The Young Girls of Rochefort might be the comfort movie of the French New Wave. It's certainly one of the bubbliest and most spirited -a film by Jacques Demy that follows up on his masterful The Umbrellas of Cherbourg , with which it has a lot in common -the big exception being a tone of bliss and optimism to replace bittersweet regret. It is a movie with a summer festival and big dance numbers and a broadly grinning Gene Kelly. What miseries there are in the characters are dispelled by the end -it is perhaps a purer tribute to old Hollywood musicals than Demy's last film, imbued with all of his and composer Michel Legrand's signature charms. Set in the port town of Rochefort, the story concerns two twin sisters, Delphine and Solange played by real sisters (though not real twins) Catherine Deneuve and Fran ç ois Dorl é ac -the former blonde, the latter redheaded. They work as ballet instructors but dream of finding love and moving to Paris. Over the course of a weekend the...
If the zombie genre is known for anything, in terms of its metaphorical resonance, it is an allegory for grief. Numerous zombie movies contend with a plot element of the hero having to let go of someone they care about, often in a traumatically violent way. In We Bury the Dead that moment may have already happened before the story begins -it is the confirmation and closure on it that is the driving force. The movie, by Australian director Zak Hilditch, had its premiere many months ago at the Sundance Film Festival and it’s a shame it didn’t get a wider release in time for Halloween, instead only slipping by discreetly at this time of the new year where it is very soon to be supplanted by the next 28 Years Later movie. This is especially ironic given its low budget and limited resources bear on it a resemblance to 28 Days Later , right down to the human behaviour in and around a zombie apocalypse being far more interesting and frightening than the zombies themselves. Hilditch’s ins...