Saturday, September 14, 2024

Reach Out and Touch Faith

Distance (2001) - Kore-eda Screen Shot 2024-09-13 at 2.31.58 PM Screen Shot 2024-09-13 at 11.39.58 AM Screen Shot 2024-09-13 at 12.03.02 PM Screen Shot 2024-09-13 at 2.07.25 PM Screen Shot 2024-09-13 at 2.15.45 PM Screen Shot 2024-09-13 at 2.45.57 PM Screen Shot 2024-09-13 at 3.08.48 PM Screen Shot 2024-09-13 at 3.09.02 PM Screen Shot 2024-09-13 at 3.11.01 PM Screen Shot 2024-09-13 at 3.11.59 PM Hirokazu Kore-eda paints a complex picture in the aftermath of unspeakable acts of terrorism and contemplates on the collective responsibility in Distance, inspired by Aum Shinrikyo Sarin Gas Attack in Tokyo Subways in 1995. But in true Kore-eda fashion, the film is not about the carnage or condemnation of the soulless society, but a plea for us to reach out and take care of each other, even though understanding one another can be hard.

It's been three years since the Ark of Truth cult sabotaged Tokyo's water supply system that killed hundreds and injured thousands, we are informed by the TV broadcast. After the act, the members of the cult committed suicide, and their bodies burned and the ashes scattered. Four family members of the cultists, still grappling with the fact that their loved ones committed such a heinous act, get together and pay a visit to the lake in the countryside where the ashes are supposedly scattered. It is revealed that they've been doing this annually, making the trips together to pay respects to the dead.

On the way to the lake, they encounter a surviving cult member Sakata (Tadanobu Asano), who abandoned the group at the last minute, there as well. He keeps his distance. After the visit to the lake and paying respects in various forms, (laying flowers in the water, praying and just saying a few words) they turn back, only to find their car stolen. It's getting late and the rain storm is brewing in the distance, they have no choice but follow Sakata into a cabin which was home for cult members.

Talking to each other and asking Sakata as they spend the night together, they find out the insights and thinking behind their estranged family members. In the beginning, Kore-eda unhurriedly shows the four living their lives, doing their jobs - a swimming instructor, a teacher, a salaryman and a florist. In a series of flashbacks, we get to witness their interactions with their family members who became cult members. Something is missing in their lives, they want to start over, they want to heal their souls...

Just like his previous films - Maborosi and Afterlife, Kore-eda plays the pivotal memories of each character- their final goodbyes, losing them forever to the cult - things get violent for some, not understanding their family, some uneventful and more contemplative. However, that was the last interaction they have had with their loved ones.

Like all his other films, Kore-eda concentrates on the concept of a family in Distance. That it is our duty to shorten the distance between us before it becomes too far and unreachable. With the poetic visuals and contemplative nature, Distance is closer to his earlier films than family dramas of his later films. Unlike the Japanese cinema of disaffected in the late 90s and 2000s by filmmakers like Kiyoshi Kurosawa and others, Kore-eda wants to give us a glimpse of hope in human interactions and advocate reaching out and understanding each other with Distance.

Sunday, September 8, 2024

Floating

El auge del humano 3/The Human Surge (2023) - Williams Screen Shot 2024-09-07 at 9.32.05 AM Screen Shot 2024-09-07 at 8.29.54 AM Screen Shot 2024-09-07 at 9.27.03 AM Screen Shot 2024-09-07 at 9.27.48 AM Screen Shot 2024-09-07 at 9.04.27 AM Screen Shot 2024-09-07 at 8.51.42 AM Screen Shot 2024-09-07 at 8.29.59 AM Screen Shot 2024-09-07 at 9.02.30 AM Screen Shot 2024-09-07 at 9.05.14 AM Screen Shot 2024-09-07 at 9.06.22 AM Screen Shot 2024-09-07 at 9.18.24 AM Screen Shot 2024-09-07 at 9.25.09 AM Seven years have passed since Argentine experimental filmmaker, Eduardo Williams's Human Surge made a splash in the international film scene. The elusive threads of young people's lives in the global south, shot in various media that incorporate video games and internet, challenged and refuted the rigid old notion of cinema and its first world colonialist hegemony without being seen as overtly political or preachy. Globalization, in Williams's presentation, at least for young people, is both fantasy and real, and among them, connection is easily made crossing national boundaries over abundant technology and is no big deal, in their impoverished daily lives.

Williams comes up with The Human Surge 3. Never mind its title. It's been a while, things have been happening in the world. It's appropriate that he jumps to the third one to keep up with the times. (The prolific filmmaker has been constantly making shorts) In Surge 3, using a 360 VR camera, he charts the non-binary young people's lives in Peru, Taiwan and Sri Lanka. As always, their daily lives in exotic surroundings and daily conversations can be a little discombobulating to the viewers at first. But as it plays out and we settle with some recognizable faces over time, we get settled in and notice that their thoughts intermingle. Certain conversations are repeated in different languages: their animosity toward millionaires, polution and environmental destruction. Then they appear in each other's surroundings and communicate with each other, either in English or in their own language without missing a beat. Someone mentions, "I saw you in my dream, eating a mango on a raft in the water," matching with the image in the Peru section.

In Williams's hand, globalization in the internet age opens up limitless possibilities for the young people to connect - they literally float in the air. For the viewers, he presents an immersive visual/aural journey while also reminding the limitations of technology (for now) by leaving in the distortions of wide angle VR camera imagery in the film.

There are some great established filmmakers who take great chances with experimenting with narratives and the medium to further their artistry in telling human experiences within historical and cultural contexts: Lisandro Alonso and Miguel Gomes- Harmony Korine to a lesser extent, come to mind. Eduardo Williams, with his minimalist/maximalist free-flowing aesthetics, with acute observations of the world here and now, with a great deal of sense of humor and compassion & tenderness toward its subjects, emerges as one of the most daring, important filmmakers working today.

Saturday, August 31, 2024

Orbiting

Janet Planet (2023) - Baker Screen Shot 2024-08-30 at 3.42.21 PM Screen Shot 2024-08-30 at 3.58.47 PM Screen Shot 2024-08-30 at 4.05.34 PM Screen Shot 2024-08-30 at 4.18.36 PM Screen Shot 2024-08-30 at 4.23.26 PM Screen Shot 2024-08-31 at 7.28.00 AM Screen Shot 2024-08-31 at 7.32.16 AMScreen Shot 2024-08-31 at 7.36.48 AM Screen Shot 2024-08-31 at 7.37.32 AM Screen Shot 2024-08-31 at 7.39.13 AM Playwright Annie Baker's feature film debut, Janet Planet, is a small wonder. It might lack the emotional impact or drama of Aftersun or Ladybird as far as a parent/daughter relationship goes, but in its quiet small ways, it depicts a meaningful, authentic mother-daughter relationship on film. Even though it's set in the summer of 1991 and the lack of cell phones indicates the era, Janet Planet is not at all a nostalgia trip. Its rural New England setting, the creaky wooden bungalows peppered with New-Age types emanate that distinctive short summer rental/impermanence vibe.

Lacy (Zoe Ziegler) is first seen sneaking out of the lodge in the middle of the night of her summer camp to call her mom Janet (Julianne Nicholson). She demands mom to pick her up, otherwise she will kill herself. Next morning, to her displeasure, she finds that both mom and mom's moody boyfriend Wayne (Will Patton), waiting to drive her home. She says she changed her mind. Too late.

Divided by chapters with Janet's love interests and friends' names, the film is seen from Lacy's point of view and her single mom making bad choices in men. Lacy, 11-years old, still insists on sleeping with mom in her bed. Janet doesn't treat her precocious and lonely daughter like a child, and always have heart-to-heart conversations - about her career trajectory (she recently got a license to be an acupuncturist and named her practice Janet Planet), her bad tastes in men, her beliefs that she can make any men fall in love with her if she tries, and how Lacy's forthrightness and (sometimes) aggressiveness make her wonder that she would be better off if she turns out to be a lesbian (and she means this as a complement). There are many other gems like that throughout.

Both Ziegler and Nicholson are wonderful. Sophie Okonedo and white bearded Elias Koteas make memorable appearances too. The dialog rings true. No character comes across as out of balance or overly stereotypical, considering its hippie environment. Baker gets the world of Lacy in detail- her odd doll collections, lying under the dining table and on the grass aimlessly for hours, getting sick with anxiety at the bus stop on the first day of middle-school and most important of all, fighting for her mom's attention among series of men that orbits her planet. Baker gets the haziness and dream-like pre-adolescence right. With a blink of an eye, it will be gone. But the grownup world, as witnessed by Lacy, is not that much different. There will be plenty of fights and screaming matches and resentment and all that in the future. She will find a girl her age to talk to, as evidenced in the beginning of the film with Wayne's daughter Sequoia. But for this brief time, mom and daughter relationship is precious, like a planet and its moon.

Wednesday, August 28, 2024

Scariest of Them All

Oddity (2024) - Mc Carthy Screen Shot 2024-08-27 at 11.36.14 AM Screen Shot 2024-08-27 at 11.36.36 AM Screen Shot 2024-08-27 at 11.38.21 AM Screen Shot 2024-08-27 at 11.39.28 AM Screen Shot 2024-08-27 at 11.40.29 AM Screen Shot 2024-08-27 at 11.41.09 AM Screen Shot 2024-08-27 at 11.42.18 AM Screen Shot 2024-08-27 at 11.47.17 AM Screen Shot 2024-08-27 at 11.48.09 AM Screen Shot 2024-08-27 at 11.49.26 AM Horror genre is having a good year with many successful releases. Some of them are very good. But I find most of them overhyped and not at all scary. Irish director Damian Mc Carthy, whose sleeper hit debut Caveat (2020), a 'haunted house' genre, was in my opinion, both original and scary horror film in an ominous remote island setting. He comes up with perhaps the scariest film of the year.

Just like Caveat, the location plays an important part. This time it is a big old remote castle. Dani (Carolyn Bracken) and Ted (Gwylim Lee) are in the process of renovating the property that they just moved in. While Ted is at work (he is a doctor at a mental hospital nearby), Dani has to fend for herself at the big, cold, empty castle. As far as atmospheric horror goes, Mc Carthy is very skilled at creating the feeling that something is off. He is very good at not only jump scares, which there are plenty, but the sense of forbodding with startling images.

After Dani gets brutally murdered in the castle by a masked intruder, her twin sister Darcy, a blind clairvoyant who owns an oddity shop in town stops in at the castle, with a hideous housewarming gift, a wooden life-size mannequin with terrifying expression, for Damian and his new, unsuspecting girlfriend Yana (Caroline Menton). Darcy suspects it was Ted who arranged Dani's murder. He is doing some insidious stuff in the mental hospital. And he in turn, challenges the notion of supernatural with his daring arrogance: you wanna play with me? I will play with you. Yana finds strange objects in the holes in the creepy manequin's head - a lock of hair, a tooth, a viale of blood and a picture of Dani and Darcy as children. Unexplained things start happening - Yana's car key disappears, the wooden figure changes its positions by itself, Yana gets to see the glimpse of Dani's apparition in the dark. Freaked out, Yana leaves.

Carolyn Bracken has a great presence in her double roles while Gwylim Lee is appropriately creepy as smarmy, insidious villain. There are many truly terrifying moments in Oddity. The sense of unease Mc Carthy creates has no equal. It's his effective filmmaking - unnerving framing, sense of claustrophobia and timing that really pays off. His playing with the expectations of the audiences provide many spine tingling moments. Horror fans, watch this movie!

Wednesday, August 21, 2024

Rehash

Alien: Romulus (2024) - Alvarez Alien copy Quick thoughts after viewing:

-Rehash of the first from the set design to plotpoints. But not as good or as effective. It gets grimyness right but nothing really memorable.

-The cast is too young. It feels like kids playing dressup.

-Facehuggers are rubbery. The first Alien came out 47 years ago and it has more realistic looking practical effects? How?

-Xenomorphs not menacing or scary enough.

-What they did to Ian Holm is a travesty

-Thoroughly PG-13

-I never thought I'd say this but I miss Ridley Scott. However trashy and incomprehensible Prometheus and Covenant were, they were superb entertainment.

Tuesday, August 20, 2024

Luminations

Afterglows (2023) - Kimura Screen Shot 2024-08-11 at 9.20.57 AM Screen Shot 2024-08-11 at 8.38.44 AM Screen Shot 2024-08-11 at 8.36.37 AM Screen Shot 2024-08-11 at 9.04.45 AM Screen Shot 2024-08-11 at 8.56.49 AM Screen Shot 2024-08-11 at 9.11.39 AM Screen Shot 2024-08-11 at 9.36.46 AM Screen Shot 2024-08-11 at 10.00.57 AM Screen Shot 2024-08-11 at 10.03.16 AM Screen Shot 2024-08-14 at 3.23.33 PM Screen Shot 2024-08-14 at 4.08.47 PM Screen Shot 2024-08-14 at 3.25.31 PM A Tokyo cap driver, Morishima (Kentez Asaka) lost his wife Sayuri (Megumi), an accomplished pop singer, to suicide. It's his obsessive spying that pushed her to end her life. Afterglows is about him processing his guilt while driving around Tokyo, mostly at night shot in contrasty black and white with glowing soft lit Tokyo skyline. The film is beautiful to look at, even inappropriately so. Things take a turn when he picks up a passenger who looks exactly like Sayuri. His obsession, believing his wife is still not dead, starts again as he stalks the woman. Morishima is confronted with his wrongdoing by a sly journalist who befriends him at a small late night eatery.

First time director Taichi Kimura creates a dreamy landscape where you don't exactly know if it's afterlife/purgatory or the protagonist's imaginings. Don't matter - empty Tokyo at night has never been more beautiful.