Day 8: September 15
A taxi day, with minutes to spare between
screenings. Schlepped down to the Paramount to catch Turturro's musical. He was
quite amiable at the Q&A, and I was pleased to count of another member of
the Lebowski cast who I have thanked personally for that film.
At
the Tommy Chong screening I asked a question to the director that resulted in
the longest answer I've ever received, an epic, 25 minute response that ranged
from discussion of Ashcroft to the feud between Chong's wife and his daughter
Rae Dawn Chong. Impressive.
I had literally minutes to spare between
Frankie and Sympathy, and luckily made it down to the latter. Say
what you will, as long as you get a good seat on the orchestra level the Elgin
is a pretty magnificent place to see a flick.
Managed to stay awake for
the Miike children's flick (!!!), and a cab home to wake up early for
tomorrow's Gromit fun. All told, I went pretty much straight from 10 in
the morn to 2:30am with barely enough wiggle room to catch a breath, let alone
find time for dinner.
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Romance and
Cigarettes
Directed by: John Turturro
Grade:
B-
Gandolfini singing, Sarandon serenading, Walken dancing to
"Delilah" in a Coen Brothers' production, what could go wrong? Well, the
stories a bit flat, and while I dig the hybrid of drama and musical, it did
seem a bit forced at times. The star of the show is clearly the ravishing Kate
Winslett, absolutely ravishing as she filthfully plooks Tony Soprano to the
sound of vitriolic cussing. The afterglow of her picking at her teeth while
eating fried chicken is the piece de resistance. On a related note, she
has really nice breasts.
Those aside, the rest of the film is just a
little bit, uh, flat. For lack of a better response, I simply, generally,
wanted it to be better.
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a/k/a Tommy Chong
Directed
by: Josh Gilbert
Grade: B
Thank God that Mr. Gilbert
listened to those around him: Rather than some rambling, pro-pot film, this
flick actually does a pretty good job of documenting the issues surrounding
Chong's arrest, and the obvious intention by the Ashcroft justice department to
bring down an icon of the debauched 70s. More contentious elements such as the
relationship between Chong and his former comedy partner are gracefully brushed
over, with the focus firmly set on the man's current struggles with his trial,
prison, and his subsequent involvement in the activist movements. A film that's
better because it so clearly could have been quite a mess, a fascinating story
of the nefarious work of the post-9/11 justice department waging a cultural war
in America.
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Mavericks: Nick Park
As part
of the dialogues series, Nick Park of Aardman fame sat down and chatted about
his career. Unfortunately, poor Mr. Park seems a bit introverted for this sort
of thing, and with the absence of an abundance of clips, the evening was a bit
of a dud. Spoilers for tomorrows W&G film proved to be fun, and the
actual claymation puppets that were brought out were fun to see.
Frankie
Directed by: Fabienne
Berthaud
Grade: C-
Apparently the life of an aging
supermodel ain't what it's cracked up to be. Hardly a mess, this film still
feels mighty forced, and the needless back-and-forth of the flashback structure
does little to improve the movie. Not a disaster, but not good either.
Sympathy for Lady
Vengeance
Directed by: Chan-Wook Park
Grade:
A-
Last year's Old Boy took many fests by storm. This third
part of Park's trilogy focuses on a woman who's imprisoned in order to save her
infant from kidnappers. She spends years on a complicated plan that is meant to
gain vengeance for her.
The story is delightfully multilayered, the look
stylish, and the horror component top notch. Best of all, while a quieter, more
subdued film than Old Boy, this one is littered with dark humour that
keeps the mood away from being artificially somber. A great, fun flick.
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The Great Yokai War
Directed
by: Takashi Miike
Grade: C+
A silly, trippy children's
movie (ha!) from the maker of Ichi the Killer. Yokai are traditional
spirits, and when a child is selected as the Kiran rider he's thrust
into a world of manic sprites and fairy creatures.
While this may sound
Narnia-esque, the birth of the half-human, half-calf screeching about
the doom of man some two minutes in should give you an idea of the style.
Still, turtlemen that make Gamera references to hot water nymphettes
does little to make this a great flick. Still, it's just twisted enough to be
worth a look.