Showing posts with label Venice 2013. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Venice 2013. Show all posts

Sunday, March 29, 2015

The alienating realism of Under the Skin



Jonathan Glazer’s Under the Skin polarised critical and popular opinion from the moment it hit the festival circuit in the autumn of 2013. About twelve months later, the film was hailed by many critics as one of the best of the year and it made an appearance in numerous top 10-lists. The lose adaptation of Michel Faber’s 2000 novel stars Scarlett Johansson as an unnamed alien preying on humans of the male variety in Scotland. During its difficult, decade-long production history, the project went through numerous iterations and transformations. The final result was produced for a relatively modest £8 million and takes an almost experimental approach to narrative filmmaking. In the following paragraphs, I will show how Under the Skin is innovative on a technical as well as a textual level in a number of ways, particularly in regards to its attitude towards realism.

One of the most interesting aspects of the film is its much debated use of non-professional actors and of hidden cameras. During the shoot, an almost unrecognisable Johansson would drive around the streets of Glasgow and strike up conversations with unknowing passers-by. In order to capture these scenes, the filmmakers installed ten small digital cameras throughout the driver’s cabin. All ten angles were filmed at the same time. Jonathan Glazer would meanwhile give instructions to Scarlett Johansson via an earpiece. This required some inventive work from the technical department (the cameras had to be inconspicuous) and the editor (due to the enormous amount of footage shot simultaneously). The concept itself is obviously nothing new. In an article for The Dissolve, Matt Singer discusses the history of the hidden camera-technique from 1948’s Candid Camera to more recent examples such as Borat (Larry Charles, 2006) or Great World of Sound (Craig Zobel, 2007). The main differences between Under the Skin and its predecessors are genre and purpose. The vast majority of Singer’s examples are comedies, frequently made for television. Others include reality-TV and investigative documentaries. Glazer takes this gimmick and applies it to narrative, dramatic cinema. In the process, the director asks fundamental questions about the nature of the medium. The concept of realism and the desire to depict reality on screen have occupied cinema and the discipline of film studies since their inception. Many current directors use handheld cameras and/or long takes to convey an illusion of the real, but Glazer erases (or at least blurs) the line between truth and fiction. During her travels through Scotland, the alien encounters a series of characters that are played by a mixture of amateur and professional actors. Crucially, the objective gaze of the camera remains neutral and the audience often can’t distinguish between the two; between naturalism and performance. The only person who is clearly acting is Scarlett Johansson. The star plays on her image as a glamourous Hollywood celebrity. Like the extra-terrestrial protagonist, she looks completely out of place in the rough, gritty environment of Scotland. Performance style and stardom are thus used as a means to make Johansson’s character stand out even more from her surroundings.

Under the Skin establishes an original form of realism through the use of hidden cameras, which Glazer exploits in a truly innovative manner. The film is defined by the juxtaposition of two polar opposites; as Jonathan Romney put it in Sight & Sound: ‘the surreal and the very concretely real.’ Glazer combines the real life people, landscapes and locations with fantastical images and Mica Levi’s mesmerising soundtrack. During the eye-creation sequence in the beginning and the devouring-scene later on, the imagery even veers into the abstract. We see a viscous liquid flow towards a bright, red rectangle followed by several seconds of flashing lights and incomprehensible images. The realism of Under the Skin does not attempt to draw the audience into the narrative or to highlight a particular social issue. On the contrary, it arguably takes on Brechtian qualities and serves as an alienation device. Looking at humanity from an outside (an alien) perspective is one of the main themes of the film. The alien struggles to understand, and later emulate, human behaviour, and as spectators, we empathise with her confusion. The environment of the shopping centre Johansson visits in an early scene is extremely real and familiar to most audiences, yet the scene strikes us as artificial and strange. After seeing the alien hesitantly pick out an outfit, there are several brief, voyeuristic shots of women having make-up applied. This suggests that their behaviour is just as absurd and unnatural as the alien’s. Another sequence, in which Johansson follows a man into a nightclub, works in a similar fashion. She is ushered onto the dancefloor by a flock of excited young women who communicate through indistinguishable chatter. Partying seems like a strange, exotic ritual throughout the entire sequence. Both these scenes were shot with hidden cameras at real life locations. Glazer thus manages to subvert the traditional meaning of realism and uses it to provide us with an outside perspective. In Under the Skin, the screen is not like window, but like fairground mirror rendering a skewed image of ourselves.


Read my original review of Under the Skin here.

Thursday, March 27, 2014

Under the Skin

The first time I heard of Under the Skin was at the Venice film festival. I was talking to a British journalist, who works for FRED film radio and the BBC: “This is one of the worst films I have ever seen!” She went on and on: “I don’t know how this got made. What was Jonathan Glazer thinking?” Later that day, the film was booed by a large part of the audience at the gala screening with Jonathan Glazer and Scarlett Johansson in attendance. Others, including many British critics, came out of the screening correctly singing its praises.

Unfortunately I did not manage to see the polarizing film in Venice. I didn’t manage to see it in London either. I had to wait until it was released in the UK last week. At the time of writing I have seen it twice within 5 days, and I’m strongly considering going again. It is that good.


An alien (Scarlett Johansson) drives around Glasgow in a white van. Her (or its?) mission is to pick up random men and lure them back to her house (spaceship? space?) where they are then, for the lack of a better word, “consumed” by some sort of extra-terrestrial sludge. If this does not sound strange enough, know that large portions of it were filmed with hidden cameras, using unknowing passer-by’s as actors. It is difficult and unnecessary to say more about the story, so I will leave it at this.

The most impressive thing about Under the Skin is the way in which Jonathan Glazer combines the gritty hyper-real and the slick, crazy surreal almost seamlessly through superb visuals and sound design. Comparisons have been made with Lynch, Kubrick or von Trier, but none of them are really satisfactory. Under the Skin is something different, a true original. Every image looks and feels right. Mica Levi’s mesmerizing, creepy score helps to join the different elements and creates a haunting atmosphere throughout the film. The importance of the music cannot be overstated and the recurring three note theme will burn itself onto your brain and haunt you in your worst nightmares.

What is it all about though? The answer to this depends on the spectator. If you are looking for answers and explanations, you will be disappointed. Glazer merely presents this story and encourages the audience to think. There are several ways to look at it. It could be a film about the strangeness of human behaviour. Seeing an alien imitate humans, clearly not understanding them, makes us realise how weird we must look to an outsider. In this sense, the film has the same effect as repeating the same word over and over, until it feels completely unnatural. There also is an interesting gender discourse within the film.

Scarlett Johansson’s performance is nothing short of brilliant; possibly the best of her career. It is an extremely physical achievement. She uses her entire body in a way she has never done before. Every gesture is full of meaning. She always seems slightly uncomfortable in her skin in the way she holds herself, slightly dropping her shoulders, the arms dangling loosely at her side. It is an extremely difficult performance to pull off, because her character’s main function is to be looked at. She is a passive character and she is the subject of her victims’ gaze, of the camera’s gaze and finally of her own gaze. About halfway through, she catches a glimpse of herself in a mirror and starts to develop an interest in her body. Mirrors are a recurring element, emphasizing the “fakeness” of her body. This stands in complete contrast to her character Spike Jonze’s Her (in which she was miscast), in which she also played a non-human form of intelligence with a desire to become human. Unlike the bodiless operating system Samantha, the unnamed alien of Under the Skin is primarily defined through her physical presence.



Under the Skin is a film that is very difficult to describe and impossible to put into a fixed category. It contains genre elements (science-fiction, erotic thriller, social realism) without belonging to any of them. Watching it is a strange, hypnotic experience and I haven’t been this captivated and fascinated by a film since Ming Liang Tsai’s Stray Dogs. Films like this remind me, why I love cinema so much. It will however divide people. Many will hate it, many will not understand it. In my opinion, it is the best film of 2014 so far.

Rating: 

Also on cine-jambalaya: The alienating realism of Under the Skin

Tuesday, February 18, 2014

Top 13 of ‘13: Special Mention: Stray Dogs

Before revealing my film of the year, I would like to mention a film I saw at the Venice Film Festival and which I haven’t stopped thinking about since: Ming-liang Tsai’s Stray Dogs. It hasn’t had a commercial release yet, which is why it isn’t on the regular list, but it deserves to be mentioned. Here is my review I wrote back in Venice: 
image
Ming-liang Tsai’s Stray Dogs, winner of this year’s Grand Jury Price, is not for everyone. In fact, it is not for most people. After the opening scene, a continuous shot of a woman brushing her hair while sitting next to two sleeping children which lasts for seven minutes, you know exactly where you are: cinema in its barest and purest form; almost closer to an art installation than a narrative film. The plot (it’s not as much a plot as very loose narrative linking the different images) depicts a father (Tsai regular Lee Kang-sheng) and his two children who live in Taipei. During the day, the father works as a human billboard, holding a sign next to a busy road while the children roam the streets of the city. There is little more to say about the story. Not much happens and we don’t learn much about the characters. Furthermore, the pace of the film is excruciatingly slow. There is little to no camera movement and the different scenes are extremely long (the entire 138 minute film contains about as many shots as a single scene in a Paul Greengrass film). 
It would be very easy to dismiss Stray Dogs as pretentious and boring or to lose patience with it (as indubitably many will). You keep waiting for something to happen, and it never does. Scenes have no causes or consequences, they just exist. We see the man eat a chicken, stand beside the road holding his billboard, we see the children wandering a supermarket getting free samples, we see a woman feeding stray dogs. This breaks every rule of fiction cinema and nothing seems to make any sense. If you go along with it however, Stray Dogs is anything but boring. It definitely is long, but it’s also mesmerizing and beautiful. It has a certain hypnotic quality to it: you don’t know what you are watching or why you are watching it, but the images are somehow fascinating. They burn themselves into the brain, and stay there for a long time after the end credits roll and everyone runs to the bathroom.
The acting is absolutely flawless in this. The actors are given very little to work with and all of them give wonderful minimalist performances. Lee Kang-sheng is arguably the stand-out. In one of the film’s most memorable scenes, he has to make a love-hate relationship with a cabbage (don’t ask) believable, similar to Tom Hanks and Wilson the volleyball in Cast Away; and he does so with unbelievable charisma and conviction.
Stray Dogs is a film that requires a lot of patience, but the rewards are infinite and the film will stay with you for a long time. Cinematic, beautiful and thought-provoking it is a piece of work for true film-lovers and perhaps the best I’ve seen in Venice.
image

Top 13 of ‘13: 6. The Broken Circle Breakdown

image
This year’s LUX Prize winner, Felix van Groeningen’s The Broken Circle Breakdown from Belgium is utterly charming, moving and tragic. The film follows a couple, Bluegrass musician Didier (Johan Heldenbergh) and tattoo artist Elise (Veerle Baetens), over the course of many years, from their first meeting, their falling in love, their marriage and birth of their daughter  Maybelle until things start to go wrong after Maybelle loses a battle with cancer.
These are not plot spoilers, because van Groeningen uses a similar structure than the acclaimed 2010 film Blue Valentine (Derek Cianfrance), jumping back and forth within the chronology of the story, between the blissful early stages of Didier and Elise’s relationship and the heart-breaking end. Seeing this couple, who you grow very fond of quite quickly, due to the extraordinary chemistry between the two leads, fall in love and fall apart simultaneously is all the more painful.
Underneath the romance, which is beautifully played and never gets cheesy, is a compelling, mature examination of grief and spirituality. Didier and Elise have different methods of dealing with the grief and pain of losing their child. The former is an atheist and a rational thinker deals with his despair by working himself up in anger against people opposing bone marrow research, which might been able to save his grief. Elise on the other hand seeks answers in the realm of the spiritual (but never explicitly religious), thinking about, and hoping for an afterlife or a return of Maybelle to earth in a different form, a concept which Didier not only fails to comprehend, but also to accept.
This discussion is enriched by the music. There is a lot of music in this film, and most of the songs are performed onscreen, live and in full, by Didier and his bluegrass band, sometimes joined by Elise. The soundtrack is brilliant in its own right and is without a doubt one of the best of the year (have a listen) but, like every great soundtrack, it also adds to the story. Bluegrass has its roots in the Appalachian region of the USA and is frequently of a deeply spiritual and religious nature, creating an interesting contradiction in terms with Didier’s knee-jerk ideas.
While The Broken Circle Breakdown is probably not going to get the awards recognition it deserves, due to the dominance of the also excellent The Great BeautyI (Paolo Sorrentino), it is a smart, romantic and incredibly sad film, which should be seen by more people.

Top 13 of ‘13: 8. Gravity

The set-up for Gravity is simple: Sandra Bullock and George Clooney are two astronauts who are lost in space after an accident involving satellite debris and are struggling for survival. Essentially, it is a B-movie with a budget. Its story is thin and its characters are even thinner. The dialogue is frequently clunky, melodramatic and unbelievable. George Clooney plays a mixture of Buzz Lightyear and himself in the Nespresso ads.
Gravity works nonetheless is because it is aware of this and keeps things simple. It never tries to be anything more than spectacle, a quick, 90-minute thrill ride. It’s not about saving the world; it’s about surviving in the most hostile environment a human can find himself in. The reason a B-movie with a budget is one of the best films of the year is not a lack of good films, but the amazing things Alfonso Cuarón has achieved with this budget. The visual effects are of an unprecedented quality; even the 3D is great.
The film’s unbroken 13-minute opening shot is the single most spectacular action-scene of the year by some distance, and the action in general is simultaneously absolutely gorgeous as well as frightening and intense. While more of a ride, a spectacle than an actual film (some people have dismissed it as a mere technical exercise, which is very harsh in my opinion), Gravity is one of the most cinematic experiences of the year, demonstrating Alfonso Cuarón’s craftsmanship as a great director and should be seen by everyone, in 3D, on as big a screen as possible.

Cine-City film festival: We Are the Best!

Published on The Badger website: http://www.badgeronline.co.uk/review-best/ 
We Are the Best!, which screened at the Duke of York’s after a lengthy festival run, including Venice and London, is one of the highlights of this year’s CineCity film festival. Written and directed by the Swede Lukas Moodysson, who brings us a wonderful tale about growing up, friendship and punk music, it will transfix teenage and adult audiences alike.
Bobo and Klara are thirteen years old and best friends in 1983 Stockholm. They are passionate punks and rebels, cutting their own hair short (Klara has a glorious mohawk) and listening to Swedish punk music. One day, they decide to form their own punk band and as Jack Black’s School of Rock character would put it: “Stick it to the man!” Full of enthusiasm, they write a song about their horrible P.E. teacher (chorus: “I hate the sport! I hate the sport! I hate hate hate the sport!”) and start rehearsing at the local youth centre. The problem however is that they don’t know how to play instruments. Therefore, they enlist the help of guitar-playing loner Hedwig, who fortunately also hates sports.
This is not a film about the discovery of the next big punk stars, but rather a character study of these three girls who are entering puberty. There are very few grown-ups and the children take centre stage. A difficult relationship and disconnect with the parents, a crush on an older boy and first experiences with alcohol are some of the typical teenage anxieties Bobo, Klara and Hedwig go through.
The reason that We Are the Best! works is because you enjoy listening to their lively discussions and generally spending time with these girls. Lukas Moodysson clearly has a lot of affection for these characters and this translates to the audience, creating a very mature and balanced portrayal of adolescence. The three young actresses are excellent, by the way. Crucially, the film, while taking a grown-up point of view, is not patronising at all towards the girls, taking them and their anxieties seriously at all times and avoiding cute for cuteness’ sake.
That said, it is much more fun than this review has made it sound so far. The tone is constantly light-hearted and there are numerous humorous (try saying that out loud) moments, particularly when they are discussing boys or God (Hedwig is a Christian, whereas Klara is a convinced atheist). Moreover, the finale is a perfectly timed, heart-warming, low-key conclusion to this very good film.

Rating: 

Review: Stray Dogs (Venice)

Ming-liang Tsai’s Stray Dogs, winner of this year’s Grand Jury Price, is not for everyone. In fact, it is not for most people. After the opening scene, a continuous shot of a woman brushing her hair while sitting next to two sleeping children which lasts for seven minutes, you know exactly where you are: cinema in its barest and purest form; almost closer to an art installation than a narrative film. The plot (it’s not as much a plot as very loose narrative linking the different images) depicts a father (Tsai regular Lee Kang-sheng) and his two children who live in Taipei. During the day, the father works as a human billboard, holding a sign next to a busy road while the children roam the streets of the city. There is little more to say about the story. Not much happens and we don’t learn much about the characters. Furthermore, the pace of the film is excruciatingly slow. There is little to no camera movement and the different scenes are extremely long (the entire 138 minute film contains about as many shots as a single scene in a Paul Greengrass film). 
It would be very easy to dismiss Stray Dogs as pretentious and boring or to lose patience with it (as indubitably many will). You keep waiting for something to happen, and it never does. Scenes have no causes or consequences, they just exist. We see the man eat a chicken, stand beside the road holding his billboard, we see the children wandering a supermarket getting free samples, we see a woman feeding stray dogs. This breaks every rule of fiction cinema and nothing seems to make any sense. If you go along with it however, Stray Dogs is anything but boring. It definitely is long, but it’s also mesmerizing and beautiful. It has a certain hypnotic quality to it: you don’t know what you are watching or why you are watching it, but the images are somehow fascinating. They burn themselves into the brain, and stay there for a long time after the end credits roll and everyone runs to the bathroom.
The acting is absolutely flawless in this. The actors are given very little to work with and all of them give wonderful minimalist performances. Lee Kang-sheng is arguably the stand-out. In one of the film’s most memorable scenes, he has to make a love-hate relationship with a cabbage (don’t ask) believable, similar to Tom Hanks and Wilson the volleyball in Cast Away; and he does so with unbelievable charisma and conviction.
Stray Dogs is a film that requires a lot of patience, but the rewards are infinite and the film will stay with you for a long time. Cinematic, beautiful and thought-provoking it is a piece of work for true film-lovers and perhaps the best I’ve seen in Venice.
image

Rating: 

Review: Lenny Cooke (Venice)

image
Sports films are usually about determination, fighting spirit and teamwork leading to great triumphs against all odds. Lenny Cooke on the other hand is a film about an individual, the stupidity of youth and greed leading to failure against all odds. It’s also a documentary directed by Ben and Joshua Safdieand executive produced by Chicago Bulls star Joakim Noah. In high school, Lenny Cooke was the top rated basketball prospect in the United States. He was on par with players such as LeBron James or Carmelo Anthony, who are now amongst the best and wealthiest basketballers in the world. Everyone was certain, Lenny is going to make it to the NBA and have a huge career. Ten years later, Lenny is overweight, lives in a trailer park with his family and has not had a single minute of NBA basketball. After brief stints in the Philippines, China and low-ranked US leagues, he ended his career. The film tries to find out what went wrong in what seemed to be a predestined fairy tale.
The Safdie brothers do this largely without interviews and talking-heads (except for some of Lenny’s coaches), using footage of Lenny during his final year of high school, a young, confident kid from humble backgrounds who is supported by a wealthy woman from New Jersey, juxtaposed with images of the older Cooke, who spends his life wondering what could have been. The film’s look, with low resolution images, almost like a home video, give it a certain run-down, used feeling; it looks like it has seen better days, which is very fitting with the story. Cooke, both young and old version, is also a fascinating protagonist and personality, very outspoken and honest, and the audience can’t help but to feel sorry for him, even though in many ways he only has himself to blame (the film doesn’t shy away from showing that he is lazy, slightly overconfident and trusts the wrong people). The film’s most emotional and pathetic scene involves a drunk Cooke belting out Mario’s Let Me Love You in front of his embarrassed wife, with tears in his eyes.
The only concern with Lenny Cooke is that, while you don’t have to be a basketball fan or even a sports fan to appreciate it, audiences who are not familiar with the organisation of American professional sports, particularly the so called draft, in which teams pick young players to add to their ranks, may feel a bit confused or lost at times. The 2002 NBA draft, which Cooke entered, is one of the film’s focal points and a quick explanation would in my opinion be helpful to widen its audience, particularly outside the US.

Rating: 

Review: A Promise (Venice)

A Promise, the English-language debut of seasoned French director Patrice Leconte, aims to be a dramatic romance, but unfortunately it almost plays like a parody. Based on a novel by Austrian Stefan Zweig, the film takes place in Germany in the wake of World War I. Karl Hoffmeister (Alan Rickman) takes Friederich (Game of Thrones’ Richard Madden), a young, handsome and motivated employee under his wings. After being taken ill and not allowed to go to the office, Hoffmeister choses Friderich to be his personal assistant and provide daily reports in his home. As a consequence, Friderich grows close to the Hoffmeisters, particularly Karl’s attractive and considerably younger wife Charlotte (Rebecca Hall).You can probably guess how the ensuing drama is going to play out if you have ever seen a romantic movie or read a romantic novel: forbidden love, separation, war, loss and other clichés.
A predictable and unoriginal plot is however perfectly acceptable, especially for films of this particular genre, as long as they manage to evoke genuine emotion and affection for the characters, a feat which A Promise completely fails to accomplish. The biggest problem is the writing. Presumably because they are part of the upper class, all the characters (who are supposed to be German) speak in extremely posh, old-fashioned British accents and the pompous, bloated and snobbish dialogue is frankly a bit silly, impossible to take seriously and frequently unintentionally hilarious (sample line: “We are separated by an ocean of iron and fire”) At times it feels as if the French screenwriters (Leconte and Jérôme Tonnerre) wrote the script in French and handed it to a translator with little sense of the story. Furthermore, the acting is weak as well. Madden, who is at the centre of the story, seems to be channelling Keanu Reeves or Hayden Christensen at their worst. Rebecca Hall, who has given some excellent performances in the past, fails to elevate the material and even the legendary Alan Rickman is on (a still remarkable) auto-pilot here. It’s impossible to tell whether he is taking it seriously or not and he does the usual Rickman things (flaring his nostrils, speaking very slowly), without adding anything interesting.
In some ways however, A Promise is very enjoyable, but not in the way the director intended it to. It never gets boring, the period details and costumes are rather well-done, and if Leconte had not taken himself seriously and embraced the films cheesy ridiculousness a bit more, the film could have become a minor cult classic in the “so bad, it’s good” category, in the vein of Mamma Mia (actually a few ABBA songs would definitely have improved A Promise, and Alan Rickman is a better singer than Pierce Brosnan).

Rating: 

Review: L’Arte della Felicita (Venice)

image
The International Critic’s Week section of this year’s Venice Film Festival was opened by L’arte della Felicità (The Art of Happiness), by Italian debut-director Alessandro Rak. The film is of a rare breed: an animated film aimed at adults, about identity, nostalgia and memory. It tells the story of Sergio, a taxi-driver from Napoli, who find himself in the middle of an identity crisis. He’s given up on his dream to become a pianist, he’s divorced from his wife and his older brother Alfredo, who’s been a guiding figure all of his life, has left him to become a Buddhist monk in Asia. As a result, Sergio lives in the past; all he has are memories. Neither the present nor the future, seem to interest him.
The film depicts Sergio’s disorientation through a series of long conversations with patrons in his cab, driving through the (usually rainy) Napoli. While one might think that this structure could make the film episodic and incoherent, this is not the case as the different chapters are linked thorough flashbacks and Antonio Fresa and Luigi Scialdone’s beautiful score. The flashbacks and dream sequences are in many ways the most interesting parts of the movie. Using different animation styles (unpleasant memories, such as Alfredo’s departure are drawn with heavy strokes and the characters are unrecognizable, while happy recollections are three dimensional computer animations) give a fascinating insight into Sergio’s mind.
image
In many waysL’arte della Felicità reminded me of Richard Linklater's animated films, in particularWaking Life, in style, tone and content. While Waking Life was about dreams rather than memories, they both deal with big philosophical questions through a lot of dialogue and a very creative use of animation. The only problem with the film is that it feels a bit too long (even though it clocks in at minutes as it is), especially in the sequences leading up to the rather smart ending, but it is to be recommended to anyone who enjoys interesting, thought-provoking and philosophical films.

Rating: 

Review: Philomena (Venice)

image
What a year 2013 has been for Steve Coogan. After with working with Michael Winterbottom on The Look of Love, a supporting role in the acclaimed What Maisie Knew, voicing a character in one the year’s funniest films Despicable Me 2 and bringing Alan Partridge to the big screen in Alpha PapaPhilomenamarks Coogan’s fifth role of the year.
The Brightonian has also co-written and produced Philomena, which is based on Martin Sixsmith’s non-fiction novel The Lost Child of Philomena Lee. The plot of the film is relatively simple. Martin Sixsmith (Coogan), an unemployed and frustrated journalist, meets Philomena, a gentle, elderly, Irish lady (Judi Dench), who is looking for her son. She was forced to give the child for adoption when he was a baby by nuns, who were taking care of her at the time. Together, Martin and Philomena embark on the quest of tracking him down, despite the nuns’ suspicious refusal to cooperate. Directed by Stephen Frears, who is very good at finding the balance between drama and (very British) humour, Philomena is extremely enjoyable. Judi Dench sets a benchmark (or perhaps a Denchmark?) as the title character and has brilliant chemistry with Coogan, who not only gets to show off his comedic range but also his dramatic acting chops. The film lives by the moments between the well-educated, slightly arrogant Sixsmith and the naïve, unworldly Philomena, which are full of charm and wit. Highlights include several discussions about religion (the line ‘Fucking catholics’ perfectly delivered by Coogan got a round of applause from the audience in my screening) and Judi Dench describing the plot of her kitschy romantic novel to an eye-rolling Steve Coogan. However, Stephen Frears’ traditional weaknesses are also obvious in Philomena. Visually, the film does not look very cinematic and perhaps a bit uninteresting, and it does have a slight tendency to descend into melodrama. Furthermore, Alexandre Desplat’s (decent) score feels a bit repetitive and overused, but overall, Philomena is a fascinating and very entertaining investigation of the natural, unbreakable bond between mother and child and probably Frears’ best work since High Fidelity.
Rating: 

Review: The Zero Theorem (Venice)

When it was announced that the Terry Gilliam’s latest film would be playing at the Mostra, my excitement was huge. Gilliam is one of the true greats of cinema, a distinct, original voice and a creator of worlds. In 12 MonkeysBrazil or Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas, he has made several stone-cold classics (not to mention his work as a member of Monty Python) and has gathered a cult following amongst cinema goers. Thus expectations were naturally high for The Zero Theorem, his first feature film since 2009’s The Imaginarium of Doctor Parnassus. Frustrated by the on-going saga of the financing of his Don Quixote, Gilliam took on The Zero Theorem and shot it for a relatively small amount of money in Romania. The result is a weird and wonderful small-scale science fiction film.
At the centre of the film is Qohen Leth (played by Christoph Waltz), a very odd man (he keeps referring to himself as ‘we’) who works as a ‘‘number cruncher’’ for Mancom, a big company of which we never really learn what they produce. He spends his life waiting for a call; a call which he believes will reveal the meaning of life to him, give an answer to the question about life, the universe and everything (spoiler: it’s not 42). Therefore he requests to work from home, and he is assigned to work on the demonstration of the zero theorem, a complicated mathematical formula, believed by many to be impossible. As a consequence, he lives his life in total isolation, and his only human contact is with Bainsley (played by French actress Mélanie Thierry), a woman who seems to be weirdly attracted to Qohen. It’s difficult so say anything more on the plot without revealing too much, but thematically and tonally the film is closest to Brazil, but it has more humour and optimism.
image
Christoph Waltz dominates the film (he is in every single scene), and his trademark charisma and charm make a character which could come across as irritating and annoying in less capable hands intriguing and somewhat likeable. He is surrounded by Thierry and an a-list supporting cast mostly responsible for comic relief. David Thewlis plays Waltz’s Mancom supervisor who is unable to remember his name in one of the year’s best/worst wigs. Matt Damon cameos as a character only referred to as ‘Management,’ whileTilda Swinton is Waltz’s virtual therapist. A scene that involves a bald Swinton rapping while wearing giant glasses is worth the price of admission alone.
The films biggest stars are however, in many ways not Waltz, Thewlis or Damon, but the cinematography, set-design and the costumes. Very few people know how to construct an image like Terry Gilliam, and despite an obviously limited budget (the majority of the film takes place in a single location) The Zero Theorem is filled with great photography (a frequent use of Dutch angles create a sense of paranoia and claustrophobia) and an extraordinary obsession for detail and little jokes in the background should reward multiple viewings.
With The Zero Theorem, Terry Gilliam is not going to win over any of his critics, but his fans should be pleased. One more thing: Could someone please just give Gilliam the money to make Don Quixote???
image
Rating: