Pedro Almodovars
Bad Education
Reviewed
by Evan Sung
Pedro Almodovars
Bad Education is the centerpiece film
for this years New York Film Festival. Almodovar
has certainly made a lasting mark on world cinema,
and the film going audience has seen his style
and voice evolve from the madcap comedies of Women
on the Verge of A Nervous Breakdown to his
last two sublime offerings, All About My
Mother and Talk To Her. Bad
Education continues to develop Almodovars
maturing voice, though never losing his absurdist
comic style.
Almodovar returns
to the cradle in Bad Education tracing
the story of a film director, Enrique Goded (Fele
Martinez), who is forced to confront his traumatic
childhood past when a long-lost schoolmate shows
up at his office. Enriques past takes the
form of Ignacio Rodriguez (Gael Garcia Bernal)
who arrives desperate for acting work and with
a movie idea based on the two boys troubled
past at Catholic boys school. The story
centers on two schoolmates, Ignacio and Enrique,
and the young, forbidden love that is interrupted
and broken apart by the menacing Father Manolo.
In the story, Father Manolo is in love with Ignacio
himself, and expels Enrique on the pretense of
stopping an immoral love between the two boys.
Many years later, Ignacio has become a struggling
drag queen looking for money to improve his body
and support his drug habit. Ignacio returns to
the school where he lost his innocence, and blackmails
Father Manolo with the story of those long-forgotten
years for the money he needs. Enrique, wary of
his past at the outset, is immediately taken after
reading the story pitch and begins immediately
working on the film adaptation. Enrique casts
Ignacio in the film and the two long-lost friends
become lovers. But Enrique has difficulty recognizing
in the needy and strangely coy Ignacio the young
schoolmate he once knew and loved. As Enriques
adaptation nears completion, he discovers that
all is not as it appears. The real Ignacio has
died three years earlier, leaving the identity
of this new Ignacio a mystery. On the last day
of the films shooting, the arrival of the
real Father Manolo promises to reveal everything
Clearly, Almodovar
is not in search of narrative minimalism. Nor
has he ever been. If his past earlier works owed
a great deal to the melodramatic twists and turns
of Spanish soap opera, Bad Education
marries that tendency with the great film tradition
of Film Noir. Indeed from the opening musical
cues, the composer Alberto Iglesias pays homage
to the insinuating, noir-ish scores of Bernard
Hermann who worked famously with Alfred Hitchcock.
The imposture and themes of mistaken and assumed
identity also suggest shades of Vertigo, replacing
Kim Novaks Madeleine Elster with the blank
figure of Ignacio Rodriguez. Bad Education
introduces a strain of hard-boiled fatalism into
Almodovars work that may surprise some longtime
followers.
But Almodovar remains
Almodovar, and expands here on the film-within-a-film
idea he used to great comic effect in Talk
to Her. Here Almodovar extends the idea
considerably, showing us how Enrique envisions
Ignacios story. All this narrative trickery
and illusion serve to illustrate everyones
tenuous grasp on their own memories of people,
places and events. Its a daring cinematic
gamble which pays off in adding layers of texture
and mystery, while never going so far as to confuse
the audience. If anything, the film is so structurally
rigorous and complex that it loses some of the
vitality that Almodovar films are so well-known
for. Talk to Her and All About
My Mother, two films no less serious than
Bad Education, still had the raw,
roiling energy of emotion and drama and absurd
comedy who can forget the black and white
film in Talk to Her of a miniature
man entering a womans vagina? Bad
Education asks us to feel moved by the plight
of its characters, indignant at the abuse the
two children suffered at the hands of the clergy,
but there is an inescapable element of abstraction
to the proceedings that perhaps prevents it from
working itself into our deepest core.
Almodovar
has said that he has been working on this film
for 10 years, and that he made it to get
it out of my system, before it became an obsession.
Those expecting a roman a clef may be a bit disappointed.
He has admitted that there are elements of autobiography
in Bad Education but I think that
it would be a mistake to read too much into that
statement. In looking over the past two decades
of work, there is little that Almodovar has not
revealed about himself and his life in all its
shocking, colorful, tragic, messy, comic facets.
It is precisely that impulse to self-revelation
that has always made Almodovar so compelling.
Those who want to see a world-class filmmaker
who continues to develop and innovate and challenge
himself will be impressed once again by Almodovar.
Miguel Albadalejo's
Bear Club
Reviewed By Armistead
Johnson
The story has been
told before; an unconventional person who has
no intention of ever having children, somehow
winds up with a child who changes his or her life.
Such is the story of Miguel Albadalejo's
Bear Club. But make no mistake about it; you have
not seen this movie before.
First, the child's
birth parent, Violeta (played by Elvira Lindo),
is not dead; she is just a drug addict who was
arrested on drug charges while traveling in India
and was thereupon incarcerated for an undisclosed
period of time. Her child, Bernardo (played by
David Castillo), was staying with his uncle Pedro
at the time of his mother's arrest. So the question
is: who does the child live with - his uncle or
his estranged grandmother?
The unconventional
parent is Pedro, played beautifully by Jose Luis
Garcia-Perez, the brother of the mother in question.
Pedro is a sexually active gay man, who tends
to be sympathetic to his sister's dilemma. And
as her brother, he certainly has more sympathy
for Violeta than her son Bernardo has.
The title Bear
Club comes from Pedro and his friend's "classification"
in the gay community. Bears are big, hairy men
who, like club kids, drag queens or leather daddies,
have entire bars dedicated to them. Bears are
usually known for being loving, cuddly and kind
and have a following of boys called (you guessed
it) cubs.
The "antagonist"
in the story is the child's paternal grandmother,
Dona Teresa, who we find out has not seen her
grandson in years. She has purposely been kept
out of her grandson's life since the day her son,
the boy's father, died. The grandmother, also
played beautifully by Empar Ferrer, is so convincing
in her love for Bernardo and her concerns are
so well intended, the audience is forced to question
who, in fact, would be a better parent for him.
There are no easy
answers provided for the audience in Bear Club,
no matter how hard the audience fights for a "good
guy" and a "bad guy." Bear Club
will make you question your own opinions (something
that seems to be forbidden in cinema today) and
helps illustrate the fact that, try as we might
to find them, sometimes there are no easy answers
when the welfare of a child is at stake.
For more
information, visit http://www.mangafilms.es/cachorro/#
Alireza Raisian's
Deserted Station
Opens DECEMBER 3, 2004
Quad Cinema
Starring: Leila
Hatami, Nezam Manouchehri, Mehran Rajabi and Mahmoud
Pak Neeyat
Iran, 88 minutes,
35mm, Color, 2002, In Farsi with English Subtitles
Reviewed by Wendy R. Williams
Deserted Station,
based on a concept the director(Ali Reza Raisian)
and Abbas Kiarostami developed on a photography
trip together, is a beautiful and stunningly odd
film about a day in the life of a photographer
(played by Nezam Manouchehri ) and his wife (the
beautiful Leila Hatami of "Leila" fame),
whose car breaks down in the desert of Iran. The
husband goes to a nearby village to ask for help
from the village elder/school teacher/car mechanic.
This "mechanic", unable to repair the
car with the parts he has on hand, agrees to take
the husband to a nearby village to buy the necessary
parts. The wife stays behind in the village and
while she is there, acts as a substitute teacher
for the local children.
And here the story does indeed become very strange.
Nothing much happens during the day the wife spends
in the village or station), but by watching the
events of the day, I was effectively transported
into a very different place and time. First the
desert and the village are absolutely gorgeous.
The cinematography (Mahammad Aladpoush) is beautiful
and yet, for some strange reason, everything,
including the mountains, appears sad. There are
hardly any parents in this village, just a mismatched
band of moppets running around seemingly being
"raised by Topsy." And unlike the heroine
in an American film of this genre (accidental
teacher changes the world), the wife does not
affect a drastic change in the village, nor does
it seem that she will stay at the end of the day.
She wonders through the afternoon, a pensive observer
to a life that appears foreign even to her.
She teaches for
a while and then allows the children to run wild.
A lamb is born and dies. We find out that the
wife has not been able to have children herself.
Lunch is served and then she lets the children
go play in the train yards. Now I am an American
mother and I can assure you that I would never
allow my children to play in a train yard. And
during the afternoon play session, there is one
very strange segment involving a handicapped child
who was born with only flippers for arms and legs
and needs to be carried everywhere. So when the
children go to lunch, they carry him/her with
them. And then, when they run off to play in the
train yard, they leave him/her in the middle of
a field on a blanket calling to be picked up for
what appears to be an hour or two. And this is
not a plot point. The wife eventually instructs
the children to retrieve their friend, but no
one seems to think too much about the fact that
he/she was left behind. Just think how that would
have been handled in an American film. Or in my
household, "What do you mean you left your
friend, the one who has no arms or legs, on a
blanket in the middle of a field? How many times
have I told you, pick him up when you go somewhere
else? How hard is it to remember a simple thing
like that! And no, you can't take him to the train
yard..... and on and on
...." Like I
said, the world of Deserted Station is
indeed a very different place.
But at the end
of the day, I could sense that they have all been
changed. Being with these children has had a profound
effect on the wife and the children do not want
to let her go. And since this is an Iranian film,
we are left with an open question at the end of
the film. She seems to leave. It looks like she
is leaving. But does she?
Quad Cinema |34 West 13th Street,
New York

Mike Bencivenga's
Happy Hour
Opens October 22nd, 2004
Reviewed by Jessica Cogan
Happy Hour begins like so many
other tales of the city - soulful music, view of
the New York skyline at night. But what ensues in
Mike Bencivegna's film is a very personal look at
deceptively stereotypical characters and what happens
when happy hour ends and real life resumes.
The story follows Tulley (Anthony
Paglia), a boozy smart ass who had once showed great
promise as a writer but has since buried that talent
under years of meaningless work as a copy editor
and about 35,000 gallons of whiskey. Tulley is accompanied
on most of his benders by his sidekick Levine, himself
a writer suffering from lack of confidence and the
inertia good times with Tulley brings on. One night
at "the bar" Tulley meets Natalie (Caroleen
Feeney), a school teacher who doesn't like children
and seems tired out by life. The two hit it off
(and hit the sheets) and soon the trio is inseperable.
But relationships built on such
liquor-saturated ground are rarely stable, and when
Tulley learns that his years of liver abuse have
caught up with him, the dynamic of the friendships
shift. Tulley feels death's urgency in finishing
his novel - seventeen years in the works. Levine
sees in Tulley his own future if he stays his present
course. And Natalie must determine whether love
is worth the pain it can cause.
The film is very atmospheric -
great shots of the city, its (pre-Bloomberg) smoky
bars and soaring corporate fortresses. LaPaglia's
ragged voice over and the moody score round out
the gritty-city feel. And while the film is heavy
on drama, there are more than a few laugh-out-loud
lines- mostly Tulley's - that lighten the mood.
LaPaglia, Feeney and particularly Stoltz deliver
fine performances and play off one another naturally.
Despite the rather gloomy subject
matter - following an alcoholic in demise is hardly
cheery - the film is finally hopeful. You just may
not want to go out for a beer afterwards.

Chuck Parellos
The Hillside Strangler
Opening Friday October 8th
Starring C. Thomas
Howell and Nick Turturro
Reviewed by Armistead
Johnson
Tartan Films
The Hillside Strangler directed and
co-written by Chuck Parello) follows the lives of
two cousins who, after raping and murdering (not
necessarily in that order) numerous women in California,
are now known as the Hillside Stranglers.
The film opens before
the two cousins have begun their killing spree;
back in a more innocent time, a simpler time, when
a good night out on the town still just consisted
of a few drinks, a few laughs, and some kidnapping
and forced prostitution.
When the cousins stable of forced prostitutes
escapes after a shakedown by some rival pimps, they
find themselves broke, down on their luck and extremely
angry with women in general.
What are two sexually
frustrated, down on their luck pimps with no hookers
bringing in the money to do?
If you guessed, Go
out on a savage, relentless killing spree?
then
Bing! Bing! Bing!
we have a winner.
The Hillside
Strangler is a disturbing movie to say the
least. Not just because of the content, but because
the film seems to follow not the investigation that
brought the two cousins to justice and not the psychological
state of mind that would cause a person to commit
such atrocities, but the actual rapes and killings
themselves
in graphic detail.
C. Thomas Howell
and Nicolas Turturo both give excellent performances
as the leads in this disturbingly perverse look
at two of the most savage serial killers of our
time.
If you liked Monster
(a superb film to which The Hillside Strangler
will undoubtedly be compared) but wish that the
rape and murder scenes had been a little more graphic
and lasted a little bit longer, then you will absolutely
love The Hillside Strangler.
Zhang Yimous
The House of Flying Daggers
Reviewed by Evan Sung
After the international
success of Hero Zhang Yimou returns
to his special brand of poetic kung-fu cinema (wuxia,
if you please) with his follow-up The House
of Flying Daggers. The film premieres at the
42nd New York Film Festival and stars the Ziyi Zhang
(Hero, Crouching Tiger, Hidden
Dragon) as Mei, a blind soldier of the rebel
outlaw army, the House of the Flying Daggers. Andy
Lau (Infernal Affairs) and Takeshi Kaneshiro (Chungking
Express) star as Leo and Jin, two police captains
of the weakening Tang Dynasty trying to break up
the House of Flying Daggers. The two captains plot
to trick Mei into leading them to outlaws, but are
soon caught up in competition for the heart of the
beautiful outlaw, and caught in a tangled net of
hidden loyalties, plots and counter-plots.
This is supposed to be a film review, but forgive
me if it veers into shameless love-letter territory
for the amazing Ziyi Zhang. Zhang Yimou was clearly
impressed by the young Zhang, having promoted her
from a supporting part in Hero to the
tragic central role of this new film. House
of Flying Daggers is a showcase of all of
Ziyi Zhangs many attributes. Aside from her
remarkable beauty, Ziyi Zhangs Mei is basically
the toughest chick East of the Yangtze, and in her
combat scenes Zhang makes Terminators Linda
Hamilton look like a demure wilting blossom. Though
small and fragile, Zhang commits to her battle scenes
with a combination of ferocity and elegance. We
take it on faith that this blind girl could naturally
take on an army of soldiers without breaking a sweat.
But her elegance is not only evident in battle,
and an early dancing scene in a brothel, showcases
a feline sensuality in her performance of traditional
Chinese dance. And in one scene where Mei has her
robe torn off her shoulders, the bare expanse of
her porcelain-white shoulder could well be considered
one of the more profound frames of World Cinema!
Her shoulder alone could have triggered a Trojan
War. If you havent gotten the point yet, the
movies ALL about Ziyi Zhang.
And how do we know its all about Ziyi Zhang? Because
we have two captains of the emperor driven to betraying
their own cause and their own friendship, ultimately
stabbing each other with swords on snowy mountaintops
in her name. Andy Lau and Takeshi Kaneshiro contrast
each other nicely, both believable as friends and
comrades, but utterly different in character. Kaneshiros
Captain Jin, is the free-spirited, skirt-chaser
who tries to seduce Mei to get her to divulge the
location of her rebel friends. Laus Captain
Leo is the by-the-book and responsible, but his
single-minded pursuit of the House of Flying Daggers
may not be solely motivated by loyalty to the kingdom.
In an amusing plot-development, one can imagine
Laus identity-conflicted Captain Leo to be
the 9th century ancestor to Laus role in this
years Infernal Affairs. Lau has
already proven himself to be a very subtle actor,
excellent in these roles where motivations are multiple
and unclear. Kaneshiro clearly has fun playing drunk
in the brothel scene, flashing the Eastern equivalent
of the Tom Cruise-patented mega-watt smile. Kaneshiro
is charming but also traces the tragic arc of his
character nicely, slowly building up layers of gravity
and sadness as the film goes on.
The film is truly brilliant and to say that, as
a film, House of Flying Daggers may
actually excel Hero is no small claim,
given that Hero had in its favor the
phenomenal Tony Leung Chiu-Wai and Maggie Cheung
and the peerless cinematography of Christopher Doyle.
But here, Yimou takes the martial arts to yet another
level, and the effect on the viewer is so visceral
that you realize how rarely cinema moves us in that
way. The thrill of seeing people perform acts of
superhuman dexterity and power is completely unlike
the numbing effects of Hollywoods exploding
computer-generated blockbusters.
This is not to say that the film is perfect. The
tragic lovers theme has become almost par for the
course in Asian wuxia cinema. And under the weight
of all this suppressed longing, slow-motion, and
plot twists and turns, the film itself starts to
bend like bamboo, threatening to break and splinter.
Still, the final battle is treated with a ferocity
completely unlike the balletic wire-fu that weve
been treated to up to that point. The heroes pummel
each other, and cry out, and slash, and it reinjects
the film with a shot of adrenaline and emotional
intensity that refocuses everything.
This is only Zhang Yimous second wuxia film
but he has already created an indelible style with
two films that rely as much on story and character
as they do on kicking ass in high-style. With a
visual richness that becomes almost hallucinatory
at times, and a great sense of grand scale as well
as intimacy, Yimou sets the stage for the stuff
of legends, and fills it with great actors, great
action, and great romance. Oh, and did I mention
Ziyi Zhang is in it?

Claude Miller's
La Petite Lili
Opens NOVEMBER 12, 2004
ANGELIKA FILM CENTER
Cast: Nicole Garcia (Mado), Ludivine
Sagnier (Lili), Robinson Stévenin (Julien),
Jean-Pierre Marielle (Simon), Bernard Giraudeau
(Brice),
Julie Depardieu (Jeanne-Marie)
***Official Selection Cannes
2003***
Reviewed by Wendy R. Williams
La Petite Lili is a cinematic
retelling of Anton Chekov's, The Sea Gull,
and this time the setting is a beautiful country
house in France. The setting and the cinematography
are gorgeous and so is the cast. The young angst-ridden
playwright of the Seagull is now a film maker
named Julien (the utterly handsome Robinson Stévenin).
Julien is in love with a local girl, Lili (played
by the lovely Ludivine Sagnier of nude Swimming
Pool fame), who is determined to become a film
star like Julien's mother, Mado (the divine Nicole
Garcia). Also in the picture is Jeanne-Marie (the
also lovely Julie Depardieu). Jeanne-Marie is in
love with Julien, who unfortunately only lusts for
Lili.
The story begins when Julien screens
his film, an arty (but boring) DVD, for his mother
and her lover, the film maker Brice (Bernard Giraudeau).
Mado can barely conceal her irritation and the scene
explodes with recriminations. Mado tells her son
that his film is immature and self indulgent and
Julien in turn has nothing but scornful comments
for his mother's work and the work of her boyfriend,
the commercially successful Brice.
Lili, quickly seeing on which side her bread should
now be buttered, seduces Brice and convinces him
to take her to Paris. Julien and Mado are devastated
and attempt to comfort each other, but they are
both too burdened by years of unhappiness to be
of any help to the other. There is one even scene
where Mado asks Julien to join her in bed. You should
probably not try this at home. Well, maybe if you
live in France and look like Nicole Garcia and your
son looks like Robinson Stévenin......but
even then.....
Then the film fast forwards five
years. In a departure from The Seagull, the
film maker has fashioned a happy ending. In interviews,
Mr. Miller has stated that he felt that a young
audience would never buy Julien's suicide and actually
in this reviewer's view, suicide always did seem
to be a little bit of an overreaction to merely
losing a girlfriend and not being able to get along
with your mother.
Julien has now become a film maker
and is in the process of making a film about the
summer they spent in the country as a group. He
has cast his own mother and Brice in the film. Julien
is happily married to Jeanne-Marie and they have
a lovely little girl. Lili, now a successful film
actress (but no longer with Brice), finds out that
Julien is making a film about their story and piteously
begs him to allow her to act in it. And after extracting
his revenge by first refusing to cast her, Julien
eventually relents and casts Lili.
We then see the movie being made.
We see Julien with his family on the set, directing
Lili in the scenes he played with her that summer.
And we see him direct his mother. And in the end,
there is a suicide in the film, but it is the actor
playing Julien and it is just a film with a film.
Everyone is very sophisiticated and worldly - Jeanne-Marie
lets Lily play with her daughter etc., etc.. After
all, this is a French film. So the story has turned
inward and Julien is now able to use his art to
work out his life. And since he is the director,
he can work things out just the way he wants them,
and like I said before, he is now directing his
mother.
Alexander
Payne's
Sideways
Reviewed by Evan Sung
The 42nd New York Film
Festival closed October 17th with a screening
of Alexander Payne's wine-soaked "Sideways."
Payne, who has made his name with comic but cutting
satires of abortion ("Citizen Ruth"),
politics ("Election"), and the obsolescence
of the aging ("About Schmidt"), returns
with his most successful film so far.
Paul Giamatti plays Miles Raymond, an oenophile,
Middle school English teacher and unpublished
novelist, whose two years of divorce have slowly
turned him from plain neurotic to full-blown neurotic
sad-sack. His only consolation now are his unopened
bottle of 1961 Cheval Blanc and his regular trips
through wine country. Miles' best friend Jack
(Thomas Haden Church) is getting married in one
week. As a gift to Jack and while awaiting word
from his agent on his latest manuscript, Miles
plans a week-long tour of California wine country,
for sun, golf, and wine. Where Miles sees an opportunity
for some good old-fashioned male bonding, Jack
sees one week of getting laid as much as possible
before the slow-death of marriage.
On their way, they meet up with Maya, a regular
waitress at the Hitching Post, Miles' favorite
local restaurant, and her friend Stephanie, to
whom Jack is instantly attracted. As the week
progresses, a delicate dance unfolds between Miles
and Maya, both wine lovers, while Stephanie and
Jack share days and nights of simple carnal pleasure.
But things start to unravel for both couples when
Miles lets slip mention of Jack's nuptials.
Wine country serves as the backdrop of this film,
and wine itself suffuses every aspect of the film
itself. In one painful scene, Miles gets himself
drunk at dinner after learning that his ex-wife
has remarried. As he staggers to the back of the
restaurant to "drink and dial" as Jack
puts it, the camera shifts in and out of focus,
perhaps the most accurate cinematic representation
of the feeling of inebriation I have seen. Wine
is a powerful metaphor for these characters, all
of them maturing, aging, on the verge of really
becoming themselves, complicated, sometimes bitter.
In one of the more moving monologues in the film,
Miles explains to Maya his near-obsessive love
for Pinot Noir. When Miles talks to Maya about
the notoriously fickle and thin-skinned grape,
we understand of course that he could easily be
talking about himself as well. And Giamatti plays
the scene with a disarming vulnerability that
hints at the depths of Miles' terror to be with
this woman he admires as well as his quiet wish
that Maya tend to him with care and attention.
Naturally Jack is the robust Cabernet in this
equation, the jovial overgrown frat boy who goes
with the flow and thrives in any situation. But
Payne is not interested in simple dichotomies.
All the characters have tangled pasts, and are
doing what they can to survive, even if it means
occasional self-sabotage. They are human, and
Payne pulls no punches in showing us just how
human they can be.
Thomas Haden Church is a rollicking surprise as
Jack in "Sideways," considering his
sitcom-heavy resume. He is boorish and likable
and gives just enough signs of humanity so that
we understand why this Odd Couple would have remained
friends for so long. But, special attention must
be paid to the nuanced portrayal of Miles by Paul
Giamatti. Giamatti, widely acclaimed in American
Splendor, does even better work here because he
is not reined in by the rather one-note glumness
of Harvey Pekar. Giamatti has room to move here,
and gets to display all his talents, showing us
why he is one of American cinema's most valuable
character actors. When his heart is breaking we
see a torrent of emotions ripple almost imperceptibly
across his round fleshy face. His comic talents
are on show as well, from wine-spurred flip-outs
to a bizarre, stiff-armed "girly" run,
that Giamatti confesses to be his own, and not
some actor's invention. Payne has found in Giamatti
the ideal embodiment of all the funny yet sometimes
cruel truths that all of his films have spoken
about America, our fears and foibles and doubts.
"Sideways" is a darkly sparkling gem
of a film. Add to the brilliant Paul Giamatti,
a uniformly excellent supporting cast, the beautifully
photographed landscapes of Northern California
wine country, and a jazzy score by Rolfe Kent
that keeps the action buoyant and floating along,
and you get a film of superior vintage: complex,
mature, delicious.

John Sayles's
Silver City
Theaters Nationwide
Featuring: John
Sayles (dir.), Chris Cooper, Richard Dreyfuss, Danny
O'Brien, Kris Kristofferson, Billy Zane, Daryl Hannah,
Michael Murphy and Maria Bello
Vote Early! Vote
Often!
Reviewed by Wendy R. Williams
John Sayles is one of my favorite
film makers. He is known for novel-like stories
that can involve an entire town. He is a master
of the art of telling a story through many voices.
Sayles has consistently championed the underdog.
And he has certainly written and cast an extremely
likable underdog in Danny O'Brien (played by the
very talented Danny Huston), the hero of Sayle's
new movie "Silver City."
Silver City is one popping film. Set in Colorado,
the film commences as a political photo-op is ruined
when the hapless villain, Dickie Pillager (a dead
ringer for George Bush, played by Chris Cooper),
hooks a dead body as he fishes in a beautiful mountain
lake. And dead things continue to pop up in that
lake, a totally appropriate metaphor for this deeply
cynical movie about political corruption.
The plot is fairly simple, Dickie Pillager, is running
for governor of Colorado, an honor that would have
never been offered to him if he had not been the
son of Senator Judson Pillager (Michael Murphy).
He is helped in his quest by a Karl Rowe-like character,
Chuck Raven (Richard Dreyfuss). Chuck Raven decides
to hire a private detective (Danny O'Brien) to intimidate
a list of five enemies, who he thinks might have
dropped the dead body into the lake in an attempt
to embarrass his candidate, the tongue-tied Dickie.
Danny then proceeds to use his
new assignment as an opportunity to do a little
investigative reporting of his own. Unknown to Mr.
Raven, Danny is a former reporter for a liberal
Denver newspaper. Danny lost his old job when one
of his sources chickened out on him while he was
reporting about some past political corruption.
As Danny starts his quest, he reconnects with his
former girlfriend, the beauteous Maria Bello. He
is also seduced by Dickie's whacked-out sister,
Maddy Pilager (Daryl Hannah). And during his journey
he discovers what happened to the illegal immigrant
who was fished out of the lake and in doing so,
he also discovers the underlying poison that ensures
that "things" will continue to pop up
in the lake.
Silver City is an obviously political
movie and a satirical take on the "family"
now in power in Washington. And in the times of
Fahrenheit 9/11, it can seem a bit subtle. But in
true Sayles fashion, the viewer really gets to know
his characters and by knowing them is made to think
about the correlations between the poisonous corruption
depicted in his movie and the corruption that led
our present "family" in power to lead
us into the war in Iraq. Hint - it is always something
about the money.
The actors are all amazing and
the direction is beautifully timed.
And everyone must see this movie just to see Chris
Cooper "do" George Bush. He is an absolute
riot and watching him alone is worth the price of
the ticket.
Mike Leighs
Vera Drake
Reviewed by Wendy R. Williams
Mike Leigh has done it again.
With his new film, Vera Drake, he has
created another family, the Drakes, and this time
they are living in the world of 1950s
working class London. And as is the case with all
of Mr. Leighs others films, if you watch this
movie, you will know the Drakes better than you
know your own first cousins.
This beautiful creation showcases
the genius of Mr. Leigh, who possesses superb casting
skills, amazing talent and the dedication to exhaustively
rehearse all his productions. According to press
reports, before Mr. Leigh ever turns on a camera,
he painstakingly creates a world, a universe and
a family. He does this by first casting the film
and then having a several month long improvisation/rehearsal
process before he writes his script. And through
this process, his stars become their characters
- living breathing people with relationships, histories
and untold stories that you can see in their eyes.
When you are watching a Mike Leigh
film, the actors are so believable it is hard to
realize that you are not watching some kind of spy
camera documentary. And so it is with Leighs
Vera Drake, a story about a 1950s
era char woman with a heart of gold who helps
out girls who are in trouble. Vera (played
by the incomparable Imelda Staunton) bustles through
life helping people, dispensing cheer, tea, advice
and a douche bag filled with soapy water.
In the first half of the story
we follow Vera with her family - we see Vera bustling
about London, calling on the sick and caring for
her invalid mother. And when leaving one apartment
she runs into a lost soul, Reg (played by Eddie
Marsan), she promptly invites him to dinner as a
possible suitor for her dumpy daughter, Ethel (Alex
Kelly). We also see Vera working as a char in the
homes of well-to-do middle class families. At one
such home she see the daughter of the family, Sally
(Sally Hawkins), who in a side story not seen by
Vera, obtains an abortion through the method then
available for women of means - visiting a psychiatrist
and getting a doctors note. The
film also shows the other house calls Vera makes,
the ones she makes to scared young women, the house
calls where Veras request for a kettle of
hot water does not mean she is going to make a cup
of tea.
In the second half of the
movie, one of Veras patients becomes
ill and the police come to arrest Vera. No one in
her family knew that Vera was a backstreet abortionist
and the rest of the film follows the familys
reactions, the resulting criminal trial and Veras
imprisonment. Veras husband, Stan (played
by Phil Davis), stifles his shock and stands by
the woman he loves. Ethels sad-sack suitor,
Reg (Eddie Marsan), comes through like a champ,
resolutely supporting his new family-to-be. Ethels
son Sid (Daniel Mays), who we see earlier trying
to pick up loose women, is shocked and dismayed
that his mother is killing little babies,
with no realization that he himself might have had
need for such services. But in the end, all the
men of the family come around and support Vera.
Because in the end, Vera Drake is a
film about love, not abortion about the love
that Vera has for her family and for all lost souls
and the love her family has for her. Bravo!
Starring: Imelda Staunton, Jim Broadbent, Phil Davis,
Peter Wright, Adrian Scarborough, Heather Craney,
Daniel Mays, Alex Kelly, Sally Hawkins, Eddie Marsan,
Ruth Sheen, Helen Coker, Martin Savage, Sinead Matthews,
Fenella Wollgar
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