Showing posts with label Marielle Heller. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Marielle Heller. Show all posts

Tuesday, August 20, 2024

Everything You Ever Need To Know About Life...

 ... you can learn from:

The Master (2012)

Peggy: And this is where we are at. At the lowest level. To have to explain ourselves, for what? For what we do, we have to grovel? The only way to defend ourselves is to attack. If we don't do that we will lose every battle that we are engaged in. We will *never* dominate our environment the way we should unless we attack! And the city, city's just noise. I know the city. I know its rotten secrets, its filthy lies and secrets. They... invited us here and welcomed us. Only to throw us down. And kick us out. It's a grim joke.

A happy 50 to the great Amy Adams today! I very much hope that Nightbitch, her upcoming movie with the magnificent Marielle Heller, is Marielle Heller's fourth straight masterpiece. And if it gets Amy her long overdue Oscar that'd be even sweller, although I feel as if the whole "female werewolf movie called Nightbitch" thing might limit its Oscar chances. But crazier things have happened! And we'll know how it's being received in just a couple weeks since it's premiering at TIFF on September 7th. (And then it hits theaters on December 6th.) Tell me in the comments -- What's your favorite Amy Adams performance? (Just don't say Hillbilly Elegy. We're pretending that doesn't exist.)



Monday, August 08, 2022

5 Off My Head: Siri Says 2019


We are indeed still filling in the final few gaps in my "Siri Says" series -- this is where I ask my phone to give me a number between 1 and 100 and then I take that number and I pick my five favorite movies from the year that corresponds. Thing is we left the "Siri" part in the dust awhile back when the remaining numbers got down below fifteen, because waiting for Siri to say a number that hadn't been used before took ages. So now I have the remaining years written on slips of paper and I choose one at random, and yet I still use Siri in the title? Sue me for fraud if you must! Anyway today I chose the number "19" and since there's no chance in all of the depths of hell that I'd have anything to say about the movies of 1919 -- my apologies to Yankee Doodle in Berlin! -- I will be regaling us with my five favorite films from three years ago. (Here is a list of 2019 movies if you need a refresher -- a lot has happened since then!)

And yes I have already posted by five favorite movies of 2019 on the site -- indeed I listed my Top 25 that year! So this will only be interesting if anything has changed, and (drumroll please) I am sorry to tell you the list of movies in my top five has not changed. But wait! The movies themselves have maybe not changed, but (drumroll please) the order of them has a little! Chaos! Sanctus! Dominus! Sanctus! Dominus! Dogs sleeping with cats et cetera! Okay maybe not but whatcha gonna do, we got a space to fill. And I do think it's a little interesting to see what's shifted in three years time's estimation. No? Well without further dreadful ado I give you...

My 5 Favorite Movies of 2019

(dir. Marielle Heller)
-- released on November 22nd 2019 --

(dir. Ari Aster)
-- released on July 3rd 2019 --

(dir. Joe Talbot)
-- released on June 7th 2019 --

(dir. Céline Sciamma)
-- released on December 6th 2019 --

(dir. Robert Eggers)
-- released on November 1st 2019 --

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Runners-up: In Fabric (dir. Peter Strickland), Sorry Angel (dir. Christophe Honoré), Little Women (dir. Greta Gerwig), Knife+Heart (dir. Yan Gonzalez), End of the Century (dir. Lucio Castro), Peterloo (dir. Mike Leigh)...

... The Nightingale (dir. Jennifer Kent), Pain and Glory (dir. Pedro Almodóvar), Invisible Life (dir. Karim Ainouz), Transit (dir. Christian Petzold), Us (dir. Jordan Peele), Once Upon a Time in Hollywood (dir. Quentin Tarantino)

What are your favorite movies of 2019?


Monday, March 07, 2022

Everything You Ever Need To Know About Life...

... you can learn from:

The Diary of a Teenage Girl (2015)

Minnie: So maybe nobody loves me. 
Maybe nobody will ever love me. But maybe 
it's not about being loved by somebody else.

Happy 30th birthday to the actress Bel Powley today! So tremendously good right outta the gate with this performance here (okay she'd been in several things before this one but this is "The Moment I Fell For" energy if every there was) -- here's my old review of this fairly perfect movie if you'd like to read it. I don't watch The Morning Show so I didn't realize she was on that -- how is she? Anybody watch that and know? I hope she's thriving. And I'm excited to see she's in at least one episode of Cary Fukunaga's upcoming series Masters of the Air, which I told you about previously here. (Also can you believe I have restrained myself and not brought up Alexander Skarsgard and his perv-stache once? Oh damn nevermind.)



Friday, March 06, 2020

Pantys '19: Fave Films, Part Two

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Well, we've done it! Our 2019 Pantys are coming to a close today with this, our favorite 10 movies of last year. I'll do a round-up post later today to help you find links to everything that's come before, but before we get to this specific list let me first summarize what I posted on Monday, my numbers 25-11 favorite films...

25. Parasite
24. The Mustang
23. Transit
22. Us
21. The Irishman
20. Piercing
19. To Dust

18. Atlantics
17. This Is Not Berlin
16. The Nightingale
15. Invisible Life
14. Peterloo
13. Waves
12. High Life
11. Pain and Glory

And now, what we've all -- and by "we all" I mean "me" because thank god I am finally done with this and can move on to the year that is 2020 properly -- been waiting for, it's time for the other 10. One more quick note first, though -- when I gave you My Favorite Horror Films of 2019 earlier this week the Top 4 of that list was missing, because I didn't want to spoil this list. So you'll see a note alongside the four Horror Films on this list where they fall on that other list, as well. That said, here we go...

My 10 Favorite Movies of 2019

(dir. Greta Gerwig)

Indelible moment: Beth by the sea

(dir. Yann Gonzalez)
(this is my #4 horror film of 2019)
-- read my review here --

Indelible moment: Cruising Part II

(dir. Lucio Castro)
-- read my review here --

Indelible moment: We met before
.
(dir. Christophe Honoré)
-- read my review here --

Indelible moment: Three in the bed

(dir. Peter Strickland)
(this is my #3 horror film of 2019)
-- read my review here --

Indelible moment: Sale at Dentley and Soper's

(dir. Joe Talbot)
-- read my review here --

Indelible moment: First and last performance

(dir. Céline Sciamma)
-- read my review here --

Indelible moment: Singing by the sea

(dir. Marielle Heller)
-- read my review here --

Indelible moment: Bedside Photograph

(dir. Ari Aster)
(this is my #2 horror film of 2019)
-- read my review here --

Indelible moment: A pair of jumpers

(dir. Robert Eggers)
(this is my #1 horror film of 2019)
-- read my review here --

Indelible moment: Fonda Me Lobster

-------------------------------------------

No doubt there's no surprise on that last one, ye barnacles and deck-swabbers alike, given how I've been calling The Lighthouse my favorite film of the year since I first saw the movie in October -- the marrow-deep love was immediate and complete. But that's given me a lot of time to wonder why this movie about two wacky dudes trapped on one wacky island, out of all the movies of 2019 that speak to our political and cultural moment, was The One for me, above all of the others. 

Well as I argued in my review I personally choose to read and enjoy the film as a a gay male love story -- a fucked-up love story obviously, but love, my loves, is fucked up. In its wackadoodle symbolic way The Lighthouse is, for me, just as specific about what it means for two men, with all that turbulent masculine baggage attached, to make a home together, as is Paul Thomas Anderson's Phantom Thread about the same subject just for the straights. I mean I love Phantom Thread and saw all of that in Phantom Thread too, but with The Lighthouse it gets to be all dudes playing out the push pull power dynamics of a long-term commitment. I like that.

But then, like my favorite movie of the entire last decade -- I never officially made that list but do you really think that'd be anything except Call Me By Your Name? -- The Lighthouse is also just a movie that swallows me whole and carries me away from this world, and I like want and need that too. The look, the sound, the dialogue, the sweat and the fervent masturbation -- when I watch these movies there is nothing in the world but these movies. Cinema isn't just an escape, but what a goddamned escape it can be.


Wednesday, November 27, 2019

Hold Your Loved Ones Close This Holiday

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This is a very short week! I didn't get everything done this very short week that I wanted to, including writing a proper review of Knives Out, which is out in theaters today and which I can't seem to summon more to say about than just "It's a ton of fun, you should see it!" I mean that. I do, and you should. It's just 1) a movie it's hard to write about because it's an endless series of twists that even just talking about the twists existing feels spoilery, and 2) it's fluff I will eventually watch ten times but doesn't really inspire a lot in the terms of words out of me.
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It's a terrific Movie Movie, full of movie stars having fun and clever misdirections and fun sets and costumes, but I don't really know what to say about it beyond that. I mean that, by the way, is plenty. All of those things add up to plenty! But I can't say I feel particularly passionate about Knives Out -- the thing that's most noticeable about it I guess is that it feels so Old Fashioned now, an original story coming from a big studio on a holiday weekend that's full of fresh characters and good actors, so that should be the thing that gets your ass to the theater for it. You won't be disappointed. 

Spectacularly moved? Probably not. For that you should still check out Marielle Heller's Beautiful Day in the Neighborhood if you haven't already, which didn't do great at the box office when it was released over this past weekend but will presumably still be in a ton of theaters this week for the holiday. I reviewed that right here and yes that is the sort of movie that will get me rambling endlessly. One of the year's absolute best.

Your other best options are Martin Scorsese's The Irishman, which just hit Netflix (read my NYFF review at The Film Experience) and I'll also recommend, if you're in New York, the Guatemalan flick Temblores, which is about a closeted gay man whose ultra-religious family refuses to let him find happiness. It's opening at the Quad (and PS its gorgeous lead actor Juan Pablo Olyslager will be there for Q&As) and the film's a rough sit emotionally but worth checking out for what feels like an honest view of the uphill battle we still face in many places. (Including here in the US for too many!) It's some perfect anti-Thanksgiving programming -- family can truly suck.

The other two films out this weekend, The Two Popes (reviewed here) and Queen & Slim (reviewed here), I wasn't nuts about them to put it mildly, but other people seem to be so who knows where you'll fall. If you see any of these, or anything else worth telling me about, let me know your thoughts in the comments! And have a Happy Thanksgiving, go get good and stuffed...
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Friday, November 22, 2019

Beautiful Groff in the Dark Frozen Neighborhood

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It's Friday and that means there are new movies out, and for a nice change of pace it looks like not only have I seen the three biggest titles coming out but I have actually reviewed all three! Sometimes one of those things happens, but usually it's neither, and here we are with the suns and the stars all aligning -- you know what this means right? We're all gonna die. On that note here are links to said reviews so I can fulfill the prophecy and we can all be free of this damned mortal bullshit.

Click here for my thoughts on Marielle Heller's A Beautiful Day in the Neighborhood, starring Matthew Rhys and Tom Hanks, aka the only one of these three I very much recommend.

Click here for my thoughts on Disney's Frozen sequel.

And click here for my thoughts on Todd Haynes' 
Dark Waters starring birthday boy Mark Ruffalo.

Have a beautiful weekend, everyone...
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The Land of Make Me Believe in Something

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"I'm broken." 

Lloyd Vogel (Matthew Rhys) speaks those words to Fred Rogers (Tom Hanks), better known by his honorific, in one of their earliest conversations -- conversations that initialize as Lloyd interviewing Fred for a magazine piece but which quickly tumble into the latter plumbing the depths of the former's soul with no muss. Mr. Rogers looks at him, really looks at him, and it's like all the noise in all of the world fades away -- all there is is one person listening, really listening and caring about what he will hear, to another. The world's profoundest gift, that.

Fred was full of them, gifts I mean, but that was the biggie, and director Marielle Heller knows it and shows it, a storytelling sleight of hand that situates us in that seat across from that astonishing man, magically waving away everything else -- you really will feel like you're sitting there being listened to, being appreciated and loved, and man it's a kick in the pants in this world of ours to feel that coming at you. What a goddamned gift, this movie is.

Lloyd says, "I'm broken," and Mr. Rogers tells him he is not broken. He says that Lloyd is just a person who feels, who knows, what is right and what is wrong. The feelings of aggrievance just get the better of us -- the world is supposed to work one way, yet it rarely if ever does. Finding ways to manage that, to accept the flaws and imperfections, even the ones that have left dark marks on us, takes effort and practice and banging on the piano keys. It takes silence, and pause, and patience.

A Beautiful Day in the Neighborhood slows its world to a crawl, and closes itself up into itself -- there could be twenty people in the cardboard world for Heller's purposes here and you, me and you, are among them. It's an airtight little fable of fingers linked in a gesture of friendship, one to one to one and on and on and on forever. Start small, with whomever is standing in front of you, and work from there. Revolutions, ones that matter in the long run, can really start with small gestures, interpersonal kindnesses -- just a full sixty seconds of silence in a busy restaurant gifting you with good thoughts.

I'm broken. That's, you know, me talking now. My mantra and prayer and my excuse for a static emotional landscape -- I repeat that to myself whenever things start hurting, allow it provenance over any actual self-examination. I'm a million jagged pieces and I don't know how to put anything anywhere. I would watch the movie about a man trying to forgive his ailing father while my own estranged father lays in a hospital bed somewhere, somewhere I can't bring myself to be. I don't know what to do with that, but it's there, like a howling wind in my head every single day. We are made of the good and the bad, built up on everything incongruous piece after piece after piece.

How do we forgive? When do we forgive? What is forgiveness? Is it for us, for them -- is there even a difference? And is there any set of questions any more human than these? Every relationship asks this of us, and as we grow older it only weaves and knots itself more thoroughly through every piece of our being and lives. Sometimes it seems as if every moment is itself forgiveness -- a breath, a pause, a step forward asking, begging, for the right to just keep going that way without the cacophony and weight of everything on our back ripping us down through the floorboards, into the dust and dirt.

Lloyd's wife reads the article he hands her and she tells him what he's come up with isn't even about Mr. Rogers, except it is -- I know her feeling. If you can find a way to disassociate this man and what he stands for from what you feel when you close your eyes and think upon your life bully for ya, but I can't. I was no doubt watching Mister Rogers Neighborhood on those afternoons when my father wasn't coming to pick me up for our bi-weekly visitations -- when the scars I scratch my fingers on today were first singed upon me. This movie, immediately and with great warmth, feels like it's a piece of my life -- a salve on those wounds, yes. But more. A way past.


Monday, July 22, 2019

It's a Beautiful Day...

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No, you're the one crying at the trailer for the Mr. Rogers movie! Okay okay fine it's me, it's me, I'm crying at the Mr. Rogers movie trailer. But maybe you will prove yourself not at all the heartless cretin I think of you as, and you will be crying too after watching it below. A Beautiful Day in the Neighborhood is the new flick from Marielle Heller, two astonishing films (Diary of a Teenage Girl and Can You Ever Forgive Me?) at her back, and of course stars Tom Hanks (who else) as Fred Rogers American Hero, and also Matthew Rhys as a journalist who's covering the man who made the land of make-believe so very real.

Actually really as we were clued in by Heller herself at a talk at this past spring's Tribeca Film Festival the movie is much more about Rhys' character, which is probably smart -- you need a protagonist with an arc, some foundering, and Mr. Rogers, for all his wonder, was wondrous because of his steadfast lifelong decency. That's good for mankind but not so good for storytelling. Anyway this movie ranked as one of my most anticipated for the rest of the year, and here's that trailer...
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ABDITN is out at Thanksgiving time, just in time to finally 
get Marielle Heller her goddamned overdue Oscar nomination.
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Monday, May 13, 2019

Great Moments In Movie Staches

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I was blessed to see Can You Ever Forgive Me and The Diary of a Teenage Girl director Marielle Heller speak about her so far killer career at the Tribeca Film Festival last weekend -- for a great report from the talk see what our pal Murtada wrote at TFE, or to see a bit of video I took see below -- and as soon as I got home I re-watched Diary for the third or fourth time, because hot damn it's a perfect film. Bel Powley is obviously magnificent but I really do wish Alexander Skarsgard had gotten more attention for just how sharp his work is.

Re-watching the movie in a post-Big Little Lies world is also interesting -- would Alex have gotten BLL without "Monroe" and would he have gotten all of the awards he did get for the latter role if "Monroe" hadn't primed us for his ace hold on playing morally horrific yet undeniably charismatic creeps? It's daring work he does, both sexy and pathetic all at once -- when has a perv-stache last felt this earned?
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Friday, February 22, 2019

My Favorite Movies of 2018: The Top 10

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See 10 runners-up here, and
see our #20-11 films here.

I wish I could lay out some sort of thematic through-line for what moved me in 2018, but per usual it's as schizophrenic as my insides -- our loves veer from Singing Nannys in the sky to Dancing Witches slinging meat hooks, and everything in between. As it should be, I suppose -- the cinema's the place for every mood, every inclination. It's like Mary Poppins' bottomless carpet bag -- reach in and put out a French drama about divorce, an American drama... about divorce... a British Jewish Drama... about divorce... okay, okay, whatever. You get the point. My life was scarred by divorce and I am a product of a broken home and these are my ten favorite cinematic achievements of 2018 -- god! Leave me alone, already.

10. Custody
(dir. Xavier Legrand)
-- read my review here --

Indelible Moment: In the bathtub

(dir. Paul Dano)
-- read my review here --

Indelible Moment: Showing the boy the fire
(dir. Andrew Bujalski)
-- read my review here --

Indelible Moment: On the roof

(dir. Jeremiah Zagar)
-- read my review here --

Indelible Moment: Kissing a boy

(dir. Marielle Heller)
-- read my review here --

Indelible Moment: Lee goes on a date

(dir. Sebastián Lelio)
-- read my review here --

Indelible Moment: Spit take

(dir. Yorgos Lanthimos)
-- read my review here --

Indelible Moment: Through the door

(dir. Ari Aster)
-- read my review here --

Indelible Moment: Dinner conversation

(dir. Luca Guadagnino)
-- read my review here --

Indelible Moment:
When the dancer becomes the dance

1. ROMA
(dir. Alfonso Cuarón)
-- read my review here --

Indelible Moment: Breaking the waves
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