Wednesday 25 August 2021

 August 26th

More from Indian Film Festival - FREE online until this Monday 30th August
Just Mercy - streaming on Netflix
Echo in the Canyon - streaming on Netflix
The Chosen - streaming free on its own channel

It's all so confusing knowing what is showing where, but I persevere bringing you reviews of what I've seen, and if these films are not currently showing in your state just put them on the list to catch up with when (if?!) lockdown ever ends. Meanwhile for those in lockdown states, I recommend you yet again to make the most of the last days of the free online Indian Film Festival. Plus, I've rerun some reviews of films I've seen on the big screen which have now fortuitously turned up on Netflix. But wait . . . there's more . . a final FREE surprise recommendation. (Apologies for some gremlins in the formatting!)

Indian Film Festival
Continuing online until August 30th 
I've been bingeing on this wonderful free festival and probably won't get through all I'd like to see before it ends. Plus some I watched, hoping to review, have ended the season - sniff! I urge you to check out the program and make the most of the last four days. Others I hope to catch between now and Sunday are: Bridge; Dhumma; Faree; The Great Indian Kitchen; Resurgence and Once upon a Village. Can I do it? Probably not! As I always say - so many films, so little time! And for bored kids note there are also plenty of animations to snap up. 

Bread and Belonging: Thanks to my dear lifelong friend Elly who (pre-Covid), spent several months of each year in Goa, for her recommendation to watch this gentle and nostalgic documentary. The Portugese, who settled Goa, left a legacy of bread baking which is carried on to this day, with family bakeries working in the wee hours to then send delivery boys out on bikes to deliver the delicious breads. But like so many traditional crafts, it is under threat. This doco gives us a rare glimpse into daily life and work in one of India's iconic cities. 
 
Home Address (Ghar Ka Pata): More melancholy and nostalgia in this doco made by the daughter of a Hindu family who were forced to flee their home in Kashmir when conflict broke out between Muslims and Hindus in 1990. The director examines how her family's lives have been typical of so many diaspora groups, making excellent use of old photographs, and verbal reminiscences from extended family. She was a tiny tot when it all happened and is hell-bent on revisiting Kashmir to find her old family home. When finally she and her sister head back and meet Muslims who remember her family, things border on tear-inducing. This film presents a view of identity and belonging that can be more broadly related to by many people who have been forced to leave their homelands. 

Echo in the Canyon
Dir: Andrew Slater
Length: 82 mins
Streaming on Netflix

© Echo in the Canyon - LLC - Universal -
Jakob Dylan chats with Dave Crosby
This is a real nostalgia trip for boomers who reveled in the music of the mid 60s, specifically that music associated with Laurel Canyon in Los Angeles. Jakob Dylan, (Bob's son) takes us on a journey through present and past, featuring legendary artists such as The Byrds, The Buffalo Springfields, Crosby, Stills Nash & Young, The Beach Boys, The Mamas and Papas and more. There is a blend of wonderful clips of the original artists and their songs, plus the rehearsals for, and the final concert, which pays tribute to that seminal music era and features the likes of Jakob Dylan, Norah Jones, Beck and other current artists discovering the past. Such musicians as Dave Crosby, Jackson Browne, Michelle Phillips and Ringo Starr put in their two bob's worth with vibrant anecdotes and reminiscences, and there is much about how The Beach Boys and The Beatles influenced each other. Some critics are peeved about what has been left out, but the songs that are in here all stand the test of time, and are still inspiring to current songwriters. This music defined an era of freedom and hope where people felt they could do anything. I danced my way through much of the film - riveted, and with a fervent desire to return to the era.
4.5 - wholeheartedly recommended

Just Mercy
Dir: Destin Daniel Creton
Length: 136 mins
Streaming on Netflix

©  Roadshow - tense and riveting fight for
justice - and it's all true.
Here's another movie based upon a true story, and a really important one it is. Newly graduated Harvard lawyer Bryan Stevenson (Michael B Jordan) travels south to Alabama in the late '80s to set up a legal advocacy to fight for prisoners wrongly convicted, or tried without access to proper legal representation. His first case is that of "Johnny D" McMillan (Jamie Foxx), accused of murdering an 18-year-old white girl, despite there being no concrete evidence, other than a bogus testimony from convicted criminal Ralph Myers (Tim Blake Nelson). Although no ground-breaking film-making happens, the story is told with such sincerity, solid acting, and an emotional wallop, that it has won me over totally. Jordan can at times be a little one-note, but his character comes across as tenacious and dedicated to justice, while supporting performances from Brie Larsen as Eva Ansley his assistant, and Blake Nelson as the repulsive Meyers are first-class. Foxx is totally convincing as Macmillan, and has already several awards. Scenes featuring Johnny D's cellmates, all on death row, are heart-breaking, and the case for no death penalty is eloquently presented. Images of irrational white bigotry against blacks, especially as dealt out by law enforcers, will induce seething anger. This is a powerful story that should be seen, to remind one of the evil of prejudice, and how fearless are those who put their lives on the line to fight it.
4 - highly recommended! 

The Chosen
Director: Dallas Jenkins
2 series - 8 episodes each - varying between 40 mins - 1 hour - FREE
https://watch.angelstudios.com/thechosen
©  Angel Studios - inspiring, rivetting -
simply a wonderful story!
Those familiar with my non-religious nature may think I've finally gone stark raving mad recommending a series on the life of Jesus Christ. But this incredible show has so captured me, I've zoomed through it in a short time, and cannot recommend it highly enough. The vision of Jewish life back in the days of Jesus' work as a travelling rabbi is masterfully recreated. The series boasts stunning sets, great detail on the political rivalry of the day, between various Jewish sects and with the Roman occupiers, and paints an extraordinary picture of daily Jewish life - pretty ordinary for the commoners, but luxurious for the upper echelon of the synagogue, like the Pharisees (a bunch of power-mongerers extraordinaire!) Every character is meticulously drawn and Jonathan Roumie is perfectly cast as the main man, creating a type of Jesus I haven't often seen on the screen. The style of story-telling captures so much humanity, compassion and "normality" to which we can all relate, and is seriously moving in many parts. The bad news is that Series 2 is all they've got so far, hoping to complete the epic tale with another 5 series, still awaiting funding.
5 - unmissable!  

Wednesday 18 August 2021

 August 19th

MORE MIFF  - including Shorts for free
Indian Film Festival - FREE online
Miss - in selected non-lockdowned location

Who says you don't get anything FREE? We need some cheering up and free films from the Indian Film Festival plus free short films at MIFF could be just the ticket. Plus for those not in lockdown, a terrific new release is there on the actual big screen. 


Melbourne International Film Festival
Until 22 August ONLINE

You still have a chance to catch some of the fabulous films available online at MIFF. Below are four feature films I wholeheartedly recommend.
Short films - Plus the most amazing selection of short films is already available , or coming in the next few days - and they are free. Short film, so often the harbinger of major directorial talent, is something to be savoured, and you don't often get the opportunity to view them, so settle in for some binge viewing. Watch out particularly for The Ninth Tower! 

Smooth Talk
A remastering of the fabulous 1985 film 
Dir: Joyce Chopra
Length: 92 mins
Trailer: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-I0g2YyLJ3E
© MIFF - this totally stands the test of time!
Connie is a 15-year-old teen, hanging out with her friends, trying to look older than she actually is 
and curious about boys and sex. She exudes sexuality, flirts shamelessly, and fights endlessly with her mother. When an older man lures her out for a drive, she grows up in a hurry. Although this film is 36 years old, it totally stands the test of time, and we can see how Laura Dern, then 18, is already a magnificent actress, capturing to a tee the nuances of a teen caught between childhood and womanhood. The film is a knock-out, with the first half encapsulating the silliness and quasi-innocence of a giggling Connie and her friends, and the second half becoming so creepy as to resonate with all today's nightmare stories of older men grooming young girls. This is seriously rewarding viewing. 

Little Tornadoes
Dir: Aaron Wilson
Length: 90 mins
Trailer: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=asqut30qZFA
© MIFF - wonderful Aussie drama
A rural town in Australia in 1971: Leo (Mark Leonard Winter) has been abandoned by his wife and left to juggle his factory work with caring for his two small children. Tony, 
(Fabio Motta) his co-worker, recently arrived from Italy, suggests his sister Maria (Silvia Colloca) could be employed as a home help with cooking and childcare. Meantime Leo tries desperately to connect with his dad (Robert Menzies), a war veteran suffering PTSD and unable to connect with the world. Shot in Tocumwal, the film perfectly captures the era visually. It also nails the Zeitgeist - a time where men found it hard to speak of their feelings and where anyone not Aussie was given a hard time. There is so much pain and loss in this film, moments of joy too, and all is handled in a beautifully understated manner. Author Christos Tsiolkas (one of my faves) is the co-writer and his experience of coming from a migrant background informs the authenticity of the script. The voice-over is captivating, as Maria speaks both English and Italian to narrate her poetic impressions of her new homeland. A beautiful story, exceptionally well told.    

The Macaluso Sisters
Dir: Emma Dante
Length: 89 mins
Trailer: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-I0g2YyLJ3E
© MIFF - a searing tale of tragedy
Five orphaned sisters bringing themselves up and running their parents' business of renting out doves for festive occasions may seem a recipe for idyllic carefree lives. That is, until a tragedy strikes on a hot summer's day at a beach in Palermo, Sicily. The film moves from the girls' youthful years to points later in their lives, when it becomes clear that what happened has irreparably and tragically destroyed their ability to live happy adult lives. This is interpersonal drama at its best, with evocative and painfully sad images and music, and top notch performances from all the actresses playing the girls and women at the various life stages.  

Riders of Justice
Dir: Anders Thomas Jensen
Length: 116  mins
Trailer: hhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j9Okx5teGBQ
© MIFF - on the vengeance trail
Soldier Markus (Mads Mikkelsen) returns home to be with his daughter Mathilde after his wife is killed in a train crash. Two oddball company statisticians Otto and Lennart believe that the crash was no accident and approach Markus, claiming an outlaw bike gang engineered it to silence a witness. Together with corpulent colleague Emmenthaler, the quirky quartet decide to go on the revenge trail. Throw in Mathilde's delicate boyfriend Sirius, and a rescued trafficked Russian sex slave, and you have a recipe for mayhem and madness, a little Coen-Brothers-esque in nature - crazy, clever, funny, violent black comedy with never a dull moment. Mads continues to show what a fine actor he is, and his deadly serious Markus is a great foil for the eccentricities of the others. The only voice of sanity in the whole debacle is (of course) a woman - Mathilde. If you can hack the violence, it's wonderfully screwball entertainment, not without its moving moments. 

Indian Film Festival - FREE online
Online Until August 30th - in-cinemas times to be confirmed
Like so many festivals under the current circumstances, the in-cinema presence of this one is on hold, but it's now online with, as always, a terrific offering of films. Visit the website to find out what and when. 
The festival is paying tribute to India's greatest film maker Satyajit Ray with no fewer than 11 of his films to be enjoyed. There are films from all regions of India, and an emphasis upon women film-makers. Animation, kids' films, feature films, docos, short film - it's all here and free, with more to come when the festival heads to cinemas at a date to be confirmed.  
Biriyaani: Flavours of Flesh
: This daring and in-your-face film is not what you expect from Indian movies. Set in Kerala in the Muslim south, it is the story of Kadeeja, a married woman who is kicked out by her husband and roams around with her mentally troubled mother. Life goes from bad to worse - most of the men she meets are brutes with the exception of a kindly muezzin at the mosque where she is sleeping rough. Just as things are vaguely looking up, she commits an act of revenge that will stay in the viewers' minds a long time. This is (again) a salutary look at the mistreatment of women in India. Warning: there is plenty to shock here, but it's an excellent, thought-provoking film.  

Miss
Dir: Rubin Alves
Length: 107 mins
Showing where lockdown isn't!! - Adelaide, Hobart, Castlemaine - put it on your to see list
Trailer: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jsCxhRi2Ka0 
© Limelight - great insight
into the gender spectrum
Androgynous French model Alexandre Wetter plays Alex, a little boy who want to be Miss France when he grows up. This moving, humorous and delightful film traces Alex's adult journey, as he attempts to transcend society's view of gender definitions. All the characters in Alex's adult life are warmly and empathetically portrayed, especially Lola the trans/drag queen. Underneath the richly human tale and the many moments of humor, are very serious issues about acceptance, identity, following dreams, and the importance of questioning long-held limiting norms. Anyone wanting to understand more about non-binary gender concepts will get a great insight. Wetter is brilliant in their (his/her) debut acting role and a talent to be watched. I loved it!
4 - highly recommended

Wednesday 11 August 2021

 August 12th

The Ice Road - showing where no lockdown - coming to other cinemas upon end of lockdowns 
Naomi Osaka - Netflix
Simone Biles Story - Courage to Soar - Netflix
Fantastic Fungi - Netflix
MIFF - going 100% online
Indian Film Festival - slightly delayed - going online - register now


Life is rapidly turning into an apocalyptic sci-fi film. But we are stuck with what is happening, so movie lovers, make the most of it. I've gone post-Olympics nutty, and include a couple of worthwhile shows on two amazing athletes. Plus one of my top docos from last year has also turned up so I rerun my review from Jan 2020. But wait . . . there's more. Ongoing MIFF reviews are here (the entire festival in now online) , plus a heads-up for the forthcoming Indian Film Festival. an extra edition will come in a few days giving you some ideas for this one.  
 
The Ice Road
Dir: Jonathan Hensleigh
Length: 109 mins
Trailer: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-I0g2YyLJ3E
© Rialto - here's the Liam we know and love
In a remote wilderness area in northern Canada, a diamond mine collapses after a methane explosion. Three drivers in massive trucks are employed to bring in mine heads to save the buried miners before oxygen runs out. The trouble is they have to navigate a frozen road that is starting to thaw. The drivers are Mike McKann (Liam Neeson) who has to bring along his PTSD ex-veteran brother Gurty (Marcus Thomas), tough First Nations chick Tatoo (Amber Midthunder), and Jim Goldenrod (Laurence Fishburne), an old hand at driving ice roads. The mysterious presence of the insurance agent becomes gradually clear. Well, at times I could actually predict the dialogue, and I certainly know the template of this type of plot. But, it actually does what it sets out to do and delivers in spades. There is high tension and nail-biting moments, non-stop action, predictable events and things that you know simply couldn't happen, but with Liam Neeson heading it all up in his inimitable tough guy reliable way, hey, what's not to enjoy! The acting by Midthunder and Thomas is actually pretty good too, and there is even the takeout of corporations behaving badly (what a surprise!)  This is the sort of film many critics love to sink the boots into, but for me this was just the sort of distraction and fun film I needed in today's fraught times. (and what a showcase for Kenworth trucks!) 
3.5 - well recommended

Naomi Osaka
Dir: Garrett Bradley
Length: 3 x 45 mins
Streaming on Netflix
Trailer: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yZRls7B7uzY
© Netflix - a winning and insightful doco
No, you don't need to be a tennis tragic to get a heap out of this wonderful 3-part doco series on an incredible young woman, Naomi Osaka. This is an in-depth portrait of what it means to be a top athlete, with all the physical and psychological stresses, but it is also a delightfully intimate look at Naomi the person.  Surprisingly she comes across as a regular gal, only more driven and self-analytical  than most of us. Of late her star is moving into other areas, particularly fashion, in both modelling and designing clothes that combine modern influences with her Japanese heritage. Wonderful and inspirational viewing.
4 - wholeheartedly recommended

The Simone Biles Story: The Courage to Soar
Dir: Vanessa Parise
Length: 86 mins
Streaming on Netflix
Trailer: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DzG_IMh7lgE
© Netflix - being a gymnast 
takes grit and determination
While I'm wallowing in post-Olympics awe, let's look at another athlete, this time the subject of a feature film.  Jeante Godlock plays the role of the world's number one gymnast. Simone's story is told in standard biopic fashion, from her poor childhood, her time in a foster home, and her then stable upbringing by her grandparents who adopted her and encouraged her career every inch of the way. The gruelling training program for an gymnast is well depicted, the arc of Simone's career inspiring, making the film both uplifting and well worth watching.
3.5 - well recommended

Fantastic Fungi
Dir: Louis Schwartzberg
Length: 82 mins
Streaming on Netflix
Trailer: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DzG_IMh7lgE

© Reconsider - a doco to change your view of
fungi and the world!
Who'd have ever thought a film about mushrooms could be so engaging? Well, it's actually about much more than mushrooms per se. I've learnt that Fungi is an entire kingdom in the world of living things, and that this kingdom contains 1.5 million species, six times more than the plant kingdom. Fungi are the oldest living organisms, and what we learn from this film about their interconnection with all life on earth is mind-blowing. Mycelium (of which mushrooms are the fruit) are of course critical to death and decomposition, in turn giving rise to new life. In the medical field, their possibilities remain still largely under-utilised and the film examines this too, (think magic mushrooms and more) along with ways of using fungi to help clear up pollution and save the bees. With important insights from leading mycologists (mushroom experts) and mycophiles (mushroom lovers), along with the most beautiful time-lapse cinematography, this film is an eye-opening education, that both entertains and changes one's view of how we can, in fact should, relate to our natural world.
4 - highly recommended

Melbourne International Film Festival
5-22 August ONLINE

MIFF alert!!! Again, and heartbreakingly so for the organisers, MIFF is forced to go 100% online, cancelling all cinema screenings. But the good news is that 30 new films have been added, so head to the website (note change of address) to read all about it and get yourself some top-notch films streamed straight to your home!
Many are already available with more coming over the next week or so. I've added a couple more to my reviews from the last two weeks. (I already reviewed six that you can catch as we speak - check the last three weeks' blogs): 
Aurora
Azor
Come Back Anytime
The Girl and the Spider
Pebbles
Souad
A couple more for you this week:

Wasteland
: With some major awards to its name, this beautifully crafted black and white film is set in a brickworks somewhere in the godforsaken wilderness of the Iranian desert. Different ethnic groups work here and conflict is ever-present. 
When the boss announces that the factory will close down, it is hardest on Lotfollah, who was born into the job 40 years ago, and knows no other life. He loves Sarvar, who carries deep secrets, but everyone has their own issues. This is reminiscent of classic Euro-films from the 50s, with its careful attention to minute detail, and its slow-burn revelation of where the truth lies. A real treat for lovers of art-house film. 

The Inheritance
: Director Ephraim Asili has crafted a tribute to black revolutionary politics in this bold and imaginative film, which is a mix of history and fiction. When a young man inherits his grandma's home, he invites his girlfriend to live in, and soon the place becomes a sort of collective where the members read literature, poetry and historical texts all relating to Black liberation. They also negotiate the nitty-gritty of share-house living! There is a dense tapestry of ideas and history here, and while some of it is done with readings, other scenes involve archival footage, with a focus upon a ghastly incident in 1985 in which the police bombed the house of a revolutionary group MOVE. While not an easy watch, it becomes progressively rewarding, and is enhanced by brilliant performances, and a colorful set that makes serious issues feel a little lighter. It's a must for students of Afro-American issues.  

Indian Film Festival
August 15th - 30th - stay tuned
Another in-cinema casualty of the Covid crisis, but never despair - great films are heading your way online in a few days time. 
Register now to start making your wishlist:


Wednesday 4 August 2021

August 5th

The Rosemaker
Fanny Lye Deliver'd 
Shiva Baby
MIFF opens - more reviews!
SCinema - attention teachers, students and science lovers - a FREE festival

I nervously present you with these films, seeing on my news feed that yet again Covid cases are breaking out in Victoria, and we never know from one moment to the next what is going to happen. Anyway, as I always say, there is plenty to be accessed online, and anything that gets postponed in the cinemas can be put on your "to see" list when life settles down. All in all, there is so much exceptionally great stuff to watch, we should (in theory) never get bored - so many films, so little time!
 

The Rosemaker
Dir: Pierre Pinaud
Length: 95mins
Trailer: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=as5dDkh6k1U
© Madman - how a new rose breed is "born"
Eve Vernet (Catherine Frot) has run her family rose business since the death of her father. Once a respected rose breeder, she is now steadily going down the financial gurgler, and is contemplating selling out. To boot, she lacks enough staff to run the business, until her secretary hires three no-hopers, with no knowledge of horticulture, from a back-to-work program. This film reminds me of the recent Perfumes, with the central ideas of how a fragrance is "born" and here how a new rose breed is "born'. It is a lightweight and sweet film, sometimes a bit too simplified in its plotting, but for lovers of roses, French scenery, and feel-good films, it is a sure-fire winner. And of course Frot is always a delight to watch.   
3 - recommended

Fanny Lye Deliver'd
Dir: Thomas Clay
Length: 112 mins
Exclusive to Cinema Nova
Trailer: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3daLm5a1Pec

© Life in the bad old days
Fanny Lye (Maxine Peake) lives in a farmhouse in rural England in the 1600s, with her husband John (Charles Dance) and young son Arthur. When Thomas (Freddie Fox)  and Rebecca (Tanya Reynolds) turn up unexpectedly, naked, and pursued by the law, the conservative, Puritan
lives of Fanny and John are turned upside down. It's not in a viewer's interest for me to reveal too much about this intense and unusual film (which has won several awards). It is a fascinating look at a time when oppression of women ruled (hmm, doesn't it still?), and the radical changes brought about by the appearance of the strangers brings perhaps a modicum of hope for change. With an impressive blend of musical score, fine cinematography, an unusual and engaging plot, plus several shockingly violent moments, this is a challenging but memorable film with outstanding performances by all.
4 - highly recommended

Shiva Baby
Dir: Emma Seligman
Length: 77 mins
Trailer: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8uT1M9WfqYA
© Kismet - what an awkward situation!
Danielle (Rachel Sennott) is part of a tight-knit Jewish community. When she attends a shiva (a Jewish get-together for mourning) with her family, she runs into Max (Danny Deferrari), her sugar daddy, an older married man with whom she has been having sex, in exchange for money. He's there with his elegant wife and screeching child. There is something so strong about this film, in the way it encapsulates uncomfortability for all concerned - Max, Danielle, nagging parents and prying, judgmental friends . . . There is also something very stereotyped about its portrayal of a defined segment of society, always pushy, always prying, which makes some of the characters very aggravating! Danielle is constantly surly and socially inept, so she's not a likable character, but depending upon your sense of humour, you will either greatly enjoy, or be heavily annoyed by this black comedy. (The latter was me!) The film has won copious awards. 
3 - recommended

Melbourne International Film Festival
5-22 August -  streaming
13-22 August- in cinemas

MIFF alert!!! The streaming vs online programming has been quite flipped, thanks to the ongoing dramas from Covid. I suggest you read all about it at the MIFF website, to keep abreast of latest developments and rescheduled programming. 
Note too that if you want the big screen, but also the super-safety of your own car, a number of films will be screening at the Coburg Drive-in:  https://miff.com.au/drive-in
recommended several films to you last week, and have a couple more for you this week, both featuring young women grappling with their lives. Both are well worth catching.
Aurora
From Costa Rica comes this moving story of Giuliana, who finds herself pregnant at age 17. Helped by 40-year-old Luisa, a teacher at her brother's school, she grapples with the decisions she must make. The film is subtle, understated, and is a gentle examination of a friendship between two unlikely women, in a conservative society that makes women feel reluctant to confide their problems even to their own mothers. A powerfully acted and moving narrative.
Souad
Souad is the story of an Egyptian teenager, torn between her repressive home life in a Muslim family, and her life on social media. She constantly pretends things are something other than reality, especially with her older so-called boyfriend Ahmed who lives in Alexandria. When things are dramatically derailed, Souad's younger sister Rabab heads off to Alexandria to find the truth. This is an intriguing look at typical life for a young Muslim girl, but it is also a salutary commentary upon the negative effects of social media upon young people's lives. Beautifully shot and acted, this is definitely a slow-burn film to catch. 

SCinema
Here's something to pique the interest of teachers, students and any lovers of science-based films. All you need to do is register, and then you'll get access to wonderful science-based films for FREE! 

In their own words: SCINEMA is an international science film festival providing a platform for filmmakers, professional, amateur and student, to showcase their science films, from dramas to documentaries, animations or epic natural history.
Established in 2000, SCINEMA attracts hundreds of entries from across the world, including some of the world’s most respected science factual producers and directors.
Each year, thousands of film lovers across Australia get to see science differently through our Community Festival screenings.
SCINEMA is presented by The Royal Institution of Australia.