Here I follow up with
last year’s films as they arrive on home video in one format or another, roughly
in order of their rating by critical consensus (with some tardy releases to be
added later: last update 6/8/17).
About Paterson (MC-90, NFX ), let me confess that I adore this film, and also
that it’s not for everyone – slow, mundane, and uneventful, but shot through
with transcendent glimpses of light. Jim
Jarmusch is sometimes too arch for me, but here his trademark deadpan is alive
with signs of grace and humor, love and insight. Paterson is a place, a person, and a state of mind, a poem
about the poetry of everyday life. The
place is the decaying industrial city in New Jersey , famous as the home of Lou Costello and William
Carlos Williams, the doctor/poet who wrote a multivolume epic called Paterson . The person is Paterson, who drives a bus in the
city, meanwhile jotting poems in his notebook (which appear in lettering
onscreen as he recites and repeats them); he’s played soulfully by Adam Driver,
in a role that totally supplants his image from Girls. Equally spirited, but as outgoing as he is inward,
Golshifteh Farahani plays his wife, for whom every phase of life is an art
project. It’s a beautiful relationship,
though not without friction, much of it supplied by their pet bulldog. The city is a character in itself, as Paterson walks to and from work, drives his bus through the
city’s streets, with the (in)action returning periodically to the waterfall
that gives the city its identity. Each
evening he walks the dog to a bar, where he goes in for one beer, and
encounters passing moments of humor and drama.
You could say nothing happens in this film, or you could say nothing happens. To me, every image and every
beat seemed just so. Unexpectedly, this
film vies with Manchester
by the Sea as my favorite of the
year. Despite its depressed condition, Paterson ’s state of mind is ecstasy.
I can see many of the
aspects for which Toni Erdmann (MC-93, NFX ) has been so highly praised, but personally I’m
just not feeling the love. Much of what
I wrote about Maren Ade’s earlierfilm seems to apply to this
as well, yet I am less enthusiastic about the new film, in a reversal of
critical consensus. It may have
something to do with the film’s length (162 minutes), and maybe with the
central characters (though not the actors, who perform admirably), a father and
daughter, he a shambling old music teacher and prankster, she a tightly-wound
corporate consultant. The title character
is the name of the improvisatory role the father takes on, to embarrass and
humanize his daughter, when he goes to visit her on the job in Romania, where
she is ruthlessly bringing German efficiency to the formerly socialist
backwater. The movie could also have
been different to watch in a theater, where audience laughter might have
jollied me along. Instead of funny, I
found many of the scenes puzzling and marked by a weirdly opaque conviction. So for this film I can issue neither
recommendation nor warning, can only say “see for yourself.”
Aquarius (MC-88, NFX) is the name of an aging beachfront
apartment building in Brazil , where a widowed music critic is the only
remaining tenant of a developer eager to tear down the building and replace it
with a lucrative condo tower. In a prologue
that is indicative of the film’s indirect and leisurely approach, we first see
her living there as a young mother and breast cancer survivor more than thirty
years before. Then we jump ahead to the
present, where she is played by the great Brazilian actress Sonia Braga. Her ability to command the screen while doing
very little is key to the film’s appeal, as she interacts with friends and
lovers, grown children and real estate adversaries. A political or cultural fable about Brazil seems to be implied, but escaped this American viewer
(though I could relate bigly to real estate developers as villains). Nonetheless, the film held my interest
through its long and rather slow progression.
Asghar Farhadi garnered
his second foreign film Oscar with The Salesman (MC-85, NFX), and
I have no quibble with that choice. The
Iranian director of A Separation and other films is masterful at bringing us into
domestic scenes, and absorbing us with small, quiet shifts of perspective,
judgment, and emotion.
Each of his films in an inquiry into moral feelings and
allegiances. Each is calculated to
engender post-film debate and discussion.
We start as usual with a couple, and work our way out into complicated
webs of connection. The actors’ names
would likely mean as little to you as they do to me, but all the performances
are layered and excellent. Both man and
woman are actors in the play within the film, a Teheran production of Death of a Salesman. They are
forced to leave one apartment and move into another, where there are
complications with a former tenant, and an inciting incident with incisive
consequences. I leave the rest for you
to see for yourself.
20th
Century Women (MC-83, NFX) has
so many good elements that it ought to add up to more than it does. Mike Mills memorialized his father in the
excellent Beginners, and here does the same for his mother in what
might better have been called “The Women Who Raised Me.” The specificity of place and time – Santa Barbara in 1979 – vouches for the film’s authenticity,
which seems more reported than dramatized.
Luckily the admirable cast fills in many of the gaps, most notably
Annette Bening as the mother of the writer/director as a 15-year-old, played
endearingly by Lucas Jade Zumann. Bening
commands the screen not just for the immediacy of this performance, but in the
context of her past performances – she’s won our devotion going in, so has no
need to ingratiate. She’s a working
single mother, who lives in a large, crumbling old house where she takes in not
so much boarders as surrogate family members.
Director and star are generous with the supporting roles, Greta Gerwig
and Elle Fanning as two young women whom the mom enlists to help raise her
fatherless boy, plus Billy Crudup as a live-in hippie handyman. Throwing visual and musical cues into the
mix, Mills does not spin out scenes, or the film as a whole, to the point of
resolution, but prefers to pile on glimpses and glances to cumulative effect,
shards of memory that combine to create a mosaic, which is striking and
attractive but not recognizably coherent.
Diligently working my way
through the list of films that Metacritic deems to have received “Universal
acclaim,” I started Jackie (MC-81, NFX) with
little expectation of enjoyment. Natalie
Portman has held no appeal for me since Beautiful Girls (1996), and I was
pretty sure Chilean director Pablo Larrain wasn’t going to have an interesting
perspective on events and personalities that were very familiar to me. But I wasn’t prepared for how annoying every
aspect of the film would be: the acting
(absolute antithesis to All
the Way, where every historical
character was immediately identifiable), the music, the editing, the sheer
tone-deafness of the whole production. I
could bear no more than thirty minutes, and fast-forwarded through the rest, so
all I can give is my reaction, not a review.
It’s odd to see a film in which the only thing I liked was Greta
Gerwig. When that Metacritic average is
unpacked, you can see a bunch of 100 ratings (Ty Burr, what were you thinking,
what were you seeing?), but I was reassured to see my most trusted critics
(Anthony Lane, Stephanie Zacharek, Dana Stevens) clustered in the 50-60
range. So I’m pretty sure I didn’t miss
something here.
I am not generally a fan of sci-fi, but I held out some hope for Arrival (MC-81,NFX ), since Amy Adams stars – as a linguist trying to
communicate with aliens who have come to earth in a dozen huge spaceships
around the globe – and Denis Villeneuve is not your prototypical action
director. Plus Bradford Young is always
a cinematographer worth seeing. Together
they supply enough heart, brain, and eye to make the film watchable, if not a
satisfying cinematic experience to me. Beyond
the well-done production values, it is unusually soulful, thoughtful, and
beautiful as sci-fi, but for me obscure enough, as well as generic and
overblown, to withhold a recommendation.
I am not generally a fan of sci-fi, but I held out some hope for Arrival (MC-81,
Fences (MC-79, NFX ) represents two types of movie which have little
appeal for me – a transposition from theater, and obvious Oscar-bait – but had
numerous aspects that did appeal to me.
Starting with the two leads, Denzel Washington and Viola Davis, who are
every bit as good as you may have heard.
Having won Tonys for the revival of August Wilson ’s play on Broadway, the cast is brought to the
screen pretty much intact, directed by Denzel himself. Not familiar with Wilson ’s work, I have to say I was taken with the
language, and the passion with which it is delivered. The characterizations seem true to life,
though the stagecraft is creaky, most notably in the final scene. The setting – narrow enough to avoid “opening
out” of the play – is the 1950s Pittsburgh backyard of a former Homestead Gray
turned garbageman, a motormouth and force of nature, in whose climate his wife
and children, brother and friend, have to exist. Each performance lives up to the two leads,
and the dialogue carries conviction, however theatrical. Having followed Denzel’s career for decades,
it was fascinating to watch him step into the shoes of James Earl Jones as Troy
Maxson. The years go by, as this film
will tell you.
Despite superb
performances from Joel Edgerton and Ruth Negga as Richard and Mildred Loving,
Jeff Nichols’ patient, serious feature Loving (MC-79,
NFX ) would seem superfluous if more people had seen
the moving and revelatory documentary The Loving Story (NFX). The landmark Supreme Court decision in Loving
vs. Virginia overturned state laws against miscegenation, and
established marriage as a constitutional right.
Thankfully, Nichols’ film is less about courts and lawyers than the
genuinely colorblind love between a white man and a black woman, a bond between
two unassuming people that broke the bonds of ancient prejudice. The film’s approach is appropriately quiet
and unassuming as well, showing how deep racism runs without rubbing our face
in its more violent aspects, more interested in the heroism of ordinary life
than famous judicial triumphs.
In a good film year for
African-Americans, it’s no surprise that Hidden Figures (MC-74, NFX) was the highest grossing of the Oscar
nominees for Best Picture. It’s
certainly the most sanitized and domesticated, the most Hollywood of them all, in its approach to race relations and
civil rights. Theodore Melfi’s film
strains to be entertaining, but does so all the same, because of the true story
behind the film. and the three women who play “colored computers” working on the
Mercury space program in the early ’60s: Taraji P. Henson, Janelle Monae, and
Octavia Spencer. They endure the double
discrimination of being women as well as black in segregated Virginia , at the beginnings of the liberation movement. A little too much “You go, girl!” attitude,
too many sitcom beats, and too little attention to truth of situation or
character, meant that I would have preferred a straight documentary, but at
least the film is true to its title, and the book on which it’s based, in celebrating
some unsung heroes of the space race.
I’m a fan of Martin Scorsese, though not always in agreement about what is his best work, but all I can say about Silence (MC-79, NFX) is that there’s a fine line between passion project and vanity project, and for me this film crossed that line, becoming overt and unconvincing. C’mon, Marty, 161 minutes on Portuguese Jesuit missionaries in 17th century Japan? Given your track record, and the Shusaku Endo source novel, I expected a lot from this adaptation. I can see that you wanted to make a Kurosawa film, and this film certainly carries over his sense of spectacle, with lots of eye candy. But Andrew Garfield? He’s a good young actor, but you expect him to carry more weight than his slight frame can handle. Adam Driver is surprisingly good in a much smaller role, as the other young priest sent to search for their spiritual guide (a monumental Liam Neeson), lost somewhere in Japan. And Marty, I hate to say it, but you’re wandering into Mel Gibson pain-porn territory here. But, but, but – I had to fast-forward through the second half of this film, and for the rest I offer only a polite silence.
It’s a little rich for me
to come across as an arbiter of teen comedies, but Edge of Seventeen (MC-77, NFX ) strikes me as one of the best, not as edgy as The Diary of a Teenage Girl, but genuinely witty and true to life, from an
authentic female perspective. In a most
promising debut, Kelly Fremon Craig writes and directs, with a good cast led by
the charming, piquant, and angst-ridden Hailee Steinfeld, as an outsider child
who’s lost her beloved father, and is about to lose her best and only friend to
her too-perfect older brother, while herself trying to navigate between an
elusive dreamboat and the endearing nerd who has a crush on her. In times of distress, i.e. frequently, she
has recourse to her history teacher and reluctant mentor, played by Woody
Harrelson with laconic but friendly satire.
It all sounds very familiar, but comes across as fresh and appealing.
Underappreciated despite
an Oscar nomination for Best Foreign Film, Tanna (MC-75,
NFX ) is stunningly good. Named for the South Pacific island where it
was filmed by Bentley Dean and Martin Butler, having lived for seven months in
a traditional village where men wear penis sheaths and topless women wear grass
skirts. Working with villagers to create
a real-life scenario that includes elements of National Geographic, Robert
Flaherty, and Romeo
and Juliet in an ethnographic
paradise (serving as a good companion piece to the recent Disney animation Moana),
the filmmakers have put together a beautiful story that is mythic and
elemental, but specific to a genuine culture.
The villagers all play roles based closely on their own lives, and the
natural expressiveness of the acting is a wonder to behold. As is the landscape, from jungle to ocean to
volcano. Altogether an experience not to
be missed.
A Monster
Calls (MC-76, NFX) was another
film that exceeded expectation. In fact
I wasn’t sure what to expect at all of this part-animated, part-CGI-wizardry,
not-really-for-children story of an 11-year old British boy coping with his
mother’s impending death, in the process summoning a King-Kong-sized Green Man
from a giant yew tree in the church graveyard.
One expects a lot from Liam Neeson (voicing and motion-capturing the
tree), Sigourney Weaver (irascible grandmother), and Felicity Jones (mother
with cancer), but the actor who makes this all work is Lewis MacDougall, as the
inward boy who finds escape in drawing and fantasy, talents absorbed from his
mother. Sure, there’s shameless
tear-jerking, but there’s also flawless production work all round, by a mostly
Spanish team, including lovely, painterly animation and convincing special
effects. Mixing fairy tale, creature
feature, and family melodrama, director J.A. Bayona strikes me as a cross
between Pedro Almodovar and Guillermo del Toro.
Almodovar’s Julieta (MC-73, NFX ) could have been called “All About Her Mother,”
and as such recalls the best of his films, as well as Douglas Sirk’s. He disciplines his maximalist style in the material
of minimalist writer Alice Munro, in the process transposing her stories from
cold, dark, barren Canada to hot and colorful Spain , without betraying their spirit. If you like Almodovar at this most raucous,
this will be a disappointment, but if you appreciate his heartfelt appreciation
for the emotional travails of women, then this is a film to seek out. A glamorous Classics professor, if you can
imagine such a thing, is played in the present by Emma Suarez and in flashback
by Adriana Ugarte, and in each incarnation the character is transfixing. The older woman gets chance word of the
daughter she has not seen in a decade, and thinks back to how she met her
husband and then lost him, in the process getting and then losing the beloved
daughter. This is a careful and caring
film that unlocks unexpected depths.
I was inclined to resist Lion (MC-69, NFX), but didn’t entirely succeed. I suspected it was another production that
the Weinstein Company had muscled into an undeserved Best Picture nomination. And I’m not really susceptible to the
presumed soulfulness of Dev Patel, which novice director Garth Davies tries to
exploit in repeated wordless close-ups.
There are some pretty things and some touching things in this “based on
a true story” tale of a poor young boy (a captivating Sunny Pawar) from rural India who gets separated from his family and winds up on
the streets of Calcutta . After
Dickensian adventures, he is eventually adopted from an orphanage by an
idealistic Australian couple (Nicole Kidman as fashion victim?), only to grow
up into a longing for his unknown birthplace and birth family. But the self-dramatization of the originating
memoir, and the manipulations of its presentation do not come with an aura of
truthful exploration of feeling.
Nonetheless I confess to a tear in the eye, at least for the birth
mother at the inevitable reunion.
If, like me, you think
that Amy Adams and Jake Gyllenhaal are reason enough to watch a movie, Tom
Ford’s Nocturnal
Animals (MC-67, NFX) will
disabuse you of that notion. To call
this movie a hollow exercise in style is to make the best case for it. To call it a garish mixture of lifestyle and
violence porn is closer to the mark.
Don’t bother.
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