VanRamblings took Friday night off from the Fest to write our weekend posts. There we were ready to publish Part 2 of our Weekend “Sunday edition” VIFF guide, and poof — the column disappeared into the ether.
Truth to tell, while attempting five VIFF 2013 screenings each day, we’ve also published something in the neighbourhood of 20,000 words of coverage on our 32nd annual Vancouver International Film Festival.
In lieu of the post that was to be, VanRamblings will instead steer you towards our VIFF coverage dating back til September 23rd.
NaHTaK transforming the environment between VIFF screenings, Thursday afternoon
Part 1, Saturday, October 5th, VIFF screenings not-to-be-missed
Here’s the latest update of VanRamblings’ programme schedule, for the final week of the 32nd annual Vancouver International Film Festival.
Based on general buzz from VIFF crowds, a surfeit of enthusiastic reviews from friends and colleagues, or simply because we loved a film the first time we saw it, and now must take in a second screening of our VIFF favourite — what we’ll attempt to do in this post is explain our choices, and use that explanation to point you in the direction of worthy films we insist you programme into your own VIFF schedule (we’re kidding about the insist part … well, kinda) over the course of the final seven days of VIFF 2013. Don’t forget, Sunday is the last day for VIFF screenings at the Cineplex International Village site. As of Monday, VIFF cinephiles will have to make do with only 5 sites: The Centre (a gorgeous venue that may be lost in 2014), The Playhouse, SFU Woodwards, The Cinematheque, and the Vancity.
Here’s how today’s VanRamblings post is gonna work: we’ll write about worthy films deserving of your attention and attendance. Over the weekend, we’ll add material to today’s column — including later tonight — in order that we might turn the post into a helpful and expansive 3,000+ word guide on what’s worth seeing over the final seven days of VIFF 2013. So c’mon back later tonight, tomorrow and again on Sunday for updates of our “what’s hot, what’s the buzz” VanRamblings’ post extraordinaire. The VIFF 2013 Must-Sees to Screen Today, and Over The Weekend
Miss Violence. Screens today at 10:30am, Cineplex 9, for the last time.
Alexandros Avranas’ airless but accomplished sophomore feature is another one of the new Greek cinema’s nightmare narratives. Before the opening credits are up, the 13-year-old birthday girl has plunged to her death from a fourth-story balcony, while her family’s strangely stilted response to the suicide suggests she had her reasons. Avranas’ film employs an irony-free meter that distinguishes his work from that of other Greek “weird wave” directors, lending the film’s most explicitly severe sequences of domestic and sexual abuse a kind of cumulative numbing power. The truth is unspeakable, the family’s interactions unnatural and violent, the narrative serving to confirm our worst fears.
Catch it if you can. One of VIFF 2013’s very hottest buzz films.
You’re going to want to re-read yesterday’s post, for insight into why you must take in a screening of the entirely magnificent La jaula de oro Saturday at 1pm at VIFF Cineplex, Cinema 9; as well as for insight into why you must take in a screening of one of VIFF’s most magnificent features, The Patience Stone, 4pm at The Playhouse next Tuesday, October 8th, and follow it up with an evening screening at The Rio, of Field of Amapolas, an important and affecting film, and a must-see VIFF film, which screens for a final time on Tuesday, 7pm, at The Rio.
Over the course of the weekend, you must, must, must take in a screening of the very best film at VIFF this year, The Great Passage. Click here to read our review of this masterwork from acclaimed Japanese director Ishii Yuya, as accomplished and moving a film as you’ll see this year or any other year. VIFF has added a screening of The Great Passage on Saturday morning at 11:30am, at The Cinematheque. There’s an all-but-sold-out screening of The Great Passage (which VanRamblings will attend, lining up an hour early) Sunday afternoon, at 2pm, at The Cinematheque.
If you’re going to line up early on Sunday at The Cinematheque for The Great Passage, rather than take in the Saturday morning screening at The Cinematheque, you’ll have freed up time to catch the second week, late- breaking buzz doc of the Festival, The Kill Team, which screens Saturday morning, 11am, at SFU Woodwards (there’s another screening of The Kill Team on Tuesday, October 8th, at 12:15pm at The Cinematheque).
On Saturday, you might want to consider taking in a screening of …
Like Father Like Son. Saturday, 1pm, The Playhouse (screens again Tuesday, October 8th, at The Centre). The “switched at birth” urban legend and the Nature-vs.-Nurture debate provide Hirokazu Kore-eda with a fresh opportunity to revisit his ongoing preoccupation with family dynamics and parent-child relationships in contemporary Japan. The life of go-getting workaholic architect Ryota (Masaharu Fukuyama) — one of comfort and quietly ordered affluence with his wife Midori (Ono Machiko) and son Keita (Keita Ninomiya) — is violently overturned when hospital administrators reveal the unthinkable: Keita is not his biological son. Due to a mistake made by a negligent nurse, his “true” son has been raised in the dishevelled but warm-hearted home of working-class shopkeeper Yudai (Lily Franky) and his wife (Yôko Maki). The different approaches of both couples to their excruciating dilemma and the gradual emotional awakening of the all-too-rational Ryota are at the core of this sensitive drama of family feeling, which showcases Kore-eda’s rich sense of humanity.
Blue is the Warmest Colour. Abdellatif Kechiche’s newest film, based on Julie Maroh’s graphic novel, was the sensation of this year’s Cannes Film Festival even before it was awarded the Palme d’Or. Adèle Exarchopoulos is Adèle, a young woman whose longings and ecstasies and losses are charted across a span of several years. Léa Seydoux (Midnight in Paris) is the older woman who excites her desire and becomes the love of her life. Kechiche’s movie is, like the films of John Cassavetes, an epic of emotional transformation. Blue pulses with gestures, embraces, furtive exchanges, and arias of joy and devastation, some verbal and some physical (including the film’s now celebrated sexual encounters between the two actresses). Screens Saturday, at noon, at The Rio. Not-to-be-missed. A must-see.
Ilo Ilo. Saturday, 1:30pm, Cineplex, Cinema 10 (screens again on Wednesday, October 9th, 4pm, at The Centre. Anthony Chen’s subtle snapshot of family life in 1990s Singapore, the Camera d’Or winner at Cannes, and a film that, according to Variety film critic Maggie Lee, “brims with love, humour and heartbreak.”
A Story of Children and Film. Screens at 4:45pm on Saturday, at The Cinematheque, and for a final time next Wednesday, October 9th, 7pm at The Cinematheque. You’ll want to read our at length review of one of our very favourite VIFF documentaries.
Felix. * Update * Spoke with Festival Director Alan Franey about the fact that the feel-good film of the Festival, a magnificent family affair, has been booked exclusively into the age-restricted Rio Theatre, where those under 19 will not be admitted. Alan told VanRamblings that an arrangement had been made with The Rio’s Corinne Lea to allow children, accompanied by their parents, into The Rio’s balcony, for the two upcoming screenings of Felix. Not so, says senior VIFF administrator Mickey Brazeau — there’ll be no admission of children at Saturday’s 6:30pm screening at The Rio, and she wasn’t entirely sure if Tuesday’s 1:30pm screening of Felix, again at The Rio, would be admitting children. Alan fully understands that building a new VIFF audience is important, and allowing children to accompany their parents to screenings builds on VIFF’s future, but … suffice to say that the screening development involving Felix is regrettable, indeed. For those of you without children, VanRamblings would suggest to you that Felix is an absolute must-see, a humble, deeply affecting, cross-cultural coming-of-age story set in South Africa that left the audience at an earlier screening of the film verklempt but heartened, with nary a dry eye in the house. Everything in Felix works: the cinematography, the production values, performances, screenwriting, and directorial ambition. Quite simply, a moving and accomplished film that is not-to-be-missed at VIFF 2013.
Anatomy of a Paperclip. You’re going to want to place this winner of this year’s Dragons and Tiger award, which will screen at a special time on Saturday, 4pm, Cineplex, Cinema 8. Vancity programmer Tom Charity told the audience in attendance for the awards ceremony on Thursday evening that he and the awards jury loved the film. Tom loves a film? VanRamblings is there.
Finding Vivian Maier. The buzz on this film has been nothing short of through the roof — we’ve scheduled it for next Wednesday, 10am, at SFU, but there’s a screening on Saturday, 9:30pm, SFU Woodwards.
Grand Central. Also arriving at VIFF with good buzz. Scott Foundas, chief film critic for Variety, and until recently the chief programming of the New York Film Festivalloved it. Screens for a final time on Saturday, 9:15pm, at The Rio. VanRamblings will be there.
Check out Part 2 of our Weekend Special, the films screening on Sunday that are not-to-be-missed at the 32nd annual Vancouver International Film Festival. C’mon back early on Saturday for our Sunday films of note.
Golshifteh Farahani, in The Patience Stone, one of VanRamblings’ very favourite VIFF films
“What would happen if one woman told the truth about her life? The world would split open.” — Murial Rukeyser, American feminist poet VanRamblings discovers another ‘knocked it out of the park’ film The Patience Stone (Grade: A+). The film at the 32nd annual Vancouver International Film Festival with the strongest buzz, a profound truth-telling cinematic experience, a film that travels deeper inside the experience of women than any film in recent years — with an exquisite screenplay, and a performance of astonishing and searing impact from an exquisite Golshifteh Farahani, who is in virtually every scene of the film — The Patience Stone has catapulted into the first rank of feature films screening at VIFF 2013.
Sensual, horrifying and mesmerizing all at once, The Patience Stone is set in a war-torn Afghanistan village, the story centered around an unnamed attractive young woman (the fine Iranian actress Golshifteh Farahani) who, as the story opens, is caring for her wounded, much older husband, also unnamed (Hamidrez Javdan), an immobilized Mujahedeen fighter with a bullet in his neck. The narrative’s eloquent, existential simplicity sets the stage for an unfolding story of a woman’s life, the notion of the universality of women’s oppression central to the film’s impact, the film’s compelling, revelatory exposition presented in whispered fears, as long-nurtured resentments, and broken sobs punctuated by intermittent cries of alarm.
Transporting, sad-eyed, straight-talking, painstakingly shot, offering an authentic story of a woman’s life, The Patience Stone emerges as a visceral yet transcendently poetic cinematic experience, progressive, quiet, evocative, anguished, forlorn, impossible to forget, and transformative, as fine a film as you’ll see this or any other year, and a must-see at VIFF 2013. The Patience Stone screens again Tues., Oct. 8th, 4pm at The Playhouse.
The two best Latin American films at VIFF, one of which we wrote about this Monday past (and will present again below), and one of which we screened on Thursday, represent two, not-to-be-missed, must-see VIFF 2013 films.
La jaula de oro (Grade: A-): Humanist filmmaking of the first order, the best Latin American émigré drama to play at the Vancouver International Film Festival in several years, directory Diego Quemada-Diez’s powerful, absorbing and suspenseful drama about four teenagers on their 3800km journey from Guatemala to the U.S. border by train offers impactful, seat-of-your-pants viewing as the foursome experience cruelty and violence at almost every turn in a series of brutal encounters with corrupt cops, ruthless bandits, kidnappers, and sharpshooting U.S. border guards. Not an easy sit, but gripping and unforgettable, with touching characters at film’s centre. Screens today (Thursday, October 3rd), 9pm at the Rio Theatre, and again on Friday, October 5th, 1pm, at Cineplex International Village, Cinema 9.
Field of Amapolas (Grade: A): In pre-revolutionary states it is always working people who suffer, caught in the divide between the state and guerrilla forces. When accused of collaborating with the enemy in the ongoing guerilla war in Colombia, itinerant farmer Emilio, along with his nine-year-old son Simon, are exiled by rebels and find refuge in the home of a relative. Struggling economically in their new life, Emilio is forced to take work in the illegal poppy fields belonging to a local drug lord. With an atmosphere infused with, and made dense by, the omnipresent shadow of violence and death. With gorgeous cinematography, affective, authentic and moving performances throughout, employing a gritty, at times traditionally Latin American magical realist narrative and visual construct, Field of Amapolis has emerged as one of VIFF 2013’s strongest, most accomplished narrative features. Screens for a final time next Tuesday, October 8th, 7pm, at the Rio Theatre.
Arising from high audience demand for tickets (arising in part as well, perhaps, from VanRamblings’ continuing rave coverage of these films), the good folks at the Vancouver film festival have scheduled additional screenings of VanRamblings’ favourite feature, The Great Passage, and our favourite documentary, Gore Vidal: The United States of Amnesia. See below for info on screening times for both of these very fine VIFF films.
Here’s a précis of what we had to say about Ishii Yuya’s new film …
A masterwork from acclaimed Japanese director Ishii Yuya, as accomplished and moving a film as you’ll see this year, The Great Passage, Yuya’s gently old-fashioned romantic comedy and workplace dramedy offers random bits of loveliness throughout, in the story of Mitsuya — a lexicographer hired to research for The Great Passage, a new ‘living language’ dictionary planned by a Tokyo publisher — and his landlady’s granddaughter, Kaguya, his affection for her unbound.
The whimsical screenplay, tremendously engaging performances, the movie’s beguiling character arcs, warmly lambent cinematography, painterly shot composition, gently seductive pacing, and transcendently well-executed direction, makes Yuya’s follow-up to his winning VIFF 2011 entry, Mitsuko Delivers — one of VanRamblings’ favourite films that year — all the more welcome, extraordinary, profound and rewarding an artistic and cinematic accomplishment. A+. Not to be missed. A must-see. Two remaining VIFF screenings, an added screening this Saturday morning. October 5th, 11:30 am, at The Cinematheque, and two days later, on Sunday, October 6th, 2pm, at The Cinematheque.
And, here’s a little something on Gore Vidal: The United States of Amnesia:
Despairing, melancholy, screamingly funny at times, and filled with more wit and perspicacity than any film you’ll see this year, here’s the best non-fiction film to play at VIFF 2013, a doc that is not-to-be-missed. Quite simply, director Nicholas Wrathall, while offering a profound and immensely witty historical document on the nature of the 21st century state, has outdone himself.
In this open-minded memorial to one of 20th-century’s most original — and brilliantly curmudgeonly — thinkers, The United States of Amnesia captures Gore Vidal in all of his agent provocateur glory, chronicling a plethora of witty epigrams, social injustices, institutional manipulation, political corruptions, and the late 20th century slide into the wholesale adoption of a neoliberal economic agenda, which sees our wages and our taxes moving upwards and away from us, and into the hands of the economic elite. VanRamblings is awarding an A+, and considers Gore Vidal: The United States of Amnesia another must-see, not-to-be missed film at VIFF 2013. Screens three more times, today (Oct. 3rd), 1:15 pm, at The Cinematheque; again on Tues., Oct 8th, at 9pm, at The Cinematheque; and, at an added screening, on Friday, October 11th at 4:45pm, once again at The Cinematheque.
You’ll want to purchase your tickets for these VIFF films as soon as possible, cuz ticket sales for each screening is brisk.
We’ll leave you today with the following video, which we shot following a VIFF screening at SFU Woodwards’ Goldcorp Theatre, the video shot in an alcove (where we could get out of the rain) in the alley way in behind the complex, the video VanRamblings’ “artistic contribution” to VIFF 2013.
VanRamblings’ programme schedule continues to change each day, mostly of late arising from buzz from folks in line, or VIFF cinephiles who are quite as enthusiastic as we are about screening the very best that VIFF has to offer in 2013. It’s almost as if, for 16 days, we’re cinema junkies. Note: Following several hours of arduous work, when publishing Part 2 of our weekend guide, all of our work was lost, disappearing into the ether. So, unfortunately, there’ll be no Part 2, a Sunday guide to VIFF films.
For those expecting our long promised Apple iOS post, we’ve decided to hold off on that post til either next week, or post-Festival. C’mon back tomorrow, though, for our regular fine Sunday post.
Not only is the 2013 edition of the Vancouver International Film Festival the most welcoming Festival in years, it is as well the best run and organized Festival we’ve witnessed in years, each VIFF staff and volunteer becalmed, for sure, but vibrant and alive in their interaction with the many thousands of VIFF patrons who, this past week and next, will help to transform Vancouver into the world city that we oughta be, and the world city we become during the 16 days of VIFF each year, as 340+ films from more than 75 countries across the globe are brought to our shores.
Sure, like many, VanRamblings is given to the occasional kvetch — but, really, why bother taking the festival to task over picayune concerns when those of us who love the Vancouver film festival experience are allowing the world cinema of our time to wash over us during these 16 days of love?
Truth to tell, at present, we’re a little tuckered, have looked at our programme schedule (pdf) for the day (4 films!), so will leave you with a shortened version of today’s post. We do encourage you to take a look at:
The column we wrote last Friday on the New York Film Festival, which unfolds in cinematic unison with VIFF, or
Parts 1, 2 and 3 of our ‘best bets” posts are here, here and here.
And please, please, please get your ticket now for Sunday, October 6th’s final screening of The Great Passage, 2pm at The Cinematheque.
Otherwise, we’ll point you in the direction of films that you don’t want to miss on this early autumn day at the 32nd annual Vancouver International Film Festival, films we either saw in preview, screened since Festival’s start last Thursday, or have read great reviews on. So, here goes …
Field of Amapolis. When accused of collaborating with the enemy in the ongoing guerilla war in Colombia, farmer Emilio, along with his nine-year-old son Simon, is forced by rebels to leave their land. After relocating with the help of a relative, Emilio and his son struggle with their new life, their economic hardship forcing Emilio to take work in the illegal poppy fields belonging to a local drug lord. Meanwhile, Simon meets and befriends Luisa, a girl his own age. Dense, dark, with the omnipresent shadow of violence and death infusing the film with a pervasive sends of dread, this one should be one to catch. Screens at 10:50am today, at VIFF’s / Cineplex’s International Village, Cinema 9.
The Patience Stone. Suffice to say that VanRamblings has heard more positive response to this film than any other film in VIFF this year. Heard the phrase must-see? Yep, this film’s one of those creatures.
Grand Central. Also arriving at VIFF with good buzz. Scott Foundas, chief film critic for Variety, and until recently the chief programming of the New York Film Festivalloved it. 4:20pm, at Cineplex International Village, Cinema 10.
Enjoy your Festival today, eat good food, keep yourself hydrated, and we’ll be looking for you just before the lights go out in a darkening theatre.