Friday, September 11, 2009

TIFF Day One

Thursday, September 10, 2009

TIFF Day One

My intial film festival movie experience is five out of five. The weather is perfect, the sidewalk at the Ryerson Theatre is ringed with a two foot wall, so the half hour wait to get in was quite endurable. Once in we found the best seats were either taken or reserved. The waiting area for the director, writer, and actors was just to our right, an advantage when your seats are on the right side. The director, a lady from Denmark introduced An Education, set in London in the early sixties. As a father if a headstrong daughter I was very impressed with the screen play adaptation of a 10 page memoir. The time period was important, todays teenager would never be seduced by a monied existence.

  • an education

  • Lone Scherfig

Description

It's 1961 in the London suburb of Twickenham, and bright sixteen-year-old Jenny (Carey Mulligan) is on the cusp of womanhood, fantasizing about a more sophisticated, refined life while smoking Gauloises cigarettes. Though she feels smothered by her own adolescence, Jenny is an assiduous, cello-playing schoolgirl with a real chance of landing a spot at Oxford University. Her path takes a turn, however, when she meets David (Peter Sarsgaard), a man who seems to embody her every fantasy.

David soon replaces Jenny's traditional schooling with his own brand of education: art auctions, smoky clubs, classical concerts and late-night dinners with his stylish yet inane friends (played with verve by Dominic Cooper and Rosamund Pike). Much to Jenny's amazement, David even manages to charm her conservative parents, despite being nearly twice her age.

Their romance flourishes, and David whisks Jenny away to Paris for her seventeenth birthday under the pretence of being chaperoned by his “Aunt Helen.” Upon her return to Twickenham, Jenny is the subject of intense scandal as her headmistress (fiercely played by Emma Thompson) and English teacher Miss Stubbs (Olivia Williams) accuse her of throwing away her future. Just as Oxford seems within reach, Jenny appears poised to embark on a new, rarefied life.

An Education is a moving film set against the stifling backdrop of post-war, pre-Paul McCartney England. The script by Nick Hornby (author of High Fidelity and About a Boy), based on a short memoir by British journalist Lynn Barber, is clever and nuanced, with a keen awareness of life's little absurdities. Director Lone Scherfig and her incredible ensemble cast deliver both a powerful coming-of-age story and a portrait of a culture on the threshold of change.


  • broken embraces

  • Pedro Almodóvar

Description

As Almodóvar settles into the midpoint of an already illustrious career, his work has achieved a happy balance between the whiz-kid pyrotechnics of his early days as a filmmaker and the more mature, measured style of his recent films. Broken Embraces sits somewhere between the two. In addition to a dense, labyrinthine narrative that jumps across time periods, it also features some fiercely contested, complex relationships. Furthermore, the master proves that he has lost none of his skill in managing the demands of a film that touches on his own métier.

At the centre of this affecting feature sits a blind screenwriter and former director who has abandoned his real name, Mateo Blanco, for a pseudonym, Harry Caine, the first sign of the double life he leads. Harry's current reality conceals a fascinating past, which Almodóvar spends much of his film detailing. The plot is propelled by the arrival of a brash young man, hot on the heels of news that the producer of Mateo's film “Girls and Suitcases” has died. The film marked a defining period in Mateo's life, as both he and his producer had fallen madly in love with a girl who was cast in the project. The simmering Lena had turned both of their worlds inside out. She became the love of Mateo's life while simultaneously leading a double life with the film's producer. But it is the young man on his doorstep that intrigues and troubles the now blind Harry. Who is he?

Almodóvar skilfully and effortlessly uncovers the secrets of everyone's various pasts in this steamy, scheming and oh-so-romantic melodrama. Penélope Cruz continues to broaden her palette as a dramatic and comedic actress, turning the coquettish Lena into a fully rounded and completely sympathetic schemer, while Lluís Homar, best known for his role in Bad Education, is both dignified and skittish in the double role of Harry/Mateo. Almodóvar's witty, well-written screenplay provides the intricate canvas on which this very Spanish dance of life and death is played out.



TIFF Day Two

  • Eyes Wide Open
    Eynaim Pekukhot

  • Haim Tabakman


Description

Living in one of Jerusalem's ultra-Orthodox quarters, Aaron (veteran stage actor Zohar Strauss) runs a kosher butcher shop and is the father of four young sons. His quiet life is disrupted when the arrival of the lost soul Ezri (Israeli heartthrob Ran Danker) awakens dormant feelings. Hidden under layers of piety, unknown desires suddenly rise in Aaron like an all-enveloping tide. While the devout Jew initially believes the proximity of temptation will only make him stronger, he ultimately abandons himself to the throes of passion. Eventually, however, he will have to face up to his religious and familial responsibilities. When a next-door neighbour strays from righteousness, Aaron is forced to reassume his role in the community, and listlessly joins the rabbi in making threats that will soon be redirected at him if he doesn't conform to the norm.

First-time feature director Haim Tabakman, having honed his skills editing David Volach's My Father My Lord, now explores the moral boundaries of his own religion with a sharp, mature investigation of a tough subject. Allowing the camera to breathe down the backs of his subjects, he creates a tightly wound universe of quiet devastation. Tabakman charges the merest touch with megawatts of emotion, delivering a restrained masterpiece of hidden tensions that wisely refuses to stoop to unnecessary dramatics.

Grounded in a realist aesthetic, Eyes Wide Open skilfully captures the duality of living in a close-knit community where there's no such thing as free will. People may look out for one another, but their generosity comes with strings attached. Aaron must choose between personal freedom and religious responsibility, and in this part of the world, the laws of desire do not reign supreme.

  • Cleanflix

  • Andrew James

  • Joshua Ligairi

Description

Mormons can be movie lovers too. The problem is that their religious leaders strongly discourage R-rated content. As one Mormon prophet explained, “The mind through which this filth passes is never the same afterwards.” In order to better serve their Mormon clientele, enterprising video stores in Utah started to offer “clean” versions of popular titles like The Matrix and Titanic. Using digital editing software, self-appointed censors removed nudity, gratuitous violence and profanity, then mass duplicated the clean versions for DVD rental. Soon the idea took off, and multiple franchises sought to capitalize on brands like Clean Flicks and Flick's Club. For a brief spell, it seemed like the perfect business.

Unfortunately, no one consulted the copyright holders. Hollywood figures such as Steven Soderbergh, Curtis Hanson and Michael Mann became vocal opponents of having their work re-edited. As quickly as the clean movement blossomed, it started to unravel, with legal threats from Hollywood, accusations among rivals and even a sex scandal in the backroom of a clean video store.

In Cleanflix, directors Andrew James and Joshua Ligairi chronicle the rise and fall of the clean movement. Having grown up in the Mormon community, the duo gained close access to the main players that outsiders might never have achieved. The controversy over cleaning films raises further questions: Who gets to set cultural standards? Does what we watch affect how we behave?

The film gives a broader context for understanding the Mormon institution (known as the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints) by talking to its adherents and those who have dropped out, most notably the playwright and filmmaker Neil LaBute, known for the dark themes in scripts like In the Company of Men andBash.


  • How to Fold a Flag

  • Michael Tucker

  • Petra Epperlein

Description

A cage fighter in Texas. A congressional candidate in Buffalo. A heavy-metal rocker in Colorado. A hog butcher in North Carolina. Their common thread is that they went through combat together in Iraq in the U.S. Army's 2/3 Field Artillery unit, known as the Gunners. Now they're dispersed back to their hometowns, trying to resume normal lives. In this extraordinary documentary, filmmakers Michael Tucker and Petra Epperlein reveal the poignant and poetic tapestry of America's neglected corners.

Tucker and Epperlein are uniquely qualified for this journey. Their debut feature film, Gunner Palace, which played at the Festival in 2004, was the first theatrical work to follow American soldiers in Iraq. That was followed by The Prisoner or: How I Planned to Kill Tony Blair in 2006, which looked at Abu Ghraib from the rare perspective of a wrongfully accused Iraqi prisoner, and Bulletproof Salesman in 2008, which examined a war profiteer.

How to Fold a Flag begins with a 1920 epigraph from the German author Ernst Jünger: “We were asked to believe that the war was over. We laughed – for we were the war.” That sentiment embodies these characters. In Texas, Michael Goss, haunted by the deaths he witnessed, says, “I need to continue fighting something.” In Buffalo, Jon Powers campaigns on his war record for the U.S. Congress, which doesn't stop his opponents from “Swift Boating” him with smear tactics. In suburban Colorado, Wilf Stuart tries to uphold his mother Becky's spirits as his brother prepares to deploy for combat. In Fayetteville, North Carolina, Javorn Drummond cracks jokes about his ramshackle home. Describing his sense of dislocation, he says, “We went to war as a unit and came home alone.”

How to Fold a Flag checks in on these characters and others throughout the pivotal election year of 2008, capturing unforgettable moments of hope, loss and redemption. They may be young, but they have a lot to teach us.



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