Posts tagged: American Teen

Dec 22 2008

DVD of the Week – ‘Burn After Reading’ – December 23, 2008

There’s no new column at MSN this week but there are new DVDs, which I have anticipated and included in the two-week column currently up on MSN Entertainment. There’s also something a little different about the Christmas Week releases, which are almost exclusively limited to 2008 features: most of them were actually released on December 21, a Sunday, presumably to give businesses a few extra days to sell and/or rent the discs before Christmas.

The brain trust of "Burn After Reading"

The brain trust of "Burn After Reading"

The highlight of the limited release week is the Coen Bros. Burn After Reading, one of their more playful projects, much lighter and significantly slighter than their previous film, the dark, Oscar-winning thriller No Country For Old Men, but put together with such perfection that you can’t help but be won over. Who else but the Coens could get away with a comedy where a major character is violently, messily killed.

George Clooney is the ostensible lead as a charmingly glib and very married Federal Marshal whose job never seems to interfere with his numerous affairs, but France McDormand drives the ensemble comedy as a desperately single woman determined to get a plastic surgery makeover at any cost. Her motives aren’t exactly pure of heart – she just wants money for some cosmetic surgery that she can’t understand why her HMO won’t cover – and her obsessive drive to get money at any costs leaves a lot of collateral damage. Her plan revolves around a computer disc of what she believes are state secrets (they are actually the romanticized memoirs of a deluded low level CIA agent, played to perfection by John Malkovich with a blank expression meant to look incredulous but actually makes him look like a doofus) and her efforts to sell them to the highest bidder. The characters all think they’re involved in an espionage caper and the Coens direct it with a straight face, not playing punchlines as much as letting the absurdity arise from the disconnect between the sober stylistics and the utterly ridiculousness of their shenanigans.

After the darkness of “No Country For Old Men,” the Coen Brothers eased up with this deadpan espionage farce played out by small fish convinced that they are in deep waters…. It may be a lark but it is pitch perfect and the performances are priceless, from John Malkovich as a doofus CIA vet with delusions of adequacy to Brad Pitt as a cheerfully idiotic personal trainer.

The DVD is reviewed here. I also reviewed the film for the Seattle P-I here.

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Jun 06 2008

SIFF Dispatch 3 – ‘Ain’t Scared’

More reviews from the Seattle International Film Festival now on GreenCine Daily.

Regardez moi From my decidedly distant perspective, Ain’t Scared, the debut feature from French director Audrey Estrougo has echoes of Abdellatif Kechiche’s L’Esquive (aka Games of Love and Chance) in its portrait of the Paris projects, or in French lingo, les cities, but has its own sensibility and its own vivid surprises. There is little sense of racial divide or tension as we watch the young men of these ghettoized suburbs filled with minorities, the poor and unemployed, a cultural mix of French-born citizens of African, Arab, white, Jewish, and Asian ancestry, talk and play and flick shit at another (race does come up in the insults, but it is equal opportunity and decidedly non-aggressive).

But halfway through the film, which surveys a day in the life of the neighborhood as their local hero, Jo, prepares to leave to play football for Arsenal in England, the whole thing begins again, this time from the perspective of two of the young women: Julie, the white girl, and Fatima, the angry black girl who moons over Jo. Suddenly race is front and center. “Whites and Blacks shouldn’t mix,” the black girls (which, by their definition, encompasses both African and Arab) state to the camera in a scene as confrontational as anything in Do the Right Thing.

I also review Nanette Burstein’s documentary American Teen and the world premieres of the documentary Creative Nature, the feature Garden Party and Julia Sweeney’s Letting Go of God, a concert/performance film of her one-woman show directed by the artist herself:

To be honest, the cinema is at its best when it’s invisible and we can get lost in her amazing, funny, serious and moving monologue about growing up Catholic and accepting the faith without really exploring it until a bout of adult Bible study and spiritual quest through the religions of the world has her questioning what she believes and why. For all the humor (and it’s very, very funny), it’s all about answering a simple question: “God, who are you?” – and feeling comfortable and secure in what she discovers.

Read the complete reviews here.

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