibilities is wobbly as heck, just full of moments where the viewer asks themselves why Barbara would do this rather than just about anything else, at least within the movie. This was the core of the original short, per the Q&A, which makes sense; that probably only needed the high concept of a master seamstress committing a crime with her highly specialized skills, positioning needles at various points and stringing threads through them so that a tug will trigger a whole series of improbable actions. The execution is terrific, but it doesn't exactly fit in a story.

Happily, the story built around it is pretty good and told well visually at that. The early scenes suggest Barbara as an insect caught in the spiderweb her mother had spun before dying, quite literally - it's not just that there are elaborate bits of stringwork dangling about a foot from the ceiling, but they integrate the mother's trademark embroideries with pull-string analog sound clips, full of words and memories that are no longer as inspiring. It widens to reveal a more human sort of desperation as the only life she knows is falling apart, even if she kind of hates it. The later alternatives, where she had to plot some sort of escape with just a little string, are maybe more sensible and resonant even if the thread-based antics aren't quite so clever. They benefit from the exposition in the first piece, but they develop who she is as a personality and benefit more from lining Calum Worthy's Joshua is her photographic negative.

That said, the first bit gambit is worth the price of admission itself, a deliciously elaborate setting up of a Rube Goldberg machine that doesn't quite make sense until it's triggered. This sort of creation is the sort of thing that either has a grin slowly spread or makes one's eyes roll, and that's going to be how the rest of the movie goes for you, because you've got three or four more coming. Macdonald is not looking to give Barbara bunches of different skills, and that first act locks the audience into a specific problem-solving place whenever danger appears. I, personally, love this sort of nonsense, but can see why others might find it repetitive or not entertaining after the first go-round.

It works in large part because Eve Connolly nails Barbara's disappointed savant nature and peels it back without making what's underneath drastically different. Macdonald makes a specific choice to have Barbara alone and not speaking with anyone else or even to herself for long stretches (ignore the short, repeated bits of narration), and there's something very striking about how she seems diminished before getting the chance to show her fierce intelligence. On the other hand, I like that there's something very hollow about John Lynch's gangster; he's dangerous and ruthless but not compelling for it, just a perilous obstacle to be avoided if possible and thwarted if necessary. K Callan's part as the local law enforcement who is also notary and justice of the peace is concentrated in the middle, but is great, wry and given the chance to describe how picturesque little towns can drain you dry before Barbara is ready, smart and by-the-book enough to be an adversary when she could have tipped all the way into villain or mother-figure territory.

The film is so specific in its eccentricity that it may not be to all tastes, and even those of us who go for it might not find it hitting our exact sweet spot. I found it enjoyably odd and appealing for just how its intricate set-pieces feel more like close-up magic than bombast, a fun break in the middle of the large-scale blockbusters.

Friday, May 16, 2025

Next Week in Tickets: Films playing Boston 16 May 2025 - 22 May 2024

Looking at the previews and screen counts for the week's new releases and thinking that's more demand than I would expect for them.
  • For instance, Final Destination Bloodlines is getting a lot of screens, premium and otherwise, 15 years after the last entry, long enough that Death is coming for all the descendants of folks who cheated him/it in earlier episodes. It's at the Capitol, Fresh Pond, Jordan's Furniture (Imax), CinemaSalem, Boston Common (including Imax Laser & Dolby Cinema & Spanish subtitles), Causeway Street, Kendall Square, the Seaport (including Dolby Atmos), SouthBay (including Imax Xenon & Dolby Cinema), and Assembly Row (including Imax Laser & Dolby Cinema).

    Hurry Up Tomorrow, meanwhile, heavily plays up that it's the new one from Trey Edward Shults, who doesn't seem to be a household name, but, hey, his movie about a young woman (Jenna Ortega) kidnapping The Weeknd (Abel Tesfaye apparently playing himself) has a trippy-enough preview to be interesting. It plays Fresh Pond, The Embassy, Boston Common, Causeway Street, Kendall Square, the Seaport, South Bay, Assembly Row, and Arsenal Yards.

    After what seems like an unusually generous amount of previews, Friendship has a limited opening before going wider next week. It stars Tim Robinson as a socially awkward man who makes friends with his cool new neighbor (Paul Rudd) but apparently has trouble when they don't become or stay very close. It opens this week at the Coolidge, Boston Common, and Kendall Square.

    Things Like This, a romantic comedy about two guys named Zack falling for each other, plays Fresh Pond and Boston Common. Drama Bound, which has been bouncing around the festival circuit since December 2023, plays at Fresh Pond.

    Aztek World Tour "Towards the LiIght: Will to Power" has an encore at Boston Common Saturday. The Wiz has shows Sunday & Wednesday at Boston Common, Kendall Square, South Bay, Assembly Row, and Arsenal Yards; Saturday & Wednesday at the Seaport. There's a Monday "Scream Unseen" preview at Boston Common, Causeway Street, South Bay, and Assembly Row. 28 Days Later plays Wednesday at the Coolidge, the Seaport, and Assembly Row. There are "fan event" previews for Lilo & Stitch in Dolby Cinema at Boston Common, South Bay, and Assembly Row and Mission Impossible: The FInal Reckoning in Imax at Boston Common, South Bay, at Assembly Row.
  • The Coolidge Corner Theatre opens documentary Swamp Dogg Gets His Pool Painted; Swamp Dogg is a rock/R&B legend living in the L.A. suburbs with other music-making friends.

    Tangerine Dream midnights this weekend are Miracle Mile on Friday and Near Dark on 35mm Saturday; The Room also plays the midnight shift on Friday. Peggy Sue Got Married on Saturday afternoon is the final Coolidge Award show in tribute to Francis Ford Coppola (I guess rather than doing a big announcement and ceremony they just worked it into the Megalopolis shows). Sunday is busy, with Franz Kafka romance The Glory of Life for the Goethe-Institut German film matinee, a special Panorama screening of Sinners with Cliff Notez discussing its musica and history, and Weathering with You for Ani-Mania. Monday has a digital restoration of PIcnic at Hanging Rock with pre-film seminar le by Lesley University's Ingrid Stobbe; Tuesday has another digital restoration and speaker, with folks from The Theater Offensive discussing Wong Kar-Wai's Happy Together; Wednesday has an Ani-Mania show of Belladonna of Sadness; and Thursday has a Rewind! Screening of 10 Things I Hate About You, plus the kickoff to the WBUR Festival with speakers for The Social Network
  • New South Asian movies at Apple Fresh Pond include Tamil-languge drama Maama, Tamil-language horror-comedy sequel DD Next Level, Nepali romance Unko Sweater, Malayalam-language comedy-adventure Padakkalam (through Tuesday). A re-release of Telugu-language fantasy-comedy Yamadonga plays Saturday and Sunday, Tamil-language thriller Eleven plays Sunday, and Nepali-language historical drama Jaar plays Wednesday, probably as the start of a week-long run though Apple isn't showing dates from Thursday on, as per usual. If you can make it out to the Liberty Tree Mall in Danvers (or live nearby), Telugu-language thriller 23 (Iravai Moodu) opens there.

    Tamil-language feel-good movie Tourist Family continues at Fresh Pond; #Single continues at Boston Common and Causeway Street.

    Haitian thriller July 7 opens at South Bay.

    Wow, is it Studio Ghibli Fest time already? Apparently so, as Kiki's Delivery Service plays Boston Common, Assembly Row on Saturday (dubbed), Sunday (dubbed), Monday (subtitled), Tuesday (subtitled), Wednesday (dubbed). Demon Slayer The Movie: Mugen Train has encores at Boston Common, Kendall Square, the Seaport, South Bay, and Assembly Row Friday, Sunday, and Monday).

    Chinese thriller A Gilded Game continues at Causeway Street.

    Vietnamese movies Money Kisses and The Ancestral Home continue at South Bay.
  • The Somerville Theatre opens New Zealand drama We Were Dangerous, about the friendship between three girls in an isolated reform institution in 1954 (it's also in West Newton). They welcome Hungarian director Bálint Szimler to present his film Lesson Learned, about a new teacher and a transfer student both facing challenges in a fifth-grade classroom, on Saturday afternoon. The schedule also has two polar opposites for their F— the Nazis series, with Bedknobs and Boomsticks playing Sunday afternoon and a 35mm print of Downfall on Thursday evening. Frederick Wiseman documentary Public Housing plays Tuesday Evening.

    The Capitol Theatre picks up When Fall Is Coming.
  • The Brattle Theatre starts off the weekend with Love Story on 35mm for the Friday Film Matinee. They also have two new restorations: Compensation is a 1999 film telling the stories of Deaf African Americans at the beginning and end of the twenty-first century, playing Friday to Sunday and Tuesday, subtitled. Charles Burnett's Killer of Sheep plays Friday to Monday.

    Val Kilmer forever continues with MacGruber on Friday, 35mm matinees of Willow on Saturday & Sunday, Batman Forever on Monday, and a 35mm encore of Kiss Kiss Bang Bang on Tuesday. There's a special Revolutions Per Minute Fest "Behind the Scenes" show Sunday afternoon which features shorts by the curators who usually assembly other people's work. Reunion Week begins on Wednesday, with 2000's American Psycho playing that night and a 35mm print of 1950's Sunset Boulevard playing Thursday. Note that 1975's Jaws plays Friday to Sunday and is your only chance to catch it on 35mm this summer as Universal is farming it out to lesser institutions for the anniversary around the Fourth of July.
  • The Seaport Alamo has thriller Sew Torn, with Eve Connolly playing a seamstress whose latest house call has her in the middle of a drug deal gone wrong, playing once a day through at least Wednesday, with the shows Friday & Saturday night featuring writer/director Freddy Macdonald on-hand for a Q&A. They also have Dog Day Afternoon Sunday & Monday, a mystery preview on Monday, Cooley High on Tuesday, and a Crossroads Movie Party on Wednesday
  • The Boston Asian American Film Festival has two shows at ArtsEmerson's Paramount Theatre this weekend: Power, about the history of American policing, plays for free on Friday night, including a post=screening Q&A with filmmaker Yance Ford and others. The Truer History of the Chan Family, about a Chinese-American playwright trying to make hay out of his family's scandalous reputation and being corrected by their ghosts, plays Saturday afternoon with short "Ten Times Better" and post-film Q&A. They also sponsor the MOS screening of The Glassworker on Sunday.
  • The Harvard Film Archive wraps its spring semester with the end of its Satyajit Ray series: Days and Nights in the Forest on Friday evening and Sunday afternoon, The Adversary later Friday night, The Music Room and Charulata separately on Saturday, and finishing with The Big City on Sunday evening. After that, they're dark until mid-July, when they begin their annual deep dive.
  • WBUR kicks off a monthly "Set in Boston" film series at CitySpace with The Friends of Eddie Coyle, considered by many to be the best Boston movie ever. WBUR's Sean Burns will be in conversation with Jake Mulligan afterward.
  • Everything Everywhere All at Once has two free shows on The Museum of Science's Omni dome on Saturday (RSVP recommended), and The Glassworker has a special screening in association with the Boston Aisan American Film Festival on Sunday, with director Usman Riaz on hand and a panel afterward (it plays again on Saturday the 31st).
  • Belmont World Film wraps their 2025 series at the West Newton Theater on Monday with Irish Four Mothers, in which a young novelist must look after not only his own mother, but those of three of his friends, during an already-busy weekend. The Irish Film Festival co-presents, social worker Marybeth Duffy speaks, and there is a separately-ticketed reception featuring Irish cuisine at the nearby Flora's Wine Bar beforehand.
  • Landmark Kendall Square has an R-rated Monday Mystery Movie, Mamma Mia! for Tuesday's Meryl Streep selection, stand-up film Joe List: Small Ball on Wednesday.
  • The Museum of Fine Arts begins their annual Festival of FIlms From Japan on Thursday with Sunset Sunrise, about a Tokyo office worker who takes the opportunity of the Covid pandemic to move to a small coastal town where he can fish everyday, something the locals regard with suspicion. The series continues through 6 June.
  • Joe's Free Films is a bit behind on the summer programs, but the Coolidge is showing Josie and the Pussycats at the Allston Speedway on Wednesday.
  • The Embassy has Thunderbolts* and Hurry Up Tomorrow through Sunday. Disney's 1954 20,00 Leagues Under the Sea, with Kirk Douglas, James Mason, and Peter Lorre, is Monday's free community matinee.
  • The Lexington Venue is open Friday to Wednesday with On Swift Horses, The Shrouds, and The Ballad Of Wallis Island. The 2025 New York Dog FIlm Festival program plays Saturday morning, and they have a free matinee screening of The Killing on Sunday.

    The West Newton Cinema hosts the Global Cinema Flm Festival of Boston, with 10 documentary features and one shorts program playing between Friday and Sunday. Friday's The Treasure Hunter has a virtual Q&A, Saturday's Faithful Unto Death has an in-person Q&A, and most have video introductions from the filmmakers. The theater also opens We Were Dangerous and holds over Marcella, Thunderbolts*, The Penguin Lessons, Sinners, Secret Mall Apartment, and A Minecraft Movie. They are also the venue for Boston Jewish Film's screening Persona Non Grata on Wednesday (tickets via BJF's website), which tells the story of a Japanese diplomat in Lithuania torn between Japan's allegiance to Germany and the Jewish refugees looking for transit visas.

    Cinema Salem has Thunderbolts*, Sinners, Clown in a Cornfield, and Final Destination Bloodlines through Monday. On Saturday they have For Sale By Exorcist, a horror-comedy about a woman who flips houses after dispelling their spirits, plays Saturday night with director Melissa MaMartina and co-writer Chris LaMartina in person. There's a Whodunnit Watch party Monday night (rather than the usual Sunday). The Sea Wolf is the Wednesday Classic, with Weirdo Wednesdays down the hall. Clueless plays Thursday as part of a sponsored new "Girlies with Anniversaries" series.

    Supernatural thriller The Ruse opens at the Showcase in Woburn and the Liberty Tree Mall AMC in Danvers.
I'll probably do Sew Torn on Friday and We Were Dangerous soon after, maybe trying to grab stragglers alongside Hurry Up Tomorrow.

Friday, May 09, 2025

Next Week in Tickets: Films playing Boston 9 May 2025 - 15 May 2024

Ah, the week between major releases when a whole bunch of unusual stuff is just looking for one week on the big screen and maybe lucking into sleeper-hit status.
  • The week's big opening, I guess, is Shadow Force, featuring Kerry Washington and Omar Sy as spies who retired to raise a family being targeted by their former employer. It plays Boston Common, Causeway Street, the Seaport, South Bay, Assembly Row, and Arsenal Yards.

    Josh Hartnett seems to have found a nice niche in weird genre fair, starring in Fight or Flight as a buzzed mercenary on a plane full of assassins (including Marko Zaror) looking to take out him and the person he's supposed to escort to safety. It's at Fresh Pond, Boston Common, the Seaport, South Bay, and Assembly Row.

    Clown in a Cornfield is somehow the first theatrical film from Eli Craig, maker of Tucker and Dale Versus Evil, since that cult classic (he's done some TV and Netflix), and appears to be what it says on the tin, a slasher movie featuring the mascot of a town's long-shuttered main business. It's at Fresh Pond, CinemaSalem, Boston Common, Causeway Street, Kendall Square, the Seaport, South Bay, and Assembly Row.

    Does billing itself as being based on the story that inspired Shakespeare's play mean that musical Juliet & Romeo can have a happy ending? Whatever the case, it's got a nifty lineup of folks in supporting roles, and plays Fresh Pond and Boston Common.

    Swedish sci-fi adventure Watch the Skies, described as Amblin-ish and using new CGI techniques to match the characters' lips and faces to the English dub, plays Boston Common.

    Greek musician biography Stelios plays Arsenal Yards.

    There are sneak previews of Friendship (some with prerecorded Q&As) at the Coolidge, the Kendall, and Boston Common on Monday; a Hurry Up Tomorrow "fan event" at Fresh Pond, Boston Common (including Dolby Cinema), Causeway Street, the Kendall, South Bay (including Dolby Cinema), and Assembly Row (including Dolby Cinema) on Wednesday. Hung Up on a Dream: The Zombies Documentary (covering the band rather than the genre) plays at the Seaport on Tuesday and at The Regent Theatre and Kendall Square on Wednesday; K-Pop concert Ateez World Tour: Toward The Light - Will to Power plays Boston Common Wednesday. Both versions of The Karate Kid play this weekend ahead of the crossover, with both the 1984 edition and the 2010 edition playing at Boston Common and the Seaport on Saturday. The directors' cut of Kingdom of Heaven also plays Wednesday, at Boston Common, South Bay, and Assembly Row. Wednesday's "Halfway to Halloween" Blumhouse show at Boston Common is Ma.
  • The Coolidge Corner Theatre opens When Fall Is Coming, the latest from French director François Ozon, with Hélène Vincent as a grandmother who has retired to the countryside, expecting to spend the week with her granddaughter but instead connecting with a friend's paroled son.

    The Cooldige also gets a 70mm print of Sinners for the next two weeks, including a special screening on the 18th.

    Tangerine Dream continues to be the theme of the midnights, with Risky Business on Friday and Legend on Saturday, with Eraserhead also playing late Saturday night. There's a special "Coolidge Award" presentation of the Apocalypse Now "Final Cut" on Saturday afternoon; Ani-Mania shows of The Tale of the Princess Kaguya on Sunday afternoon and Vampire Hunter D on Thursday evening ; a Science On Screen presentation of 2 or 3 Things I Know About Her on Monday; Jeff Rapsis accompanying the 1920 The Mark of Zorro plus Open Screen (without Rapsis) on Tuesday; a New England Legacy program of five short documentaries from women in the 1970s on Wednesday with speakers; and a 35mm print of The Big Chill on Thursday
  • Landmark Kendall Square opens three independent films like it was pre-pandemic times this week. Lilly stars Patricia Clarkson as an Alabama factory supervisor who discovers she has been paid half of what men in similar jobs make and takes it to the Supreme Court. Black Tea stars Nina Melo as a woman who decides to start a new life in one of the few neighborhoods in China that has a substantial Black population, falling in love with the Chinese man who owns the tea shop where she works. Finally, they open Tom Dustin: Portrait of a Comedian, made by his friend Joe List and examine their friendship as List's career rises and Dustin plateaus. Tuesday's Meryl Streep movie at the Kendall is Death Becomes Her.
  • New Indian movies at Apple Fresh Pond include Telugu-language comedy #Single (also at Causeway Street & Boston Common) and Telugu-language horror-comedy Subham (through Sunday). Tamil-language feel-good movie Tourist Family, Telugu-langage action flick HIT: The 3rd Case (also at Causeway Street) are held over. Malayalam drama Thudarum returns for matinees Friday through Sunday, and Marathi-language elder romcom Gukland plays Sunday afternoon. Retro and Raid 2 continue at Boston Common.

    English-language Tibetan film Four Rivers Six Ranges plays two shows at Fresh Pond Saturday afternoon.

    Chinese high-finance thriller A Gilded Game, starring Andy Lau, Ono Ou, and Crystal Huang with prolific director Herman Yau behind the camera, plays Causeway Street. Trapped, also from Mainland China, stars White-K as one of three cops trying to hold off 44 bandits, and plays Boston Common. The Dumpling Queen also continues at Boston Common.

    Two Vietnamese movies open at South Bay: Money Kisses is a romantic comedy two sisters wooing billionaires, and The Ancestral Home has an internet influencer reunited with the ghost of her dead brother as their relatives fight over their late grandfather's house.

    A new 4K edition of anime Wolf Children plays Boston Common Sunday (subtitled), Monday (dubbed), and Tuesday (subtitled). Demon Slayer The Movie: Mugen Train, which was one of the surprise hits of the pandemic, returns to theaters Wednesday (and next Friday) at Boston Common, Kendall Square, the Seaport, South Bay, Assembly Row
  • The Brattle Theatre kicks off the weekend with Spaceballs on 35mm for the Friday Film Matinee. From Friday to Monday, they play the new restoration of Jean-Luc Godard's A Woman Is a Woman, although with a few exceptions: On Saturday afternoon, they welcome director Mira Nair to present her film The Namesake; and then on Sunday, one can celebrate Mother's Day in two different, unconventional ways: An early show of The Secret of NIMH or the now-traditional screening of Psycho later.

    Then for the rest of the week, they pick their Val Kilmer tribute up: Kill Me Again and Kiss Kiss Bang Bang on Tuesday, both on 35mm film; Thunderheart and The Island of Dr. Moreau on Wednesday, the latter on 35mm; plus Heat and Macgruebr on Thursday, the former on film.
  • The Seaport Alamo has an encore presentation of the Bjork: Cornucopia concert film on Friday, with Sight and Sound Magazine's top film, Jeanne Dielman, 23, Quai du Commerce, 1080 Bruxelles playing Saturday at 11am. Mamma Mia! plays twice on Sunday.
  • The Harvard Film Archive finishes their series spotlighting Osaka's Planet archive on Friday evening with archivist Yasui Yoshio in person and a 16mm print of Document of Collision: The Whiplashed Ones. After that, they have a Mother's Day MiniMarathon all weekend, with Almodovar's All About My Mother on Friday, Chantal Akerman's News From Home, Martin Scorsese's Alice Doesn't Live Here Anymore, and Bong Joon-ho's Mother on Saturday, John Cassevetes's A Woman Under the Influence and Michael Curitz's Mildred Pierce on Sunday, and Pier Paolo Pasolini's Mamma Roma on Monday. The films are free for HFA members, and all are 35mm prints except News From Home.
  • The Capitol Theatre picks up The Ballad of Wallis Island, and also has a "4th Wall" show featuring Upnow!, Warmachine, and Moss Boy with visuals by Digital Awareness on Saturday.

    The Somerville Theatre shows the local 48 Hour FIlm Project participants on Monday & Tuesday, then continues F— The Nazis with a 35mm print of Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade on Wednesday. There's also a 35mm member screening on Sunday, but I'm not blabbing what the email said if you're not on the list.
  • The Museum of Fine Arts screens Van Gogh: Poets and Lovers on Saturday afternoon and Everything Everywhere All at Once on Sunday.
  • The Museum of Science has upcoming Omni screenings of Everything Everywhere All at Once on Saturday the 17th and The Glassworker on the 31st of May
  • Movies at MIT has Being John Malkovich on Friday and Saturday evenings. As always, if you're not part of the MIT community, they'd appreciate an email at lsc-guest (at) MIT dot edu ahead of time.
  • Joe's Free Films has the first outdoor screening of the summer season with the Reel Rock Film Tour package at MIT Open Space Friday night.<.LI>

  • This week's entry in the Belmont World Film series is Shepherds, a French-Candian (or French/Canadian) film about a Montreal advertising man and a French civil servant who meet after quitting their job to tend sheep in the Alps. Mathyas Lefebure, who adapted his own memoir for the screenplay, will be at the West Newton Theatre when it plays Monday.
  • The Embassy continues Thunderbolts* and The Legend of Ochi through Sunday. The 1978 Invasion of the Body Snatchers kicks off a month of sci-fi flicks for Monday's free community matinees.
  • The Lexington Venue is open Friday/Saturday/Sunday/Wednesday/Thursday, adding Princess Mononoke and The Legend of Ochi to The Ballad Of Wallis Island. They also have the 2025 New York Cat Film Festival program Saturday morning and the 2025 New York Dog FIlm Festival program on Thursday evening.

    The West Newton Cinema opens Marcella, a documentary on noted cooking personality Marcella Hazen, keeps Thunderbolts*, Conclave, The Penguin Lessons, Sinners, Secret Mall Apartment, and A Minecraft Movie. They also have a "Behind the Screen" show of I'm Still Here on Saturday, a Ty's Movie Club presentation of No on Wednesday, and two documentaries by Allie Humenuk on Thursday: Shadow of the House, with Humenuk and photographer Abelardo Morell on had, and The Guys Next Door with Humenuk, co-director Amy Gellar, and subject Rachel Seagall present.

    Cinema Salem has Thunderbolts*, Sinners, Clown in a Cornfield, and The Legend of Ochi through Monday. Friday's Night LIght show is RoboCop, Suspicion has an encore on Saturday, and this Wednesday's classic is The Adventures of Robin Hood, with a Weirdo Wednesday show on the other screen.

    Out at the Liberty Tree Mall in Danvers, Words of War opens alongside the other new releases; starring Maxine Peake as Russian journalist Anna Politkovskaya, and Becoming Led Zeppelin has a return engagement.
Got the A-List upgrade and kind of want to use it and the Alamo pass to see all the stuff shooting its shot, and kind of regret that the Vietnamese movies in South Bay will be hard to make work. But, also, a lot of Val Kilmer stuff I haven't seen [in a while], Last Crusade, and, yeah, Sinners in 70mm.

Thursday, May 08, 2025

Imports: Yadang: The Snitch and The Dumpling Queen

As usual, I'm running late on everything I want to write up for this blog and even Letterboxd over the past few weeks, so if you want to see Yadang in Boston, you're too late, though it looks like The Dumpling Queen is sticking around another week.

That said, I've got to respect AMC's trailer game on Yadang much more than usual. The AMC trailer block- 20 minutes long, including three ads for seeing a movie at AMC, a thing you're already doing - is justly kind of infamous, but I'd argue that there's some value in that, especially if folks are seeing a big movie, because advertising is kind of useless these days and this gives that audience an overview of what's coming out in the next few months that they'd like to see. Yadang, on the other hand, is the sort of genre movie that's probably only going to last one week, so what do they show for trailers? Three genre movies - Shadow Force, Watch the Skies, and Fight or Flight - that come out the next Friday, with "May 9th" clearly stated at the end. It's kind of the same thinking as the normal package, just targeted at those of us who will go to decent-looking little movies if we know they exist.

That said, I used just about every minute of the big block before The Dumpling Queen waiting for trains and snacks; even most of the Chinese-American audience that normally waits until the last second was in before me!


Yadang: The Snitch

* * ½ (out of four)
Seen 2 May 2025 in AMC Causeway Street #8 (first-run, laser DCP)
Where to stream it (when available)

If Yadang were a book, it would have three pages that were blank except for a roman numeral and maybe a subtitle and/or a year, or whatever the Korean equivalent of that would be. As a movie, the three distinct parts all run together, and the result is never quite the whiplash of shocking revelations or exciting twists. One can follow the story and enjoy the final caper, but maybe not be quite clear on how all that works.

The "snitch", in this case, is Lee Kang-su (Kang Ha-neul), although he's apparently more of a liaison between prosecutor Goo Gwan-hee (Yoo Hae-jin) and the sources he's developing than a mole in any particular criminal enterprise. It didn't start that way - Gwan-hee developed Kang-su as a source when the latter was used as a patsy and placed in a cell with a gangster that the former was prosecuting - but now the ambitious prosecutor's operations are bumping into cases the police are investigating, notably narcotics detective Oh Sang-jae (Park Hae-joon), who has gotten frightened actress Um Su-jin (Chae Won-bin) to lead him to Yoon Tae-su, a dealer in North Korean meth.

Maybe South Korean audiences with a bit more knowledge of their justice system (or at least the police-story tropes of it) will understand how Kang-su's whole deal works, because I can't see how this keeps him in nice suits and a Hummer-sized vehicle three years out of jail. Is there some loophole where prosecutors aren't allowed to speak to criminals directly but can fund consultants? Is it a pyramid scheme? Given that in one case the criminals are calling him to help broker a deal, he must be well-known in the underworld, and in that case, why haven't the gangs murdered him just on general principle? The basics of his character - guy who initially became amoral when let down by the system looking out for himself even though there's an honest man underneath - work but the details are iffy.

A lot of the movie is like that; many parts of the story that settle folks in their positions happen off-screen during time jumps so that a thing that was set up as really bad at first can be somewhat waved away fifteen minutes later. Bits of the election-centered story in the last act was set up earlier, but this high-stakes material seldom feels like an escalation or the culmination of what's come before. There's a lot going on, but emphasis seems to change out of convenience, rather than because the story is following a path.

It tends to work in the moment, at least, especially once it can play Kang Ha-neul's cocky snitch off Park Hae-joon's righteous cop more regularly, while Yoo Hae-jin does nice work scrubbing away the veneer of good intentions his prosecutor has over the course of the film. Director Hwang Byeng keeps things moving and shines particularly well when he gets to get into the con-artist capers of the finale. Sure, the audience can see how the last fifteen or twenty minutes are going to play out as soon as someone asks for a cigarette, but that's perhaps why the film might wind up re-watchable anyway - it's very enjoyable to sit, nodding, waiting for the penny that's already dropped to inevitably land on (mostly) bad people.


Shui Jiao Huang Hou (The Dumpling Queen)

* * ½ (out of four)
Seen 4 May 2025 in AMC Boston Common #13 (first-run, laser DCP)
Where to stream it (when available)

It is, in some ways, oddly satisfying to see that the things folks are decrying as if they are somewhat unique issues with Hollywood and its descent into irrelevance are present throughout the world. The "product origin story", for example, which has manifested in North America as movies about Air Jordans, Tetris, the Blackberry, and so on, is apparently also a thing in the People's Republic of China, with Wanchai Ferry Dumplings getting one expected to be a big enough hit that it gets a more or less day-and-date release around the world.

Of course, it's more presented as the biography of founder Zang Jianhe (Ma Li), at least at the start, when she is effectively a single mother of two girls, 5 and 9, living in Qingdao, about to take a trip to Hong Kong to reunite with her husband (Kenny Wong Tak-bun) and join him in Thailand. When she arrives, though, he and his mother (Nina Paw Hee-ching) inform her that he has a second wife there who has already given him a son, but that's allowed in Thailand, and Jianhe will be recognized as his concubine. Having some pride, she stays in Hong Kong, eventually winding up in a boarding house run by widow Hong Jie (Kara Wai/Hui Yinghong), and works two or three jobs until an injury has her laid up and she meets neighbor Tang "Uncle Dessert" Shuibo (Ben Yuen Fu-wah), who suggests she join him at Wanchai Ferry with her well-regarded dumplings. There's no permitting, so they're often chased away by police, including Brother Hua (Zhu Yawen), a handsome widower who soon takes an interest in Jianhe as more than just a vendor, though he intends to emigrate to Canada for his own daughters' education.

A lot of these stories have roughly the same shape - determined immigrant, disrespected as a person and a woman, tremendous work ethic, helpful friends and neighbors, seeing opportunity in idle comments, holding firm when large companies try to dictate terms - so it's often the details that matter. The issue that the filmmakers seem to face, presuming that this is relatively close to the true story, is that a lot of the colorful pieces of Jianhe's story aren't necessarily all that germane to founding her business; Hong Jie's boarding house is full of colorful characters who serve to show just how exceptionally dedicated Jianhe is or what a good decision she made leaving the husband who didn't respect her, but steadiness isn't necessarily as interesting to watch as activity or initiative. The other end of the film has a fair amount of fast-forwarding while montages show what sort of changes Hong Kong was undergoing during this time, with Jianhe having to make a new decision that shifts her business's arc from street food to supermarket shelves. It tells the story, but at a bit of a remove.

There are a lot of steady hands involved, though - Mainland star Ma Li has a good handle on playing Jianhe as self-respecting even if she's initially nervous about putting her girls in a bad position early on and more firm-but-nice later. I am kind of curious about how Hong Kongers feel about her portrayal of JIanhe as an assimilating immigrant, since her difficulty with Cantonese is a large part of the first half or so of the movie. Kara Wai and Ben Yuen turn in pleasant supporting performances as the neighbors who are Jianhe's most important early supporters; the second half of the film would, perhaps, be more interesting if it got into how their characters fell away as Jianhe's business grew and how her daughters took a more active role as they became adults. Director Andrew Lau Wai-Keung is a journeyman who seldom calls for anything flashy and manages to evoke a nostalgic view of 1970s/1980s Hong Kong without things becoming cloying.

Which isn't to say the movie is particularly subtle or clever; the soundtrack gets mawkish about ten minutes in and more or less stays there, with the songs chosen a mix of Mandarin, Cantonese, and English like they're trying to find the balance that makes the film an international hit. The film does not actually stop to display a cartoon light bulb over Jianhe's head whenever someone mentions something along the lines of freezing dumplings, but almost seems to do so. And there's a sort of odd vibe to the whole thing at times: It's a Mainland production with a Mainland star telling a Hong Kong story with a Hong Kong director and supporting cast which builds to signing a deal with an American company, and given current tensions between the U.S. and China, censors expecting a pro-China message, and how Hong Kong nostalgia usually manifests, it feels oddly muted.

Not bad, as these corporate biographies and standard immigrant stories go, though not exceptional.

Friday, May 02, 2025

Next Week in Tickets: Films playing Boston 2 May 2025 - 8 May 2024

Here's hoping what I missed during the festival didn't get wiped out by the big Marvel movie!
  • The big Marvel movie for the start of summer is Thunderbolts*, and I'm just going to assume the asterisk is to warn us that this isn't The Masters of Evil pretending to be a new superhero team while the Avengers have disappeared, but various characters from Black Widow, Falcon and the Winter Soldier, and Ant-Man 2 thrown into the middle of a clash between two ultra-powerful supers. It's at least got Florence Pugh as White Widow at the center, though! It plays The Capitol Theatre, Fresh Pond (including 3D), The Embassy, Jordan's Furniture (Imax 2D), West Newton, CinemaSalem, Boston Common (including Imax Laser 2D/3D & RealD 3D & Dolby Cinema & Spanish Subtitles), Causeway Street (including RealD 3D), Kendall Square, the Seaport (including Dolby Atmos), South Bay (including Imax 2D/3D & RealD 3D & Dolby Digital), Assembly Row (including Imax Laser 2D/3D & RealD 3D & Dolby Cinema), Arsenal Yards (including CWX), and Chestnut Hill.

    Horror movie Rosario features Emeraude Toubia as a woman whose grandmother has just died and who will have to face supernatural entities before the ambulance arrives during a snowstorm; David Dastmalchian is in there somewhere, which is a good omen. It's at Boston Common, Causeway Street, and South Bay.

    Bonjour Tritesse is not a French movie, but an American indie set in the south of France with Lily McInerny, Claes Bang, and Chloe Sevigny that just looks like the sort of thing Ozon would have cast Ludivine Sagnier in back in the day. It's at Boston Common. Also at Boston Common, and also featuring Chloe Sevigny, is Magic Farm, from La Planeta filmmaker Amalia Ulman, about a film crew that winds up in the wrong place and decides to work with what they've got.

    Boston Common and Chestnut Hill will have "Block Party" shows of A Minecraft Movie all week, presumably so kids can scream and cheer without old folks complaining, while the Seaport Alamo has it for Saturday & Sunday matinees. There are 25th Anniversary screenings of Dogma at Boston Common on Saturday, but they're already listed as sold out. 50th Anniversary presentations of Monty Python and the Holy Grail at Boston Common and Arsenal Yards on Sunday and Wednesday. The week's Wednesday "Halfway to Halloween" show at Boston Common is Annabelle. Looking forward rather than back, an R-rated mystery preview plays at Boston Common, Causeway Street, South Bay, and Assembly Row on Monday. There are non-mystery early access screenings of Clown in a Cornfield at Boston Common, the Seaport, and Assembly Row on Wednesday, plus Watch the Skies (aka UFO Sweden), also at Boston Common on Wednesday.
  • BUFF opening night film The Surfer opens at Landmark Kendall Square, Boston Common, and the Lexington Venue, with Nicolas Cage playing a divorcé attempting to buy the house on the Australian coast where he grew up, clashing with Julian McMahon as the ringleader of a bunch of locals who chase off any non-residents trying to surf their beach.

    Kendall Square also has an R-rated secret movie on Monday and starts Meryl Streep May with a screening of Out of Africa on Tuesday. Björk concert film Cornucopia plays Wednesday (also at Boston Common, the Seaport), and Tall Tales, a "collaborative album and visual experience" from producer Mark Pritchard, musician Tomm York, and director Jonathan Zawada, plays Thursday.
  • Apple Fresh Pond opened Telugu-langage action flick HIT: The 3rd Case (also at Causeway Street) and Tamil actioner Retro (also at Boston Common) earlier in the week, and adds Hindi-language actioner Raid 2 (also at Boston Common) with Ajay Devgn returning as a tax agent hunting down a new white-collar criminal, and Tamil-language Tourist Family, about a clan of Sri Lankan immigrants new to India.

    The Dumpling Queen, a biopic of with Ma Li as Wanchai Ferry founder Zang Jianhe, opens at Boston Common; it's a Hong Kong story with a mainland star but HK supporting cast and director Andrew Lau Keung-Lau (not to be confused with Andy), playing in Mandarin.

    Korean thriller Yadang: The Snitch opens at Causeway Street.
  • The Brattle Theatre probably just kept the DCP of IFFBoston selection An Unfinished Film on their servers after showing it as part of IFFBoston, right? The latest from Lou Ye, it's a story about filmmakers who reunited to finish a film abandoned during production just as the Covid pandemic reared its head. It plays Friday to Monday. Donnie Darko plays later on Friday to Sunday, in its original theatrical release version, on 35mm film. There's also a "Resistance of Vision Festival" shorts program with a post-film panel on Saturday afternoon, and the latest Grrl Haus Cinema program, "Experimental Echoes", on Thursday.

    They also have Top Secret! for their Friday Film Matinee, as well as an encore on 4K DCP Tuesday evening. There is also a special encore of last week's sold-out Chungking Express "pineapple expiration date" screening, and Real Genius on 35mm film Tuesday & Wednesday.
  • The Coolidge Corner Theatre mostly keeps going with what they've been doing, although they reset the rep calendars. Midnights in May will be featuring soundtracks by Tangerine Dream, with Sorcerer on Friday and Kamikaze 89 on Saturday. They've got their third 35mm Lord of the Rings marathon in as many months on Sunday. Monday's Big Screen Classic is Czech New Wave classic Daisies, with a seminar from Alex Kittle beforehand; Tuesday's "Stage & Screen" show is Katharine Hepburn in David Lean's Summertime; Wednesday begins "Ani-Mania!" (I'd've gone with "Ani-May!", myself) with Satoshi Kon's Millennium Actress; and Thursday has a Cinema Jukebox show of Buena Vista Social Club on 35mm film.
  • The Seaport Alamo has French lesbian pop musical Queens of Drama on Friday, Sunday, and Tuesday. Barry Lyndon plays Saturday & Sunday; Nashville plays Sunday; there's a Hunger Games: Catching Fire movie party on Monday; an R-rated mystery movie preview Monday (think they're all the same movie?); and J-Horror flick Noroi: The Curse on Tuesday.
  • The Harvard Film Archive is dark for most of the weekend, but has a second screening of Wang Bing's Youth (Spring) (the part of the trilogy that didn't play last weekend) on Monday.
  • The Somerville Theatre opens Sinners, now that Ani DiFranco and IFFBoston have moved on. They continue Frederick Wiseman showings with Boxing Gym on Tuesday and start this year's F— The Nazis series with a 35mm print of Raiders of the Lost Ark on Wednesday.
  • The Museum of Science has upcoming Omni screenings of Everything Everywhere All at Once on Saturday the 17th and The Glassworker on the 31st of May.
  • Movies at MIT has Yi Yi on Friday and Saturday evenings. As always, if you're not part of the MIT community, they'd appreciate an email at lsc-guest (at) MIT dot edu ahead of time.
  • Belmont World Film plays Sima's Song, a film about the friendship between two very different women in 1970s Afghanistan, at the West Newton Theatre on Monday, with Berklee history professor and author James Bradford on hand to introduce it.
  • The Regent Theatre presents a selection of the "Wild & Scenic Film Festival" on Thursday.
  • The Embassy has Thunderbolts* and The Legend of Ochi through Sunday. Do the Right Things plays for Monday's free community matinees; they've also announced a "Movie Makers" camp for the summer.
  • The Lexington Venue is open Friday/Saturday/Sunday/Wednesday/Thursday, opening The Surfer, and keeping The Ballad Of Wallis Island.

    The West Newton Cinema opens Thunderbolts* and keeps The Legend of Ochi, Cheech & Chong's Last Movie, Conclave, The Penguin Lessons, Sinners, Secret Mall Apartment, and A Minecraft Movie.

    Cinema Salem has Thunderbolts*, The Accountant 2, Sinners, and A Minecraft Movie through Monday. Friday's Night LIght show is zombie biker movie Psychomania, and the Wednesday Classic is Suspicion, with a Weirdo Wednesday show on the other screen.
When does Stubs A-List go from 3 to 4 movies a week? Not until the 23rd for me, apparently, so I'll use it for Thunderbolts*, Yadang, and The Dumpling Queen, and maybe catch up on what I missed elsewhere (around a Red Sox game).

Friday, April 25, 2025

Next Week in Tickets: Films playing Boston 25 April 2025 - 1 May 2024

I love IFFBoston and all, but there's both some finger-crossing that things last past it and wishing I could get to other stuff too going on this week.
  • As mentioned, Indpendent Film Festival Boston has all the screens at the Somerville and Brattle throughTuesday, including both indigenous documentary shorts & student shorts programs on Saturday, centerpiece documentary Pavements at the Brattle Saturday night, Zoo as part of the Frederick Wiseman retro Sunday afternoon, previews of Friendship Monday & Tuesday, and then heading down the 66 to close with Sorry, Baby at the Coolidge on Wednesday.
  • Its mildly amusing that in the years since the original became a TNT staple, Jon Bernthal became big enough to rate as Ben Affleck's co-star in The Accountant 2, rather than just one of several folks listed as supporting cast. Here, Affleck's autistic underworld accountant must call in his brother (Bernthal) when a murder pulls him into a federal investigation. It's at the Capitol, Fresh Pond, CinemaSalem, Boston Common (including Dolby Cinema), Causeway Street, the Kendall, the Seaport, South Bay (including Dolby Cinema), Assembly Row (including Dolby Cinema), and Chestnut Hill.

    Video-game adaptation Until Dawn, where some poor teens get stuck in a time loop where they are murdered by various monsters and slashers, opens at Fresh Pond, Boston Common, Causeway Street, the Seaport, South Bay (including Dolby Cinema), Assembly Row, and Arsenal Yards.

    The latest from David Cronenberg, Shrouds, continues the introspection-through-science fiction themes of Crimes of the Future, with Vincent Cassel as a tech guy who invents a way to monitor one's deceased loved ones' decay while also mourning his own wife, only to have a conspiracy evolve around it. It's at the Coolidge, Kendall Square, and Boston Common.

    Also opening is The Legend of Ochi, in which a young girl in Carpathia discovers that the stories of monsters in the mountains from which the adults must defend the village are at best incomplete, as she befriends a cute, intelligent juvenile. It's at the Coolidge, the Capitol, Fresh Pond, West Newton, Boston Common, Causeway Street, the Seaport, South Bay, and Assembly Row.

    Cheech & Chong's Last Movie is a documentary framed as a road trip that has the pair reflecting on both the counterculture comedy that made the pair household names and their separate careers after that initial peak. It's at West Newton, Boston Common, Kendall Square, and South Bay.

    Twenty years since Star Wars Episode III: Revenge of the Sith already? Guess so; it gets a one-week re-release at Fresh Pond, the Embassy, CinemaSalem, Boston Common, Causeway Street, the Seaport, South Bay, Assembly Row, Arsenal Yards, and Chestnut Hill. No sign of the 3D conversion I'm pretty sure was done but never released ten years ago, though. Happy Gilmore also gets a re-release at Boston Common (all week), the Seaport (Saturday/Monday/Tuesday), and Arsenal Yards (Sunday/Wednesday).

    Pink Floyd at Pompeii - MMCLXXII has encore screenings at Kendall Square, the Seaport, and Assembly Row on Sunday. Blumhouse does a "Halfway to Halloween" rerelease of M3GAN at Boston Common on Wednesday. There's also an early access screening of BUFF opener The Surfer with livestreamed Nicolas Cage Q&A on Wednesday at theSeaport South Bay, and Assembly Row. Some of the early Imax Laser Thunderbolts screenings at Boston Common and Assembly Row are listed as "Fan Events".
  • On Swift Horses opens at The Coolidge Corner Theatre, Kendall Square, and Boston Common (and the Somerville on Wednesday). It looks under the idealized 1950s in California and finds both forbidden loves and gambling addiction.

    Crowe v Washington ends with the pairing that likely inspired it - Gladiator on 35mm film at midnight Friday and Gladiator II the same time Saturday. Midnights on the other screen are The Room on Friday and The Rocky Horror Picture Show on Saturday. Sunday's Gene Hackman show is The Birdcage, with The Royal Tenenbaums on 35mm Tuesday; Monday's Big Screen Classic is Scarface, with seminar by Mikal J. Gaines, plus 9 to 5 ("Big Screen Classic") and Midsommar ("Cult Classic") on Thursday,. They also welcome very special guest Francis Ford Coppola for Megalopolis with post-film discussion, but both the original Monday night screening and added Tuesday matinee look to have sold out very quickly.
  • New South Asian films this week at Apple Fresh Pond include Ground Zero, a Hindi-language action-thriller set against the 2001 Parliament attack (also at Boston Common); Tamil-language action flick Gangers; Malayalam-lagnuage drama Thudarum; Sarangapani Jathakam, a Telugu-language comedy about a horoscope fantastic facing the real world (through Sunday); Hindi-language drama Kesari Chapter 2: The Untold Story of Jallianwala Bagh (also at Boston Common) is held over. Bangladeshi action film Daagi plays Saturday and Marathi-language comedy Susheela Sujeet play Sunday. On Monday, Fresh Pond opens biopic Phule, while Telgugu-langage action entry HIT: The 3rd Case opens Wednesday (also at Causeway Street) and Tamil actioner Retro opens Thursday (also at Boston Common).

    Anime Colorful Stage! The Movie: A Miku Who Can't Sing is around for another week at Boston Common.
  • The Harvard Film Archive lets folks not at the festival catch up with some encores, including two from Wang Bing's Youth trilogy - Homecoming on Friday and Hard Times on Saturday - and then two from the Satyajit Ray series on Sunday: Company Limited in the afternoon and Devi in the evening, both on 35mm film. Monday is another drip into the Kobe Planet archive, documentary Asia Is One on 16mm film.
  • ArtsEmerson has a "Shared Stories" presentation of documentary Igualada, about a rural black woman who ran for president of Colombia (where the entrenched power is none of those three things), on Friday, and a "Projecting Connections" presentation of Come Home, My Child, about a Taiwanese immigrant who has been writing to people in the New York prison system for a decade, on Saturday. Both will have post-film Q&As with the directors and others.
  • The Seaport Alamo has a (partially) different selection of Max Fleischer Cartoons on Saturday than the Somerville had a month or so ago. They also show The Departed Sunday & Tuesday, Makoto Shinkai's Suzume on Monday.
  • The Museum of Science has Treasure Planet on the dome as part of Massachusetts Space Week on Sunday, with a screening of Pakistani animated film The Glassworker on the schedule for the 31st of May.
  • Monday is the last of the month, which means The Capitol Theatre will probably be doing the monthly Disasterpiece Theatre show.

    The Somerville Theatre emerges from IFFBoston on Wednesdays with On Swift Horses opening and Secret Mall Apartment returning downstairs and a Gene Hackman double feature of Scarecrow (35mm) & Absolute Power upstairs; Scarecrow was one of the movies most cited as among Hackman's best work in all of the obituaries. Thursday, they show Pineapple Express for the monthly "Greenscreen" presentation in association with The Goods.
  • Landmark Kendall Square concludes thier David Lynch tribute series with Mullholand Dr. on Tuesday.
  • You can tell the plumbing situation at The Brattle Theatre was pretty bad because of the new carpeting installed, but they're open for IFFBoston, and celebrate "Halfway to Halloween" on Wednesday with new 4K restorations of Phenomena & Tenebre (the two Argentos may or may not be a double feature). On Thursday, they've got a free "Elements of Cinema" screening of The Wicker Man, and an already-sold-out pineapple expiration date screenings of Chungking Express.
  • Joe's Free Films shows the directors of Oscar-nominated documentary Sugarcane presenting the film on Tuesday (RSVP required), among other things.

  • Movies at MIT has 1997's Taste of Cherry on Friday and Saturday evenings. As always, if you're not part of the MIT community, they'd appreciate an email at lsc-guest (at) MIT dot edu ahead of time.
  • Belmont World Film and the Brazilian consulate will be providing snacks with Manas on Monday, with three speakers for perspective.
  • The Regent Theatre shows The Shawshank Redemption on Wednesday with post-film discussion on how it was adapted from the book.
  • The Embassy has Revenge of the Sith and Sacramento. Field of Dreams plays for Monday's free community matinees.
  • The Lexington Venue is open Friday/Saturday/Sunday/Tuesday/Thursday and turns the schedule over, opening Bob Trevino Likes It, Pride & Prejudice (no show Tuesday), and The Ballad Of Wallis Island. There's also a short run of locally produced horror movie Round the Decay through Saturday, with cast and crew on hand for a Q&A with Saturday's matinee.

    The West Newton Cinema opens The Legend of Ochi and Cheech & Chong's Last Movie (with plenty of 4:20 showtimes), also bringing back Conclave, and holding over The Penguin Lessons, Sinners, The Wedding Banquet, Secret Mall Apartment, and A Minecraft Movie. They also have plenty of documentaries Recovery City with director Q&A on Friday, We Will Dance Again on Saturday and Sunday, and Etched In Glass: The Legacy of Steve Ross with post-film discussion on Tuesday.

    Cinema Salem has Revenge of the Sith, The Accountant 2, Sinners, and A Minecraft Movie through Monday. Friday's Night LIght show is zombie biker movie Psychomania, and the Wednesday Classic is Them!. There's also a Weirdo Wednesday show, plus a presentation of indie MFA: The Terminal Degree with live music and a post-film Q&A.

    Dark comedy The Trouble with Jessica opens at the Liberty Tree Mall in Danvers, if you can get there.
I'm at IFFBoston through Wednesday, and who knows whether Thursday will be a "see it before it's gone" day or a "lets just say in and order a pizza" day.

Tuesday, April 22, 2025

Gazer

Independent Film Festival Boston takes the Somerville Theatre over starting on Wednesday, so not much is opening there since it would just get moved around anyway, but it does mean that they had a little room on screen #2 for this to get a brief five-day run, while the other screen downstairs is playing Secret Mall Apartment. They had filmmakers and subjects for the opening last week, so you'll find these throughout the theater:

If you've seen the movie, you get it.

(There was also a plastic easter egg in my seat's cupholder, because it was Easter, and now I'm wondering if there was a free ticket or something inside)

Anyway, it's serendipitous that Secret Mall Apartment was last year's IFFBoston spotlight film at the Somerville, and its regular run is at that theater just as the next year's festival opens.

So, obviously, late post, but last call for Gazer is tonight at 7pm, but Secret Mall Apartment will be back next Wednesday, at least for a couple of days.


Gazer

* * ¾ (out of four)
Seen 20 April 2025 in Somerville Theatre #2 (first-run, DCP)
Where to stream it (when available)

I'm not saying Gazer would have been better if this was the case, but I went into the film thinking it was going to be a scrappy little 74-minute indie only for it to be half-again that long. It doesn't quite fall into the "you're probably only going to get one movie about X, so put every X thing you can imagine into it" trap (with X being dyschronometria in this case), but it does wind up spreading both its hook and its plot kind of thin.

Frankie Rhodes (Ariella Mastroianni) is the person with dyschronometria here; for her, it tends to present as zoning out, not realizing that a time has passed, but also interacts with a number of other cerebral issues, which together are likely terminal. Her doctor has advised her to look into an assisted living facility, but she bristles, wanting to be reunited with daughter Cynthia, who has been in the custody of her mother-in-law Diane (Marianne Goodell) since Frankie's husband Roger's suicide (Diane thinks Frankie's claims she was zoned out and unable to remember is awful convenient). At a support group, she meets Paige Foster (Renee Gagner), whose brother Henry (Jack Alberts) has become abusive since their mother's suicide. Paige offers to pay $3000 if Frankie will sneak into the apartment, get her car keys, and drive it to someplace she can pick it up, but when Paige doesn't show up at the meeting the next day, Frankie doesn't know whether something has happened to her or if, rather than another woman in a tough situation, Paige had seen her as a perfect patsy.

Despite being set in roughly the present day, the vibe of Gazer comes from a generation or two earlier; director Ryan J. Sloan and cinematographer Matheus Bastos shoot on 16mm film and find the sorts of locations in Newark, New Jersey that haven't changed much in the last three or four decades. Everyone has cars that have been on the road for a while, and, crucially, Frankie relies on payphones and a cassette player in her daily life; LED screens and the like tend to trigger her illnesses in a bad way. The score by Steve Matthew Carter isn't exactly a throwback but wouldn't seem out of place in a paranoid 1970s thriller. Little bits of modernity appear around the edges - the PC showing brain scans in the doctor's office, the way Frankie uses earbuds rather than clunky headphones - but the effect is just enough to keep the audience from asking questions and maybe put them in a similar state of detachment.

It's a good sort of mental space for this kind of mystery. The story is not particularly complicated, perhaps, but it's interesting enough to have something to tug on while observing everything else in Frankie's life. Star Ariella Mastroianni (who co-wrote the film with husband Sloan) is careful never to present Frankie as a sleuth, even as she is following a trail or evading pursuit, but someone locked into the current moment who has to work hard to manage anything outside it. There's something off about the way she plays against everyone else in the movie, like Frankie isn't really sure how well she knows anybody aside from her daughter. As much as Frankie is mostly-functional and the more relatable pieces get across, one kind of has to learn to read her, though Masroianni seems to have figured out a nonstandard but consistent set of expressions and tones.

One could argue that the way the pacing and priorities get weird in the last stretch is part of the point; is giving the audience a sense of the disorientation and distraction Frankie feels as he stretches the time out after all the pieces have been put together and has Frankie sort of stumbling forward while often having surreal flashbacks to the night her husband dies. There's not much connection, which frustrates the audience who expects movies to edit in a way that creates links but also perhaps underlines how Frankie is constantly both in the now and the then. A lot of the second half of the movie is like that, though, with Cronenbergian imagery that doesn't exactly resonate with the idea that Frankie's main issue is keeping track of time, and a finale that may be frustratingly discordant in how it emphasizes that Frankie's priority is not necessarily the mystery that has been occupying the audience's more conventional brains.

It's a reasonably intriguing paradox of a movie, in that everything that helps the audience get into Frankie's head and mindset also makes the movie more frustrating as a mystery and story, but it's possible that the filmmakers are well aware of that: What are the cassette tapes that Frankie uses to keep her focused and aware of, say, how long she should be riding on the bus to get home but a way to impose a narrative on her frustratingly nonlinear mind, and how is someone more likely to spiral rather than regroup when those crutches fail? It's a movie that many will leave frustrated, but, well, imagine how Frankie must feel!