Thursday, February 28, 2013

#62 The Queen of Versailles (2012)

Directed by Lauren Greenfield.


An absolutely great documentary about one of the richest couples in America. It starts out focusing on the process of them building and getting ready for a new family home in central Florida—what will be the largest single-family home in the country, costing $100 million. The movie takes a turn for the better with the financial collapse of 2008, which leads to a huge loss in value of the enormous time-share company owned and run by the patriarch of the family, David Siegel. From that point on, the movie shows the process of a family gradually imploding on itself as they try to adjust to life on a budget. The main character, Jackie Siegel, is David Siegel's 25 year younger former beauty pageant winner trophy wife. The couple have 8 children under the age of 16. Jackie's pure ignorance about anything to do with the financial situation of her family, and the way in which the family's excesses is so clearly demonstrated for the cameras without even the least bit of awareness of how callous and out of touch with reality they are is fascinating. I won't go into any detail, but only highly recommend that anyone reading this should make a point of watching this film. I am a huge fan of documentaries, and this one is a really good one at that.

#61 Street of Chance (1942)

Directed by Jack Hively. Production: Paramount Studios.


This was an old Film Noir picture that was OK. It was clear that this was a B movie. It didn't have too interesting a story behind it. But a lot of typical Noir attributes. A man gets hit on the head, suffers an episode in which his memory suddenly changes and he doesn't know anything about his current life but only about the previous life that he disappeared from suddenly a year before. His knew (unfamiliar) life involves an attractive feisty blonde and a police detective pursuing him in regards to the murder of two wealthy associates. How the story unravels itself involves a bed-ridden mute grandmother who seems to know all the secrets and a femme fatale. A good picture to catch in the theater on a rainy day. It stars Burgess Meredith thirty years before his more famous role as Mickey, the old trainer of Rocky Balboa.

Wednesday, February 27, 2013

#60 Black Cat, White Cat (Crna mačka, beli mačor) (1998)

Directed by Emir Kusturica.






This was my first experience with Emir Kusturica. What a trip! To even get the slightest idea of the tone of this movie, just watch the youtube clip I have in this post. I know it lacks subtitles, but you don't necessarily need to understand the dialogue to get a feel for what this movie is like. I highly recommend it. It is chock-full of incredibly quirky and bizarre characters that are all ridiculously hilarious. I especially got a kick out of the ubiquitous flock of domestic geese hanging around and invading so many of the scenes. I can only imagine how crazy of an experience filming this gem would have been. I think that I will foray into Kusturica's weird world again to see what else there is to discover. Oh, and I can't forget to mention the lovely Branka Katić. It was very refreshing to see such an enchanting beauty appear in a comedy and not play the one-dimensional beauty/object of desire of a story. All of Katić's charm comes shining through as she is just another member of this crazy group of individuals who all come together to create such a wonderful and bizarre world. It really makes you wonder if life is just simply like that in the Balkans.

Saturday, February 23, 2013

#57 Sunset Boulevard (1950)

Directed by Billy Wilder.





How lucky to get to see not one, but two absolutely classic movies in the span of 4 days! I do not have any desire to critique this movie in comparison to 8½ or perform an analysis of the two movies side-by-side or anything of the nature. In fact, these two movies seem to me to be so far apart from each other despite the iconic status that they both have deservedly received.

Sunset Boulevard is a great film for film-lovers. We saw it during the opening weekend of SIFF's "Noir City" mini-festival of restored and recovered Film Noir movies. This was easily the highlight. A digital restoration that was amazingly clear and flawless. It really made me realize that so many of the "classic oldies" seem not nearly as good as they could be because in many cases bad quality reproductions (bad sound is a huge detriment to old films or poor image quality, for example). I feel that many these films would have so much more appreciation if they could always be shown in the quality that they deserve to be shown in. 

This is a classic tale about a queen of the big screen many years past her heyday desperately awaiting her chance to become big and famous again. Norma Desmond was an icon in the silent motion picture era, but the film business has radically changed in the past 20 years. Or as she puts it in response to a comment that she used to be big, "I am big! It's the pictures that got small." 

Everything put all together about this film make it one of the all-time greats. I am happy that I got the opportunity to see it on the big screen. It is definitely one of my top ten of all time!

Friday, February 22, 2013

#56 Planet Earth: Great Plains (2006)





#55 Arcadia (2012)

By Olivia Silver.


The debut feature-length film of UCLA Film School graduate Olivia Silver starring John Hawkes. Congratulations to this young filmmaker for turning out a better than average coming-of-age story in her first feature-length film. Ryan Simpkins plays twelve year-old Greta who along with her brother and sister is being uprooted by their dad (Hawkes) in order to move the family across the country to California. Greta's disillusionment with her father and the fact that they are moving steadily grows as their journey progresses, however the fact that she is unable to find out any answers about the status of her mom (who is supposedly going to join them in California) makes her situation appear more and more desperate. There are some very nicely developed themes in this film. Greta's evolving relationship with her parents, and in particular her dad, is the main issue at hand, however the deeper story really revolves around Greta's personal growth and maturation as she struggles to find her identity as a pre-adolescent. Interwoven into the story, Silver has created some wonderful scenes of sibling bonding, which for me formed some of the best storylines that this movie contains. Greta and her younger brother Nat (played by Ryan Simpkins's real-life brother, Ty) possess a tight bond, the kind that seems most often to exist when there is a strong lack of parental involvement or emotional connection as is the case with this family, albeit primarily because of circumstances. I enjoyed this movie and also enjoyed meeting and speaking with the filmmaker following its screening at the Northwest Film Forum. Perhaps as a consolation for only receiving 3 stars from me, Silver should at least be proud that her movie appears in almost365films sandwiched between two movies that could easily be considered among the top ten of all time ( and Sunset Boulevard). So she's in good company!

#54 Cavalier (2013)

Directed by Steven Schardt. Written by Steven Schardt and Christian Palmer. Starring Christian Palmer.
A short film directed by a Seattle/Kentucky/New York-based filmmaker, Steven Schardt. Scotty is an alcoholic and is appearing to lose any custody he might have remaining over his 20 month-old son when he decides to kidnap him and take him on an impromptu road trip. The story, which appears to have neither a definite beginning nor end, culminates in a roadside motel where Scotty meets and entertains a fellow alcoholic in the form of a lonesome woman. I am happy that this movie and the artists involved will get some exposure at SXSW as I personally know the filmmaker. At the screening at Northwest Film Forum, it was apparent that many of the other audience members were impacted positively by this short as its concepts of divorce, fatherhood, responsibility and/or alcoholism possibly touched home more for many others than for myself.

Thursday, February 21, 2013

#53 A Story for the Modlins (2012)

By Sergio Oksman.

A documentary short about an artistic family pieced together from a discovered box of old photos, letters, journals, a VHS tape and knick-knacks of various sorts. This awkward family appears to have attempted to escape from modern society by secluding themselves in their apartment in Madrid, Spain. The father was an unknown actor who never succeeded at getting his break in Hollywood. The mother was a talented artist who experimented with painting, sculpture and photography, although the themes of most of her works were quite bizarre. The end to this short film is as mystifying as the entire family story of these three characters. It makes you wonder if there really are so many out-of-the-ordinary people in the world or if recovered random artifacts of any normal family could be interpreted in such a way as to highlight only the bizarre characteristics and tell a story that veers quite far away from reality.

Wednesday, February 20, 2013

#52 8½ (1963)

Federico Fellini.








This was the first time I ever saw this movie. And in 35mm in the theater, as well. I am so excited about this post and this movie, that every picture that I find on the internet I want to add to my post. I've restricted myself to only some of the best. Both movie posters I think are super cool. Then I have the two main actresses, Amouk Aimée, Guido's wife Luisa, and Claudia Cardinale, his muse Claudia. I also was extremely excited when I came across the animated gif of the dance scene with Mario and Gloria, which clearly was the inspiration for Tarantino's dance scene in Pulp Fiction with Travolta and Thurman, an obvious tribute to Fellini's 8½ if I ever saw one.

This movie is very difficult to write about, and I don't think I am going to try very much. I feel honestly blessed to have had the opportunity to see it in the theater even though it was a poor print and there was also a somewhat annoying older couple in the audience who laughed excessively during just about every scene. I think they were the kind of Seattlites who want to express to everybody how much they were understanding the movie by laughing at everything. You know, "we're so culturally aware and interesting. Not only do we go to 8½ in the theater, we want to make it clear that we know the film so much more than everybody else." To the point of at times repeating some phrase in italian that the character of the scene had just said with the air of like, "oh, how genius that is!" Regardless, it was impossible for me to come away from this film without thinking that it is truly one of the best films I have ever seen. And, I know that simply by its reputation as a film classic I was very hesitant to give it my approval. I guess I am very quick to think that movies are far too overrated. However, in this case, it was impossible not to adore this movie. I was completely enchanted by the actresses in this movie. Of course, the movie is about a film director struggling with his artistic voice and in particular with all the myriad women who occupy some part of his life. And Fellini does an incredible job of portraying them all. There is no way to watch this and not come away completely in love with women in all their incarnations. I was already so impressed with so many of the female characters already introduced at the point when Luisa, Guido's wife, shows up. Anouk Aimée instantly became one of my favorite actresses. And this was this first time I had ever seen her. The scene in which Guido sees her and follows her is incredible film-making at it's most basic. Her enchanting beauty and female strength was so immediately apparent to me, that I instantly fell in love with her. I was so entranced by Luisa and completely immersed by the movie that I couldn't have been rescued by anything that Fellini would do with it. And then he brought back into the picture Claudia. She had a very small shot early in the film that just gave you the idea she was going to be an insignificant extra in one of the strange dreams of Guido. But, no. He brought her back. And his portrayal of this sirena is too powerful to even try to describe in a silly blog. I only wish I could have seen the movie again immediately after it finished. Anyone who ever gets the opportunity to see this movie in the theater should legitimately feel great shame if they pass it up. I wish my meagre review could only portray a little bit how strongly I felt about this movie. 5 stars.

Tuesday, February 19, 2013

#51 Planet Earth: Ice Worlds (2006)




The sequences of both the female polar bear with her cubs and the male out on his own comprise such wonderful filmmaking. The story of the desperate male bear deciding to try and attack the herd of walruses is about the most heart-wrenching story I've seen this month. Even just thinking about the poor bear now as I write is so sad, and I'm about as big of a realist when it comes to nature and the fight for survival and understanding that mother nature has no sympathy and that's just the way of the world. Again, another episode in this documentary series that should be seen by anyone and everyone.

Monday, February 18, 2013

#50 Léolo (1992)

Written and directed by Jean-Claude Lauzon.

We decided to try this French-Canadian film based on a recommendation by a friend. It is a strange and bizarre ride. It took me two days to finish it, and by the end, I wasn't certain I was any better off than before I started. It was difficult to discern any type of chronological or even sequential storyline. There is a boy, Léolo, as the main character, who seems to escape from his strange and quirky family by his secretive hobby of writing. About the only really memorable characteristic of Léolo is that he believes that his mother was impregnated accidentally by the sperm of an Italian when she falls into a cart of tomatoes. Thus he really is not a Canadion named Leo, but an Italian named Léolo Lozone.  There are some slightly humorous sequences, but overall this movie is difficult to enjoy over the entire hour and 40 minutes.


#49 Planet Earth: Deserts (2006)



Saturday, February 16, 2013

#48 Planet Earth: Caves (2006)



I wanted to remember that this episode introduced me to the Lechuguilla caves in New Mexico, an incredible and fabulous story by itself, which were only discovered in 1986. The Planet Earth crew is likely to be the last ones who were able to get permission to film in this geological marvel for quite some time, I would guess.
                               Despite what it seems, those are not ice crystals...

#46 — #47 Oscar Nominated Shorts: Documentary (Part 2) (2012)


#46 Redemption — Jon Alpert & Matthew O'Neill

#47 Open Heart — Kief Davidson & Cori Shepherd Stern

This post gets a label of 5 stars primarily for this last film: Open Heart. I believe it will be the winner of the Oscar, and it deserves to be. It was a very touching story worth viewing for anybody. Even though it is only a short-length film and therefore harder to come-by, I recommend it over about 90% of the feature-length films I have on here.