Friday, October 19, 2007

Freaky Friday (1976)

This is the kind of film that only children can enjoy, literally. The last time I watched this film I was around 8 years old, so I thought it was the wittiest things I'd ever seen. Watching it now, it's pretty drab. For anyone not familiar with this film's premise, a mother and daughter who are fed up with each other simultaneously declare they would rather be the other person, and then at the blink of an eye, the daughter is in the mother's body, and the mother is in the daughter's body.
This film, all of that aside, was very casted. Jodie Foster plays a very convincing mother, for someone in their early teens, and Barbara Harris is hilarious as the mom turned young teen. Harris is definitely more entertaining to watch because she pulls off slapstick comedy like no other. Watching her try to put on fake eyelashes is so funny, you really believe she has no idea how to be an adult. Of course supporting roles too are great. John Astin, legendary Gomez Addams from the original Addams Family pulls is weight.
Overall this movie is only worth watching if you remember seeing this as a child, and you feel nostalgic, besides that it's just like eating a cream-filled donut, only feels like a sweet idea before you start eating it.

The Lives of Others (2006)

This was a very good film. It takes place in 1984 East Germany and illustrates how it's citizens how no privacy from State Security. The story is of one of the spy's who lives a lonely life, one day has a change of heart and does not record the rebellious activities of the artist he is spying on. The spy starts to agree with the artist's political convictions, and even goes so far as to help the artist's girlfriend return to him.
There are very strong voyeuristic elements in this film, which makes it very interesting to watch. You can't help but feel empathy toward the lonely spy because he everyone wants to feel as if their presence in other people's lives are making a positive impact. The lonely spy is in the position where he can allow something to happen that can change a nation, and he doesn't hesitate for a moment.
I was very moved by this film and recommend it to everyone to see because it's such a truthful tale of human actions. This film won best foreign-language film at the Oscar's this past year, which it very much deserved.

Saturday, October 13, 2007

The River (1951)

I found this film to be very unique. It takes place in India and describes Indian philosophy and way of life through a British family that lives on an estate. The story is of two sisters, one in her twenties, and the other in her teens who fight over a young man who is a family friend and comes to stay awhile on the estate. It gets pretty "Mean Girls" between them because the young man is friendly toward both girls, so neither of them back away. The film ends just as a tragedy is ending, so it kind of a toss between a sad and happy ending.
What I liked about this film is the philosophy about life and families that is intertwined in the plot. I had an interest to see this film because Wes Anderson said that The River is the film that most inspired his new film The Darjeeling Limited (2007), and me being a big Wes Anderson fan (and giant film geek), I had to watch this soon.
This film was also the first colour film Jean Renoir made. Renoir being a very reputable French director really wanted to make a different film that his current oeuvre. I think this film, while having a very different stage than his other films, is very similar in theme to his other films.
Overall this film is pretty good, but not amazing. I think one would enjoy this film if they're looking for a film that takes them to a part of the world they've never been to (unless they've been to India). It's something to watch when you want to kick back, relax, and reflect on life.

Monday, October 08, 2007

Shortbus (2006)

This movie was pretty magical, I really enjoyed it. Shortbus is about sex and trust in relationships. A number of different story lines, dealing with similar, but unique relationships. The relationships are weaved together giving the film a bigger picture on how people act with their mates. I felt this film was very honest in it's portrayal. John Cameron Mitchell is amazing as the writer and director of this film. Anyone who has seen Hedwig and the Angry Inch (2001) would definitely enjoy this film. To capture NYC as a whole, Mitchell uses an amazing art piece of the city as a stand-in and then zigzags over it's skyline to segue between different scenes. The performances were also very good. I thought it was cool seeing Sook-Yin Lee, former MuchMusic VJ acting it up.
Overall the film had a mid tempo tone to it. I felt neither depressed, or delighted after the film, but rather balanced about it's outlook on relationships. Mitchell showed both sides of the coin, so that you know that relationships are an imperfect thing.

Sunday, October 07, 2007

Enron: The Smartest Guys in the Room (2005)

This movie was pretty decent. It was your typical corporate scandal documentary, not that I'm an expert on this genre, but I've seen my share of "greedy-corporate-bastard" vs. "Poor-defenseless-public". The movie is all about exposing how Enron mislead the world about their accounts. I thought it was pretty interesting the different ways that Enron got away with all so much fraud, before a righteous whistle blower came out.
The format of the film is pretty standard for this genre. Opening of "wow, we can't believe they got away with all that", to some impressive investigative reporting on their business methods, to "gee, they all new the illusion wouldn't last forever". I watched this film for the content more than anything. Enron was a huge story a few years ago, but this doc is definitely still topical in today's criticism of corporate worlds. What I find interesting is the portrayal of the executives as human beings, as opposed to seeing them as soulless talking heads. They all knew they were cheating so many people out of their life's savings, but for some reason they just wouldn't come clean. I don't think it's something everyone has the capacity of doing, but it's wild when those who do, take it so far.
I think this movie is worth watching if you're looking for a doc on a corporate expose. The film is definitely content over style, so kind of educational.

Monday, October 01, 2007

Away From Her (2006)

Wow! This film was nothing short of amazing and fantastic. I came into watching this film thinking it'll be too much on the art-house/pretentious side for me to enjoy it, but boy was I wrong. This film was incredible for it's script, direction, and acting; all forces seemed to be just right.
Before I just continue singing words of praise for this film let me mention it's premise. A couple in their golden years are dealing with the wife having Alzheimer's. She decides it's best for the both of them if she stays in an institution where they treat people with the same disease.
The movie is about to continuing tension that goes on between the couple as the disease deteriorates her memory. I don't want to ruin anything else because it's such a tragic story. It's the kind of film you feel sad watching but also inspired in the way that you don't want to waste your life with trivial pursuits.