TIFF 2012: Artifact Review (Paolo Kagaoan)

Photo from http://www.tiff.net

Artifact (2012)

Starring Jared Leto, Shannon Leto, Flood and Tomo Milecevic

Directed by Bartholomew Cubbins

Who is this bearded man who looks like he’s wearing $50 pairs of pyjamas that he dares to wear outside his expensive white-walled Hollywood home? Why is he stroking his cat – not a euphemism – before packing a carry-on and traveling the world with his band? That’s Jared Leto, a person who had an acting career before forsaking it to make music with his band 30 Seconds to Mars. I have had no need for rock of any genre since I cried to Coldplay’s second album. I am obviously an old person whose idea of crying music has nothing to do with angry young white men screaming through my speakers. I will make a terrible parent who will have no tolerance for my children’s shitty taste in music.

What this documentary inadvertently does is legitimize Leto as a multifaceted artist­. We see him on the piano, discussing compositions and structure with his drummer/ brother Shannon, drawing either on paper or on the sands of Miami beach. Instead of looking affected, which docs like this never make their subjects do, there’s a tenderness in these sequences. Besides, his band was formed in 1998, before Fight Club came out, so this is more of his baby than his movies are. There’s also time devoted to spotlight the other band members. There’s recovering delinquent Shannon who switches from bearded man to a coiffed Angeleno. There’s also Tomo, the Michelle Williams to Jared and Shannon’s Beyonce and Kelly, whose bravado actually seems adorable.

Photo from http://www.tiff.net

Their legitimacy, as well as a section devoted to what could have been an indulgent section about the universality and ineffable effects of music, comes in hand when tackling the real reason for this documentary. This movie explains the reason for the lack of relative ubiquity for the past half-decade. 30 Seconds to Mars tried to exit their contract with EMI in 2008, and in return the record label, under the UK equity company Terra Firma, sued them for $30 million. The following two hours of footage portrays the time after the lawsuit. And during this time they juggle phone calls with lawyers and recording studio time, doing both while the antagonistic absence of a powerful record label aren’t there to back them.

I don’t know how old my readers are from or where they’re from or what kind of access they have to music journalism. But I’ll assume that a lot of us have heard Alan Cross’ program or, on a separate note, read the Mad Magazines issue on what’s wrong with the music industry. Not to take away from Cross but Artifact further explores the way record labels screw with their own acquired artists. The relationship between the labels and their talents are as bad as it was in the 1950’s when they wouldn’t pay the artists a cent. Despite the shocking natures of exposes, Cubbins’ directorial debut is informative and engaging in portraying the band’s optimism and search for a new business model for an industry benefiting from archaism.

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Lola Versus Blu-Ray Review (Kirk Haviland)

Lola Versus Blu-Ray

Starring Greta Gerwig, Joel Kinnaman, Zoe Lister-Jones, Hamish Linklater, Bill Pullman and Debra Winger

Written by Daryl Wein and Zoe Lister-Jones

Directed by Daryl Wein

Currently one of Hollywood’s latest “IT” girls, the talented Greta Gerwig steps into one of her first starring vehicles in the new Blu-ray release from Fox Entertainment, Lola Versus. The story of an about to be 30 year old that goes through a life altering situation was written by co-star Zoe Lister-Jones and Director Daryl Wein seemingly with Gerwig in mind as it seems to be tailor made for her brand of “dramady”. But is Gerwig ready to be the main attraction?

When 29-year-old Lola (Gerwig) is dumped by her fiancé Luke (Kinnaman) just three weeks before the wedding, she embarks on an emotional, year-long adventure of self-discovery. Guided by the advice, good and bad, of her close friends Alice (Lister-Jones) and Henry (Linklater) and eccentric parents Lenny and Robin (Pullman and Winger), Lola’s chaotic journey takes her through ill-fated flings and mental breakdowns. As Lola progresses, claiming that she has moved on yet continually falling back to Luke, she slowly starts to realize that she has to spend more time dealing with the most important person in her life, herself.

Lola Versus suffers from what a lot of other films in the “chick flick” genre do, the script. A lot of the typical clichés are here, the oddball best girlfriend, the male good guy friend that despite being “family” leads to one of her ill-fated affairs. We also get the fiancé who comes crawling back claiming he’s made a huge mistake and the flaky parents who seem to wander in and out of the story. On the positive side we have Gerwig, Greta is talented enough to elevate her surroundings and dialogue to create a watchable and believable character. She truly is one the actresses to keep an eye on right now and I personally look forward to seeing what she has to deliver next. The rest of the cast is decent enough, Pullman and Winger have very little to work with here, but there is one glaring problem: Lister-Jones unfortunately did not stay behind the camera, but hopped into the best friend role instead, and the film suffers for it. Lister-Jones seems to have written herself a role that she is completely unsuited for, or perhaps she is better writing than performing, because her performance does not work at all. Her Alice comes off as cloying, fake and downright grating. The setting of New York conveniences the script by allowing Lola’s antics to be more accessible to arrive at, and Lola does not live on some upper west side condo that’s well out of the price range for the character, but a modest apartment that she has to kick her sublet-er out of to move back into. These are the touches that work.

The Blu-Ray is loaded with special features including deleted scenes with an alternate ending and outtakes from our stars, two Fox Movie Channel featurettes including an “In Character” with Gerwig and another entitled World Premiere, two more featurettes and an audio commentary from our co-writers Director Wien and star Lister-Jones. The fetaurettes are all fun to watch, especially the Gerwig centered ones. The deleted scenes and outtakes don’t do much to expand on the film and the alternate ending was better left on the cutting room floor.

Ultimately Lola Versus comes down to Gerwig’s performance and likeability in the lead role as to whether it will be a film that you will enjoy. That said, as much as I like Gerwig, her performance is not enough to make the film work, Lola Versus is a mild non-recommend.

Till Next Time,

Movie Junkie TO

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TIFF 2012: Fly With the Crane Review (Paolo Kagaoan)

Photo from http://www.tiff.net

Fly with the Crane (2012)

Directed by Li Ruijun

A burst of vibrant red instantaneously flies across the screen, then a hand paints some white over it in the shape of a crane. Thank you, Li Ruijun, for giving us a movie with an aura that we the audience can love from the beginning. Anyway, that hand belongs to an old man in rural China who’s putting the finishing touches on what looks like a wooden airplane while his grandchildren are noisily playing around him. It’s a part of a charming coexistence, the grandfathers hang out on the street and talk about their off-screen wives while the grandchildren play in the sand by a lake. The sun glares, a warm autumn compared to local standards.

Photo from http://www.tiff.net

That’s until the adults come along, moving the kids from one farm to another, talking about what they’re going to do to their aging parents, changing their traditions and local landscapes. I make it sound tragic but we’re seeing this movie with the eyes of the children, their parents’ interferences therefore seeming like annoyances with occasional sadness.

Let’s return to the first scene with the red wooden airplane, which is actually a coffin that the grandfather has made for one of his friends. I’m assuming that his generation carries the same beliefs as he does, but according to him the only way to a proper afterlife is to be buried, his preserved body and soul will be carried by a crane. Burials are ‘strongly discouraged’ in favour of cremation, but the grandfather tries to slip one coffin or two as an act of subversion within an oppressive new order. How much you can read into ‘subversion’ is up to you. There’s this act, and another involving the grandfather and his grandson covering up chimneys to somehow let the residents know what it’s like to be cremated.

Photo from http://www.tiff.net

This movie has its slow moments. But otherwise it shows this connection between grandfathers and their grandchildren despite having the mostly oppressive parents between them. And the parents’ generation isn’t fully demonized neither, since they also take part in some of the traditions. Some of them fight for their parents’ right for a burial in one of many heart-wrenching scenes. It ends with a beautiful elegy, not losing its colour and bittersweet innocence.

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TIFF 2012 – Passion Review (Dustin SanVido)

Photo from http://www.tiff.net

Passion (2012)

Starring Rachel McAdams, Noomie Rapace, Paul Anderson, Karoline Herfurth

Written by Alain Corneau and Brian De Palma

Directed by Brian De Palma

Passion reminds me so much of Gus Van Sant’s much-maligned remake of Psycho, the Alfred Hitchcock masterpiece, in that both are pretty much shot-for-shot remakes with little else to offer. Whereas the remake of Psycho was a deliberate carbon copy of its predecessor that suffered from a group of actors who were distracting from the film because of their stardom and reluctance to diverge from the source material, Passion, a remake of the French film Crime d’amour, is a little more complicated than that. I admit I was excited to see Brian De Palma return to the screen after a run of commercial and critical failures (Redacted and the somewhat underappreciated Black Dahlia) and felt his sentimentality for the filmmaking techniques he innovated during his great run of thrillers in the 80’s would perfectly accentuate and expand upon the original film’s sexually charged themes and thrills. What I found though is a film that didn’t change all that much from the original and instead felt extremely tiresome and dated. And for a film that promised the erotic thrills of his past work such as Body Double and Dressed to Kill, the end result amounted to not much more than a campy and seemingly intentional farce.

The story revolves around the relationship between Christine (McAdams), a ruthless ad executive for a French marketing firm and her seemingly naive assistant Isabelle (Rapace). After Christine deliberately steals an idea from Isabelle for a new cellphone ad which has management excited and offering promotions, the assistant begins a game of cat-and-mouse and one-upmanship that slowly escalates toward one of the silliest murder plots of recent memory. Also involved in the shenanigans of Christine and Isabelle is the rivals’ shared lover (Paul Anderson) and Isabella’s own assistant (Karoline Herfurth) who is clearly in love with her boss. I’ll be quite honest, I was on board with the silliness and preposterousness of the first hour or so of this film, but once the film transitioned from light sexual thriller (at best) to campy paranoia and farcical police procedural, I began to imagine myself in a theatre watching Muppets Treasure Island, and how much better of an experience I had with that than what Passion turned out to be.

Photo from http://www.tiff.net

The biggest problem with Passion is not with the direction of De Palma, we’ll get to that, but in the just plain wrong acting choices. I will first say that I enjoy the past work of all the actors involved in this project and don’t fault them at all for what I witnessed onscreen, aside from Isabelle’s assistant they’re all just simply miscast. McAdams is skilled and does her best at an adult version of her antagonist from Mean girls but she is just too young to portray this ruthless and vindictive a character. This is made more obvious when calling to mind the superior and mature performance of Kristen Scott Thomas in the original. Rapace is also in trouble. I’d actually prefer her as Christine than McAdams and have Herfurth play her role instead. This is the second English language film for her where she is so much better than the material (see Sherlock Holmes 2), I’d be happy with her making films in her native language from here on out. The rest of the actors are completely changeable and to me, with such a campy tone throughout the film, anyone could have played the supporting cast.

Photo from http://www.tiff.net

DePalma has had himself quite an up and down career and this continues in Passion. This whole film is up and down and I’m not sure if I was supposed to be taking what I was seeing seriously or treating it as comedy. If the film had kept a serious tone like the original throughout, I wouldn’t have noticed the cracks in the plot beginning to give way and ultimately proving just how dated his techniques as a filmmaker have become. The score didn’t do him any favours either, as it was as schizophrenic as the narrative.

I am a firm believer of the figure of speech “You can’t teach old dogs new tricks”, and as such, it may be nearing that time for DePalma to hang up his six shooters and find another hobby, as it appears to me that’s what filmmaking has become for him. That is unless he can acknowledge the techniques he used to remain successful for so long are best to be left in the past and that he should embrace the current trends and filmmaking styles of the present and future. I certainly hope so, as I was a fan of his work for so long and hope he gives us another masterpiece the way he used to in his earlier days.

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Spartacus: Vengeance Blu-Ray Review (Kirk Haviland)

Spartacus: Vengeance

Starring Liam McIntyre, Peter Mensah, Manu Bennett, Katrina Law, Lucy Lawless, Viva Bianca, Craig Parker and Nick E. Tarabay

Created by Steven S. DeKnight

From Anchor Bay Entertainment and Starz Network in the US, The Movie Network for us up here in Canada, comes the long awaited second season follow up to Spartacus: Blood and Sand, Spartacus: Vengeance. After the illness that sadly took the life of season one star Andy Whitfield, and the prequel production Spartacus: Gods of the Arena, Liam McIntyre steps into the sandals of our lead Spartacus and throughout the course of the season leads a furious bunch of rebels out for revenge against the Romans after events of season one. But is McIntyre capable of taking over the iconic role?

After the bloody escape from the House of Batiatus that concluded Spartacus: Blood and Sand, the gladiator rebellion has erupted and begun to strike fear into the heart of the Roman Republic. Praetor Gaius Claudius Glaber (Parker) and his Roman troops are sent to Capua to crush Spartacus’ (McIntyre) growing band of freed slaves before they can inflict further damage. Spartacus is given a choice between satisfying his personal need for vengeance against the man who condemned his wife to slavery and eventual death, or making the larger sacrifices necessary to keep his budding army from breaking apart. Spartacus is joined by Crixus (Bennett) and his band of Gauls, united by their mutual hatred of the Romans, that join his loyal group of rebels including his right hand man Oenomaus (Mensah) and his now lover Mira (Law). Meanwhile Galber and his scheming wife LLithiyia (Bianca) discover the former wife of Batiatus Lucretia (Lawless) alive and well, yet apparently unable to remember the previous events.

Known for its bombastic nature including epic battles doused in buckets of CGI blood with rampant nudity/sex and the campiest of dialogue, season 2 of Spartacus does not stray from the formula that made it a smash hit in its first season. This is the same hyper stylized, Spanish TelaNovella-styled, brattier younger sibling of HBO’s Rome that it always has been. The script is written with built-in camp value and tongue firmly planted in cheek. The acting is over the top and downright goofy in parts, but absolutely works within the context and tone of the series. McIntyre actually does admirable work here in taking over the role vacated by the untimely passing of Whitfield. His portrayal of Spartacus still brings the gravitas that shows why these men follow him to the ends of the earth. Bennett does solid work as Crixus and Lucy Lawless is a scenery chewing machine every time she appears on screen. This surely is not a family friendly atmosphere, thanks to the copious amounts of sex and violence, but serves its purpose of adult fairy tale very well; think 300 meets Fifty Shades of Gray. The cinematic camera work and production value only adds to the attraction, no expense seems to have been spared in realizing the series for the screen.

The Blu-Ray is packed with special features including multiple audio commentaries with cast and crew, behind the scenes specials and a blooper reel. The specials include a Starz produced studios series recap  and a making of, Behind the camera featurette as well as a on the set with star McIntyre. A featurette on the special effects and a sneak peak of the follow up final series Spartacus: War of the Damned. The Blu-Ray also features the extended versions of episodes from Vengeance, all in a impressive haul of extras.

Not for everyone, the violence may be too much for some, Spartacus: Vengeance will not disappoint the fans of the previous incarnations of the series. Spartacus: Vengeance is a recommend.

Till Next Time,

Movie Junkie TO

Make sure to keep up with what’s going on at Entertainment Maven by liking our Facebook page and having updates delivered right to your Facebook News Feed. It’s the only way to stay on top of all of our articles with the newest blockbusters and all the upcoming films, festivals and film related events in Toronto.

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