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Standin’ Alone: A Compassionate Tribute to a Forgotten Maestro

“No one ever loved me that much.” Humphrey Bogart says this line in Casablanca at the height of his character’s cynicism -after his lost love has shown up again with another man, after a painful truth of their liaison has been revealed to him, and as the world itself appears to be closing in. He says it to a young Bulgarian woman desperate for his help in escaping the Nazi-occupied territory with her new husband, ashamed that it might mean sexual favours yet steadfast in her love and devotion even through that potentiality. Lorenz Hart sees himself in Bogart when he quotes this line twice in Blue Moon , aware that a comment of seemingly insensitive despair is paired with an act of pure selflessness -Bogart does rig the husband’s roulette game in his favour. But Hart doesn’t have so readily available a noble victory at hand. He’s only got his liquor. That Hart’s is an obscure name today in spite of a twenty-five year modestly successful partnership with composer Richard Rodgers, prior t...
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Nouvelle Vague Brings Free and Spontaneous Dimension to its Revered Artistic Moment

Nouvelle Vague. The French New Wave -arguably the most important artistic movement in film history. In the span of just a handful of years more than a hundred young French filmmakers made their debuts, often coming from the worlds of academia, philosophy, and criticism - Cahiers du Cinema most notably- and making movies markedly different from those of the previous generation. It was a fresh and exciting period dominated by inspired eccentric personalities driven by intense creativity and a desire to experiment with the potential of their art. And yet the French New Wave does not have that reputation today -at least among most. Movies belonging to its pantheon are often hard to introduce to average moviegoers, unable to see or understand the appeal of what was being done then and what it meant. Stuffy and pretentious are the words that most commonly occur in such discussions of the Nouvelle Vague (especially if you insist on calling it “the Nouvelle Vague”). And probably none has contr...

The Haunted, Intoxicating Parables of Sound of Falling

The ghosts that haunt the figures of this movie and by proxy their audience, are real. Not so literally, but for nary making an appearance they are frightfully present all throughout the experience of watching Sound of Falling , the chronicle across generations of various families living in an ancient farmhouse in northern Germany. Whether they derive from the history of the place or the links between the traumas of specifically the women and girls there, or just from some other force that imbues the home’s residents with a morbid curiosity around death -it is unclear. But their presence is undeniable. Mascha Schilinski’s enigmatic and powerful epic drama which won the Jury Prize at the Cannes Film Festival,is an utterly entrancing thing to experience. Psychologically transporting as much as spiritually so, it makes for a unique and resonating -as well as chilling- broad view portrait of distinctly feminine perspectives and anxieties over the span of a century, rendered grand in atmosp...

The Excessive Whimsy and Idle Romance of Eternal Return

Eternal return is a concept, popularized by Nietzsche stating that time is an infinite loop, that every moment is destined to repeat itself exactly the same for eternity -and at least in the Nietzschean view, it is not entirely a negative thing. Supposedly there is some comfort in fate and the reliability of events. It is a theory that is somewhat loosely applied to the film of the same name written and directed by Yaniv Raz, who is compelled by the notion but in a rather roundabout way that still leaves room for mystery and drama to the cosmic dictates of our world. A looseness that doesn’t totally gel with the stringency of the philosophy, though Raz tries hard to make it so -specifically to make a romance that is both destiny and a surprise for a character who, even more unfortunately given these themes, is a clairvoyant. That is Cassiopeia (because Cassandra would be too obvious but any other name not obvious enough) Pfeffer (Naomi Scott). As a student in New York she fell in love ...

With Hasan in Gaza: A Valuable Time Capsule

In a moment in 2001 crystallized in time, Kamal Aljafari is encouraged by his guide Hasan to capture footage out his car window as they drive through Gaza City, and among the sights he captures is the Islamic University of Gaza, an institution that has since been destroyed by torrents of Israeli airstrikes. Documentaries aren’t strictly meant to be records and time capsules, but sometimes they are forced to function as such, when the world they were made against has been irrevocably and forcibly changed. Any documentary about the Palestinian struggle seems doomed to this fate. How many structures in this film are no longer standing? How many people, children at that time -glimpsed in a pure and wholesome way- are no longer living? I suppose it is a troubling irony that this footage is captured in the process of combing through the devastation left by Israeli attacks in the midst of the Second Intifada. On several occasions Aljafari and Hasan make their way through rubble as frightful n...

Taking the High Road

High and Low  coming to America makes a lot of sense. Arguably more so than when Akira Kurosawa made it in Japan in 1963 -it was after all based on a U.S. book called King’s Ransom  by Ed McBain. But Kurosawa made it his own, adapted it with technical novelty, rendered its themes universal -and it has remained a world cinema classic off of those merits. Spike Lee doesn’t accomplish quite as much in his remake, Highest 2 Lowest , which wears on its sleeve the influence of Kurosawa far more than McBain or any other one artist. But even in seemingly not changing much, he translates it impeccably for his culture and his moment. His title is fitting -the high and the low have only grown further apart in the last six decades. High and Low  was of course one of the sixteen classic collaborations between Kurosawa and the great Toshiro Mifune. Likewise, Highest 2 Lowest reunites Lee with arguably his best partner for the screen, Denzel Washington -for the first time in nineteen ye...

A Complicated, Messy Movie about a Complicated, Messy Situation

The sexy stuff is dealt with pretty quickly in The Threesome . That is neither a positive nor a negative thing, but it is indicative of what kind of movie this really is. It is not about sexual thrill or experimentation, the titillating novelty (in fact the very inciting incident is largely relayed through ellipsis -though the foreplay preceding it is effectively charged); it is about the dramatic physical and emotional consequences of an impulsive act that usually is portrayed as consequence-free. And that is a compelling and unique angle of approach from writer Ethan Ogilby, who uses the idea of a threesome as a jumping-off point for an earnest examination of relationship complexities. The film stars Jonah Hauer-King as Connor, a sound engineer in love with Zoey Deutch’s Olivia, who has a flirtatious rapport with him but is hesitant to commit to a relationship. One night Connor is encouraged to charm a grad student Jenny (Ruby Cruz) after a date stands her up, and Olivia joins them. ...