Last of SIFF

Wed, Jun. 10th, 2015 07:14 am
scarlettina: (SIFF 2015)
The Seattle International Film Festival ended this past Sunday. I had four more films scheduled from last Thursday through Sunday. I saw only three of them. By the time Sunday rolled around, I was well and truly done with sitting inside movie theaters on some of the first truly warm and beautiful days this spring. So here are notes on the last films I saw.

Love Among the Ruins: A mockumentary about the discovery of a legendary, long-lost Italian silent film. The director got some major names in film scholarship (including Serge Bromberg, whom I mentioned in my notes about Saved from the Flames) to comment on this film-that-never-was, and then shot said film with actors local to the Italian village where the story was set. I suspect that were I more literate in silent film, its scholarship and community, there might have been more in it for me to appreciate. Nevertheless, I found it a fun, clever project, a pleasant diversion for a Thursday night.

In Utero: A documentary that examines how life before birth affects life after birth. Discussing the latest research and current theories of physiological and psychological development, the doc posits that life before birth is a chemical and emotional journey linked to the mother's experiences and the environment around her as well as the environment she creates in the womb. The stresses she experiences, the happiness, and so on, are transmitted chemically to the fetus, influencing from the earliest days of development who that bundle of cells will be when it develops into a fetus, is born, and grows into an adult. While there was some interesting commentary, I also occasionally felt like the director was reaching a little bit, like some of the experts were pushing too hard on making their points. Still, there was some fascinating discussion, especially from Gabor Mate, who is apparently one of the front-running thinkers in this area. Thought-provoking stuff. Here's a link to the film's official website for further reading, if you're so inclined. The director was present with a number of experts for a panel discussion afterward, but I couldn't stay because I had another film to catch.

The Great Alone: Winner of SIFF's Grand Jury Prize this year, this documentary about second-generation, four-time Iditarod champion Lance Mackey was a fascinating glimpse into what, for me, is a completely alien life and experience. Chronicling his 2013 attempt at the race, it also told his story from rebellious kid to cancer survivor to racing phenomenon. The documentarian did a terrific job using home movies, news footage, and fresh film of that 2013 race to weave it all together into a compelling experience. Mackey has lived a life so different from mine--little schooling, an almost primal relationship with his dogs, a life lived more outdoors than inside, and an almost obsessive drive to participate in, and win, the Iditarod. This is why I go to SIFF and see documentaries--for views into totally different lives and experiences. After the film, the director, Mackey, his mother, and one of his dogs were present to answer questions and do a meet-and-greet. When Mackey walked into the room, he received a standing ovation--and it was for him, not just for the film. I stood, too, because I had to respect someone so driven, so completely at the top of his field of endeavor--especially having seen what it takes to get there--and, as it turned out, so completely down to earth and genuine.

Final thoughts for SIFF 2015
The Great Alone was terrific, one of the films that the programmers could not stop talking about at the member preview event last month. After that, I had one more film on my schedule--The Muses of Bashevis Singer--a documentary about the great Jewish writer. But, as noted above, I was tired of spending beautiful days inside in the dark. Since The Great Alone was so good, I decided to end the festival there, on a high note. It was exactly the right thing to do. Interesting to me was that this year, though everyone was talking about Phoenix, the post-Holocaust drama--there didn't seem to be a consensus among the regular attendees about which fiction films were particular stand-outs until much later in the festival than usual--at least, that was my perception. People did talk about Me and Earl and the Dying Girl, which went on to win a Golden Space Needle and already has distribution. It looks like a number of the other films I particularly wanted to see will be turning up at SIFF Cinema later this year, which makes me happy; I'd like a chance to see them. Good festival this year overall. As ever, so glad I went.

SIFF: Henri Henri

Thu, Jun. 4th, 2015 07:12 am
scarlettina: (SIFF 2015)
Henri has spent his entire life in a French-Canadian orphanage, learning from the nuns who run the place, and maintaining the light fixtures throughout the property. When the building is sold, Henri learns that he must leave and navigate a world for which he is unprepared. By following the signs, he finds himself a job at a lighting store and a small, unlikely group of friends. His next great adventure: winning the heart of the winsome--and blind--Helene (whose name means "light"--yes, it's a theme). It's one of those "naif encounters the world" movies that could have been either cloying or just sweetly engaging; this film is definitely the latter and was clearly a crowd pleaser. Its cinematography and production design create an other-worldly 1960s feel. Henri is a charming character for whom you can't help but root in his search for life, love and home. Delightful.
scarlettina: (SIFF 2015)
A program of some of the earliest silent films, Saved from the Flames was hosted by film archivist Serge Bromberg, an entertaining and knowledgeable Frenchman who founded Lobster Films, which preserves the silents as they're found. The films included before and after footage of the Great San Francisco Earthquake, a beautiful hand-tinted version of the complete Georges Melies "A Trip to the Moon," and a showing of the early animated short, "Gertie the Trained Dinosaur," animated by Windsor McKay. Bromberg offered historical context, demonstrated just how flamable and therefore vulnerable nitrate film is, and played piano accompaniment to many of the films he showed. Delightful and educational evening, which I got to share with [livejournal.com profile] oldmangrumpus, [livejournal.com profile] varina8 and [livejournal.com profile] ironymaiden. So pleased to have such excellent company; part of what made it such a fine evening.
scarlettina: (Five)
SIFF films
Saturday morning: The Primary Instinct had its world premier at SIFF. It's actor Stephen Tobolowsky's concert film. Tobolowsky--whom you may know as Ned Ryerson in "Groundhog Day" or Sandy Ryerson (distant cousin?) in "Glee" or any one of a number of character roles--is a terrific storyteller, and this movie is a record of a show he did in Seattle last year, telling the stories that have made his podcast "The Tobolowsky Files" (which I highly recommend) so popular. This guy tells a story like nobody's business. He's engaging and insightful. The monologue he offers here has, at its core, the question of what we seek as human beings--what's our primary instinct, but he starts by asking the question "What is a story?" It's great question for an actor or a writer--or a human. And he riffs on it from there, telling story after story to get to his main point, offering thoughtful commentary and laughter along the way. This was a terrific hour-and-a-half, and the Q&A with Tobolowsky and David Chen, the film's director, afterward was very good indeed. I recommend both the movie and the podcast. Possibly my best experience of the festival so far.

Sunday afteroon: I thought, for some reason, that Paper Planes was a documentary, not a fiction movie. Turns out it was the latter, an Australian film for families about a boy who enters an international paper plane folding contest. It was actually quite a sweet thing--not what I was expecting but, as the description on the SIFF site says, a crowd pleaser and a pleasant first film of two for the day.

Later Sunday afternoon: Admission: I don't really read The New Yorker; I read it occasionally, in bits and pieces. But I always look at the cartoons. So when I saw that Very Semi-Serious, a documentary about The New Yorker, its cartoon editor and its cartoonists, was going to be at SIFF, I didn't have to think twice. Turns out that it's not a documentary so much as an examination of the art of the single-panel comic, with thoughts and insights provided by David Mankoff, the editor, and many of the artists who contribute. Fun, thoughtful stuff, lots of New York images and the kind of humor that has always appealed to me. I found myself thinking about the New York Times documentary, Page One, that ran at SIFF back in 2011. Though they are very different films in focus and sensibility, yet they share that ineffable New York-ness that makes them both of a piece in some way. Good movie, well worth seeing.

Books
Finished reading Mary Robinette Kowal's "Of Noble Family" this weekend--one gets a lot of reading done waiting in line at SIFF. The fifth and final book in her Glamourist Histories series, it takes our heroine Jane and her husband Vincent to Antigua to get Vincent's late father's estate in order. They are not prepared for what they encounter--which includes a legacy of slavery, the fallout of abuse, and Jane's welcome but awkwardly-timed pregnancy. It is by far the darkest of the books in the series, but it nevertheless still brings some of the fun and interest that Mary always brings to her storytelling. I found it a satisfying conclusion to the cycle and enjoyed it quite a bit.

Started reading "Old Man's War" by John Scalzi. Breezy and fairly lightweight, as Scalzi's work tends to be, it's science fiction of the Old Skool: colonial armed forces off to make the universe a safer place for humanity--but with a twist. As ever, Scalzi's narrative voice is strong and appealing, and I'm enjoying the reading. While I understand that the Sad/Rabid Puppy crowd dislike Scalzi for his politics, I don't think they understand what they're missing by not reading his fiction. It's exactly the sort of thing they claim to prefer. But I think there's as much professional jealousy in their expressed hatred--especially given his new book deal--as there is political difference. Their loss. Scalzi's work is fast and fun, and I'm enjoying this one.

SIFF: Mr. Holmes

Sun, May. 31st, 2015 08:25 am
scarlettina: (SIFF 2015)
Saw "Mr. Holmes" on Friday night. Starring Ian McKellan as the eponymous detective in his senior years, it is a charming, sometimes tough but mostly gentle film. It was a delight to watch McKellan bring Sherlock to life, and to bring a warmth and thoughtfulness to the character. The film is more meditative than action-oriented (as one might expect with a senior at its center), and less about solving mysteries (though there are one or two) than it is about solving problems of the human heart. I liked it that much more for it. It's getting a wide release (as one might expect with a film starring McKellan and Laura Linney), so go see it. I recommend it.
scarlettina: (SIFF 2015)
In this Swiss/Belgian/French film inspired by a true story, Eddy, a lovable if clueless small time crook convinces his friend, Osman, a man in dire straights, to steal the corpse of recently-deceased Charlie Chaplin for ransom. Between the planning and the execution of the heist, we follow Eddy as he takes care of Osman's daughter Samira while Osman tries to earn enough money to pay for an operation for his wife.

If it weren't based on actual events, the story would be too wild to be believed. But a couple of crooks did, in fact, steal Chaplin's coffin in an attempt to extort money from the Chaplin family. The film takes that story, adds a lush Michel Legrand score, and a genuine sweetness to the characters, and then departs from actual history in plot developments and portrayals that are practically tributes to the Little Tramp himself. There were moments when the director let a scene stretch a bit too long, and times when that delicious Legrand score didn't seem quite the right thing against the events that it accompanied. But the performances--every one--were appealing and the film ultimately satisfying if perhaps a little too good to be true in the end.

Other quick SIFF notes: I was scheduled to see the documentary "Handmade with Love in France" last weekend. Sadly, I went to the wrong theater on the bus and wasn't able to get to the correct theater in time to see it. I'm still pouting about this; I really wanted to see that doc. Tonight, watching the trailers for upcoming films, I caught one for Henri Henri. After "The Price of Fame" let out, I traded a voucher for a ticket to this new movie and added it to next week's schedule.
scarlettina: (SIFF 2015)
My first film, as previously noted, was Cuidad Delirio which I enjoyed quite a bit. Next up were:

Virtuosity: The Cliburn Competition is one of the world's most prestigious piano competitions. This documentary follows the 13th competition, the competitors and their stories. I thought the documentary very well made, full of interesting people and exactly the kind of interest and suspense that's wanted from a competition film. The movie, of course, is filled with wonderful music, and you can't help but get involved in each competitor's story, picking and choosing those you want and believe will win. The doc is scheduled to air on PBS; well worth looking for.

The Farewell Party: An Israeli comedy-drama about a group of seniors wrestling with age and infirmity, and their solution: the secret creation of a self-euthanizing machine. Word of the machine's existence gets around their retirement community, and choices must be made. The film had some truly human, truly funny moments, some wonderful characters and some very truthful insights into the challenges of aging and end-of-life issues. But I felt like the movie couldn't decide what it wanted to be: a comedy about the absurdities of being human and getting older or a drama about the agonizing choices we make for our loved ones. In the end, that uncertainty proved the film's great weakness, and we end on a note that is abrupt and poignant rather than celebratory or at least a satisfying resolution. I'm still on the fence about this once. It's complex, but I don't think it's hefty enough to support that complexity.

The Passion of Augustine: In the north outside of Quebec, in the wake of Vatican II, a small convent that specializes in educating girls in music struggles to survive sudden change. Mother Augustine fights a new administration that doesn't love or understand music and must come to terms with her own history, as opened up by the arrival of her niece, a musical prodigy, at the school. Celine Bonnier as Mother Augustine is beautiful in an austere way, smart and independent and admirable. Diane Lavallee as Sister Lise, a nun who has a hard time dealing with change, is excellent; you at once want to dislike her but find yourself sympathizing with her struggle. One of the most poignant (in a good way) sequences in the film is when the sisters must put off their classic black habits and change into their more modern blue-and-white habits. It's not something I ever thought of before, but it's a moving moment. Excellent film. Really enjoyed it and recommend it.

Animation4Adults: This was the adult animated short film program, and I walked out about 2/3 of the way through the program, something I've never done at a SIFF program before. I found almost all the shorts aesthetically ugly and many conceptually predictable (road rage, the mass production and commodification of people and society, and so on). One short--Pop-up Porno: f4m, about a woman dealing with her mastectomy--was frank and cleverly done. Another--Francis, about what happens to a girl on a camping trip, based on a Dave Eggers story--was good looking and creepy. But I walked out because I realized that I wasn't enjoying myself. There was no loveliness here. I felt like there was very little innovation. And I don't need misery in the movie theater given the challenges I'm dealing with myownself.

This morning I've got another documentary. Hoping it can take the bad taste of last night's experience away.
scarlettina: (SIFF 2015)
My first film of the festival was Ciudad Delirio, a Spanish-language romance with a lot of salsa music and dance. A doctor from Spain goes to Colombia for a world medical conference, meets a beautiful dancer and must win her heart. Despite its reliance on certain cliches that seem inevitable with this sort of film, it is completely charming and I had a marvelous time. (Given that I tend to avid romantic movies, this is a Big Deal.) You can't help but want to get up and dance by the end of the film. It was a great way to start the festival. Looking forward to more!

SIFF 2015

Thu, May. 14th, 2015 07:14 am
scarlettina: (SIFF 2015)
So, after much hemming and hawing, plotting and planning, I've got my schedule figured out for the 2015 Seattle International Film Festival, one of the great annual pleasures of living in this town. As happens every year, there are far more films I want to see than I have time, money, and energy to actually take in. And as usual, figuring out what to see and what to sacrifice was a big freaking deal. In the end, my usual tastes seem to have won out: there are, in this list, a preponderance of documentaries, a couple of French films, at least one major movie that already has wide distribution--but this way, I get to see it for half the usual box office price. Unusually, I find myself with 5 spare tickets. I figure I'll use them either to share with friends or to add films to my schedule as I hear chatter about what's good and what may suit my schedule. In the meanwhile, here's the roster as it currently stands. Almost all of these films were on the programmers' pick list, so I'm feeling pretty confident about the choices. Click the links for trailers and more information.

Schedule beneath the cut )

There are a ton of films I want to see that, for one reason or another, don't work with my schedule. I may try to find a way to fit them in anyway, including (but not limited to):

Phoenix: a post-Holocaust drama about a concentration camp survivor--already getting lots of good chatter
Beach Town: A "beach movie of the mind" directed by a former coworker of mine. Trying hard to figure out how I can see it given work hours and schedule conflicts
Slow West (which may get a limited release): A Kiwi-made historical film set in the American West
The Farewell Party: An Israeli comedy about assisted suicide
Love, Theft and Other Entanglements: A Palestinean dark comedy about being in the wrong place at the wrong time
Romeo is Bleeding: Documentary about a San Francisco poet trying to put on a contemporary version of Romeo and Juliet
Morbayassa: A Guinean move about a woman trying to escape Guinea for a better life
Liza the Fox Fairy: Comedy about a woman who loves all things Japan and who may be a figure out of Japanese myth
Chatty Catties: A comedy about cats who can talk telepathically to their people; looks incredibly silly
Don't Think I've Forgotten: A documentary about Cambodian rock'n'roll nearly lost in the haze of the Vietnam war.
The Glamour & The Squalor: A documentary about a Seattle DJ who helped to put grunge on the map

There are many others; these are the ones I can think of off the top of my head. Too many riches, not enough time (or money). ::sigh::

Films that the programmers were excited about but that I have no desire to see: The Wolfpack (documentary that may be too grim for me), Guidance (a comedy certain to get at least a limited release), Wet Bum, Eisenstein in Guanajuato (new Peter Greenaway film that the programmers were frothing over), Me and Earl and the Dying Girl (another comedy certain to get a wide release; programmers were fond of this one, too), Gemma Bovary, The Little Death, among others
scarlettina: (Five)
1) Warm weather: It was warm and sunny this weekend, so I did the things one does when the sun comes out. I went to the West Seattle Garage Sale Day with a friend and picked through other people's cast offs looking for treasure. (Found some!) And I transplanted the coleus into outdoor pots. I have three pretty varieties out there now. I hope the warmth lasts and nurtures them into bushiness. I will be doing my best to help along this process. I loves me my coleus. I also topdressed the strawberries and am hoping for a better crop this year. (I've already got one little berry, electric green and growing, on the vine.)

2) Reading: Just finished reading Marie Brennan's Tropic of Serpents and while I enjoyed it, I found myself feeling as though some of the things she set up paid off rather weaker than I think she intended them to. The end felt a little rushed to me. The book felt somewhat uneven. Isabella is still a fun and interesting character and I am likely to read the next volume, but my hopes will be more reasonable.

3) SIFF is coming: With the inevitability of winter in a George R.R. Martin novel, SIFF approacheth and I'm still picking my movies. I promised myself I would have my schedule mapped out by tonight so I could go get my tickets this evening on the way home from work, but I have failed. Maybe I'll use my lunch break today to review things one more time. We'll see. I'll post my schedule once I have it nailed down.

4) Mother's Day: Though the day itself was quite fine, the cultural overlay of the day--the "holiday"--was a mixed bag of emotions, as Mother's Day always is for me. Glad it's over. Moving on.

5) Day job: There's been a lot of change at work, a reorganization that has moved me into a different department, upending a lot of plans I had and a lot of social infrastructure I was building. I'm considering my options now, considering the lay of the land and trying to figure out what I want now and what I want next. It's stressful; my stomach hasn't settled in nearly a week.

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