Captain Phillips from director Paul Greengrass is absolutely
riveting, Greengrass, a former documentarian is excellent at putting the
audience directly within the action employing often a handheld camera (and high
ISOs – I saw this in 4K and it was noticeable). The film, despite the presence
of movie star Tom Hanks attempts to strip out the artifice, like the
filmmaker’s United 93 he uses actors who are little known or unrecognizable.
Opening in a quiet New England hamlet, Phillips (Hanks) foreshadows what’s to
come in a conversation with his wife Andrea (played by Catherine Keener).
Hitting the high seas he sees piracy warnings and orders a
piracy drill which quickly becomes a real world situation – Greengrass is
excellent at balances perspectives and often orienting us within the ship. He’s
one of the few blockbuster filmmakers with the clout to tell this story in this
way – often pushing the limits. Consider thrilling sequences that happen
virtually in the dark later in the film, Greengrass is the man for this job.
The ship goes into lockdown after it’s boarded by a band of
pirates (thankfully not headed by Johnny Depp) in several sequences that are
truly terrifying. The leader is Muse (Barkha Abdi) who doesn’t play any civilized
rules. The ship is an unarmed freighter with only $30,000 on board (offered
initially to the three pirates – four skinny teens with guns and nothing to
lose). It’s perhaps the nothing to loose that’s the scariest – even as the crew
fights back in small ways (including leaving broken glass on the floor for the
bare foot one).
Thrilling the story kept me engaged right up and until its third
act after a somewhat slow opening. Phillips played by Hanks is a likable family
man, much like Hanks – and here’s the challenge: it’s hard to de-Tom Hanks, Tom
Hanks. In a Greengrass film with often first time actors his casting is
engaging but a tad distracting because, well quite frankly, he’s a too damn
good and too damn iconic.
The film is quite strong in a number of ways including its
performances, direction and writing. This hasn’t been a great year for films at
sea, in 2013 we had the headache inducing ethnographic (torture) film on a fishing
boat documentary Leviathan, the georgeous yet slow Kon-Tiki, and thankfully now
Captain Phillips – the best of the bunch.
In addition to the Buffalo International Film Festival, the Queen City welcomes six new titles - including two sports documentaries, three films with all-star casts and a Bollywood title. An awful lot to see - including the expansion of Metallica: Through the Never seeding its IMAX screen and heading down the hall to a standard theater in Real D 3D.
at the Art House
Ballin' at the Graveyard - Not sure about this one, a pick-up basketball documentary hitting Dipson Amherst (which would seem more fitting down at Market Arcade) - hopefully its better than its trailer suggestions - the filmmakers will be in attendance on Friday night.
Screening: Dipson Amherst
Parkland - An all star cast including Zac Effron, James Badge Dale and Paul Giamatti start in a docu-drama that bowed last month in Toronto. Centered around the Parkland hospital moments after JFK's assassination and shot with what looks like period-accurate 16MM.
Screening: Dipson Eastern Hills
at the Multiplex
Gravity - Another title with significant buzz out of TIFF this year, Alfonso Cuaron's thrilling (looking) space saga has been called by Forbes a movie that can save the multiplex experience. Hitting IMAX 3D (probably where it should be seen) this looks amazing.
Screening: Regal Elmwood, Regal Walden Galleria, AMC Maple Ridge, Regal Quaker Crossing, Regal Transit, Dipson Flix, Hollywood 12
Runner Runner - What looks like a classic kind of B-Movie thriller with Timberlake, Affleck, and (I hate to admit this - someone I've got a crush on) Gemma Arterton centered around an off-shore gambling racket. It could be fun.
Screening: Regal Elmwood, Dipson Flix, Regal Transit, Regal Hollywood 12, Regal Walden Galleria, Regal Quaker Crossing, AMC Maple Ridge
Generation Iron - From the producers of Pumping Iron comes a new look at body building - will director Vlad Yudin ask the hard questions and catch someone injecting horse seman into their ass? Who knows.
The 7th annual Buffalo International Film Festival reaches screens in Amherst and Buffalo with four nights of films - including several local works including the features Brandonwood and Buffalo Boys making their WNY debuts. Also local are several shorts - screened throughout the festival and in a shorts block on Friday at 4PM, two local documentary including one about Allentown's Theater of Youth and another about climate change.
There is something for everybody including the festivals' most intriguing film - The Thief and the Cobbler - Recobbled Cut which attempts to complete a never completed epic.
The Galas
While maybe not as glamorous as a TIFF outting at Roy Thompson Hall - the festival none the less features an opening and closing night Gala including a little scene film from French filmmaker Luc Besson (director of The Family) - The Extraordinary Adventures of D'Adele Blanc-Sec and the Theater of Youth documentary Long Live TOY: Defending Children's Theater in the Nickel City.
Brandonwood and Buffalo Boys show Friday and Saturday night at 9PM respectively. Buffalo Boys by Raymond Guarnieri has screened at Indie Gathering at the Manhattan Film Festival where it took home several honors. Brandonwood by John J. Fink, will have its world premiere at BIFF after revealing its trailer earlier last month. Both look like strong works - with Buffalo Boys selling out several days in advance - the festival announcing a rush line for those without tickets. Local shorts play before both shows.
Docs
The festival has a strong line up of documentaries including the kid friendly Magic Camp, the Long Bike Back from Buffalo born filmmaker Julia Wrona, the story of a Reverend Gary Davis - a rag time singer in Harlem Street Singer, and Dear Mr. Watterson, an exploration of comic strip Calvin and Hobbs by Joel Allen Schroeder. Comfort Zone: The WNY Climate Change Movie also aims to shine a light on several important air quality issues - gee - thanks Tonawanda!
A block of Made in Buffalo documentaries also screens on Sunday at 4:30PM.
World Cinema
Earning its title as an INTERNATIONAL FILM FESTIVAL - let us not forget several titles the festival is showcasing that otherwise would slip through the cracks (not that Squeaky Wheel and Dipson aren't trying their hardest). Amongst those include the Bollywood dance flick (luckily without the Bollywood running time, the festival quotes it at a lean 95 minutes) - Aayna Ka Bayna, the Chinese sex shop comedy Red Light Revolution - which looks hilarious, and the controversial Turkish film When Darin Falls.
Also don't forget to check out Casa De Arte (on Elmwood Avenue in Allentown) which will be home to the festival's tribute to Mexican actress Maria Felix, featuring a different Felix film Friday-Sunday at 8PM. Admission to the Felix tribute is free.
The festival offers various ticketing options with general adult admission $10 - with discounts for students, seniors, children and members of the Buffalo Film Society. All tickets on sale at www.buffalofilmfestival.com.
Don Jon is a very strange directorial debut for Joseph
Gordon-Levitt, in a role he’s now always known for playing. Here he is a New
Jersey Guido who interestingly enough (perhaps the film takes places in the
spring) doesn’t venture to the shore. Jon Martello cares about a few things in
life: his apartment, his car, his family, his church, his boys, his girls, and
– his porno. A sex addict porn ruins perhaps his most meaningful relationship
with Barbara (played by Scarlett Johansson). Yet, do they share an emotional
connection? I’m not so sure – the film attempts to have it both ways and for
much of the first act is an interesting portrait of what the hell is wrong with
Gen Y – or as a friend of mine says “thirty is the new twenty”.
Of course The Economist once found that friends with
benefits has had a negative economic impact for prostitutes – why buy the cow
when you can get the milk for a few shots on Jameson. But sex isn’t what Don
Jon is after – he seeks sex as good as that in a porn flick, while he’s more
than happy to bed a random “8” or “9”, it’s the “10” he keeps around until it
doesn’t work.
Enter his most meaningless sexual relationship – Esther
(played by Julianne Moore), an older women in crisis Don Jon finds himself
annoyed and entranced. A weird path in a very strange film – it seems rather
fitting.
Joseph Gordon-Levitt is on to something here: the film is at
once real and foreign – liberated and frustrated. Jon is charming: we see why
women happily agree to go to bed with him and Scarlett Johansson has never
looked sexier as a strong independent women who slightly nags her man to be
better. She’s perfect in this role.
Will the movie be a hit? I’m not so sure – it reminds of
Saturday Night Fever which is one of the ballsiest movies ever – it’s a crowd
pleaser that ends in a rape and quickly finds redemption. It’s been called one
of the most feminist films of all time. Don Jon is perhaps a film just as
strange – in fact it does find its way into a confidently feminist ending where
Jon gets exactly what he wants – and then some. It’s the kind of ending that
could have used a little more time to really develop but then again Jon doesn’t
need more time – he’s living in the now.
With no shortage of local diverse local indies hitting Buffalo screens this fall, add Elizabeth Bathory from siblings Elizabeth and Andrew Nixon to the list. Set to bow on October 19th at the Dipson Market Arcade, Elizabeth (both the film and director) released its first trailer - tickets are available via the film's Kickstarter campaign. The film looks excellent, well shot and well acted, the cast is lead by Tilke Hill and co-stars Kathleen Denecke and Adah Hagen. Attempting more psychological thrills (rather than the typical B-Movie horror films that Buffalonians love to make), the trailer to what looks to be a contained thriller - an arthouse version of Saw if you will - and made me ask "just who is Elizabeth Bathory monster!"
From the filmmaker:
Two women find themselves in a dark dungeon tormented by distant memories of the horrific legend of Countess Elizabeth Bathory and looming feelings of sinister forces as they struggle to find an escape.
Elizabeth Bathory is the second outing for the Nixons and Tilke HIll - last year they released Plumb (currently available to stream online). In honor of Elizabeth Bathory's upcoming screening and their second kickstarter campaign to fund post-production and sending the film out into the world, we chatted with director and co-writer Elizabeth Nixon:
-What is it that brought you to filmmaking? I began directing plays in the backyard throughout middle school with a group of friends and that's where I developed interest in directing in general. As high school sophomores my friends and I thought it would be fun and hilarious to make a movie, but it turned out to be a ton of work and time. Most were turned off by that, but I loved it. I loved the intensity of production and the creativity and challenges that came along with it. I've been making films ever since.
- What was the inspiration to make a film about Elizabeth Bathory? I read an old theory that the myth of the vampire came about to explain a blood disorder that members of royalty inherited genetically in eastern Europe. They exhibited many of the symptoms we now associate with vampires like paleness and sensitivity to light and their consumption of blood may have been an archaic attempt to relieve their symptoms. Names like Vlad the Impaler and Elizabeth Bathory were mentioned as possibly sufferers. Whether this theory is accurate or not, I thought it would make an interesting premise for a movie- a true biological vampire. -Is this first time you've worked in psychological horror? Most of our films from our early shorts to our last feature "Plumb" to "Elizabeth Bathory" explore psychological turmoil. Our characters are usually in some type of inner distress and it gravely affects how they interact with the world around them whether that distress is based in reality or pure delusion. I find it interesting that there is no difference between perceived danger and actual danger in human minds.
- Can you talk about the process of working as part of a team of filmmakers? For me the most important part of working as a team is to have the support of another person you trust throughout the very trying process of filmmaking. My brother Andrew Nixon and I are a filmmaking team from the start of pre-production to the end of post-production. When you get writer's block or when you suddenly think that everything you're doing is crap or you're overwhelmed because of the tasks ahead of you it is crucial to have someone there who is equally invested in the project to put things in perspective, remind you of your ultimate goal or balance out your emotions. After we develop an idea and a script we split up the pre-production tasks of marketing the film for crowd funding, planning production, etc. "Elizabeth Bathory" was co-produced by Tilke Hill so she also had influence on casting and marketing in addition to her acting role. During production we each play our designated parts, me as director, Andrew as sound director/technician and grip which helps us to stay organized and focused. Then in post-production we split tasks up again and create a film we are equally proud of and connected to.
-Can you describe some fights you refer to in your Kickstarter video? When things get tense (which they inevitably do in filmmaking-time constraints, financial constraints, creative disagreements) that is when discussions get heated and with your sibling you don't really hold back or behave diplomatically necessarily. So, a simple discussion about how to handle color correction can turn into "I'm doing more than you!" or "I care more about the film than you do!" or "I have the final say!" which of course just aren't true and we usually end up laughing about it.
- How did you cast the film? With "Elizabeth Bathory" we did not do an open cast call like we've done in the past. We cast Tilke Hill as the lead having worked with her and developed this project with her in mind. And as a co-producer Tilke recommended many of the other actors for the main roles, like Kathleen Denecke.
- What were some of the biggest challenges to bring this story to screen? Doing a period film with a micro-budget is challenging because of costume and set requirements. It took a while to find a cheap location that looked like a dungeon of the renaissance. And we eventually found it in a South Buffalo basement! It also makes sound difficult because there's no way you can write-off airplanes, lawn mowers and car motors as part of a 16th century Hungarian sound world.
- What's the future plans for the film - screenings, festivals? Our goal is to submit "Elizabeth Bathory" to as many film festivals as we can on a local, national and international level and have it recognized not only as a psychological horror, but also a compelling, complex story for everyone. It explores theme seeds like abandonment, faith or lack of it, the meaning of virginity, and trust. We are in the final stretch of this film process and are holding a kickstarter campaign to cover the final costs of post-production. Because of the support we've received from our fans and backers we raised enough money in our production campaign to highly improve the technical quality of this film compared to our previous films. And with a little extra boost in our post-production campaign we will have a enough to raise "Elizabeth Bathory" to its full potential.
We are looking for anyone interested in the DVD or premiere tickets or other rewards to make a contribution to help us finalize this project and make it as strong as it can be. They can contribute at http://kck.st/17wq2yi.
Elizabeth Bathory screens on October 19th - Kickstarter contribution levels include tickets to the premiere, a DVD and even acting lessons and videography services. More information at Kickstarter.
Lots of new movies to check out this weekend - with six new films hitting Queen City screens with something for everybody - quite literally. For the dudes we get Ron Howard's Rush (sadly its got nothing to do with a certain Canadian band), Don Jon - as if one movie about sex addicts in town wasn't enough, and Metallica: Through the Never in IMAX 3D. For the kids it's Cloudy with a Chance of Meatballs 2. Finally the ladies get two flicks - Baggage Claim with a hilariously bad quotable trailer ("I need your pockets, out your pockets" and "that man could have had INTERGALACTIC travel booty") and the much smarter looking (and more mainstream looking than her previous films) Nicole Holofcener's Enough Said. See you at the multiplex (and arthouse!)
at the Arthouse
Enough Said - Nicole Holofcener is one of the most preceptive directors working in Indiewood, Enough Said may be her breakout film. Featuring James Gandolfini in one of his last roles and Julia-Louis Dreyfus as empty nesters who start dating, unfortunately her new pal (played by Holofcener alum Catherine Keener) is his ex-wife.
Screening: Dipson Amherst, Dipson Eastern Hills
at the Multiplex
Cloudy with a Chance of Meatballs 2 - Filling in a missing family film niche is really more of the same, in 3D of course.
Don Jon - You've seen the internet meme - a picture of Joseph Gordon Levitt - the caption "Writes, directs and stars in a movie as a sex addict - girlfriend played by Scarlett Johansson". To be fair his dad is played by Tony Danza. Even after Thanks for Sharing (a flawed but interesting) this Sundance hit looks great, with buzz that its far more charming than it ought to be.
Screening: Dipson Amherst, Regal Elmwood 16, Regal Walden Galleria, AMC Maple Ridge, Regal Hollywood 12, Dipson Flix, Regal Quaker Crossing,
Baggage Claim - Paula Patton (Mrs. Robin Thicke) stars as a flight attendant haunted by ex-boyfriends. This could either be hilarious or terrible, or a little bit of both (my vote is for the later). Get ready for some international - no - intergalactic travel booty. Trey Songz as co-stars as her ex, and in like real life, he's leaning on his successful girlfriend ("she crazy.....cra...zy"). Ugh.
Screening: Dipson Market Arcade, Regal Transit, Regal Elmwood, Regal Quaker Crossing, Regal Walden Galleria, AMC Maple Ridge, Regal Hollywood 12
Metallica Through the Never: An IMAX 3D Experience - A young man is entranced into a world of violence in a kind of Wizard of Oz, metal style. Could be fun - in addition to Lars it stars Dane DeHaan. Directed by the very stylish Nimrod Antal.
Uneven, messy, yet an interesting examination of addiction,
Stuart Blumberg’s Thanks for Sharing is a Mark Ruffalo-led ensemble comedy
about a group of sex addicts in recovery. Ruffalo plays Adam, a green packaging
executive who has gone five years without sex or masturbation – and he’s not
even married!! (Zing!) He’s mentor is Mike (Tim Robbins), who lives with Katie
(Joely Richardson) – Mike; we learn had quite an abusive past. His son, Danny,
also a recovering addict played by Patrick Fugit re-enters his life leading to
that age old paradox: father and son hate each other because deep down they’re
very much a like.
Josh Gad and Alecia Moore (P!nk) play new comers (I just
said..….oh, nevermind, I’ll keep this a family blog) – Neil and Dede. Neil is a
self-destructive med student with a strange relationship with his mom (played
by Carol Kane), he enjoys touching and looking at anything and everything. Dede
feels like having sex instead of dealing with her problems. The goal of the
group therapy is not to live like a monk as Robins tells Ruffalo, but to remain
faithful – no sex outside of a committed relationship and no masturbation.
Ruffalo can’t trust himself, he carries a flip phone that’s
not capable of sexting or web, has an assistant who puts parental blocker on
his laptop, and asks hotels to remove the TV from his room. Unfortunately for
him he meets the lovely Phoebe (Gwyneth Paltrow in a very sexy role) and they
engage in a very real romance. Somehow though, the film doesn’t quite gel –
Josh Gad is perhaps a little too over the top even if I have no doubt his
performance and character is inspired by actual research into sex addiction.
Still Blumberg keeps an interesting and light touch: perhaps
at times the tone gets away from him. The arcs of each story are a tad all over
the place and while this material is rich it perhaps could use a little more
focus. The performances are all quite good including Ruffalo and Paltrow who
are excellent together. Patrick Fugit and Tim Robins work well as father and
son and I enjoyed P!nk in her first role, she’s perfectly cast.
Thanks for Sharing has smart and useful moments – it turns
out all addiction is a like, it’s a disease. Redemption is found even if it’s a
tad artificial and the story beats all play as predicted including moments of
relapse. An awareness of film’s construction and how it plays as it’s showing
is a problem – great movies kind of just wash over you. Thanks for Sharing is
more mature and thoughtful than many films currently in general release, but it
feels a little too neat for a movie this smart.
Prisoners walks a fine line: on one hand it’s a handsomely
directed thriller that cares more about character development than big action
set pieces. It offers one action sequence towards the end, in the snow, so well
done and thrilling that it alone makes for a satisfying twist. The film is
written by Aaron Guzikowski has a few required twists, turns and surprises. In
its late third and forth act it feels like a little bit of a tug-of-war,
throwing in a few dark surprises that feel a wee bit out of place with the
first and second acts. The film is otherwise, mostly, masterfully constructed
by Denis Villeneuve, who tacks the subject of violence with the fine (often
emotional) detail that no doubt served him well in his past career as an
entomologist. He previously directed the Oscar-nominated Incendies, along with
Polytechnique and Maelstrom.
His first Hollywood effort is anything but Hollywood. It
opens simple enough – two families share Christmas dinner – the Dovers (Hugh
Jackman and Maria Bello) and the Birchs (Terrence Howard and Viola Davis).
Their two young daughters go missing and after they try their best to locate
them, Detective Loki is called in (Jake Gyllenhaal). The police hold the only
suspect in the case, Alex Jones (Paul Dano) who is mentally challenged but able
to drive a beat-up, very creepy camper. When Jones is released and quells
something ominous to Keller Dover (Jackman), Keller takes the law into his own
hands, holding Jones hostage.
And here’s where the film engages in a tug-of-war with
itself: skillfully crafted with a brain in its head the film s more and more
violent until its final twists. While the trailer gives away the story up until
the point when it starts to grow darker there’s an awful lot of interesting
material here. Running just over 2 ½ hours the film is constantly engaging full
of white-knuckle moments and top-notch performances by Jackman, Dano and
Gyllenhaal. While the story gives us a few, shall we say, rabbit holes to fall
into the efficient thriller features a decent amount of pay off – trust the
audience is smart enough to follow the film Villeneuve often cuts around the big
hero moments, remaining in full control.
Another star of the film is Roger Deakins’ beautiful cinematography,
which is perfectly matched with Villeneuve’s direction. Prisoners is mostly a satisfying
experience with several really great scenes. Some moments don’t quite work as
well, but then again most films aren’t this skillful.
Screening: Dipson Market Arcade, Dipson Flix, Regal Transit, Regal Quaker Crossing, Regal Hollywood 12, AMC Maple Ridge, Transit Drive In, Regal Elmwood
Local filmmaker John Fink premiers his first feature film, Brandonwood at Buffalo International Film Festival, one of three local features along with Buffalo Boys and the documentary Comfort Zone: A Western New York Climate Change Movie. (Local shorts will be featured in front of select features and in their own sidebar). Looking at the trailer the film looks like a poetic, romantic and heartbreaking - with some good performances.
From the filmmaker:
A romantic thriller following four years in the life of a young couple - from the reckless highs of new love to the lows of circumstances they cannot change on the periphery. Natalie (Kathleen Denecke) a college freshman, begins a relationship with Brandon (Kyle Perry) - an employee of their town's public works department. Keeping him a secret at first, she alienates her friends and family in the process, the comfort of the relationship morphs into dysfunction as they each come into their own.
Starring Kathleen Denecke, Kyle Perry, Gerry Maher, Eric Mowery, Kelly Krose, Mike Sarcneli, Travis Hedland, Megan Deanna Smith, Darryl Hart, Andre Colon, Michael Moral and Tilke Hill
Three Films by John Fink:
Additionally John Fink has three films on YouTube he's pointed out to us including Analog staring Tilke Hill (co-star and co-producer of Brandonwood) and filmed in Buffalo - while a tad slow Analog, like his film Hollow Spaces have a slow build - things aren't quite what they seem. Working in documentary he made Reclamation in conjucntion with the Resurrection Village Ministry on Buffalo's East Side (produced by Squeaky Wheel as part of their Channels Documentary Program).
Hollow Spaces (2010)
Analog (2011)
Reclamation (2011)
Brandonwood screens on October 4th at 9PM at the Screening Room in Amherst. Tickets for Brandonwood and all festival program are now on sale at the Buffalo International Film Festival.
After a lull a few weeks back the schedule is back to being crowded with five new films and an early preview of the Buffalo International Film Festival - screening Company in honor of Buffalo's Curtain Up!
at the Art House
Short Term 12 - The buzz amongst the bloggophere is the SXSW hit Short Term 12 is a powerful winner. A drama centered around a women (Brie Larson), a supervisor at a home for at-risk teens. This looks like another powerful drama about young folks, following the wonderful The Spectacular Now.
screening: Dipson Amherst
Thanks for Sharing - An ensemble comedy directed by Stuart Blumberg (co-writer of The Kids Are All Right) about a group of recovering sex addicts. Staring Mark Ruffalo, Gwyneth Paltrow, Tim Robins, Patrick Fugit and P!nk.
screening: Dipson Eastern Hills
Salinger - Exploring the legend of JD Salinger, filmmaker Shane Salerno aims to demystify literature's most mysterious figure featuing interviews with like A-list celebrities (Phillip Seymore Hoffman, Edward Norton, John Cusack) and modern literary figures (including Tom Wolfe)
screening: Dipson Eastern Hills
at the Multiplex
Prisoners - From Canadian director Denis Villeneuve (whose last film is the breathtaking epic Incendies), Prisioners, has been garnering Oscar buzz out of Toronto. An ensemble drama staring Jake Gyllenhaal, Hugh Jackman, Paul Dano, Melissa Leo, Maria Bello and Paul Dano - I've told although the trailer appears to tell it all, it's just scratching the surface of the 155 minute drama. This will probably be amazing....
Screening: Dipson Market Arcade, Dipson Flix, Regal Transit, Regal Hollywood 12, Regal Quaker Crossing, Transit Drive In, Regal Elmwood, AMC Maple Ridge
Battle of the Year 3D - Starring rapper / wife beater Chris Brown - Battle of the Year 3D probably delivers what it promises: great dancing, decent music and likely sequences worth of the 3D upcharge (Dance movies - although rarely good - are perhaps the best in 3D). It will probably deliver exactly what it sets out to...
Screening: Dipson Flix, Regal Quaker Crossing, Regal Transit, AMC Maple Ridge, Regal Hollywood 12, AMC Maple Ridge
Written, directed and staring Lake Bell, the Sundance award
winning comedy In A World… is set in the unusual, rarely seen and often
exclusively an all-boys club world of trailer voice-overs. When great Don Lafontaine
known for the phrase “In a World…” passes (told in a spirited credit montage)
the phrase is retired, that is until the resurrection of the phrase in ad copy
for a new “quad-illogy” – for a quazi-feminist action film called The Amazon
Games.
Making use of (likely) several pals in the alternative
comedy world, Lake Bell rounds out the cast with some greats including Demetri
Martin, Tig Notaro, Nick Offerman, and Ken Marino. Fred Melamed plays Carol’s
(Bell) dad – a rival legend who realizes its time to move on, he’s happy living
with a sexy groupie, a year younger than Carl – and starts training Marino’s
Gustav.
In A World announces the arrival of Lake Bell as alt comic – she’s quite wonderful here as Carol, a geeky women who at 31 is
still in the process of finding herself. Early in act one Carol is asked to
leave home… so the groupie can move in – she barely makes end meet as a
freelance vocal coach – initially teaching Eva Longoria to take a cockney
accent. Carol’s unlikely love interest is Louis – played by Demetri Martin, and
they share very funny and very sweet scene.
That’s the tone Bell strikes – In A World... is often
hilarious, setting up awkward situations that are both funny and in once
instance painful. Carol moves into her sister Dani’s apartment (she’s played by
Michaela Watkins). Living with the always snacking Moe (Corddry), Carol evokes
sister code – asking her to record and collect the voice of a flirtatious
client. Carol ultimately redeems herself and the film has a happy ending even
with a few detours.
The competition for the trailer for The Amazon Games comes down
to three voice over artists: Carol, Gustav, and Sam – but Bell has so much fun
along the way (moments I won’t spoil). In A World succeeds while other
alternative comedies (including those co-written by Marino) often haven’t for
me. Sometimes comedies just simply work – often when they take themselves seriously.
Bell first and foremost does – taking risks. Sure at times it’s a little sitcom
like – but that’s exactly what this is – situational comedy. I await what she
does next as writer/director – Bell, has made a confident, original film.
Sometimes a horror movie works, sometimes its laughably bad.
James Wan just a few months ago released a very effective horror thriller, The Conjuring (now playing in the cheap seats). Insidious: Chapter 2 bares some similarities
– but ultimately is a step backwards (most likely he was under contractual
obligation). Wan is a gifted filmmaker; this is not his finest hour. I think
the fact The Conjuring was based on the real life story of the Ed and Loarrine
Warren made it that much more interesting.
This is not to say Insidious: Chapter 2 couldn’t have been
interesting – I think the problem is it lacks those hansom details – its far
less ambitious and the characters are far less developed. It’s essentially
stuff you’ve seen before – including in Insidious, the 2010 hit that grossed
$54 million domestically on a budget of $1.5 million. So now you know why Part
II had to be made.
With that said I think part of the problem with Chapter 2 is that we’ve A.- Seen this all before and B.- Really don’t care the
way we did in The Conjuring. The Conjuring was effective in its use of atmosphere,
essentially the story of two families. Insidious: Chapter 2 is kind of a
run of the mill story – things go bump in the night, the dad becomes a demon with too little under the hood. It's like buying a car with seats and steering wheel but not radio. Restrained in its direction, it's just not very fun – mostly because all of the bumps and jumps
are expected.
The Lambart family (Patrick Wilson and Rose Byrne) returns
to uncover a mystery buried within Mr. Lambart’s childhood. Lin Shayne (whom I
know best from There’s Something About Mary) plays a spirit hunter. Okay so
that happens, but it’s just not enough. Insidious: Chapter 2 feels cheap,
quick, and carelessly made – go see The Conjuring if you haven’t – better you
spend $2 on a good movie verses $10 on one that sucks.
In sort of a lay-up for THE Robert De Niro, The Family is a fun effective time. Playing a gangster from the notorious Manzoni family, he snitches and is placed in witness protection. His family – including wife Maggie (Michelle Pfeiffer) son Warren (John D’Leo) and daughter Belle (Dianna Agron) cause so much trouble their FBI liaison Robert (Tommy Lee Jones) is forced to move the family every 90-days.
Exiled to a quite French hamlet (where everyone apparently speaks English quite well) they try to assimilate dealing with the kinds of cultural consequences you might expect. Warren, following in his father’s footsteps takes to running the school – keeping the bullies and business interests in check after getting a brief ass-kicking. Belle has her sights set on a graduate student, hoping to have a very French kind of fling. Funniest and most problematic of all is mom, Maggie – bringing her expectations to this remote (yet beautiful) little village that looks like something out of Epcot’s World Showcase; she just can’t seem to play nice. Early in the film she blows up a supermarket.
DeNiro’s Fred Blake sets about to write his memoirs, a dangerous feat all considered, which leads the story to it’s a hilarious scene when his expertise is called upon. Much of the funny material early on is you can see in the film’s trailer, however the later behavioral based humor really does work. Directed by master filmmaker Luc Besson the story is injected and edited with great style and energy – reaching almost the level of comedy’s best director Edgar Wright. The transitions alone are masterfully planned, executed and often hilarious.
What I enjoyed most of course are the relationships and DeNiro, as I mentioned this is a bit of a lay-up and here he’s having an awful lot of fun as a stereotypical good-fella (keep that in mind, it surfaces later in a wonderful sequence). The Family is essentially a sitcom; while “executive produced” by the great Martin Scorsese it’s certainly not one of his films (even if its as energetic as one). Enjoyable, light and full of character driven comedy, when The Family works, it works beautifully.