It's mid-May, the heart of the summer, and the weather is beautiful on the French Riviera for the 79th Cannes Film Festival. And once again I can only admire it from afar. One of these days I will see it in person, but for now I can only fawn on what is likely to be a critical preview of the movies to gradually come through the rest of the year. The big headline out of Cannes this year so far seems to be on the lack of Hollywood present. No major American studio films are in competition or premiering there, when typically there are at least a few. In past years, Furiosa and Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny as well as the last several Mission: Impossible movies have featured in the festival a few weeks ahead of their broad domestic release. But this year and by its own choice, mainstream Hollywood has no presence at all, despite the official poster referencing Hollywood classic Thelma and Louise . But this isn't a bad thing. Cannes is an international festival with inte...
I wonder if Remarkably Bright Creatures would exist without My Octopus Teacher , the Oscar-winning documentary that came out two years before Shelby Van Pelt published her bestseller novel. The interest both take in the octopus and specifically anthropomorphizing it as some wise creature benignly interacting with the affairs of everyday people is a link that doesn’t feel entirely incidental. And now with a movie adaptation out directed by Olivia Newman, who was also behind another movie translation of a book club favourite , it’s even easier to see those linking tentacles. In spare moments at least. Because though he is an omniscient figure, narrating the story through cool, dispassionate ruminations provided by Alfred Molina, the octopus Marcellus isn’t so significant a part of the movie here. Yet I suspect Remarkably Bright Creatures would have been much better if he had been. Distributed directly to Netflix, the film stars Sally Field as Tova, an elderly cleaning lady at a sm...