Saturday, December 29, 2012

Past seven days

Hope everyone had a good holiday (or at least a good break!) Here's what I've been up to:

After Shock
Le Ciel Est A Vous
Good for Nothing
The Hobbit (2012)
Jade Warrior
Not Fade Away

I Will Follow

This movie has a pretty familiar theme. A woman has to deal with the passing of an ancestor, and there are issues with other members of the family. Some minor things to commend it are an all African-American cast, including some supporting characters whom the main character encounters in her time of grief

In flashbacks, we see May (Salli Richardson-Whitfield) spending time with her aunt (Beverly Todd), who has cancer, living with her in her last year of life. In the present, May is emptying out her now-deceased aunt’s house in preparation to move out. She is expecting her aunt’s daughter/her cousin, Fran (Michole Briana White), to come by to help clean up as well as pick out any of her mother’s things she doesn’t want to go to Goodwill. When Fran arrives, she brings along her teen son and two younger kids, then starts making excuses of having to take care of the kids, leaving May alone to do the work. The teen son, Raven, stays behind and helps May, and she tells him stories of his grandmother. It seems the grandmother was a noted session musician in the disco era, who--while she was well known in the industry--didn’t have widely known personal success in the public eye. May is also a professional makeup artist who put aside her career to care for her aunt, so they shared an artistic side.

When Fran returns, she shows her resentment and jealousy, blaming May for “coercing” her aunt to make some difficult choices about her life. The women argue about quality of life and the aunt/mother choosing her own lifepath. Fran leaves without changing her attitude, but throughout the story May has short encounters with other people—a neighbor who didn’t know the aunt well offers some kind words; the man who drives the moving van leaves after an altercation but then returns in sympathy; May talks to some old boyfriends; a cable tv installer comes to remove the satellite dish.

Thursday, December 20, 2012

Angel-A

This French movie, directed by Luc Besson, is filmed in black and white.

Jamel Debbouze stars as a small time crook, Andre, who owes some people a lot of money, and fast. (The film doesn’t say what he’s needed that money for.) He tries borrowing new money to pay the old lender, but it is unsuccessful because he is just not good at asserting himself. Feeling the heat, he tries to commit suicide on a bridge, but saves a leggy blonde Angela (Rie Rasmussen), who is doing the same. He doesn’t want to admit his suicide urge but she is forthright and says she will do anything he wants in return for him saving her life. Throughout the film she expresses her opinion that Andre is just too meek to be the tough guy that his lifestyle needs him to be. The story shows her boldly going where Andre has never gone before.

Andre thinks he can impress the new money guy by bringing Angela along, hoping this will convince the guy he is a big shot and deserves the money. When he is still unsuccessful, Angela agrees to have sex with the guy for cash, which discomfits Andre, and although he is at odds over whether to take her money or not, he does end up taking it. She continues this behavior by having sex with men at clubs for money, leaving Andre to drink alone in misery and collect the cash. From time to time they meet up with the bruisers to whom he owes money, but it seems Angela has some kind of special powers where she can coerce men into doing what she wants (or easily knocks them out).

Later she tries to convince Andre that all he needs to boost his confidence is to be more self-assured, and there is a scene where Andre has to admit to himself that he needs to love himself more. She convinces Andre to look in a mirror and voice some self-affirmation mantras.

Wednesday, December 19, 2012

Free event: Pegasus

If you prefer heavy drama, check out this film in the Chicago Public Library's Global Lens series of foreign films.

In Pegasus, an emotionally stressed psychiatrist tries to connect to a young, traumatized woman who refuses to speak. The story of the psychiatrist herself may have similarities to the woman's problem.

Pegasus
Wednesday, December 19, 2012
6:00 p.m.
Chicago Public Library, Bezazian Public Library
1226 W. Ainslie Street

Free event: Swing Time

Get away from holiday stress today and catch a musical!

The Northbrook Public Library continues with another Fred Astaire film. Swing Time is one of the better known of the Astaire and Rogers films, but the premise is just as flimsy to build some songs and dances around. This film includes the Bojangles of Harlem song and dance routine, where Fred dances in blackface to copies of his shadow. It is meant to be a tribute to Bill "Bojangles" Robinson, who as the song states, is more famous than the President (who, in 1936 when this film was made, was Franklin Roosevelt).

Swing Time
Wednesday, December 19, 2012
1:00 p.m. and 7:30 p.m.
Northbrook Public Library
1201 Cedar Lane
Northbrook, IL 60062

Past seven days

Looking forward to a break next week to watch even more moves! This week wasn't too bad and I even watched some tv shows not listed here.

Angel-A
Cirque du Soleil: Worlds Away
Detachment
The Finger
Ghajini
Les Miserables (2012)
The Spook Who Sat by the Door

Tuesday, December 18, 2012

Free event: The Entrepreneur

A man inherits a dying business which he hopes will be acquired, but his marriage also begins to fail.

The Entreprenuer
Tuesday, December 18, 2012
6:00 p.m.
Istituto Italiano di Cultura di Chicago
500 North Michigan Avenue, Suite 1450

Monday, December 17, 2012

Free event: Monsieur Lazhar

Transistor, the record shop and art gallery, continues to offer free films. Today's offering is not music-related, but was Oscar-nominated last year as Best Foreign Film.

The film involves several cultures, as a substitute Algerian teacher in Montreal deals with his own grief after filling in for another teacherwho committed suicide.  This film is from Belgium.

Monsieur Lazhar
Monday, December 17, 2012
8:00 p.m.
Transistor
3819 N. Lincoln Avenue

Sunday, December 16, 2012

The Moon-Spinners

This is one of Hayley Mills' Disney era pictures she did as a teenager. When I watched this as a kid she was the only actress I knew, despite Joan Greenwood as her aunt, Eli Wallach as the villain, Irene Papas as the inn owner, and Pola Negri as a rich woman that Mills meets late in the picture.

Mills is Nikki, who travels with her aunt (Greenwood) to the Mediterranean island of Crete. They take in the local color while her aunt records folk songs for her anthropological studies. Nikki spies an attractive young man, Mark (Peter McEnery) whom she later discovers has some kind of secret. It involves the menacing/friendly Stratos (Wallach, playing Greek) and stolen jewels. The young couple have to find proof that Stratos is a thief while also evade being kidnapped and shot.

Thursday, December 13, 2012

Free event: The Prize

In this film from Mexico, a mother and daughter leave Buenos Aires while it is under military rule. At the daughte's new school, students are asked to write a patriotic essay on those same dictators who may have made her father "disappear."

The Prize
Thursday, December 13, 2012
6:00 p.m.
Chicago Public Library, Lincoln Belmont Public Library
1659 W. Melrose Street

Past seven days

One day late but a decent week!

Django, Unchained
The Driver
Evening Primrose
Gifted Hands
Hyde Park on Hudson
Intimate Stranger
Pegasus
Perfect Sense
Three Wishes for Cinderella
True Believer

Wednesday, December 12, 2012

Free event: Roberta

The Northbrook Public Library seems to be starting a series of Fred Astaire screenings. This first film, Roberta, is a mishmash of characters, co-starring Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers, although the main headliner is Irene Dunne, as you can see from the poster. The premise is that a football player (a wholesome Randolph Scott) has inherited his aunt's fashion shop, where he falls for the aunt's true designer, played by Irene Dunne. There is no character named Roberta in the film, in fact it is the name of the fashion shop (although the aunt who owns it is named Minnie--confusing, huh?) The original source material is a novel called "Gowns by Roberta."

Roberta
Wednesday, December 12, 2012
1:00 p.m. and 7:30 p.m.
Northbrook Public Library
1201 Cedar Lane
Northbrook, IL 60062

Monday, December 10, 2012

Free event: Being John Malkovich

I wonder how this film would have turned out if it was "Being" someone else? "Being Meryl Streep," "Being Nicolas Cage," "Being Charlie Chaplin?" It would make for an interesting discussion at your next party, especially if you have some film buffs on your guest list!

Being John Malkovich
Monday, December 10, 2012
8:00 p.m.
Transistor
3819 N. Lincoln Avenue

Wednesday, December 5, 2012

Free event: Amnesty

In this film from Albania, two people meeting their partners for a conjugal visit in prison end up sympathizing with each other instead.

Amnesty
Thursday, December 6, 2012
6:00 p.m.
Chicago Public Library, Harold Washington Library Center
Cindy Pritzker Auditorium
400 S. State Street

Free event: Holiday Inn

Sometimes these old musicals have such contrived plots, but great songs, that you don't mind the flimsy premise. In Holiday Inn, a singer (Bing Crosby) and a dancer (Fred Astaire) open up an inn which only opens on holidays. The musical numbers centers around these holidays. The enduring holiday classic song White Christmas (and other songs by Irving Berlin) were used in this movie. White Christmas was used again in a film of the same name, also starring Bing Crosby, in the 1950s. Interestingly, Irving Berlin was the one who came up with the idea of a hotel only opened on holidays.

Of course there is a romantic storyline for both characters as well, with ladies played by Virginia Dale and Marjorie Reynolds.

Holiday Inn
Wednesday, December 5, 2012
1:00 p.m. and 7:30 p.m.
Northbrook Public Library
1201 Cedar Lane
Northbrook, IL 60062

Past seven days

I didn't get to some screenings as planned, so here instead are some movies I caught on DVD and Netflix. I am not sure if I want to get stuck on the TV show American Horror Story, as it is a bit too melodramatic and introduces too many characters and elements.  Thoughts?

Going Postal
Hogfather
Playing For Keeps

Tuesday, December 4, 2012

Playing for Keeps

Gerard Butler is one of the producers of this film and also plays the lead character, George, an ex-soccer player falling on more desperate times while trying to re-connect with his ex-wife.

George has trouble paying his rent and his own soccer memorabilia doesn't fetch much on the resale market. During his son Lewis' soccer game, he notices the coach is distracted and not very good, and takes it upon himself to teach the team a few things. The parents notice this and ask him to be coach. George's ex wife Stacie (Jessica Biel) is about to be remarried, but George still wants her back. At first he coaches the kids' team in order to get closer back to her, but she warns him that it better be for his son's sake, and not some misguided attempt to woo her back.

Meanwhile, three soccer moms vie for his attention. The married Patty is a desperate housewife whose husband throws money around and suspects her of infidelity when he is doing the same (Uma Thurman, Dennis Quaid). Barb is divorced and depressed (Judy Greer). Denise is a sportscaster who uses her industry connections to help George get a potential sportscasting job with ESPN (Catherine Zeta-Jones). While George at first welcomes the romantic and sexual advances, he becomes a bit more mature and tries harder to work on himself and his relationship with his son Lewis, as well as with Stacie. There is some comic relief with George's landlord (Iqbal Theba) as he asks for the rent money and sees the women come and go from George's house.

Free event: The Wind Blows Round

A French shepherd brings his family to the Italian Alps, where the citizens of a small town hope his presence revitalizes the life there. Unfortunately, the town becomes divisive.

The Wind Blows Round
Tuesday, December 4, 2012
6:00 p.m.
Istituto Italiano di Cultura di Chicago
500 North Michigan Avenue, Suite 1450

Monday, December 3, 2012

Premium Rush

Just sit back and enjoy the action in this movie. There are many bike stunts and fast riding, but the story is not really that important to the main character, except as a plot device.

Joseph Gordon-Levitt is a daring New York City bike courier known as Wilee sent to deliver an envelope to Chinatown. What he doesn't know is that a crooked cop and gambling addict (Michael Shannon) needs to pay a Chinatown gambling debt, so is given info that Wilee is delivering a bearer bond kind of ticket that will net the holder of the ticket a wad of cash.

Wilee also has to deal with typical 20-something stuff--a girlfriend and a romantic/professional rival.

Free event: Fat, Bald, Short Man

I first saw Fat, Bald, Short Man at last year's Chicago International Film Festival.  It is getting some re-screenings during the Chicago Public Library's Global Lens film series this winter.  I like the film and its depiction of a meek man emboldened to make his presence known.

Fat Bald Short Man
Tuesday, December 4, 2012
6:00 p.m.
Chicago Public Library, Sulzer Regional Library
4455 N. Lincoln Avenue

Free event: Bernie

If you didn't catch Bernie when it first was released, here is another chance to catch it, for FREE!  It has a great performance by Jack Black, who is equally well-known these days for acting as he is for being a comic musician.  Shirley MacLaine also turns in a performance of a character type she is well-known for, an older lady who takes no guff.  Matthew McConaughey rounds out the main cast.

Bernie
Monday, December 3, 2012
8:00 p.m.
Transistor
3819 N. Lincoln Avenue

Friday, November 30, 2012

Free event: Stolen Life

The Chicago Public Library's Global Lens series goes to China this weekend.  Stolen Life is about a young woman who escapes her depressing life by becoming a college student.  She meets and falls in love with a delivery guy whose deception brings more tragedy.


Stolen Life
Saturday, December 1, 2012
2:00 p.m.
Chicago Public Library, Chinatown Public Library
2353 S. Wentworth Avenue

Free event: Sound of Noise

Transistor, the record store and art gallery, offers another film this week. I am not sure where to categorize Sound of Noise, as the plot is "a tone deaf cop tracks down some percussionist terrorists" and tagged as crime and comedy on some websites.  It's a Scandinavian film, so no doubt there will be some dry humor.

Sound of Noise
Friday, November 30, 2012
8:00 p.m.
Transistor
3819 N. Lincoln Avenue

Thursday, November 29, 2012

Free event: Pina

With films like Werner Herzog's Cave of Forgotten Dreams and the upcoming The Great Gatsby by Baz Luhrmann, 3D is film is exploring more than mainstream kids movies and action hero stories these days. This is a profile of the choreographer Pina Bausch, completed by director Wim Wenders after her untimely death in 2009.

Pina (in 3D)
Friday, November 30, 2012
7:00 p.m.
Univ. of Chicago Film Studies Center
5811 South Ellis Avenue
Cobb Hall 306

Anna Karenina (2012)

Joe Wright, who directed this new version of Tolstoy's Anna Karenina, has also directed Keira Knightley in two other movies, Pride & Prejudice and Atonement.  The story is about a married Russian worman who is caught up in a passionate love affair, and decides to give up her reputation and her family, including her beloved child for whom she would do anything for.

In this film, Wright uses heightened visual and artistic elements that suggest the characters are characters in a play, i.e. their fate is already written and their choices are not their own. Many of the scenes are visualized as sets on a stage, often revolving and changing as one would experience in a real play as the theatre would switch scenery while the audience continues to view. Often the shots go from indoors to outdoors with a simple removal of a wall.

Wednesday, November 28, 2012

Past seven days

Despite a long holiday weekend, I didn't watch as many movies as I thought I would.


Bedevilled
Departures
The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy
Spiderman
Spiderman 3
The Thing

Tuesday, November 27, 2012

Free event: The Man Who Would Be King

A film co-starring a favorite, Michael Caine, that I haven't yet seen.  Based on a book by Rudyard Kipling, and as expected takes place in the the far east.  As with some other screenings at the Northbrook library, Reid Schultz is scheduled to lead a discussion after both screenings of the film.

The Man Who Would Be King
Wednesday, November 28, 2012
1:00 p.m. and 7:30 p.m.
Northbrook Public Library
1201 Cedar Lane
Northbrook, IL 60062

Free event: Intacto

Intacto is a sort of "bet-with-the-devil" story. Max von Sydow plays the devilish character, a gambler and owner of a casino.  Several characters lives are changed.  This Spanish-language film is presented by Instituto Cervantes.

Intacto
Wednesday, November 28, 2012
6:00 p.m.
Instituto Cervantes
31 W. Ohio Street

Return engagement: Tales of the Night

Tales of the Night returns to Chicago. 

This animation film of several short folk tales is a French language film, although the tales take place in different parts of the world.  See my review here.  There are a couple more days to catch this at the Gene Siskel Film Center.  This would be great to watch with kids, obviously, but adults can also appreciate the artistry of the shadow puppet/cut paper animation style and bold colors.

Monday, November 26, 2012

Free event: Grey Matter

The Chicago Public Library continues their Global Lens series of foreign films. In Grey Matter (Matiere Grise), a young African filmmaker is pressured to make his film, about a woman who suffered atrocities during a war only to be sent to the same mental hospital as her tormentor, more mainstream.

Grey Matter
Tuesday, November 27, 2012
6:00 p.m.
Chicago Public Library, Sulzer Regional Library
4455 N. Lincoln Avenue

Free event: There'll Always Be an England

This one sounds like a concert documentary, about the Sex Pistols. As the poster to the right shows, there may be adult content (lyrics?) so viewer discretion advised.

There'll Always Be an England
Tuesday, November 27, 2012
7:00 p.m.
Delilah's
2771 N. Lincoln Avenue

Free event: Certified Copy

This talky sounding drama is about an English art critic who meets a Frenchwoman in Tuscany during a book tour.

Certified Copy
Monday, November 26, 2012
8:00 p.m.
Transistor
3819 N. Lincoln Avenue

Wednesday, November 21, 2012

Past seven days

Bafk into the swing of things!  (I hope)

Anna Karenina
Easy A
The Frighteners
Groundhog Day
Hitchcock
Lincoln
Paralelo 10
Skyfall
Toll Booth

Strictly Ballroom

Usually I am not a fan of really broad comedies. I think this '90s film comes from a time when Australia's comedies were mostly of the broad type, at least the ones I saw that came my way. But there is also a romance and music and dancing, creating appeal across many fronts. It is a film by Baz Luhrmann, part of his Red Curtain trilogy (along with Romeo & Juliet and Moulin Rouge), and based on a stage musical he made in the '80s.

The plot concerns the competitive ballroom dancer Scott (Paul Mercurio). For all his life he has trained as a ballroom dancer, a culture that is a big part of several generations of his family. His parents, Shirley and Doug (Pat Thompson, Barry Otto), also were competitive when they were younger and now run a dancing academy. Among the hopefuls is the amateur Fran (Tara Morice), an ugly duckling who knows she can never match the glamour of the ballroom. When Scott tries to include new showier steps in his performances that are outside of the standard rules of the ballroom community, he is pressured into following the rules by his manager Les (Peter Whitford), the competition head Barry (Bill Hunter), and other dancers.

But Fran sees him practicing his new steps and Scott is grudgingly convinced to have her as a temporary partner since no one else wants to risk dancing with him. He also meets Fran's father, a notable flamenco dancer (Antonio Vargas), who helps Scott perfect his paso doble. Scott later finds out something about his own father and a shared dream that he now has the opportunity to make real.

Free event: Kraftwerk and the Electronic Revolution

Every now and again I will find some place screening a movie that I’ve never been to before, much less heard of! Bars tend to fall into this category. This music documentary, about the electronica music group Kraftwerk, screens at Maria’s Packaged Goods & Community Bar. (And what the heck are “packaged goods” anyway?)

Kraftwerk and the Electronic Revolution
Sunday, November 25, 2012
7:00 p.m.
Maria's Packaged Goods & Community Bar
960 W 31st Street

Free event: ParaNorman

One for the kids, a pretty new movie that maybe they haven't seen yet. Paranorman is an animated film about a boy who is able to talk to ghosts. He helps saves his town from a curse.

ParaNorman
Saturday, November 24, 2012
2:00 p.m. and 7:30 p.m.
Northbrook Public Library
1201 Cedar Lane
Northbrook, IL 60062

Free event: Warriors of the Wasteland (The New Barbarians)

The premise of this sounds pretty out there. Radio signals during a nuclear holocaust lead survivors to a homosexual tribe of warriors. It's an Italian-made movie with the title I Nuovi Barbari, hence this alternate title on the movie poster.


Warriors of the Wasteland
Saturday, November 24, 2012
7:00 p.m.
Delilah's
2771 N. Lincoln Avenue

Tuesday, November 20, 2012

Free: The Secret in Their Eyes

I think I have seen almost everything available here that stars Ricardo Darin, an understated Argentinian actor. He often plays loners that connects with few people, and that is the case here. In this story, he plays a court investigator re-examining an old murder case.

Be sure to keep your eyes on the spectacular chase scene during a soccer match, which I believe is one long shot as well as shot during an actual match.


The Secret in Their Eyes
Wednesday, November 21, 2012
6:00 p.m.
Instituto Cervantes
31 W. Ohio Street

CIFF 2012: The Scapegoat

This is based on a Daphne duMaurier book, a previous film adaptation starred Alec Guinness. I don’t know the lead actor, Matthew Rhys, but I did recognize a few of the actors in the smaller roles. The story is a period piece taking place in the 1950s just when England's Princess Elizabeth is about to be crowned as Queen Elizabeth II. A teacher John is just leaving his post at a boys school—you can tell he is definitely not of the social or economic class of his students’ families. He teaches Greek and it is decided that these old languages are not needed anymore in the modern world, so his post has been eliminated. A bit bitter, he drinks at a hotel bar where he sees a man who amazingly looks exactly like him. He and this other man, Johnny (played also by Rhys), learn a bit about each other and Johnny buys him drinks and they stay the night at the hotel when they get too drunk. When John wakes, he finds his clothes are gone and a personal driver has arrived to take him “home”—Johnny’s home—believing John to be Johnny.

At first John tries to convince people he is not Johnny—they just think he has a bad hangover—until he meets the family. Lady Spence, the mother (Eileen Atkins), is a bedridden matron who does not go out anymore; wife Frances (Alice Orr-Ewing) is one of those sweet wives who loves her husband, not knowing his bad side; brother Paul (Andrew Scott) is trying to hold the family business together, a glassmaking factory; Paul’s wife Nina (Sheridan Smith), whom John finds out has been having an affair with Johnny; Blanche (Jodhi May), the outspoken sister; and Mary Lou, Johnny’s precocious daughter.

Bit by bit he is taken with the Spences, and to a lesser extent he is enjoying the life of a heritaged and monied family; but he also wants to find out why Johnny has forced him into this impersonation. It seems the factory is not doing well, and Johnny had been on a business trip to negotiate a merger; unbeknownst to everyone, the details of the merger are not good for the family or their workers. Johnny has run away and taken this unique opportunity to leave his problems to John to deal with. John is unable to tell the hard truth to the family and the factory workers, so stumbles about trying to find a solution and playing for time. At first he just wants Johnny to retake his life, but as we start to see secrets all around, John slowly sympathizes with the family, even falling in love with the wife Frances. But Johnny has been pretty dastardly and all his actions have caused problems for each member of the family. John’s presence and actions within the family change everything for the better for all the characters.

Friday, November 16, 2012

Free event: Olga's House of Shame

Do you watch a sexploitation film for the sex, or for the camp?

Olga's House of Shame
Sunday, November 18, 2012
6:00 p.m.
Delilah's
2771 N. Lincoln Avenue

Free event: The Filth and the Fury

If you want some punk music in the middle of the week, check out this documentary about the Sex Pistols.

The Filth and the Fury
Tuesday, November 20, 2012
7:00 p.m.
Delilah's
2771 N. Lincoln Avenue

Free event: Solar Mamas

Who needs a film festival?  Free movies abound in Chicago!

This next pick, Solar Mamas, is a documentary taking place in Jordan about the Bedouan woman, Rafea.  She has the unusual distinction of being the first Jordanian woman to join a edcuation program to create solar energy engineers.  This program was created for women of poor and third world countries to help educate them and offer economic support to their families.

This part of PBS' Independent Lens series.

Solar Mamas
November 17, 2012
2:00 p.m.
Cultural Center
Claudia Cassidy Theatre
77 E. Randolph Street

Free event: Mostra Brazilian Film Series

The Mostra Brazilian Film Series ends with this last screening. Era Uma Vez (Once Upon a Time in Rio) is a romantic drama. In Carra-Cega (The Blind Game), a man wounded in a fight with the police is sheltered by a woman.

Mostra Brazilian Film Series
Saturday, November 17, 2012
3:30 p.m. - Era Uma Vez (Once Upon a Time in Rio)
6 p.m. - Carra-Cega (The Blind Game)
Columbia College's Film Row
Wabash & 11th St., 8th Floor

Free event: Gerhard Richter: Painting

A documentary profile of the abstract German artist, Gerhard Richter, taking place mostly in his studio.

Gerhard Richter: Painting
Friday, November 16, 2012
7:00 p.m.
Univ. of Chicago Film Studies Center
5811 South Ellis Avenue
Cobb Hall 306

Free event: Bronx Executioner

You can't tell by the title but this is part sci-fi, part western. Two sheriffs work on a murder case involving humans, robots and replicants. It is an Italian made film set in New York City.

Bronx Executioner
Saturday, November 17, 2012
6:00 p.m.
Delilah's
2771 N. Lincoln Avenue

CIFF 2012: Shorts Program: Animation: Blurring the Lines

The shorts programs are always hit and miss for me. This year the animation styles were pretty good and had lots of variety, although as in many shorts the stories often had open endings or surreal tales.

38-39 c (S. Korea/US)--I don't think I've seen any short films from South Korea before. I believe the filmmaker is a Korean American student. The title is the temperature in a bathhouse. There is no dialogue, so the synopsis of the short "A birthmark forms a bond between father and son in an old public bathhouse" tells me more than I got out of it. There was no real indication to me that the two characters were father and son. This film was mostly portrayed via images melding into something else, going in a roundabout way from the son's birthmark to his father's.

Bite of the Tail (US)--A woman suffers from a mysterious stomach ailment but her doctor is distracted and not very interested, giving her vague diagnosis and cures. Her husband also is not very interested in her health either. He spends his time in an empty lot trying to catch a snake when he should be working. The snake metamorphoses into symbolism of the woman's ailment, whether it is physical or mental I don't know.  This story to me feels very autobiographical.

The Conquerors (Canada/France)--A surreal landscape where a man and woman live as if they are on a desert island, eventually birthing several kids, making pets out of giant insects, battling nature and other creatures. The people are real and although everything else is rendered via CGI, they still have the style of clip art type images cut out of a book.

Old Man (US)--The filmmaker got her hands on taped telephone recordings of Charles Manson and splices them into a rambling conversation, with animation to personify what he is saying.

Edmond was a Donkey (Canada/France)--Meek Edmond is picked on at work and daydreams of escaping to a fantasy land. When his coworkers covertly put donkey ears on him, this seems to change Edmond into a more extroverted and confident person, despite his ridiculous appearance. When the ears are taken away, Edmond returns to depression.  It won the Gold Plaque for Animated Short at the fest.

Oh Willy (Belgium/France)--A man returns to his natural tendencies and to his mother who lives in a nudist commune. When she dies it distresses him and he runs off into the forest where he befriends a big hairy creature. After giving it a good shave, he finds the creature is pretty much like himself. Made entirely of felt and fabric and other textiles and natural materials, which looked like it was a lot of handwork, and deserving of its Silver Hugo for Best Animated Short.

Body Memory (Estonia)--Creatures made of string are trapped in some kind of boxcar shack. Their strings start unraveling as they try to prevent being unraveled entirely. Some string creatures are wound around an egg, suggesting they are mother types with a pregnant belly.  This film has the same feel of other Eastern European short film artists such as Jan Svankmajer, Jiri Barta, Jiri Trnka, as well as a bit of Ray Harryhausen.

The Pub (UK)--Dialogue at a pub is animated in a rotoscope style. A female bartender has to deal with drunks, rowdy football hooligans, a bachelorette party and other types that congregate at bars.

Next Door Letters (Sweden)--Two girls play a joke on a third girl by sending her a fake love letter from a boy. When the victim is genuinely interested, one of the mean girls feels bad and continues the charade through letters in order not to hurt her feelings; she feels guilty enough to want to confess but ultimately writes that "his" family has to move away. Later the jokester, now a grown up lesbian, tries to track the girl down to reconnect and apologize.  This one, too, felt like an autobiographical story of the filmmaker or someone they knew.

Thursday, November 15, 2012

Free event: Mostra Brazilian Film Series

The Mostra Brazilian Film Series is hosting a bunch of films around the Chicagoland area, taking place mostly at universities from as far down south as Urbana-Champaign to as local as Columbia College. There are two more free screenings this week, the first takes place tomorrow, a schedule of short films and two feature length films.

Besides the short fiction, there is also a documentary and a feature film. Each of screenings is accompanied by an additional short film. Paralelo 10 concerns the plight of indigenous people in the Amazon rainforest, located in the 10th parallel. Su Quando Eu Danco (Only When I Dance), another documetnary, is billed as " Mad Hot Ballroom meets Billy Elliot."

Mostra Brazilian Film Series
Thursday, November 15, 2012
3:30 p.m. - Short Fiction Program
6:00 p.m. - Paralelo 10 (The 10th Parallel)
8:00 p.m. - So Quando Eu Danco (Only When I Dance)
Columbia College's Film Row
Wabash & 11th St., 8th Floor

Wednesday, November 14, 2012

Past seven days

I watched some tv-on-DVD, a short-lived series called Defying Gravity that was caleld "Grey's Anatomy in space." I should have listened. I was hoping for more sci fi and less about the love lives (or lack thereof) of these astronauts going to Venus. Seriously, all the female astronauts were thinking about were their romantic troubles, sex, or having babies.

I did manage to squeeze in one movie in my oh-so-busy week!

Craft