SIFF 2014: Day Five

An anticipated highlight of the festival was Frank, starring Michael Fassbender in the title role.  I was not disappointed. This is a story of a group of avant garde musicians led by Frank, a man who wears a full-head helmet at all times. It is endearing without being sickly sweet, off the wall without being out of touch. I don’t really want to say too much about it, except go see it!

This screening was in the old Egyptian theatre which is being appropriated by SIFF later this year after a bit of fundraising. Is SIFF getting too big for its britches? How much “success” should a non-profit experience? I’m not sure, but I ponder these questions at times.

SIFF 2014: Day Four

This day was reserved for Burt’s Buzz, a documentary focusing on the Burt from Burt’s Bees and his relationship with the company he founded. I got called away out of town so missed it, but I had someone go in my stead.

"It's about the conflict between small 
business owners and corporate capitalism... 
and a love story!" -- Karl Myers

I’m sure it will be on Netflix eventually, and I will see it then.

Afterward there was a visit to the newly opened Flatstick Pub in Kirkland. Indoor mini-golf! Exactly what we need in this drizzly region. Hopefully the idea will take off and someone will open an indoor mini-golf in Seattle proper. Sorry, Eastside, but I just don’t want to go there! I will, however, make at least one trip to Kirkland for a round.

My travels also caused me to miss Me, Myself and Mum, a French/Belgian film where the main character is also his own mother. It’s screening again on Sunday, so maybe one of you will see it and tell me if it is as good as I think it might be. Anyway, watch the trailer!

SIFF 2014: Day Three

Today’s film was Unforgiven, a Japanese revamp of the Clint Eastwood classic western. It is very true to the original, with some politics and racial conflict thrown in. In case you’re not familiar with the story, a former samurai has given up killing to be a farmer/widow/dad. An old friend stops by to invite him to earn a bounty on some dudes who cut up a prostitute’s face. The big questions of who is good, who is bad, and what is the correct punishment for said badness are asked. At times I felt it was a bit slow and brooding. Although I wouldn’t call it a samurai film or any kind of “fighting movie”, the director did give us a few gruesome shots we would expect from such films. I had a fantastic time studying the costumes – lots and lots of indigo!

Due to some unforeseen circumstance, I will miss out on my Day Four, Burt’s Buzz. Perhaps I’ll be able to post some words from my film proxy later this week.

SIFF 2014: Day Two

Finished up the weekend with The Search for General Tso, a delightful documentary exploring the history of Chinese food in the United States, and specifically the origin of the eponymous (and ubiquitous) dish. The film asks the questions, who was General Tso, why was this dish named after him, and how did this dish end up on virtually every Chinese menu in the country? I must admit, I do have a fondness for the dish. I often, and fondly, tell the story of randomly finding General Tso’s tofu at a place in Raleigh, North Carolina. I also shell out the extra bucks to get the most expensive combo at Bamboo Garden, just so I can get a few chunks of General Tao’s “chicken”. Not only did I learn the history of the dish, but I also learned quite a bit about the history of Chinese Americans in general (no pun intended). The screening was sold out, so I imagine this film will get some distribution outside of the festival circuit.

SIFF 2014: Day One

Just FYI – This is the fortieth year of SIFF.

This year, when choosing the films I would see, I tried to keep it somewhat light for the most part. I succeeded half-way in my first night of the festival.

I started with Attila Marcel, the live-action feature debut of Sylvain Chomet (Triplets of Belleville). With plenty of whimsy, it tells the story of a man, mute since witnessing the deaths of his parents at age two, living with his overbearing aunts, and his eventual escape from his existential prison. The means of which is an eccentric neighbor who sells him special tea. It is a musical and colorful journey of discovery and change. I was quite entertained by this film and don’t have too much complaint about it. However, the sub plot and inevitable exit of Madame Proust felt somewhat lacking to me, as it was merely a device in the drama and not so well though out as the memory dreams of main character Paul. Still, a fun bit of cinema.

The second half of the night took a darker turn with The Double, Richard Ayoade’s follow-up to Submarine. Jesse Eisenberg takes the dual roles of Simon and James, two very different, but very much the same, people, vying for the attentions of the boss and the pretty girl across the street (Mia Wasikowska). There is humor, as one might expect from Ayoade, but ultimately the film is a dark character story, a sort of exploration of the nice and not-so-nice in all of us. The settings were a timeless generic blended with a futuristic dystopia. There is no clear locality nor era beyond just “modern times”.  Much like Attila Marcel, it was an aesthetic delight.

SIFF 2011 Day 11: And So It Ends

My final day at SIFF was one of annoyance and melancholy.
After a morning of Vampire Diaries on DVD, I headed over to SIFF Cinema (conveniently located!) for Holy Rollers: The True Story of Card Counting Christians. I watched this film mainly because a friend of mine would be referenced in it. As it turns out, Benjamin had quite a bit more screen time than I had anticipated, and I was surprised and delighted to see his wife, also my friend, Megan on-screen as well. (It really should not be a surprise to see Megan on the silver screen, and if you have spent ten minutes with her, you’d know why.) It is really difficult for me to write objectively about this film for the very fact that it’s about self-proclaimed Christians. The film follows a team of blackjack players made up of primarily pastors and other “devout” Christians. I use the capital C to emphasize that the appellate is more name than description. The only player that seemed a true christian to me was Mark, the pastor who quit because he could no longer correlate his spiritual life with his casino life. The filmmaker of Holy Rollers was on hand for a Q&A but I felt my mind would burst if I had to listen to more of the claptrap. So I left during the credits and headed to Pacific Place for my final film.
The evening ended with a sorrowful Belgium film called Illégal. A single mother of one has made her way in Belgium as a cleaner for nearly ten years when she is randomly spotted by police and detained for lack of papers. Not wanting to be deported back to Russia, she hides her identity from authorities while waiting out her time at a detention center. She suffers while also bonding with fellow detainees. A guard at the center empathizes with the foreigners although she needs the job to support her own family. Events reach a cresendo at the center, bringing the guard to a turning point and bringing a sincere tear to my eye. Illégal is available on DVD and will be on Netflix Instant Watching in July.

SIFF 2011 Day 10: Crop circles, or Corpsicles?

Friday night found me again at the Harvard Exit for All Your Dead Ones (Todos Tus Muertos), a sort of social commentary out of Colombia. A farmer finds a pile of dead bodies in his corn field on election day. The tempo was a little off in my opinion (surprising, then, that action junkie Toni liked it), but there were some nice, comic moments. I expected more activity from the dead – I know, that’s a peculiar thing to say, but I think you’ll get what I’m saying if you read any reviews. One of the actors was in the house for the screening and was able to shed some light on the political landscape of Colombia which made the film, for me, much more understandable and enjoyable. (I was also impressed with myself for how much of his spoken Spanish I was able to understand.) I didn’t really understand the reason for bookending the film with scenes of the farmer having sex with his wife, but I suppose in retrospect it was a way of “grounding” the story in the reality of the day which was, in it’s own weird way, supernatural. I don’t expect All Your Dead Ones to have a US theatrical release, so look for it on DVD.