Thursday, 28 October 2021

October 27th

A Life on Our Planet  (streaming on Netflix)
A Sun (streaming on Netflix)
The Serpent (Series - streaming on Netflix)

Well here we are at last. Lockdown is easing, cinemas are opening with a smorgasbord of offerings, most of which I haven't yet been able to see. So let's stick with good ol' Netflix for this week. Take note that festivals are coming fast and furious over the next few weeks. And for Sydneysiders, the St ALi Italian Film Festival has just started and runs for the next month (see my reviews in last week's edition.)   


David Attenborough: A Life on Our Planet
Dir: several
Length: 83 mins
Streaming on Netflix
© Netflix - compulsory viewing
to help save the planet
This has been on Netflix for some time now, so you may have seen it; I only just discovered what could be one of the most timely and important documentaries of the current era. Much-loved naturalist David Attenborough has created what he calls his "witness statement", where he reflects upon his life and  remarkable career. More importantly tells it like it is, opening with "the planet is headed for disaster". In the seventy years he's been showing us the world, he has seen the devastating impact humans have had on the planet, its ecosystems and its animal inhabitants. As well as delivering scary statistics showing the correlation between burgeoning population and loss of wilderness along with carbon emissions, he gives us a glimmer of hope, that things can yet be brought back from the brink of destruction. The beautiful natural images from his many shows are spectacular, making his dire message all the more compelling. This should be compulsory viewing for everyone, especially the politicians heading to Glasgow!
5 - unmissable

A Sun
Dir: Mong-Hong Chung
Length: 156 mins
Streaming on Netflix
© Netflix - intensely told,
brilliantly acted

How this 2019 film didn't get a mainstream release here I don't know - it is fantastic. With 9 wins at various festivals and 25 nominations under its belt, it tells the story of an ordinary Taiwanese family of four, and the ripple effect upon their lives when one son A-Ho is sent to juvenile detention for his involvement in a violent attack. There is so much depth of emotion in this film, as characters grapple with guilt, rejection, anger, fear and redemption. Each character is richly drawn, from the punitive father, to the compassionate mother, and the favoured brother, studying medicine but hiding his own problems. Every detail feels authentic with no recourse to melodrama. The film is magnificently shot, and each performance is pitch-perfect.  
4 - highly recommended

The Serpent
Dir: various
Length: 8 episodes by approx 50 min each
Streaming on Netflix
© Netflix - Sobraj (aka Alain) with
sidekick Monique

Anyone old enough to remember the name Charles Sobraj will probably already have shivers running down their spine. This notorious serial killer preyed upon young travellers along the so-called "hippie trail" in the '70s, poisoning, drugging and murdering, stealing their passports and money, all under the guise of being a precious gem dealer. Every performance from largest to smallest is memorable, especially Tahar Rahim as the charismatic killer. Billy Howle is also impressive as central character Herman Knippenberg from the Dutch Embassy, who starts to piece together the case after two of his countrymen disappear.  
Suffice to say this series is binge-worthy gripping stuff, with settings from Kathmandu, to Bangkok and India, and a plot that will have you on tenterhooks. It's not the faint-hearted but totally immersive.
4.5 - wholeheartedlyrecommended

Japanese Film Festival
28th October - 5th December - different dates, different states
For all the info on dates and films: https://japanesefilmfestival.net/
It's the 25th anniversary of the Japanese Film Festival with a fabulous selection of features spanning many genres. For any readers in these states, the Festival opens in Canberra this week, followed by Perth and Brisbane, but I'll save my reviews for the opening in Sydney and Melbourne in a month's time. Doesn't stop you browsing the program and getting ready!

Thursday, 21 October 2021

 October 22nd

Ms White Light
Becoming Cousteau
St Ali Italian Film Festival

Well here we are at last. Cinemas are re-opening and there has been so much confusion, I suggest if you want to watch any of these films, new releases or festival films, you head to Professor Google and find out what is playing where in your State. Of course online and streaming remain alive and well. If the Italian FF is not yet on near you, jot down those that take your fancy, and catch them when the Festival hits your city. 

Ms White Light
Dir: Paul Shoulberg
Length: 97 mins
Available to rent on a variety of platforms - including  iTunes, Googleplay and more
© Heritage Films - bringing death into
the spotlight - in a quirky way
Lex Cordova (Roberta Conlindrez) works with her dad Gary (John Ortiz) in a business they call Mortality Solutions. It involves Lex being hired to assist dying people to "let go" and to accompany their final moments, especially in cases where the families cannot handle the situation. Lex is masterful at what she does, however, when it comes to relating in the broader world, she is  socially inept. Then she meets Valerie (Judith Light), a feisty unafraid woman, who just wants companionship and also employs Spencer (Zachary Spicer), a charlatan spiritualist. These two will give Lex a whole new perspective on life. I have no idea why this award-winning quirky film hasn't made it to screens here before now (maybe because it divides critics on Rotten Tomatoes?) Even though a couple of plot directions are a bit obvious, it's refreshing to see death out in the open, with our mortality front and centre. The film is well-scripted with plenty of dry humour and winning performances by all, especially Ortiz and Conlindrez.
4 - highly recommended

Becoming Cousteau
Dir: Liz Garbus
Length: 93 mins
Variety of cinemas Australia wide
© Rialto - a legend in the ocean
and in his own lifetime
I remember as a little kid loving the regular 
docu-series The Underwater World of Jacques Cousteau. And now, all grown up and old, I can enjoy him all over again, in this excellent doco tracing his life story and his environmental legacy. A nominee for Best Doco at the London FF, the film has been crafted from more than  550 hours of footage, archival and modern. We discover that the man had many more strings to his bow than underwater exploration - he was an adventurer, author and inventor, giving the world the breathing regulator that enable SCUBA diving to happen. Sadly too, we discover how Cousteau began sounding the alarm on the world's environmental problems decades ago, but no-one really wanted to listen. Absorbing and important viewing.
3.5 - well recommended 

ST ALi Italian Film Festival
20 October - 12 December
Melbourne and Canberra are last cabs off the rank, not  opening until 19th November.
For times, venues, films and bookings in all other states, visit: www.italianfilmfestival.com.au

Always a showcase of magnificent films from Italy, this year's festival features a Roberto Rossellini retrospective, with a restored version of the classic Rome, Open City as the closing night movie. Another couple of interesting retro films are Marriage Italian Style and Visconti's The Leopard. As always, the festival features award winners,  including Nanni Moretti's Three Floors and To Chiara, which won the Director's Fortnight prize at Cannes. I'm lucky to have previewed a few.

© Italian FF  - Cannes winner 
1946
Rome, Open City: This remarkable film, nominated for an Oscar in 1945, also won the top prize at Cannes the following year. Rossellini had Fellini collaborate with him on the screenplay, a script which totally 
stands the test of time! An Italian  resistance leader is pursued by the occupying Nazis, while deception, lies, torture, tragedy and unsurpassed bravery take centre stage. The film feels more authentic than so many war depictions in modern films, and having the opportunity to see it gloriously restored is not to be missed. 
   
© Italian FF  - Bergman
in full flight
Stromboli: Another film in the Rossellini retrospective, Stromboli won a couple of awards for Ingrid Bergman. It's the story of Karin, a woman displaced after WW2, who marries a simple Italian guy who comes from the volcanic island of Stromboli. She cannot get used to the lifestyle there, and resolves to get away - but the volcano has other ideas! Melodramatic but intriguing, this is a window into a way of life led by many of the migrants who ultimately made their way to Australia. If you want a classic 50s film, this could be it, and of course Bergman is iconic. 

© Italian FF  - best actor for 
Favino
Padenostro: Inspired by the director's own childhood, this is the story of young Vale, who witnesses the attempted assassination of his father, Alfonso (Pierfrancesco Favino) a judge. The traumatised boy befriends a mysterious older lad, and, when the family head south for a break to Calabria, disturbing connections are revealed. Favino got the Best Actor award for his fine performance, scenically it is beautifully shot, and there is much tension and heart in this impressive film. 

© Italian FF  - much awarded
and so innovative
Hidden Away: Antonio Ligubue was an artist who painted in the naive style. His story is heartbreaking: he was orphaned young, sent from his native Switzerland to Italy, then spent many years in and out of mental institutions. This startling biopic is the winner of the Silver Bear for Best Actor (Elio Germano) plus many other Donatello awards, and is innovative in so many regards. Its visual style, narrative arc, and stunning cast are all memorable. It also is a beacon to encourage compassion for those who are somehow different.

© Italian FF  - umpteen awards
for this moving story
Glass Boy: This one is fun for the entire family. Young Valerio suffers from haemophilia and can only look longingly out the window at other kids playing together. But when he attracts the attention of a special group (the SNERDS), his life takes a new turn. Yes, there is much here that we can predict and have seen before, but the kids all pour their hearts into their roles, there's plenty of light-weight adventure, and it is an uplifting film in dark times.
 

Thursday, 14 October 2021

 October 15th

Lamb (in cinemas where open)
The Donut King (streaming on DocPlay)
Security (streaming on Netflix)
The Father Who Moves Mountains (streaming on Netflix)

Despite our Melbourne cinemas still not being open, there's a lot of stuff happening on streaming platforms, and A LOT of film festivals coming up. So, that may explain the frequency of editions I'm putting out. Stay tuned for the Japanese Film Festival, British Film Festival, Italian Film Festival. Meantime some good recommendations here, and let me reiterate the value of subscribing to DocPlay, for little more than the price of a cup of coffee per month! 

Lamb
Dir: Valdimar Johansson
Length: 106 mins
Screening at most cinemas where no lockdown applies! Put it on your list Melbourne!
© Madman - warm and fuzzy but
also unnerving and majorly weird!
Maria (Noomi Rapace) and husband Ingvar (Hilmir Snaer Gudnason) farm sheep in a remote rural region of Iceland. One day, a most unusual lamb is born, and they decide to rear it as if it were their child. When Petur, 
Ingvar's brother, turns up, he disturbs their new-found happiness. Perhaps the less said about the rest of the plot, the better, as this is the sort of imaginative, bizarre and quasi-mythical narrative that invites you to interpret what it really is all about. Winner of the prestigious Un Certain Regard in Cannes 2021, Lamb is a film some viewers may find slow, but I found it grippingly tense, at times menacing, and absolutely intriguing. The bleak landscape is splendidly captured in wide shots, and the director creates a constant tension. The unexpected nightmarish conclusion makes for challenging viewing. Many close-up shots of the farm's sheep add to the surreal atmosphere. Ultimately Lamb tells a powerful but sad tale, which leads us to question the value of playing with nature. Fabulous performances from the small cast, and some fine special effects where required.
4 - highly recommended

The Donut King
Dir: Alice Gu
Length: 90 mins
Streaming on DocPlay: www.docplay.com
© Madman - donut heaven in a really 
interesting and inspirational story
In 1975 Cambodian refugee Ted Ngoy fled with his wife and three kids to America, with nothing to his name. While working as a janitor and then 'pumping gas' he noticed a local successful donut shop and got himself apprenticed to Winchells, then a leading donut chain in California. The rest of the story is just amazing - how Ted set up a chain of his own unique donut shops, giving employment to countless other Cambodian refugees. There's a lot more to Ted's story but I'll leave you to discover it, as this is an absorbing and delightful story, not only of happy times and success from nothing, but also of hard times including some of the horrific history of Cambodia under the Khmer Rouge. The soundtrack, featuring plenty of donut-themed songs, is a hoot, and the American obsession with the sweet treat something to be wondered at. At heart, this is a story of hope and caring , with Ted an inspiration to make the best one can of life.
4 - highly recommended

Security
Dir: Peter Chelsom
Length: 118 mins
Streaming on Netflix
© Netflix - complex plot, strong
performances
Roberto (Marco D'amore) works as a security surveillance expert, protecting the homes of the elite in the picturesque Tuscan seaside town of  Forte dei Marmi. One fateful night Maria appears in many of the residents' security cameras, face bloodied and beaten and begging for help. The ensuing revelations will bring down many people in the town, break up relationships, and uncover a web of lies and deceit. When I watched this I was definitely in the mood for a bit of a mystery/thriller and this sure has a lot to recommend it, although the plot at times is quite complex and convoluted. There are many thematic threads involving sexual assault, rich privilege, teacher-student relationships, marital discord and more. The fine cinematography captures the lovely town with the alpine backdrop and the dark underbelly. Acting is universally strong and overall, when the plot threads finally come together, there's a sense of a well-crafted, satisfying film.
3.5 - well recommended

The Father Who Moves Mountains
Dir: Daniel Sandu
Length: 108 mins
Streaming on Netflix
© Netflix - gripping and starkly beautiful
Mircea (Adrian Titieni) is a retired intelligence officer. He's expecting a child with his second wife. When the son from his first marriage, plus new girlfriend,  go missing hiking in the remote Bucegi Mountains in Romania, he heads to the site, begging the local search and rescue team to take him along on the mission. When the missing hikers can't be located Mircea calls in unauthorised hi-tech help from his past colleagues. With grand and sweeping cinematography, and a tense plot this is gripping watching that puts the viewer right into the scene: a cold, majestic, overpowering, and threatening landscape, and a man whose guilt and obsession lead him down paths of desperation. With strong psychological undertones, and a thrillingly tense plot, this is fine watching.
4 - highly recommended


Sunday, 10 October 2021

 October 11th

Melbourne Documentary Film Festival (online)
A Fire Inside
SciFi Film Festival
NYC Epicentres (streaming on Foxtel)
Midnight Diner: Tokyo Stories - (series streaming on Netflix)

With probably another two weeks to go of lockdown in Melbourne (aargh!!), there is still online solace with the wonderful Melbourne Documentary Film Festival, and the SciFi Film Festival. For the rest of you A Fire Inside releases, and Japan fans can soak up a terrific Netflix series. 

Melbourne Documentary Film Festival
October is Documentary month and with Melbourne still being in lockdown this fine festival is online for the entire month. 
Earlier in the year I reviewed, among others, Batoor's Journey http://hurstosfiveminutefilms.blogspot.com/2021/07/july-17th-sir-is-love-enough-sir.html  and Cry of the Forests (http://hurstosfiveminutefilms.blogspot.com/2021/07/july-2nd-melbourne-documentary-film.html), which will show and come highly recommended. I've previewed a couple of further films from the festival: 
© MDFF: Great musicianship helps expose
important issues in the mental health area
Mental as Everything
Dir: Damon Smith
By his own admission, director Smith suffers from a debilitating mental condition known as OCD, Obsessive Compulsive Disorder. In this frank and revelatory doco, Smith talks about what that means for his life, and in fact opens the door to allow others to talk about something that is so often swept under the carpet. Designed originally as a cabaret show, the film mixes creative original songs, which cleverly nail the essence of the condition, and are performed with his colleague Matthew Briggs. (Both are top musicians.) Along with honest discussion, and creative graphics, all combines to make for entertaining viewing, that is also extremely thought-provoking and helpful in tackling an important subject.
 
Meeting the Beatles in India
Dir: Paul Saltzman
© MDFF - a must-see for Beatles fans
In 1968, a 23-year-old budding Canadian filmmaker headed to India to visit an ashram, meditate and hopefully mend his broken heart. Imagine his surprise to find The Beatles were also staying there. In this terrific doco, made years later, he reminisces upon his time there, what the iconic group were like as people (as opposed to stars) and the lasting influence the experience had on his life. The film includes many intriguing insights into the group, how their music was influenced by their time in India, with  additional input from people like David Lynch and Beatles historian Mark Lewisohn. This is highly enjoyable viewing, especially for Beatles fans, and is an interesting account of one man's spiritual journey.

A Fire Inside
Dir: Justin Crook, Luke Mazzaferro
Length: 91 mins
Screening at many cinemas where no lockdown applies!
© Icon - bravery, heartbreak and resilience
Who can forget the horrendous bushfires that wreaked such devastation on Australia, just before Covid came along? This marvellous doco takes us into the heart of the apocalypse, initially following the journey of one fearless firefighter as he almost dies saving many families. But then the film moves on post-fires to look at the personal toll taken on people, fire-fighters and victims, as they battle with post-traumatic-stress, and attempt to rebuild their lives. We hear first-hand the harrowing stories of many of the firefighters, and also of survivors. While the film is an unforgettable account of devastation, it is also a celebration of amazing bravery, and an inspiration as we witness just how selfless some people can be as disaster brings out the best in them. Essential viewing, and a salutary tale for climate-change deniers.
4 - highly recommended

SciFi Film Festival
For program and bookings: https://scififilmfestival.com/
15-31 October
With 13 feature films, plus 67 shorts from 28 countries, this festival is soon to be online across Australia. The festival is touted as "mind-bending science fiction and fantasy" and there should be plenty to please fans. 
I watched Trans: A tale of schoolkid nerds in Korea attempting to create "transhumans". While not totally my genre, it could have quite some appeal to fans of the Frankenstein tale, with its freaky lightning shows, and kids behaving badly.   
 
NYC Epicentres - 9/11 - 2021 1/2
Dir: Spike Lee
Length: 4 episodes: 7 hours 20 minutes
© Foxtel /HBO: binge this fab mini-series
Spike Lee's love song to his city is a terrific feat of film-making. Tracing the last 20.5 years, from the terrorist attacks of 2001 through to the Covid pandemic, Lee interviews a myriad of people (famous and otherwise)  who reflect upon their relationship to their city, their memories of 9/11, their current experiences with the virus, and so much more. No point my raving on about how engrossed I was in it, just watch the first hour and you'll no doubt be hooked. (It's made especially appealing by Spike and his very funny, idiosyncratic interjections and asides.)
4 - highly recommended

Midnight Diner: Tokyo Stories
Several series - half hour episodes
© Netflix - oh yeah! I love it!
A Netflix original series, this is one to transport you to Japan, and for a brief half hour, take away your world-weary angst over everything crap that is happening in today's world. I've only just started this sublime series, but as a Japan-o-phile, I can say the series is reflective of a certain simplicity and compassion that one experiences in that country, and I can't wait to binge my way through it. The food may appeal, but ultimately it is the stories of human connection that hit the heart, as diners visit in the wee hours of the morning to pour out their hearts and seek comfort from Master (Kaoru Kobayashi) who serves wisdom with his simple comfort food.
4 - highly recommended



Sunday, 3 October 2021

 October 4th

Winged Migration (aka Travelling Birds) - (streaming on Amazon Prime)
House of Cardin (streaming on Docplay)
Remastered: Devil at the Crossroads (streaming on Netflix)
The Glass Castle (streaming on Netflix)
Mosquito State (Shudder)

This week my recommendations are only for films that are streaming into your living rooms. Hopefully soon lockdown restrictions will end, festivals and latest releases will resume in cinema, and I'll have more current recommendations for you. But for now, there are still some mighty fine offerings available.
 

Travelling Birds (aka Winged Migration)
Dir: Jacques Perrin, Jacques Cluzaud, Michel Debats 
Length: 98 mins
Streaming on Amazon Prime
© Amazon Prime - quite sublime in parts
An oldie (2001) but a goodie, this exquisite homage to our feathered friends won the Oscar for Best Documentary in 2003.The film follows the migratory journey of flocks of birds, including geese, flamingos, cranes and many more, as they fly thousands of miles to breeding and feeding grounds. It took more that four years to make, with hundreds of crew and many light planes and gliders, all filming in a way that makes us feel we have taken to the skies and are flying alongside the birds. There are zero special effects, and minimal voice-over, making the whole thing an immersive experience that will delight bird fanciers and nature lovers.
4 - highly recommended

House of Cardin
Dir: David Ebersole & Todd Hughes
Length: 97  mins
Streaming on DocPlay
© Umbrella /DocPlay - the man behind the legend
Over the years there have been many films about iconic fashion designers, but none so fascinating and inspiring (for me) as this one, featuring Pierre Cardin, a creative genius in not only haute couture, but furniture, accessories, the arts and more. The film is a virtual smorgasbord of fabulousness - his ground-breaking clothing, his branded accessories and furniture, theatrical spaces he has created, his visits to other cultures and lands where he has become a household name, and the invaluable 
 insights from so many unexpected people: singers Alice Cooper and Dionne Warwick, actress Sharon Stone, other famed designers to name a few. Best of all the man himself - a workaholic who lives to enjoy his work and is still going strong at 98 years old. For anyone who wants to see that age is no barrier to keeping on creating, this is the film for you. It's vibrantly shot, with so much packed in - a treat for the eyes as well as the heart.
4 - highly recommended

Remastered: Devil at the Crossroads
Dir: Brian Oakes
Length: 48 mins
Streaming on Netflix
© Netflix - another legend - of blues music
You know how I adore music documentaries, and this one, so short, sharp and rivettingly good, is another winner. Myth has it that legendary blues singer/guitarist Robert Johnson met the devil at the crossroads and swapped his soul for a retuned guitar and a great talent. The film employs innovative graphics to recreate aspects of the narrative of Johnson's all-too-short life, and many current blues performers add their commentary to the tale of Johnson's profound and enduring influence on blues and rock music. Among them are Taj Mahal, Bonny Raitt, and Keith Richards. A lot of fascinating content and great music is packed into a very short run-time. So much of the Johnson story was a tragedy underpinned by his ego, along with  people's beliefs back then that the blues was the "devil's music". Fascinating factoid: his death at 27 is thought to be the basis of The 27 Club - that group of famed musos, so talented, who died at that very age.
4 - highly recommended

The Glass Castle
Dir: Destin Daniel Cretton
Length: 127 mins
Streaming on Netflix
© Netflix - good story, questionable values
Jeannette and her three siblings grow up in a nomadic and dysfunctional family, headed by mother Rose Mary (Naomi Watts) and father Rex (Woody Harrelson). Rex is an alcoholic, Rose Mary a painter, and the family moves from one rundown hovel to the next, while Rex dreams big, obviously loves his kids, but seems to have no idea of the line between encouraging them to be self-sufficient and neglect. Based upon Jeannette Walls' memoir of her childhood, the film is grounded by a brilliant performance from Chandler Head as young Jeannette, and Harrelson as Rex. The narrative moves between past and present, with Brie Larsen as the now-adult Jeannette, a writer engaged to a Wall Street analyst, and torn between past and future, so at odds with each other. While the film certainly tells an engaging and often disturbing story, there too many moments of over-sentimentality that seem to celebrate what could be seen as child abuse, disguised as family bonding at all costs. But fans of Harrelson should love it. 
3 - recommended

Mosquito State
Dir: Filip Jan Rymsza
Length: 100 mins
Streaming on Shudder
www.shudder.com - starting at $5.83 a month
© Shudder - streaming all things horror
If your genre of choice is horror, thriller and supernatural, you can't go past the streaming service Shudder. Though not really my bag, I gave it a go and watched this very weird thriller, about Richard, a reclusive Wall St analyst, for whom everything starts to change 
just prior to the GFC - he meets a girl at a work party, his computer predicts financial calamities and his apartment is invaded by a swarm of mosquitoes. I can't quite decide if it is at heart rather pretentious wannabe arthouse fare, or something more symbolic and deep. Suffice to say it delivers the goods with a level of body horror, social critique of the Wall Street brigade, and it has won many awards including cinematography and special effects.
If horror is your genre, then recommended