On Sunday, the early part of VanRamblings’ movie day turned out to be a bust. Which is not to say that the films that we saw throughout the morning and afternoon were ‘bad’, per se, it’s just that they were not our cup of tea. We made a promise to ourselves: from here on in no more comedic crime caper melodrama (we’re talking about you Cold Fish, Down Terrace and A Somewhat Gentle Man). From here on out, it’ll be the ‘Cinema of Despair’ for us, human scale dramas, films with mothers and children, and wildly inventive cinema but wildly inventive film with a heart.
So, what did we like, what were we swept away by, what measured up and exceeded our expectations, what made the Film Festival worthwhile for us on Sunday? First off, at 7:15 p.m. there was …
The Sleeping Beauty (Grade: A-): An absolutely enchanting, naturalistic and human scale take on the folkloric Sleeping Beauty fairy tale, writer-director Catherine Breillat finds her heart in this rapturous, provocative and compelling adaptation of Charles Perrault’s classic 17th century folk tale. Her visually sumptuous, epic coming-of-age fantasia sets about to track the transition from childhood and adolescence into adulthood through the realm of fantasy. In the film, Breillat explores the notions of male and female socialization as well as regressive, ideological notions of femininity and masculinity in conflict with social convention. Setting aside academics, if we might, The Sleeping Beauty emerges, simply and beautifully, as an elegant and picaresque adventure, and always involving and heartfelt cinema. Screens again Oct 6 @ 10:30am, Gr7, Th 7, & Oct 7 @ 4:15pm, Gr7, Th 7.
Continue reading VIFF 2010, Day 4: In Which The Evening Saves The Day