Category Archives: Cinema

VIFF 2008: A Transforming, Transcendent Window on the World

VANCOUVER INTERNATIONAL FILM FESTIVAL

Work on the Downtown Eastside beckoned in the early part of the day, causing us to miss the three films we had scheduled in the morning and afternoon, but we did make it to the evening screenings we’d chosen …

Lights at the End of the Tunnel (Grade: A): A quartet of short films — two from Malaysia and two from Taiwan, the work of filmmakers Ho Yuhang (the touching, hallucinatory dreamscape, As I Lay Dying), Charlotte Lim (the lively, funny, melancholy, Escape), Ho Wi Ding (the mystery thriller road movie, Summer Afternoon), and Chang Rong-ji (the exquisitely poignant, genre-bending boy-meets-girl story, The End of the Tunnel, with an amazingly affecting, tour-de-force performance by newcomer Sandrine Pinna (Yong Zhang) — will surely emerge as two of our favourite hours within a darkened theatre this year. Playing again at 1:30 p.m. on Friday, Sept. 26th, at Pacific Cinémathèque, no matter what you do, catch this series, even if it means skipping work, or adjusting your life. A must-see!
Be Like Others (Grade: B+): Iranian-American filmmaker Tanaz Eshaghian turns her camera on Iran, and the story of three ‘maybe‘ transsexuals, and their journey to and from sex change operations that transform their lives. In a country where homosexuality is punishable by death, but where sex-
change operations are perfectly legal within an Iranian theocracy that all but forces these operations on gay men, Be Like Others takes the viewer inside a bustling, modern day Tehran, exposing the humanity and travails of a group of its citizens, while exposing the victimizing hypocrisy of the state.

The Vancouver International Film Festival Looking Good At 27

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Iiit’s baaack!

The cinematic juggernaut that is our annual Vancouver International Film Festival rolls into town next week, opening with a full slate of films on Thursday, September 25th, at the Empire Granville 7 Cinemas, the Pacific Cinémathèque, the Ridge Theatre, and the VanCity Theatre.

An ambitious rendition of the best-selling book (of the same title) by Nobel Prize winner José Saramago, the opening gala, Blindness, directed by Fernando Meirelles (City of God, The Constant Gardener), offers a thought-
provoking, visually impressive meditation on the fragility of humanity in the face of the apocalypse, as a mysterious pandemic descends upon a city without warning, plunging the entire population into darkness.

The Festival closes 16 days later, on October 10th, with the Canadian première of The Class (Entre les murs), Laurent Cantet’s 2007 classroom drama winner of Cannes’ Palme d’Or.

In the days between these two poles, the Festival will showcase 332 films from 58 countries at 575 screenings, with 193 features, including Cannes’ winners: Turkey’s Nuri Bilge Ceylan’s Three Monkeys (Best Director); Jury Prize winner, Italy’s Il Divo; Germany’s Cloud 9 (Heart Throb Jury Prize), and Britain’s Camera D’Or winner, Hunger.

Sundance winners coming to VIFF include Amin Matalqa’s Captain Abu Raed, World Cinema Audience Award winner; and Best Director award-winner, Lance Hammer’s Ballast. Tribeca award winners arriving at the 2008 VIFF include Let The Right One In (Sweden), by Tomas Alfredson, which won Best Narrative Feature; My Marlon and Brando (Turkey), winner of the Best New Narrative Filmmaker prize for Hüseyin Karabey; and, Old Man Bebo (Spain), a film about Cuban music legend Bebo Valdes, which garnered the Best New Documentary Filmmaker prize for Carlos Carcas.

Also coming to VIFF, Berlin Film Festival winners The Song of Sparrows (Iran), by Majid Majidi, Best Actor winner for Reza Najie, and Happy-Go-
Lucky
(UK), by Mike Leigh, which netted Best Actress honours for Sally Hawkins. From France, there’s Philippe Claudel’s I’ve Loved You So Long, winner of the Ecumenical Jury Prize, and Boris Despodov’s Corridor #8 (Bulgaria), which won Berlin’s Forum Award.

Götz Spielmann’s Revanche (Austria) took the Femina award at Berlin’s Film Festival, while the Youth Jury gave special mention to Nina Paley’s, Sita Sings The Blues.

Arriving in Vancouver with strong buzz are: Sugar, Ryan Fleck and Anna Boden’s (Half Nelson) new film, which tells the story of a 19-year-old Dominican baseball pitcher trying to break into the big leagues; and, Wendy and Lucy, Kelly Reichardt’s (Old Joy) stripped down, 80-minute drama about a young woman, Wendy (Michelle Williams), who travels from Indiana to Alaska with her dog, Lucy, to find work.

Other films garnering buzz: Tulpan: Russian director Sergey Dvortsevoy’s first “fiction” feature, winner of the Un Certain Regard prize at Cannes; RR, James Benning’s hypnotic homage to the beauty and importance of the train; and, When It Was Blue, Jennifer Reeves’ eye-popping, superimposed dual projection montage, structured in four parts representing the directions of the compass and the seasons.

Reeves’ film is reviewed on the same page of The Globe and Mail as RR, where there are also four star reviews of Kim Jee-Woon’s (South Korea) The Good The Bad The Weird, Steve McQueen’s Hunger, JVCD, potential Academy Award nominee Rachel Getting Married, and Waltz With Bashir.

Continue reading The Vancouver International Film Festival Looking Good At 27

Oscars 2007: That August Day Has Finally Arrived !!!


OSCARS 2007


After all the prognosticating, more than a month after the nominees were announced, Oscar Sunday is upon us, and all is right with the world.
The Gurus o’ Gold: the 14 critics predict a Best Picture win for The Departed. Kris Tapley, at In Contention, is calling for Letters From Iwo Jima to pick up the Best Picture prize, while Tom O’ Neill at the L.A. Times’ Gold Derby predicts a sweep for The Departed (will win in every category it’s nominated); Sasha Stone, over at Oscar Watch, is right in step with O’Neill.
USA Today‘s Claudia Puig, the ever thoughtful Jeffrey Wells, the independent-minded James Berardinelli, The Hollywood Reporter’s Anne Thompson, and a host of others also offer their two cents worth.
VanRamblings? Where do we come in? Who, and what, do we feel will win?
Well, even though we’re feeling a little verklempt, not to mention a tad burnt out about this whole Oscar prediction thing, fair’s fair, so …
Best Picture: Babel. Why Babel? Very few have seen Clint Eastwood’s Letters From Iwo Jima. Little Miss Sunshine is too slight (and won last night at the Independent Spirit Awards). The Departed is far from Martin Scorsese’s best. And, The Queen is a warmed-over BBC production.
As to the remaining ‘big’ awards: Helen Mirren is a lock for Best Actress (The Queen). Forest Whitaker is a lock for Best Actor (The Last King of Scotland). Martin Scorsese is a lock for Best Director. Jennifer Hudson is a lock for Best Supporting Actress (Dreamgirls).
The only toss-up: will Eddie Murphy take home the Best Supporting Actor Oscar, or will Alan Arkin triumph?
And, oh yeah, Best Foreign Film oughta go to The Lives of Others.
We’ll know soon. Full results will be published below, later tonight.

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Update: Perhaps not the most boring Academy Awards in memory (Ellen DeGeneres was fine, if a little unexciting … even if the programme did run long), there were few, if any surprises at the 79th annual Academy Awards.
Nikki Finke snarkily live-blogged the event, as did Greg Kirschling at Entertainment Weekly and L.A.’s Defamer.com.
The New York Times has already published their wrap-up of the ceremony, as has the L.A. Times. Tom Shales at the Washington Post found the ceremony to be “a bore and horror,” while Variety’s Brian Lowry writes the ceremony was “unspectacular bordering on dull.”
So, who won and are out partying while you’re getting ready for bed?
Just as we reported earlier in the day, as critics predicted The Departed won in every category it was nominated (save Mark Wahlberg for Best Supporting Actor), including Best Picture, Best Director, Adapted Screenplay and Film Editing. Forest Whitaker (Best Actor), Helen Mirren (Best Actress) and Jennifer Hudson (Best Supporting Actress) were, as it proved, ‘locks’ indeed, while Alan Arkin proved more popular than Eddie Murphy, taking home his Best Supporting Actor Oscar. And, of course, as we predicted above, Florian Henckel von Donnersmarck’s The Lives of Others picked up Best Foreign Film, which oughta improve its box office.
You were thrilled, you were excited, and now it’s all over til next year.
C’mon back later in the week, when VanRamblings will set about to publish the first of two lists on films to be released in 2007 that are likely to gain Oscar recognition come next February 24, 2008.

2007 Academy Awards: One Week To Go (and more reviews)

We’re less than one week away til the big day, and VanRamblings is back to weigh in on four more Oscar contenders.
Of course, Little Children remains our favourite film of 2006 (followed by The Good Shepherd, Babel, The Lives of Others and Letters From Iwo Jima … pretty much in that order), but we’ll leave to another day the posting of our Top 10 Films of 2006 list.


THE DEPARTED - LETTERS FROM IWO JIMA - PAN'S LABYRINTH - VOLVER


First up, the film that will garner Martin Scorsese that Best Director Oscar statuette he’s long sought. Too bad, though, that The Departed is a rather humdrum adaptation of the Hong Kong crime flick Infernal Affairs, a high body count movie where sterling performances (from Leonardo DiCaprio, Matt Damon, Jack Nicholson and Mark Wahlberg) become the focus over compelling narrative. The Departed isn’t a bad film; rather, it’s just not up to the standards of Raging Bull, Casino and Bringing Out the Dead.
The pick o’ the bunch this week, Clint Eastwood’s Letters From Iwo Jima is everything that Flags of Our Fathers was not: passionate, strikingly original, involving, masterful and resignedly melancholy. How is it possible that anyone would come away from this film and not see the absolute futility of war? Certainly deserving of a Best Picture nod, Letters From Iwo Jima is eloquent, powerful, humanizing filmmaking, created by a mature filmmaker working at his peak.
Set in the dying days of the Spanish Civil War, when Franco had long been in control of the reigns of government, Guillermo del Toro’s fabulist fairytale, Pan’s Labyrinth, brilliantly melds the realms of fairy tale and brutal 20th-century history as it relates the trauma of war through the haunted eyes of a lonely 10-year-old girl. Often terrifying and graphically violent in its depiction of evil, Pan’s Labyrinth is decidedly not children’s fare, but del Toro does create a richly imagined world, and magnificent film fare.
Volver may not be one of Pedro Almodóvar’s more compelling nor inventive films but for all that, given the heavier fare reviewed in today’s posting, Volver comes across as generally involving, sporadically humorous, well-acted and warmly personal cinema. Relating the relatively slight story of a family who take over a recently closed restaurant and in the process discover much about themselves, Penélope Cruz is very much the star here, her performance radiantly funny, her character immensely likeable.
Well, that’s it for now. See you later in the week for our Oscar post.