Friday, August 21, 2020

Next Week in Virtual Tickets: Films sort of playing Boston 21 August 2020 - 27 August 2020

I've been pretty good about keeping in and to myself during this whole thing, but everything being closed kind of made it easy. This weekend, though, the challenge gets real.

  • Two new movies come via The Brattle Theatre and its virtual screening room: Desert One is the new documentary from Barbara Kopple, taking an in-depth look at 1979's Operation Eagle Claw, a top-secret mission to rescue hostages during the 1979 Iranian revolution, including new interviews and previously unavailable archival footage. They also pick up the new restoration of Son of the White Mare, a psychedelic 1981 fantasy from Hungarian animator Marcell Jankovics, scanned from the original negative elements. They also continue to offer Represent, Jazz on a Summer's Day, Creem: America's Only Rock 'n' Roll Magazine, and You Never Had It - An Evening with Bukowski.
  • The Coolidge Corner Theatre has a natural double feature partner for Desert One (which it also picks up) in Coup 53, which goes back to the other end of the Shah's reign to examine the coup that put him back on the throne with fortuitously-discovered footage. They also retain Jazz on a Summer's Day, River City Drumbeat, I Used to Go Here, and John Lewis: Good Trouble.

    They also have a "Science on Screen" entry in From Controversy to Cure, an hour-long featurette on the biotech boom in Cambridge streaming on their site for free. They'll also have a Q&A on Tuesday with director Joe McMaster and several of the subjects. Thursday's Coolidge Education seminar covers There Will Be Blood, with Rolling Stone critic David Fear taping an introduction and leading a discussion afterward (note that as usual, they're only supplying the before/after, and you're on your own for the movie itself).
  • That bit about staying in getting tough? That's because Train to Busan: Peninsula opens this weekend, playing The Lexington Venue, Boston Common (including Imax), and the Seaport. It's the sequel to Train to Busan, which also plays Saturday and Sunday at The Venue for those that need catching up.

    The Venue also opens Tesla, starring Ethan Hawke in the title role and Kyle MacLachlan as Thomas Edison. It's apparently a fairly off-kilter biography written and directed by Michael Almereyda, who worked with him on a similarly odd version of Hamlet twenty years ago and also recently made the interesting Experimenter and Marjorie Prime.
  • The West Newton Cinema Is one of the places picking up a 10th-Anniversary run of Inception ahead of director Christopher Nolan's Tenet maybe possibly opening in a couple of weeks; it's also playing at Boston Common (including Imax), the Seaport, and South Bay.

    West Newton also also continues to play The Burnt Orange Heresy, 2001: A Space Odyssey, Motherless Brooklyn, and The Goonies, through at least the weekend. They also wrap up their four-day run of Christmas on Ice, a holiday romance made by local filmmakers, on Friday and Saturday.
  • Some of the multiplexes are re-opening, with AMC, Showplace Icon, and Showcase letting up to 25 people in at a time where allowed, which includes Boston and some of the outer burbs but not Somerville. The biggest release is Unhinged, which stars Russell Crowe as a lunatic who apparently does not take being cut off very well. It plays Boston Common (including Dolby Cinema), the Seaport (including Icon-X), and South Bay. There's also more action in the form of Cut Throat City, a RZA-directed thriller about four friends pulling off a heist in post-Katrina New Orleans, at Boston Common and South Bay.

    Also opening is Words on Bathroom Walls, featuring AnnaSophia Robb as a young woman diagnosed with mental illness during her senior year and tries to hide it even as she meets a nice boy. It's at Boston Common, the Seaport, and South Bay.

    That still leaves screens to fill, so they have leftovers from earlier in the year and classics. Boston Common has Bloodshot, Black Panther, the 2017 Beauty and the Beast, the classic Ghostbusters, The Empire Strikes Back, Grease, Back to the Future, and The Goonies; South Bay has Bloodshot, Black Panther, and Back to the Future.
  • The Somerville Theatre still has The Fight, Amulet, John Lewis: Good Trouble, the Quarantine Cat Film Fest, Pahokee, and Alice in their virtual screening room; ditto for The Capitol and "One Small Step" shorts, the Cat Film Fest, The Surrogate, and Heimat Is a Space in Time in their own virtual theater while still selling ice cream and snacks.
  • The Regent Theatre still has WBCN and the American Revolution, Creem, What Doesn't Kill Us, and Reggae Boyz listed on their site, but Creem says "ending August 20th" and the others aside from WBCN say "last chance", so…?.
  • The Brattle, the Coolidge, and West Newton have all been offering relatively reasonable rentals for up to 20-ish people; you may have to dig through their websites or call them directly get quotes on rates, available slots, and what the rules on concessions and masking are.


So, I've actually purchased a ticket to see Peninsula during a time when I hope the theater will be mostly empty, and I kind of want to see Tesla, but, obviously, it is probably not smart. I guess I've got to be ready to bail the second I feel uncomfortable, even if it's before the movie starts. In the meantime, I've got the week off work and will be inhaling Fantasia screeners.

If you're not ready to go out, make sure to write to your representatives via Save Your Cinema, and check out Nightstream, the upcoming online festival put on by BUFF and other genre festivals around the country.

Fantasia 2020.01: Special Actors and The Columnist

Welcome (again) to the Fantasia International Film Festival, which opened both its on-demand program and livestreamed screenings up to Canada yesterday, and while I'm not in that lovely, less-scorching-hot-in-the-summer country whose leadership appears to have show some interest in containing the pandemic, I am apparently still considered press, so I can request and work my way through screeners, which is what I'm doing, mostly trying to reflect the actual schedule but also fitting in on-demand films that I didn't get to before I started. It's a bit strange that everyone is really going to have their own festival experience, even more so than usual.

Anyway, I'm grateful and will try to earn this pass by pumping out as many reviews as I can, even taking off work for it. I say every year that eventually they're going to realize that this is something a little bit more than a hobby and way less than a job for me and as such will realize that I can and would pay for tickets, but I'm glad it's not this year.

So, no photo of the banner outside Concordia this year, but there is the annual tradition of the opening night film not accepting press passes and me being fine with that because it will probably open elsewhere, which is why I've got pretty much nothing to say about The Reckoning and its cancelled Q&A. I would have liked to see it - Neil Marshall's The Descent was one of my favorite films at the first or second Fantasia I attended - but all the stuff around Marshall, Charlotte Kirk, and some executive at Universal is something I'm kind of glad I don't have to spend much time on, especially since it would have taken me a while to get past the "wait, he's not with Axelle Carolyn anymore?" stage.

Still, I would usually get into the second show of the night, which was effectively Special Actors, and a lot of fun. There might be a bit of concern when watching this that Shin'ichiro Ueda is a one-trick pony or repeating himself, and I do wonder sometimes if filmmakers (and film critics) start immersing themselves in film so early that they don't really know anything else. I don't really think that's the case here, but it's something to watch for the future.

I didn't really see The Columnist as part of the "first day", but they asked for negative reviews to be held until the festival began, so… I think it's kind of a mess in a lot of ways, but I also got kind of irked for it being "So Much for the Tolerant Left: The Movie". It's an attitude I hate coming and going, and while I don't really expect a slasher movie to advance a solution to how social media has made free speech an even more sharply double-edged sword than ever before and more easily weaponized by those who mean harm, I'd kind of like to see it grapple with the issue rather than just say "there are two sides!"

Once again, if you're in Canada, enjoy Fantasia! If you're elsewhere, take notes; there's other virtual festivals coming up and some of these are already in the pipeline to some sort of distribution.

Special Actors (Supesharu Akutâzu)

* * ¾ (out of four)
Seen 16 August 2020 in Jay's Living Room (Fantasia Festival, Vimeo via Roku)

There are two, or maybe three, pretty solid ideas for a movie in Shin'ichiro Ueda's Special Actors, and while I suspect that they could maybe be separated to better effect, Ueda would probably feel like that was making the same movie twice. It works as one, oftentimes pretty well, in fact, enough that the folks who watch and enjoy it will have different things that they wish there had been more of.

Things start with Kazuto Ohno (Kazuto Osawa), a security guard who dreams of being an actor but has trouble with both because confrontation and tension makes him pass out. Surprisingly, his younger brother Hiroki (Hiroki Kono) has become an actor of sorts, and after a chance encounter, Hiroki recruits him for "Special Actors", an agency which places its clients not just in stage and screen, but real-life encounters - laughing in movies, fake dates, even muggers you can look tough for fighting off. A former scam artist (Yosuke Ueda) writes the scripts, and their latest major job is right up his alley: Schoolgirl Yumi (Miyu Ogawa) says that older sister Rina (Rina Tsugami) has fallen in with a cult and wants them to infiltrate and expose them.

As soon as that set-up starts being laid out, some viewers might find their eyebrows rising involuntarily, because a caper film that pits two crews doing basically the same thing against each other is just a deliciously fun idea, and both the Special Actors and the "Musubiru" cult are full of colorful characters. If this were just a caper flick, it would probably be in large part about the reformed swindler diving into taking down his opposite number but possibly being hindered by how his team is much less experienced at this sort of thing. There's bits of that there, but mostly the Special Actors seem to know what they're doing well enough to keep things moving quickly, and that's okay; Ueda is clearly having fun with the con-artist material, from the Scientology-mocking religion to the inevitable USB stick gag, and presents it as a nifty mission where folks imitating movies can still pull some nifty feats off.

Full review at eFilmCritic

De Kuthoer (The Columnist)

* * (out of four)
Seen 14 August 2020 in Jay's Living Room (Fantasia Festival, internet)

You can see the strong idea that the rest of The Columnist was built around being put front-and-center during a climactic scene toward the end, and that's a thing people make movies like this should try to do. Put a nice cast around it and polish it up fairly nicely, and that should have the movie in good shape. And it is, much of the time, but in the moments when it's not, one gets the impression that the filmmakers haven't completely thought this through, leaving a movie that feels like they haven't thought their good idea through.

The columnist of the title is Femke Boot (Katja Herbers), who is working on her first novel to build off her fame as a regular newspaper columnist, while daughter Anna (Claire Porro) seeks to follow in her footsteps even as she's kicked off the school newspaper for a column the headmaster doesn't like. Like a lot of people, she has trouble dealing with social media, regularly swearing off Twitter and the like for the vitriol with which some respond to her work but logged back in the next morning. She spars on a panel show with horror writer Stephen Dood (Bram van der Kelen) but finds herself connecting when they meet under other circumstances. The tweets that get under her skin more than others come from a neighbor who is extraordinarily nasty online but different in person, to the point where something small can set her off.

It escalates quickly, and between them director Ivo van Aart and writer Daan Windhorst don't necessarily seem to know where to go from there, or necessarily even how to get there. There's not a whole lot of room to examine how online pile-ons can make a person feel unsafe, or even genuinely in danger; on the other side, there's not enough twisted satisfaction in eliminating trolls. There's a bit implied in there about how murder seems to fuel Femke's ability to write her book, but only in a moment or two, and numerous instances that show that Femke is sort of a hypocrite where free speech and civility is concerned depending on whether it's directed at her or coming from her (or her daughter) just kind of sit there, like Windhorst and van Aart are content to have simply raised a point rather than having actually said much about it.

Full review at eFilmCritic

Thursday, August 20, 2020

Fantasia On-Demand Preview 2020.04: Crazy Samurai Musashi (plus Sheep Without a Shepherd and Fantasia Classics)

I thought I'd be doing more of these, but I got caught up watching a couple baseball games (which is stupid, because the Red Sox are awful this year and take a long time to lose), but there's going to be plenty of time over the next couple of weeks to catch up on some even as I try and keep up with the "real time" screenings. I'd still hoped to get a couple more in, but some time has to be saved for work

Crazy Samurai Musashi is a lot of fun, at least - not a great movie, perhaps, but one whose central gimmick is nifty enough that it's worth checking out even if star Tak Sakaguchi and his cohorts didn't have a major place in world genre cinema back when I first started going to Fantasia: Ryuhei Kitamura's Versus was a huge deal, arriving right around the same time Audition did and signally that there was this sort of energetic, entertaining live-action stuff being made in Japan when most of what came over was either animated or very formal, and they were followed by a group of B-movie filmmakers who often seemed to be making Crazy Japanese-Brand stuff for export as much as for consumption at home, especially when you consider what strong in-person presence these guys would have during the festival in Montreal (and, presumably, Austin a month or two later). As I mention in the review, the bubble kind of burst without anyone really taking that next big leap into the mainstream in Japan and Kitamura sort of becoming a journeyman here, their cheap-but-crazy entries more or less replaced with slick manga adaptations. I kind of miss them, from Tak Sakaguchi showing up and doing martial arts demonstrations to having my jaw drop at the utter madness of what Yoshihiro Nishimura would come up with for his own movies compared to the KNB-quality professionalism he brought to others.

The other "premiere" that I can review from the on-demand section is Sheep Without a Shepherd, which is this year's "wait, this played Boston but not Montreal, even though this sort of movie seems to be all the Cineplex at the Forum plays?" entry. It's kind of reasonable, though - as I noticed when it played here, it came out on the same day as The Rise of Skywalker and although it was a big deal in China, it was kind of secondary even among the Chinese movies playing in North America at the time. It is pretty darn good, and even if you're not able to access it via Fantasia because you're not in Canada, it's on Prime in the U.S., as are a couple of the "Fantasia Classics" that include a lot of Japanese movies listed toward the end. It's been kind of weird seeing embargo dates for some of these, as I've had reviews up from the last time around for a while.

Crazy Samurai Musashi

* * ¾ (out of four)
Seen 19 August 2020 in Jay's Living Room (Fantasia Festival, Vimeo via Roku)

It probably won't be too long before someone teaches an entire course on action cinema using just Crazy Samurai Musashi; though there is some extra material on either side, roughly 80% of this is a single shot of a single samurai taking on a veritable army. It's not perfect - folks taking that hypothetical course will likely learn a whole lot about how editing and coverage can be pretty useful - but it's a fairly amazing achievement and a must-see-it-at-least-once for fans of the genre.

It opens, more or less, with a child watching a butterfly; Matashichiro is the heir to the Yoshioka clan and it is technically his right to challenge Miyamoto Musashi (Tak Sakaguchi) to a duel to avenge the killing of a fallen comrade. Neither he nor his grandfather will actually fight Musashi, of course; there are over a hundred samurai loyal to the clan and 300 mercenaries hiding in the woods around the compound, prepared to swarm on him should he get too close.

They may almost be enough.

Star Tak Sakaguchi and director Yuji Shimomura both got their starts working with Ryuhei Kitamura on Versus (Tak starred and Shinomura choreographed the action), part of a group of young filmmakers who had incredible amounts of enthusiasm, imagination, and style but who by and large never really figured out storytelling beyond the high concept or the ins and outs of studio filmmaking. By all appearances, Crazy Samurai Musashi seems to have taken this idea to its logical extreme, with the big 77-minute fight shot around seven years ago - Sion Sono is listed as writing the "original story", so right around when Sakaguchi was choreographing the action for Tokyo Tribe - with the segments on either end either clearly featuring an older Musashi or trying to keep him in the shadows. They came up with the fight, did an impressive job of shooting it, and then took years to scrape together the bare minimum amount of material to make an actual movie out of it - and even then, it doesn't quite fit, as Sakaguchi plays Musashi as kind of put-upon and righteous during the fight but the material around it portrays him as more an unrepentant killer.

Full review at eFilmCritic

Wu Sha (Sheep Without a Shepherd)

* * * ½ (out of four)
Seen 21 December 2019 in AMC Boston Common #9 (first-run, DCP)

Sheep Without a Shepherd is the sort of thriller that elicits happily complicit snickers from the audience because they are extremely invested in someone getting away with murder. Well, maybe not quite murder, but you get the point. The filmmakers know exactly what's going to get the audience rooting against the police and manage to make it work even when what they are doing is pretty obvious.

It starts with a jailbreak that's actually a story being told by Li Weijie (Xiao Yang), a Chinese man living in the Thai village of Chanban who watches a lot of movies between calls at his network service business. He's a bit tight with money - he, wife Ayu (Tan Zhuo), and daughters Pingping (Audrey Hui) & An-An (Zhang Ziran), have a fair-sized house because a lot next to the cemetery is a bargain - but he relents when 16-year-old Pingping needs 6000 baht (about $200) for a special weekend camp for high achievers. It goes badly, and things get worse when a fellow attendee, Suchat (Beety) shows up with cell phone video to blackmail her into another "date" while Weijie is away on business in nearby Lua Pathom. Ayu interrupts and Pingping fights back, accidentally connecting with Suchat's skull rather than his phone. The next morning, Weijie must call on everything he's learned about avoiding arrest from watching movies to keep what they've done from being discovered, especially tricky because not only are Suchat's parents chief of police Laoorn (Joan Chen) and mayoral candidate Dutpon (Philip Keung Ho-Man), but Sangkun (Shih Ming-Shuai), a corrupt cop who has long had it in for Weijie, actually caught a glimpse of him getting into the victim's car the next morning.

Six screenwriters are credited with adapting the Malayalam-language film Drishyam (the sixth remake, following four in other parts of India and one in Sri Lanka), something which often seems like a recipe for turning a pointed story into mush, but that is not the case here. It's a really impressively constructed machine of a film which lays out where it's going but still makes the audience enjoy the process of getting there, turns dark comedy into something that really stings, and finds plenty of room to bring emotions to a boil even as it's being methodical. The writers and Malaysian director Sam Quah Boon-Lip are able to wear their influences on their sleeves and even find a way to use a mid-credits scene to wring something out of the Chinese "content guidelines" that the film had mostly been mostly able to skirt by being set in Thailand. Quah and company manage to walk an impressive tightrope between the different ways that crime is difficult in the movies and in real life, keeping the audience aware of it but never becoming a movie about movies.

Full review at eFilmCritic

Mirokuroze (Milocrorze: A Love Story)

* * * ½ (out of four)
Seen 15 July 2011 in Theatre Hall (Fantasia 2011)

Milocrorze: A Love Story is the sort of colorful, genre-mashing flick that doesn't just try to bowl the audience over, but practically insists on it, overwhelming the viewer with color and sound and sudden shifts until they either walk out numb or give in. And there's no reason not to give in, as writer/director Yoshimasa Ishibashi finds ways to both pop the eyes and tug at the heart.

Of course, the title character (Maiko) doesn't seem to be that important at first; she's the etherially beautiful woman that oddly-independent seven-year-old Ovreneli Vreneligare falls for one day in the park, but soon enough she's gone, leaving the boy with a broken heart. That's when we meet Besson Kumagai (Takayuki Yamada), a "love counselor" for young men whose hotline leads to him berating his callers and giving them questionable advice. Following his path eventually brings us to Tamon (Yamada again), a one-eyed samurai on a quest to find his beloved Yuri (Anna Ishibashi), stolen away by kidnappers four years ago. It's only after the end of Tamon's quest that we catch up with the now-grown Ovreneli (guess who), who encounters a familiar face while still nursing a hole in his heart.

Though all three sections are quite something to see - Yoshimasa Ishibashi and his fellow filmmakers seldom see a frame that they don't think could be improved by a little more color, a poppier beat, and a bit of absurdity - it's Tamon's segment in the middle that is Ishibashi's and Yamada's tour de force. Yes, the film changes styles before and after, but it shifts genres several times within this part, jumping from samurai to something contemporary to western to a stylized blending of everything without any sort of explanation other than that this genre perhaps feels most appropriate for this moment. It also features one of the most astonishing action sequences in recent memory, in which Tamon hacks his way through a brothel filled with yakuza in one long, apparently continuous shot that moves like a side-scrolling video game and continually jumps between regular speed and slow motion. It's jokey at some points and surreal at others, but Ishibashi packs an amazing amount of activity into what certainly appears to be one continuous shot.

Full review at eFilmCritic

Tabineko ripôto (The Traveling Cat Chronicles, aka Tabineko Report)

* * * ¼ (out of four)
Seen 21 July 2018 in Auditorium des Diplômés de la SGWU (Fantasia International Film Festival, DCP)

The Traveling Cat Chronicles was the first film to play the festival lineup on this day, and it was a canny bit of scheduling not just because this was a more family-friendly movie than what makes up the bulk of this genre-heavy schedule, but because it's unapologetically sentimental in a way few other movies playing the event are. So, fine, let's get the day's crying done early and have fun with the rest of the movies; it's not like that will be unearned.

The film is narrated by a once-proud stray cat (voice of Mitsuki Takahata) who mentions that she as yet has no name, though has been living with Satoru (Sota Fukushi) since he found her on the side of the road. Satoru is a young man, at a point where one's life is often in flux, and there is no space for a cat in this next phase, but he's also a cat lover who wouldn't dream of not making sure Nana does not find a good home. So he travels up and down Japan meeting with childhood friends Kosuke Sawada (Ryosuke Yamamoto), who is recently divorced, and Yoshime (Tomoya Maeno), who has recently adopted a kitten; former classmate Sugi Shusuke (Takuro Ono) and ex-girlfriend Chikako (Alice Hirose), now married and running a pet-friendly B&B; and his aunt Noriko (Yuko Takeuchi), who raised him after his parents' death and whose itinerant work as a judge prevented Satoru from having a pet as a child. None of them, unfortunately, are quite able to take in a cat who has grown attached to her human.

There has, obviously, been a fair amount of tragedy and upheaval in Satoru's life already, and each time Satoru visits a friend there is an accompanying set of flashbacks to how Satoru met them, how they were separated, and some story about how they bonded over a cat. The stories inevitably fall into a bit of a pattern, but director Koichiro Miki makes that a good thing, telling some funny stories that glide into a bittersweet place; they point at where the film is heading while still misdirecting the audience a bit. Where the story is heading is both a surprise and not by the time it gets there, but that doesn't matter; the film is generally about taking both animals and people who need it in, even when it's difficult and leads to some heartache, and never loses sight of that.

Yes, this is the sort of movie that tries to soften a blow with cute animals, but since it's cats instead of dogs (as is more common), it's kind of no-nonsense about it. Nana is smart and not sentimental in her narration (or his; the subtitles use male pronouns despite the female voice, but I suspect that will be fixed if this gets any sort of official release), with Mitsuki Takahata giving her a default tone of annoyed indignation that matches the feline performer without ever seeming aloof (and occasionally being quite emotional). It's just enough tartness on top of a sort of simple, child-like vocabulary to feel like a cat. There are some other animal voices (though mostly confined to the present where Nana can relay them), but Takahata's performance sets the tone.

Full review at eFilmCritic

HK: Hentai Kamen (HK/Forbidden Super Hero)

* * * (out of four)
Seen 3 August 2013 in le Cinéma Impérial (Fantasia Festival, HD)

Look, I'm not going to make Hentai Kamen out to be anything other than it is: It is a deeply silly, tacky, crude spoof of the superhero genre that takes Warren Ellis's description of their outfits as "underwear pervert suits" to its illogical extreme. It's got roughly one joke in it and hits that gag relentlessly. But, man, does it do that well.

A while back, Det. Hario Shikjio ran a gangster visiting his favorite dominatrix to ground. The gangster's, that is, although when Maki (Nana Katase) responded to the cops busting in on her business by slapping Hario around... Well, it was love at first sight. Sixteen years later, their son Kyosuke (Ryohei Suzuki) is part of his high-school martial arts team, but though he's inherited his father's sense of justice, he's kind of a wimp. Still, when new student Aiko Himeno (Fumika Shimizu) gets in trouble, he races to her rescue but the only mask he can find to conceal his identity is a pair of women's panties. Good thing wearing them on his face stirs the kinky blood of his mother that flows in his veins, and from then forward, he fights crime as Hentai Kamen, the masked pervert!

There's a way of telling this story that would make it about not denying who you are and embracing the totality of your heritage, even if it's kind of embarrassing. And while that's there, it's buried deep underneath a ton of crude jokes based on Kyosuke having the most embarrassing secret identity ever and fight scenes whose choreography is built around making evildoers (and audiences) kind of uncomfortable with all the raw beefcake on display and how every finishing move seems to involve pushing the contents of improvised g-string right up into somebody's face. There are plenty of jokes at the superhero genre's expense as well, with Spider-Man getting hit the hardest from the spoof of Marvel's familiar logo animation to the distinctive eye-holes that appear on the "mask" for no discernible reason.

Full review at eFilmCritic

Fukufuku-so no Fuku-chan (Fuku-chan of FukuFuku Flats)

* * * ¾ (out of four)
Seen 3 August 2014 in Salle D.B. Clarke (Fantasia Festival, DCP)

Huh. I missed something about this movie when reading the program description, although on a certain level it doesn't really matter. What does matter is that this is a big-hearted, charming movie that pays off in some unexpected ways. It also has one of the single funniest sequences I've seen in a movie this year, which never hurts.

The "Fuku-chan" of the title is Fukuda Tatsuo (Miyuki Oshima), a 32-year-old house painter who is fairly well-liked both at work and the cheap apartment block he calls home, where he winds up making peace between his neighbors Nonoshita (Asato Iida) and Mabuchi (Tateto Serizawa) over the matter of the gigantic snake the latter is keeping as a pet. He isn't quite rude in how he rebuffs his supervisor and friend Shimacchi's attempts to set him up with women, but is even more standoffish than one might expect given how he's overweight and not exactly handsome. Meanwhile, on the other side of town, pretty businesswoman Chiho Sigiura (Asami Mizukawa) quits her job after winning a photography prize, only to be put off that when her mentor (Toshiyuki Kitami) proves more interested in her body than her eye.

Where this is going is kind of obvious, but just as the audience is starting to wonder just how writer/director Yosuke Fujita is going to arrange the meet-cute, he throws the audience a curve that makes Fuku's and Chiho's story a bit more complicated than a girl who is, by her own admission, kind of focused on surface-level things realizing that Fuku has a big heart underneath a face that, while expressive, is not conventionally attractive. What's more impressive is that he doesn't waste much time in doing so after starting to hint that the audience is looking in the wrong direction. And while the events of the story are more or less the ones you might expect, Fujita doesn't just acknowledge how these two would likely view each other in real life, but deflects the film from the romantic comedy path fairly explicitly.

Full review at eFilmCritic

Monday, August 17, 2020

Fantasia On-Demand Preview 2020.03: La Dosis (and Fly Me to the Saitama)

Another short "day", as only three movies were set to have their embargo lifted Saturday and one of them was a "Fantasia Classic" that I saw (and greatly enjoyed) at last year's event. The third, Hail to the Deadites, I may catch up with during the festival proper if I've got time, but I may not; I'm not huge on documentaries about fandom and figure I'll see it in its natural environment, as a special feature on the next release of Army of Darkness as I purchase my fifth copy of one of those movies, with the question being who actually owns it now and whether whatever catalog specialists they license to sees fit to give it a 4K release.

Anyway, I'm sure that will be a lot of fun for the folks who do order it, and I'm willing to bet it would have been a real kick if it played in an auditorium with guests. I don't know whether it would be a Hall or de Seve movie, though.

La Dosis, I suspect, would be one that winds up in de Seve, a slow-and-low burner that holds things back to good effect but isn't really made to get the crowd of 600 or whatever to whoop. I dig it, though. And I strongly suspect I'd still enjoy the heck out of Fly Me to the Saitama, and I don't even feel bad about padding my 2020 reviews with it, because I probably wrote the final review of that one closer to the 2020 festival than the 2019 one anyway!

La Dosis (The Dose)

* * * (out of four)
Seen 16 August 2020 in Jay's Living Room (Fantasia Festival, Vimeo via Roku)

One keeps expecting La Dosis ("The Dose") to move up to another gear at some point, but it never quite does so, at least to the extent that one might expect. That's not a criticism; it's an acknowledgment that there are ways that society can provide cover to darkness, and one cannot necessarily wait for the big moment to make things better.

It begins with a comatose patient in an Argentine intensive care unit entering cardiac arrest; the doctors give in after three attempts to restart her heart fail, but nurse Marcos Roldán (Carlos Portaluppi) seems to sense she is not gone yet, and applies the paddles himself. She is revived, but still unconscious, and the hospital is loath to spend more resources on this old woman who is apparently without family, prompting Marcos to steal something from the supply closet and inject her with it. Meanwhile, some changes are happening in the department - the area supervisor is ailing, and co-worker Noelia (Lorena Vega) hints that it's already been decided that the job is Marcos's. There's also a new nurse in the ICU's rotation, Gabriel Santos (Ignacio Rogers), handsome and cheerful and happy to give the oft-invisible Marcos a ride home. He may, however, be a little too sympathetic with regards to the mercy Marcos showed that old lady.

One doesn't have to know much about the health-care system in Argentina to guess that Clinica Nagal is maybe not the area's best hospital, but the filmmakers don't vilify it. They show how cramped this ICU is, and it looks kind of dark and dingy compared to the other hospital that Marcos has occasion to visit, with its clean white walls and private rooms, but if this is a lesser hospital for the city's lower classes, it doesn't seem to have disdain for its patients; the doctors and nurses and the rest are mostly professional, dedicated caregivers. Still, you can see how it's a place where things may fall through the cracks, with resources stretched thin. It's not really about how the lower-class patients or staff are taken advantage of in the way that some movies might be, but it's not a factor that can be entirely discounted.

Full review at eFilmCritic

Tonde Saitama (Fly Me to the Saitama)

* * * ¼ (out of four)
Seen 22 July 2019 in Auditorium des Diplomes de la SGWU (Fantasia International Film Festival, DCP)

This may not be the most shojo movie possible, assuming I'm not being my manga categories mixed up, but even if I am, it's right up there in terms of just being absurdly, specifically Japanese, and regionally so at that. It shouldn't travel at all, even to a festival audience of people who love Japanese pop culture, and yet it got the biggest laughs of any film there, because for all that the jokes are specific, the spirit is not, and the way they're told is something anyone can laugh at.

The Saitama is a Tokyo suburb, described as the bits that were left over when Tokyo and Yokohama separated, and apparently not well-regarded by its neighbors. Teenage Manami Sugawara (Haruka Shimazaki) is embarrassed to be from there, something of great consternation to father Yoshiumi (Brother Tom) and mother Maki (Kumiko Aso) as they take a road trip. Frustrated, Yoshiumi turns on a radio drama, set in a heightened Tokyo where Class President Momomi Hakuhodo (Fumi Nikaido), a stiletto-heeled monster from the very best family, rules her high school with an iron fist with the Saitamese basically servants living in hovels, though she is as immediately smitten with new transfer student Rei Asami (Gackt) as anyone - "you can still smell the America on him!" What she doesn't know is that before he went abroad, he lived in the Saitama, and has been sent to infiltrate high society and destroy it from within.

Though I can't recall ever seeing any of the manga Mineo Maya specifically, original series Tonde Saitama was published in a girls' manga magazine and director Hideki Takeuchi is clearly channeling the general style, with its elaborate hair and fashion, lean and androgynously handsome men, and generally exaggerated visuals represented and amplified on-screen. It's a somewhat garish style that often works better on the page than screen, but this is a story that lets the filmmakers lean into it; between the contrast with the modern simplicity of the car and the satirical intent, it's no leap for the style to be self-parodying. After a while, becoming more ridiculous is a big part of how Takeuchi and screenwriter Yuichi Tokunaga keep it light rather than mean.

Full review at eFilmCritic

Sunday, August 16, 2020

Fantasia On-Demand Preview 2020.02: Lapsis (and Free Country)

A short entry for "Day 2" (Friday), but one of the slots was taken by something I'd already seen because Geothe-Institut and the Coolidge are pretty cool and for the other, well, there's a request not to post negative reviews until the festival is actually underway and, well, you do a deep dive into a film festival and you're not going to love everything. I'm pretty sure that a festival as big and devoted to movies that push buttons as Fantasia would see its programmers disappointed if something didn't rub any given critic the wrong way.

Hopefully I won't have a whole bunch of stuff to bump on Thursday, though.

Anyway, both of these are pretty darn decent, although I think I liked Marshland (seen at Fantasia back in 2015!) a fair bit more than Free Country. Both are pretty solid watches for those north of the border, hopefully available on screens all over North America in a couple of months.

Lapsis

* * * (out of four)
Seen 14 August 2020 in Jay's Living Room (Fantasia Festival, internet)

Lapsis takes place in a sort of alternate present, which is handy; the filmmakers not only don't have to pay a lot to build the future, but there's not a whole lot of specific futurism to get in the way of how they're talking about present-day issues. It doesn't always work well; there's a lot of chances for the actors to disconnect with the reality. In this case, thankfully, that's seldom a problem, even when the characters are themselves more than a bit thrown.

The big difference here is that in the movie's world, quantum computing has been invented, and major financial networks are built by threading cables between quantum nodes in isolated areas. Courier driver Ray (Dean Imperial) is not exactly a natural for such work - he's clearly not a guy who does wilderness hikes in his spare time - but his brother Jamie (Babe Howard) suffers from Omnia, a variant of Chronic Fatigue Syndrome, and the treatment costs a lot of money. Fortunately, he knows a guy (James McDaniel) who can get him a bootleg cabling medallion. It's a weird scene - routes assigned by apps, automated carts potentially stealing them while you sleep, armies of untended kids ambushing cablers to steal their equipment - and that's before Ray discovers that the identity on his medallion (username "Lapsis Beeftech") has left him with access to big-money routes and the resentment of a number of the other cablers, although he really doesn't understand why until he meets Anna (Madeline Wise) when their far-flung routes briefly intersect.

The ways quantum computing could change financial analysis in particular and the world's data infrastructure in general, or how all this cabling facilitates it, is given pretty close to zero time in the film, beyond it suddenly leaving everything on the entire old internet obsolete, and that's fine. That sort of disruption is worth having stories told about it, but it leads to other disruptions closer to the ground, and writer/director Noah Hutton zeroes in on how the big companies have an invisible monopoly and create a gig economy designed to make worker organization almost impossible. Hutton doesn't do much to hide what he's doing, right down to having the characters literally having to stay ahead of robots that are trying to snipe their jobs, but it's worth doing in part because a lot of tech-savvy science fiction fans might not have looked that closely at the economic aspects of their favorite app-based services.

Full review at eFilmCritic

Freies Land (Free Country)

* * ¾ (out of four)
Seen 15 May 2020 in Jay's Living Room (Goethe-Instiut German Film/Coolidge Corner Theatre Virtual Screening Room, internet)

It's been a while since I saw Marshland ("La Isla Minima"), the Spanish film remade here, though I didn't recognize the connection as I watched the new version. It does, however, make sense in retrospect: Free Country plays like a story mapped and adapted to a similar situation, and does that well enough to work as a thriller but is perhaps not as incisive as the filmmakers intended it to be.

It takes place in 1992, soon after the reunification of Germany which has left the East in turmoil; it's no surprise teenage sisters Patricia and Nadine Kraft talked of leaving the town of Löwitz and going to Berlin. Their disappearance still must be investigated, with Patrick Stein (Trystan Pütter), recently reassigned from Hamburg in the West, and Markus Bach (Felix Kramer), from Görlach in the East, assigned to the case. They start by talking with parents Henner (Marius Marx) and Katharina (Nora van Waldstätten), and classmates including Nicole Liederbach (Alva Schäfer), who appears to be dating the "Handsome Charlie" (Ludwig Simon) that the older sister had been seeing. A so-called psychic provides one clue, but the investigation expands when new information comes to light.

Murder, after all, was the sort of crime committed in decadent capitalist countries, and swept under the rug in places like East Germany. Ideally, this would be the heart of the movie, with the squeaky-clean Stein having to deal with everybody in the area associating the police with the Stasi while Bach struggles with decreased authority, or directly confronting how the fall of communism and reunification has not necessarily made things better in places like Löwitz but instead given them capitalists who want to decrease their already-low wages while hiring Poles from over the border. To the extent that this is a factor, though, it seems to be one where a viewer might have to be a German of a certain age to see the nuances of it. Other than the most clearly-described instances, this tends to fade quickly into mismatched-cop territory, with a side of "city cop in a small town" - a clash of styles, but in the most familiar, generic manner.

Full review on eFilmCritic

Saturday, August 15, 2020

Fantasia On-Demand Preview 2020.01: Clapboard Jungle, Yummy, Life: Untitled, and Sleep

So, Fantasia is weird this year - it's happening as an online film festival from 20 August to 2 September, with the streaming from the festival site requiring that you be in Canada to watch. I could probably try and get around it with some VPN chicanery and maybe even feel good about it - I've been coming for 15 years and am way closer to Montreal that the folks in Vancouver! - but I decided I wasn't going to do that even if I didn't get credited as media. The festival has been absurdly generous to me as a guy for whom this is an avocation rather than a job and I sure as heck am not going to give the people running the festival any reason to (a) not give me a pass in the future or (b) not even sell me tickets because I acted like an entitled jerk.

Anyway, as you can see, they did accredit me this year, which means I'm eligible for screening links and the like. It won't get me access to the entire program, and I may be denied some of the stuff that is available because some films' producers/distributors are pickier about giving out links, but I suspect that the bigger releases will be well-covered by the major sites. I figure my willingness to cover the smaller things is why they keep accrediting me anyway.

The festival's online offerings are split into two parts - some movies are available on-demand throughout the entire two-week period, while others are live-streamed at specific times, like with the regular festival. When the festival starts, I will be doing my best to mirror that schedule to the extent that I can, so those two weeks should look like the regular "Fantasia Daily" posts I've been making for the past decade and a half. I kind of have to, what with the embargo schedule and all. But, here's a funny thing about the embargo schedule - the programmers (and, presumably, content-owners) have staggered it so that reviews will be spread out over the next week, kind of approximating an extra week of the festival (or, because this is Fantasia, getting it up to its proper three-week length. There's no way I wind up that same schedule, but it feels a little right, and this post, at least, is all stuff from "Preview Day One" (festival day -6, if Wednesday is a day 0; "7 B.F." if we want the Georgian Calendar to inspire our numbering).

For Canadian friends, you could do a lot worse than to start your virtual Fantasia with Clapboard Jungle, where the festival plays a part and you'll get a glimpse of Mitch and some of the regulars. You guys can figure out the purchasing of tickets and such at the official site. For Americans (and the rest of the world), I suspect that some of these movies will be part of Nightstream, a joint venture between five American genre festivals (including my local one, Boston Underground). And, heck, I gather Yummy is already on Shudder and will be on disc in a couple of months, so consider it a preview of that!

Also: No really great place to say it in the review, but Sleep reminded me of the basic premise of Hereditary in a lot of ways, and while it's not quite so polished, I feel like it didn't completely lose itself in the potentially-supernatural aspects the way that movie did, certainly leading me to like it more than that film, although I don't know how many other people have the same sort of hang-up about that as I do.

Clapboard Jungle

* * * (out of four)
Seen 12 August 2020 in Jay's Living Room (Fantasia Festival: Documentaries from the Edge, Vimeo via Roku)

It's probably not particularly important to mention that I was fairly disappointed in Lifechanger, the feature film made by Clapboard Jungle director Justin McConnell whose production is a major focus of the second half of his documentary on being an independent genre filmmaker at the present moment, but the review is easy enough to find on this site, so there's not much point of not putting that context right up front. It kind of doesn't matter, though - it's not just that McConnell does a good enough job of showing the madness of independent film production to make you realize that just getting something made is a victory, but that the madness is the point.

He makes this point by making the risky choice of making himself, rather than the film, the story, which he acknowledges as hubris right at the start, but it's necessary: Focusing on the production of one film would give a documentary such as this a clear beginning, middle, and end, with resolution and boundaries, but that would be something of a lie: Even as Lifechanger is taking shape and going into production, the theme that is taking shape is that filmmakers like McConnell can't just focus on the one thing; they must have a "slate" of multiple projects in the works at all times because not only are there are going to be long stretches where work on that one project is stalled, waiting for someone else's interest or availability, but because producers investing in a filmmaker are looking for longer-term returns, or because nothing will come of it. Eventually, yes, shooting, editing, and doing the festival circuit with Lifechanger will take center-stage, but outside of those moments, McConnell and those like him have to split their attention, build a pipeline, and be ready to change direction .

It changes the focus of the movie from what you might expect, and it works sneakily well - one of the first filmmakers McConnell talks to is Guillermo del Toro, and while it's always fun to hear him wax rhapsodic about how much he loves movies and enjoys making them (and useful to demonstrate the dedication filmmaking inspires), one sees him making The Shape of Water and knows that, even if he's famously had trouble getting films off the ground, he's a bit disconnected from the granular struggle at this scale. He soon expands it to folks the mainstream may not know, whether because their successes at the box office are still relatively minor or because they work well behind the scenes - people like producers, packagers, and festival programmers - the ones who are usually cast as villains or obstructions in movies about moviemaking.

Full review at eFilmCritic

Yummy

* * ¼ (out of four)
Seen 12 August 2020 in Jay's Living Room (Fantasia Festival, Vimeo)

If enthusiastic gore and violence is your first priority for a horror movie, Yummy has you covered; the filmmakers spill a lot of blood and build some gross prosthetics, and they don't waste a lot of time getting from one gruesome gag to the next. That's not quite all it's got, but it's close, and while that may be enough for those just looking for an hour and a half of splatter, it's the sort of horror movie with a lot of places where it could have been great if the filmmakers had run with something a little bit more.

It quickly introduces the audience to Alison (Maaike Neuville), her boyfriend Michael (Bart Hollanders), and her mother Sylvia (Annick Christiaens), driving to a clinic in Eastern Europe where Alison can get inexpensive breast reduction surgery and Sylvia can get some more stereotypical procedures. Michael, who studied to be a doctor before discovering he can't stand the sight of blood, finds the low-rent place suspicious, from namesake surgeon Dr. Krawczyk (Eric Godon) to administrator Janja (Clara Cleymans) to travel coordinator Daniel (Benjamin Ramon), and he's not wrong: There's an occasional zombifying side-effect to Krawczyk's experimental stem-cell formula, and when one gets loose, Alison and company are in a particularly bad situation.

The sight of that first zombie is the first of many times a viewer may raise an intrigued eyebrow; she's topless, super-perky, toned, and smooth, and while "sexy zombies" isn't necessarily the most creative idea out there, you can do something with it, flipping the script by having perfect-looking but hollowed-out undead chasing folks who look impaired or maimed in some way, but it's a passing fancy, with moments of role-reversal though it's never a consistent-enough theme to become the movie's thing. There's a weird creature that may or may not be connected to the zombies, because why not, and a thread about Michael being kind of clumsy and having bad luck that kind of lurks without getting a really great moment, especially since director Lars Damiseaux and co-writer Eveline Hagenbeek seem to be playing with the idea of Michael being more useful as a healer than a fighter at one point, another potentially interesting twist.

Full review at eFilmCritic

Life: Untitled

* * * (out of four)
Seen 13 August 2020 in Jay's Living Room (Fantasia Festival: Camera Lucida, Vimeo via Roku)

Writer/director Kana Yamada's Life: Untitled is based upon her play, and it's a fair translation, but it's kind of funny how things that are just part of how things work in one medium can make you wonder if something else is up in another. This one, for instance, opens with a character addressing the camera directly and mostly takes place in one location, no big deal in the theater, but do it in a movie and eventually something seems like it might be up. Is this some sort of deal where there's really just one character and everyone else is some sort of figment of her imagination or fragment of her personality?

Probably not. Well, not literally, but it's that sort of movie.

The girl who starts by breaking the fourth wall is Kano (Sairi Itoh), who has had what she describes as an "ordinary life" - though not one that exactly has her eager to jump into any sort of intimate relationship. She goes to work for the Crazy Bunny escort service, but recoils the first time that she's in a hotel room with a client. She doesn't quit, though, instead staying on to help around the office, assisting the manager by answering phones, keeping the fridge stocked, and making sure everybody gets paid. The girls include bookish Shika (Aika Yukihara), gossipy Atsuko (Aimi Satsukawa), and businesslike Riyu (Tomoko Nozaki), as well as Shiho (Reiko Kataoka), who at about 30 is the "older woman" of the group, and Mahiru (Yuri Tsunematsu), who has a tendency to smile a little too wide and laugh a little too hard. Drivers include friendly Hagio (Dai Ikeda) and bleach-blond Ryota (Shunsuke Tanaka), who is maybe not having the best reaction to how serious a crush Kyoko (Kokoro Morita) has for him.

There aren't a whole lot of men to be found in this movie, just enough that it's not entirely obvious that Kano has cocooned herself among this group at least partially in order to avoid dealing with them. That's kind of impressive, because Yamada is fairly pointed during that first monologue that she's had some really lousy experiences that culminate in a lousy first assignment, but avoidance has a different feel than overt anger. One doesn't necessarily notice that a lot of them men who might be aggravating the situation are off-screen, just being referenced rather than having it demonstrated, but it builds. It is, without calling attention to itself as such, a precise sort of encapsulation of how men tend to treat women as just sex objects and then look down on them even more when they leverage their sexuality. It's kind of exhausting and frequently humiliating but not something a woman can completely extricate herself from.

Full review at eFilmCritic

Schlaf (Sleep)

* * * ¼ (out of four)
Seen 13 August 2020 in Jay's Living Room (Fantasia Festival, internet)

The trick that the makers of Sleep pull off isn't necessarily rare, but it leads to disaster often enough that you have to admire how well they manage it. It's a thriller that is so exceptionally grounded at its center that one can easily discount just exactly how almost everything else about it is. It's a trip but not so random that filmmaker Michael Venus ever actually loses track of what made the audience get invested in the first place.

That would be the mother/daughter pair of Marlene (Sandra Hüller) and Mona (Gro Swantje Kohlhof); the former is a flight attendant who has a few health issues, mostly a sleep disorder that sometimes interrupts her breathing, manifesting as frightening nightmares, although Mona is starting to realize Marlene might have mental health issues as well, especially when they come to a head as a particularly bad dream sends her into a breakdown at a Stainbach hotel, in a fugue state when Mona arrives. She winds up staying in the same hotel, run by Otto Fahrmann (August Schmölzer) and his wife Loretze (Marion Kracht), trying to solve the mystery of what sent her mother over the edge, or why the hotel seems to match drawings Marlene made before she left. Soon she's having nightmares of her own, which is understandable under the circumstances, even without the doctor's warning that Marlene's condition may be hereditary, unless there's more to it.

Mona is an intelligent, rational young woman who winds up dropped into some very irrational situations, the sort of character who could easily be swallowed alive by a movie like this, with filmmakers often working overtime to make her seem cool or quippy, but that's not the way Venus and star Gro Swantje Kohlaf go. Kohlof has room to seem puzzled by the mystery and unnerved as she finds signs of her mother's issues in her own head, and she does so without ever seeming to lose the initiative. One gets the sense that because Mona has been dealing with Marlene's issues her entire life, she has a handle on how to navigate strange situations and maintain some control even if she's being buffeted. It's fun to watch her react uncertainly to this town's eccentrics, shiver at the things that make her question her own sanity, and make seemingly aggressive leaps out of character when that's the only reaction to everything going crazy.

Full review at eFilmCritic

Friday, August 14, 2020

Next Week in Virtual Tickets: Films sort of playing Boston 14 August 2020 - 21 August 2020

Keep writing to Save Your Cinema, and maybe check out Nightstream, the virtual festival that will be subbing for BUFF (and four others around the country) this year. In the meantime...

  • The Brattle Theatre opens a pair of documentaries: Represent follows three women vying for public office in the midwest, and features a pre-recorded Q&A with director Hilary Bachelder. That one is new; Jazz on a Summer's Day has been showing up at the Brattle since 1959 and its latest iteration features a spiffy new restoration. They also continue Creem: America's Only Rock 'n' Roll Magazine, You Never Had It - An Evening with Bukowski, Beats, and Shanghai Triad, the latter two marked as being in their final week.
  • The Coolidge Corner Theatre also adds Jazz on a Summer's Day to their selections, and if you want more music, there's River City Drumbeat, a documentary following people from three generations involved in a Louisville, KY school's drum corps. They also get I Used to Go Here, starring Gillian Jacobs as an author who makes a return trip to her college to deliver a lecture at the behest of the professor she had a crush on 15 years earlier (Jermaine Clement). Those play in addition to A Thousand Cuts, Creem, The Fight, and John Lewis: Good Trouble.

    On top of those, there's the weekly Coolidge Education seminar on Thursday, with NYU professor Dr. Sujay Pandit examining Spike Jonze's Her; sign up, watch the introduction, find the movie on whatever services you favor (or pull a disc off the shelf), and then return for the Q&A.
  • The West Newton Cinema continues to play The Burnt Orange Heresy, 2001: A Space Odyssey, Casablanca,Motherless Brooklyn, The Goonies, The Wizard of Oz, and Happy Feet through at least the weekend. Starting on Wednesday, they also have a four-day run of Christmas on Ice, a Lifetime-looking holiday romance made by local filmmakers.

    The Lexington Venue is also open at least through Sunday, featuring Made in Italy, which stars Liam Neeson and son Micahel Richardson as an estranged family traveling from London to sell the house that the father inherited from his wife. They also have The Burnt Orange Heresy and Summerland.
  • The Somerville Theatre holds steady with The Fight, Amulet, John Lewis: Good Trouble, the Quarantine Cat Film Fest, Pahokee, and Alice in their virtual screening room; same with The Capitol who have the "One Small Step" shorts, the Cat Film Fest, The Surrogate, and Heimat Is a Space in Time in their own virtual theater but is open to serve ice cream and snacks.
  • The Regent Theatre shows Creem, What Doesn't Kill Us, Reggae Boyz (marked with "last chance"), and WBCN and the American Revolution on their site, although you may have to .
  • The Brattle, the Coolidge, and West Newton have all been offering relatively reasonable rentals for up to 20-ish people; you may have to dig through their websites or call them directly get quotes on rates, available slots, and what the rules on concessions and masking are.
  • Many of the multiplexes are targeting next weekend for re-opening, with AMC announcing 15-cent movies for Thursday the 20th at their re-opening theaters, though showtimes and seating will be limited and staggered to allow for extra cleaning. Boston Common will have Bloodshot (including Imax), Black Panther, the live-action Beauty and the Beast, the classic Ghostbusters, The Empire Strikes Back, Grease, Back to the Future, and The Goonies; South Bay currently lists multiple screens for Bloodshot (including Imax), Black Panther, and Back to the Future. Further afield, Burlington has Beauty and the Beast and The Goonies; Braintree has Jumanji: The Next Level, Black Panther, and Back to the Future; and the Liberty Tree Mall has Bloodshot (including Imax), I Still Believe, Jumanji: The Next Level, Sonic the Hedgehog, Beauty and the Beast, Ghostbusters, The Empire Strikes Back, Grease, Back to the Future, and The Goonies. The location at Assembly Square in Somerville does NOT appear to be opening yet, and a quick dig through the Stubs app makes it appear that the Massachusetts locations are not offering pick-up for snacks yet. You might also find your Stubs account "paused", as I have, which shouldn't be a big deal for those 15-cent shows, but Friday may be a different story.


Again, tempted to go to Lexington, but between Lollapuzzoola and this huge virtual pile of screeners for Fantasia, I will probably stay safely in my living room.

Thursday, August 13, 2020

This Week in (Virtual) Tickets: 13 July 2020 - 9 August 2020

This is what you might call an extremely lockdown-inspired chunk of movie-watching, from "I can do this big project" to "I don't want to do anything" to virtual theater streaming to stuff you've always meant to get around to. It's a roller coaster, sort of.

This Week in Tickets

This Week in Tickets

This Week in Tickets

This Week in Tickets

It kind of starts off with the sort of online shopping spree one gets vulnerable to when you're spending so much time inside and on your computer, as I took advantage of a sale to pick up not just the newly released The Rise of Skywalker but most of the movies that came before on 4K. I'd mostly planned to just do the Rise review I'd punted back in December, but instead decided to watch the whole Star Wars saga, one per night. It not only holds up as a whole well enough to not be hurt by a disappointing finale, to the point where I'd like more right now.

In the middle of that, I took a couple of cinematic trips to Hong Kong for a double feature: The Inspector Wears Skirts was the back end of a double feature with The Empire Strikes Back on night #2, and it turned out to be not great. I found myself fairly fond of Denise Ho: Becoming the Song on night #6, though - it's a pretty good starter for folks who would like to know what's going on with the protests there.

I took a night off between the main saga and the "extra" movies, both of which were part of two-movie days with stuff that was playing in the local virtual theaters. Amulet, sad to say, was a pretty disappointing horror movie, the sort where you can see the good pieces but where the whole just doesn't come together. The next night's, Relativity, was one that grew on me as I wrote about it.

Then, after that, it was a pretty sluggish week as I tried to write up the Star Wars stuff and watch baseball and get stuff done for work. There's only so much baseball to watch, but the Red Sox have decided to start the games later, which makes no sense because fewer people are trying to get to the park or even home from work to watch it, and stink and play poorly and not even leave a lot of time for a movie afterward. Bleh.

By the time I was ready to go again, I was looking for 90-minute movies, which led to two early ones by Ann Hui, Zodiac Killers and The Story of Woo Viet. It's an interesting thing to look back after only having seen some of her later, more acclaimed and less genre-infused works - I came in with a lot of different expectations that both were and weren't met.

After that, there was some more time to pull some discs off the shelf - Blood Simple, Legend of the Wolf, and Hopscotch to start the week, and then Memoirs of an Invisible Man at the end. You're never going to believe this, but the two that I got as part of Criterion Collection sales were better than the ones which I bought because they were movies from guys I usually like that maybe aren't big deals like they're classics. Crazy, right? Who'd've thought?

Next one of these will probably be in another month, since I've started watching Fantasia screeners and part of covering them as press is agreeing to embargos, which specifically includes when they can go on one's Letterboxd page. Congrats, ya crazy kiwis, you've built a platform that's a big enough deal for festivals and publicity people to make rules that mention you specifically!

Ba Wong Fa (The Inspector Wears Skirts)

* * (out of four)
Seen 16 July 2020 in Jay's Living Room (off the shelf, Hong Kong Blu-ray)

They made four of these things, for some reason, shedding characters as they went until only two of the original ensemble cast were left a mere four years later. It must have been a hit, and I suppose that if you come at it looking for a light girl-power take on Police Academy, it does that well enough for its period, and it's partially my fault for expecting more action and sharper wit both times I saw it.

It's tough for the film to not be a let-down after the extremely fun action piece that opens it, with Cynthia Rothrock showing up as a guest star to fight alongside Sibelle Hu, but the film doesn't help itself in a lot of ways: That bit puts the instructor at the center, but she's pushed to the side through the rest of the film, and while the students are fun, there's maybe too many of them with only the slightest story connecting them. The filmmakers position Sandra Ng as "the stocky one", which she's not, really, although she is the one who is putting the most effort into being funny (quote-oddly-unquote, the guy she's paired with, who actually does look sort of heavy, never becomes the butt of jokes for it). It doesn't always work, and maybe wouldn't until filmmakers started putting her into films where everybody was trying as hard. The brief action bits before a messy finale are so formal that they never get to be fun.

The lesson here, I guess, is not to buy movies and have them shipped from the other side of the planet without checking your own blog. I apparently didn't like this much 16 years ago, and while some of that was walking home disappointed after a midnight show, a fair amount wasn't.

What I thought back in 2004

Blood Simple

* * * ½ (out of four)
Seen 3 August 2020 in Jay's Living Room (off the shelf, Blu-ray)

When I watched the copy of Blood Simple that I got from the latest B&N Criterion sale, I wasn't sure whether I'd seen it before or not, and afterwards I still wasn't sure - it seemed familiar in a general sense, but not in any particular scene. That's not to say it felt generic, just that it's a well-oiled machine of a movie; the Coens made a heck of a modern noir without getting winky or meta and if that means it doesn't have quite the easy hook to file individual bits away that the more obviously self-aware thrillers that they and others would make, it's fine. The movie just works.

That simple, machine-like nature is a big part of why it sucks the audience in; there's a remorseless order to how every step just a little further outside the usual bounds leads to the next, and even as each man further compromises himself, they're not really ready to handle the person who has gone a step further (Frances McDormand's Abby isn't an innocent damsel, but she mostly avoids the sort of descent the men undergo). It's a small enough world that it can handle a few coincidences and near-misses, along with a finale that emphasizes how small steps can explode into something that destroys the whole circle in highly visible fashion.

It's never just low-key and heads-down, though. Dan Hedaya and M. Emmet Walsh are quite enjoyably scummy men, with John Getz the sort of handsome and earnest counterpart that maybe wouldn't take all that much to sink to the others' level. I'm a bit curious about how the Coens (making their first feature) managed to hook up with Barry Sonnenfeld (shooting his first feature); it's a great pairing, especially since the Coens are still coming from the same place as Sam Raimi in how they stage action. You don't necessarily expect to see noteworthy folks on the same project that early, but they're a great match.

It's entirely possible that, the next time a local theater has a Coen Brothers or modern noir series, I'll see "Blood Simple" on the calendar, not be sure whether I've seen it before, and have more or less the same experience I did this time, only with an audience and a bigger screen. It's not yet as idiosyncratic as the Coens would later become famous for, but it's awfully effective genre work.

Chin long chuen suet (Legend of the Wolf)

* * ¼ (out of four)
Seen 4 August 2020 in Jay's Living Room (off the shelf, Hong Kong Blu-ray)

How old is Donnie Yen's character supposed to be in the "present day" segments of Legend of the Wolf? 80-ish? He doesn't look elderly, and rooting him specifically in the mid/late 1990s seems like an odd choice, given how timeless the flashback material that makes up the bulk of the story is. There's fun bits there, to be sure, from the perfectly blue and sleazy look of the city to how the guy looking for "Wolf" is doing so via perfectly realized 1997 computer bullshit, but what happens "now" is never as important as "then" and the winking acknowledgment that the story being flashed back to is maybe embellished doesn't really gain the movie anything.

Of course, one can kind of understand the need; Donnie Yen was a great screen fighter but not yet much of an actor, and the script he and his collaborators come up with makes his character a blank slate. It doesn't make a lot of sense or give the audience a lot of reason to invest in him or hypothetically wonder how he became the mysterious fixer in the 1990s, but his performance doesn't actually clank here, so... fine? It's a set-up that acknowledges Yen's limits and gives him a little chance to get better.

That all that does, eventually, is get the movie to a couple of highly impressive fight scenes, including a creative sort of "running melee" that I really liked: It's one of the few times I can remember a foot chase becoming a fight scene without regularly stopping to plant, putter around a "ring", and then start back up again. Arguably its most memorable bit of bonkers action plays into this, a ridiculous and likely impossible redirection of a knife that keeps the action literally moving.

Eventually, Yen would find the right sort of screen personae and collaborators to actually be a quality leading man between the punching and kicking. Legend of the Wolf doesn't have him there yet, but the action is enough fun to be worth a watch on its own.

Hopscotch

* * * ¼ (out of four)
Seen 5 August 2020 in Jay's Living Room (off the shelf, Blu-ray)

Has anybody, aside from maybe Peter Falk, benefited more from getting older and having a few wrinkles than Walter Matthau? He was a few years from playing old here - he's more the sort of rumpled and weathered middle-age that later fitness trends would make less visible - but he's got a wry wit that comes from experience that only got better with age.

Hopscotch is all leaning into that, with Matthau playing a senior spy being put out to pasture because he is all too well-aware of how much better he knows his job than the people above him, and while he's got a chance at a soft landing (Glenda Jackson as a former lover who has married a wealthy man and been widowed but not lost any interest in Matthau's Miles Kendig), he can't stop being a spy. It's who he is. Even as he decides to write his memoirs and use their publication to taunt his former masters, he's almost certainly getting more of a kick out of finding a new use for his old skills than causing actual harm.

That's a large part of what makes it so much fun; aside from it being a good 100 minutes of Matthau walking about with a twinkle in his eye, with only Ned Beatty's blustering blunt instrument really opposing him actively (Sam Waterston and Herbert Lom are detached, appreciative pursuers), it's generally light. The secrets in Kendig's book are clearly more embarrassing than dangerous, and his level of pettiness stays more or less exactly where it should. It's an impressive sort of balance throughout, a breezy comedy that never loses sight of both how unproductive and wasteful the Cold War tended to be but also how dangerous the folks who wanted it to to be ruthlessly fought were. It's obviously a product of its time, but the human beings involved are real and likable enough for it to still work 40 years later.

Memoirs of an Invisible Man

* * ¼ (out of four)
Seen 9 August 2020 in Jay's Living Room (off the shelf, Blu-ray)

Memoirs of an Invisible Man feels like it was an entertaining book whose adaptation got run through too many drafts by too many screenwriters until any sort of satire that might have made studio executives uncomfortable was gone, along with anything they figured the punters wouldn't understand, and what is left is a shell of a movie, a standard story of an ordinary man on the run from an ordinary CIA killer. It looks especially bad when put up against 2020's version of The Invisible Man, which has a pointed idea of what to use invisibility for compared to the half-hearted take on conformity this movie tries to make into a theme.

There is still some fun to be had; Daryl Hannah is in it, and even if she's got kind of a nothing character, she's charming enough to drag Chevy Chase's milquetoast up a notch or two in likability when they play off each other. It never hurts to have Michael McKean and Stephen Tobolowsky around, and while Sam Neill is given a pretty standard-issue villain, it's not hard to spot the moments when he finds something he can work with. He gets to run with one of the shockingly few bits of invisible-man physical comedy as he mimes getting dragged around an office with a gun to his head, and I feel like few people do a much better switch between nastiness and smiling insincerity when called upon. Director John Carpenter would work with him again in his next feature, In the Mouth of Madness, to much better effect, suggesting that none of the talented people here were ever on the same page.

Truth be told, it seems like a strict paycheck job for Carpenter - consider how viciously his previous movie, They Live, went after capitalism and complacency compared to how this one never really has an alternate route for its stock-trading main character - but he still does a solid, professional job as director, though he can't get more out of the script than was put in. He and the folks at Industrial Lights and Magic really seem to get a kick out of creating the various invisibility effects, squeezing the most they can out of the relatively new CGI technology and also putting together some impressive matte painting work. For all the other faults, "Memoirs" has more than a few moments when, even 28 years later, someone might sit up a little straighter and say something is a really cool special effect a few times; it hits the sweet spot where you can see the level of effort and the creativity that led to a striking image as opposed to pure grinding (either virtually or in the real world).

Movies where the best thing is the cutting-edge special effects don't always age well, and this one's no exception. It's still John Carpenter, a good cast, and some striking visuals, and that's worth watching once.


Star Wars
The Empire Strikes Back
The Inspector Wears Skirts
The Phantom Menace
Attack of the Clones
Revenge of the Sith



Denise Ho: Becoming the Song
Return of the Jedi
The Force Awakens
The Last Jedi
The Rise of Skywalker
Solo: A Star Wars Story
Amulet
Relativity
Rogue One: A Star Wars Story



Zodiac Killers
The Story of Woo Viet



Blood Simple
Legend of the Wolf
Hopscotch
Memoirs of an Invisible Man

Monday, August 10, 2020

Two from Ann Hui: Zodiac Killers and The Story of Woo Viet

Did I go for Zodiac Killers on Saturday night because it was late and the movie at the end of the shelf was a tidy 99 minutes? Yes, absolutely. Was I more than happy to go back to that same shelf to get another Ann Hui movie the next day, especially if it starred Chow Yun-Fat? Oh, certainly.

The pair were odd experiences, though, in that my exposure to Ann Hui had been her acclaimed films from the 2010s - A Simple Life, The Golden Era, and Our Time Will Come - so I wasn't sure what to expect from these two. I kind of expected Zodiac Killers to be a more straightforward genre film and Woo Viet to be something of a low-key epic, and as a result spent a fair chunk of Zodiac wondering if I was giving it extra credit because I knew what she'd be capable of later. One does that; it's tough not to look at earlier movies without that perspective.

They've got a similar sort of interesting vibe, though, genre film back-ends attached to more exploratory first halves, but as much as each of them can feel like two things glued together, but when you look at them afterward, they're more entangled than they look. It's kind of the opposite of how this sort of genre hybrid often works these days - western filmmakers often seem more interested in creating a quick hook and then letting the audience wander once the viewer is committed - and given that genre film isn't held in the same sort of regard as the more interior drama these films have in the first act, it can feel like a kind of devolution.

And I don't know that it's an unfair way to look at it; for all that Hui doesn't abandon the more overtly complex indie-ness to get people shooting at each other, the endings, tragic and emotionally messy as they are, are still a little too definitive for the way the situations were set up.

Hui had 1.14 movies on the schedule for 2020 - a Mainland co-production and one of the segments in Septet - and I'm eager to be able to see both, somehow. They likely won't be this sort of thing - which certainly play as a female filmmaker with indie sensibilities carving her own place out of a film industry built to crank out violent action - but they'll absolutely be the result of movies like this. Then again, as the only woman directing a segment in Septet, surrounded by six men known for action, maybe she'll be back in this space for twenty minutes or so.

Ji dao zhui zong (Zodiac Killers)

* * * ¼ (out of four)
Seen 1 August 2020 in Jay's Living Room (off the shelf, Hong Kong Blu-ray)

Zodiac Killers seems to be a product of a very precise time and place, even more than is typical for a film industry that cranks movies out relentlessly. Read a synopsis and it looks like a pretty standard crime flick, making the person who comes in for that frustrated as it wanders, but give it a little space and it becomes more intriguing: In 1991, lots of Hong Kongers are going abroad or looking for foreign passports, just in case the handover quickly goes south. And though the tendency to noodle around the crime story didn't need the sudden resurgence in independent film going on across the Pacific to show up in Hong Kong cinema, it certainly makes the time more specific for foreign audiences.

Ben Lee (Andy Lau Tak-Wah) might be aware of what's going on at Sundance; he and classmate Chang Chih (Tuo Tsung-Hua) are studying film in Tokyo, although Ben doesn't show up to class much, working multiple jobs to pay for class and rent. Meng Tieh-Lan (Cherie Chung Cho-Hung) is in a similar situation, and they meet when Ben's friend Ming (Sun Peng) splurges to bring all the Chinese hostesses at a club to his table. Ben gets infatuated quickly, but it turns out Tieh-Lan already has a boyfriend, Hideyuki Asano (Jun'ichi Ishida), a gangster whose current situation is, generously, a mess.

Asano is not the guy who is holding onto Tieh-Lan's passport; that's a different guy with a similarly sketchy mustache who is also dealing with yakuza issues, and the way the script by Raymond To and Ng Lim-Jan suddenly drops one and brings in the other can certainly throw a viewer for a moment or two as she goes from ready to just walk out of everything and maybe interested in Ben to head over heels without anything else intervening. It's an odd transition, and one that signals a transition from Hui et al mosty poking around at these characters and their situation to something that's more of a straight-ahead crime story. They do well at both, but there's a pretty notable bump in between, and getting Ben involved in a righteous mission muddies how shifting to the story involving Asano involves Ben being a ridiculously entitled dick.

Which, itself, isn't a bad thing at all - there's a story in there somewhere about him going from the cynically materialistic but not exactly hard-working guy with all the useless crap in his tiny apartment at the start to the man who will selflessly sacrifice everything for a woman who doesn't love him the same way. It's one that Hui and stars Andy Lau & Cherie Chung more or less have to impose upon the script, but they know how to work the emotion over the plot, from an opening flash-forward that lays the melodrama on thick to Lau and Chung not exactly hamming it up but never allowing a scene to be overly subtle. The plot's not much, but Hui is zeroed in on the feel of the time and the emotion of the story is in broad strokes, and she's a good enough filmmaker to make a fairly impressive movie out of it.

Woo Yuet dik goo si (The Story of Woo Viet)

* * * (out of four)
Seen 2 August 2020 in Jay's Living Room (off the shelf, Hong Kong Blu-ray)

As with Zodiac Killers, which came out a decade later, The Story of Woo Viet has a weird split to it, like director Ann Hui spends the first half of the movie making the independent film that focuses on the themes and situations that she's most interested in, with the second half being the crime movie from which you can cut a genre-film trailer and sends the mainstream audience out satisfied. It's not a bad trick, although a little disappointing if one is interested in the place where the movie starts.

Woo Viet himself is a refugee from Vietnam, and while he's escaped to arrive in Thailand on the way to Hong Kong (from whence he intends to reach America), he's not out of danger; the boatload of refugees contains spies, and when he kills one, his contact in Hong Kong has to get him and a fellow escapee out on fake passports. That gets him to Manila, where he winds up part of a Chinatown gang.

That would later become a familiar place for star Chow Yun-Fat, and Chow is easily the best thing about this movie: He shows an easy charisma early on, easily connecting with Cora Miao Chien-Jen as the Hong Konger with the obvious crush, Lam Ying-Fat as a kid taken under his wing, and Chan To-Kit as the cynical old man who it turns out is properly paranoid, as well as Cherie Chung Cho-Hung as the girl he will travel with to Manila, enough so that when situations call for him to harden, it's a hard shift. He'll never be quite the same afterward, and the second half reflects this - there's a cynical not-quite-hollowness to Woo Viet, gangster that shows how the decency that originally attracted the audience has been abraded away.

It's not a shock, though - Hui and company have quickly built the sort of sort of environment where hope and fear can easily co-mingle, making Woo's own reaction feel logical. She and writer Alfred Cheung Kin-Ting are good at making everything before Manila quietly chaotic, like nobody is really sure what they should do because they're not by nature as ruthless as the people the refugees are trying to escape, and Woo Viet having to expose that part of him and not put it away is tragic without requiring a lot of self-reflection. The second half goes through gang-movie motions, kind of rote even if the action itself is solid, but it's got a little more heft to it. The audience has an understanding of Chow's brooding badass and Chung's damsel that they might not have in lesser movies.

It means The Story of Woo Viet isn't really two movies, even if it sometimes feels like it is - it just turns out to be a crime film with extra depth rather than a message drama that turns to crime.