And the Nominees Are 2024: Final Round

Happy Oscars weekend! It has been such a strong year, and I managed to watch most of the main category nominees out of genuine interest early in the season, so today’s post is a couple of Indie Spirit nominees I caught up with before that show, and then some documentaries. I admit that I didn’t finish that category because they all looked so bleak and the two I did watch did not encourage me. I’m sure the rest are deserving films, but I couldn’t bring myself to watch them.

Here’s what I did see:

Fallen Leaves

I saw a review of this that referred to it as a “romantic comedy,” and I guess it is a romance and the driest of comedies, but I tend to think “frothy” when I think rom-com, and any bubbles in this film are immediately burst. Not to say its dour, I laughed out loud multiple times! (Basically any time Janne Hyytiäinen was onscreen as the best friend). But it’s the deadest of pan and makes life in Helsinki look like a bleak place to live, with interjections of the war in Ukraine whenever anyone turns on a radio. Throw in some alcoholism and you can see why these characters think a Jarmusch zombie movie is an escape.

That all being said, its an oddly comforting kind of bleakness, and these is a cute dog. Plus, it’s less than 90 minutes long, so give it a shot!

How To Have Sex

I think this movie is really badly titled. It grabs your attention, sure, but it implies a raunchiness (my critical obsession of the year I guess) that is not at the center of this story. Also, the trailer I saw implied a tragedy that isn’t, so, I guess I didn’t appreciate the packaging of the story, but I did like the film!

It follows three British teen girls on the European version of a Spring Break type of bacchanalia. It manages to capture both what is liberating and terrifying about being young and choosing to let go of control (through the medium of astoundingly copious amounts of vodka). The bad things that happen are captured with empathy and subtlety, but what really got to me emotionally was the ways that the girls let the pressures of “desirability” and jealousy erode their friendship. (The writing of Skye (Lara Peake)’s undermining of Tara (Mia McKenna-Bruce) cut me deep.)

A cautionary tale that has the confidence to also show that this kind of mess can be genuinely fun, it both made me so grateful to not be that young anymore and a little wistful for the version of myself that had the energy to dance all night and be up for brunch.

Bobi Wine: The People’s President

Every year, as we get close to the end of the season, the movies i have left tend to feel like the bleakest & heaviest list. Partly, this is an “importance” bias in the documentary branch of the Academy, but it’s also a matter of my own motivation. Which is how I spent the afternoon of my President’s Day off curled up in a chair, holding my breath watching Bobi Wine, a Ugandan pop star turned activist-politician as he tried tom use democracy and non-violence to combat dictatorship in his country.

He is an inspiring figure, as his wife, Barbie Kyagulanyi, and I am glad that I learned their story. But this was a really heavy watch, particularly since last year around this time I went on a similar journey with Navalny and his death has been weighing on me.

Wine’s fight is worthy and inspiring and this film captures it well, but it is a lot.

Fremont

If I have convinced you sometime over the last 8 years to watch Jim Jarmusch’s Paterson and it didn’t work for you, then you can keep scrolling, because this movie has a very similar, quiet beauty and slyness that I just adored. But if you don’t get on its wavelength, it could feel pretty sleepy. Lead actress Anaita Wali Zada, in her debut role, carries the whole thing and I really hope she keeps acting because her face is so compelling.

Quiet, slow, but lovely.

(Also, if you’ve seen the trailer, just FYI Jeremy Allen White doesn’t actually show up until the end, but he’s great, of course, when he does.)

Four Daughters

At the Indie Spirits, director Kaouther Ben Hania told Natalie Portman to see her movie, because people were saying it was a North African documentary May December. I can see what she mean, because while it is a documentary, it captures not the central events covered by the interactions between a group of actors hired to portray members of the family and the members of the family who are telling the story/playing themselves. This leads to meta-discussions of performance and sequences of an actress watching her subject eerily closely. But, what I found really notable about Four Daughters was the willingness of the central figure, Olfa Hamrouni, to be almost cruelly honest about the harsh and violent ways she treated her daughters (two of whom joined an Islamist terrorist community). The honesty is painful to watch and the actors allow the narrators a distance from their painful pasts that facilitates a level of reflection that is rare to achieve. Truly hard, but powerful watch.

Perfect Days

At various points in this movie I found myself bringing my fingers to my mouth in a gesture of astonishment at how lovely it was. Not a lot happens, we just follow Hirayama (Koji Yakusho) as he goes about his days as a cleaner for for Tokyo’s public toilets, living his solitary, but not empty, life. Each day is the same, except for how they are different, in ways both small (which cassette he plays on his van’s tape deck, how crowded his preferred ramen bar is), and big (being dragged along on a doomed attempt at getting a date by his obnoxious but entertaining coworker Takashi (Tokio Emoto), the unexpected arrival of his teenage niece Niko (Arisa Nakano)). It never swerves into melodrama and remains sweet and humane without ever becoming saccharine.

I could write forever about this, just listing every detail that Wim Wenders captured perfectly, but instead, I’ll just tell you all to go see it. A wonderful way to end a really strong awards season/movie year. Come back Monday for an Oscars Round Up!

And the Nominees Are 2024: Round 4

With this week’s (truly baffling) BAFTA nominations, there are now only the Oscar nominations (this Tuesday!) to complete this year’s too long list of things I have assigned myself to see! But as a good reminder of why I choose to so torture myself, I saw some fun stuff the last few weeks!

Here we go:

Wham!

I have long been in talent-love with George Michael, so I know completely that I am biased when In tell you all that this is a great music documentary and you should all watch it immediately. But I also have been telling people that since I saw it in July and I don’t think anyone has taken my advice, because I think people remember Wham! as silly 80s Day-Glo popstars, which they were, but they were also really talented and George in particular was a genius. (Based on his words in this movie, I don’t think Andrew Ridgeley would mind me signaling Michael out.) It’s a rags to riches to story and a tale of the warping effects of fame that never gets too melodramatic. Plus, you get to listen to George Michael songs the whole time, what could be better. It’s on Netflix, please watch it.

Napoleon

There is a moment in this movie where Joaquin Phoenix‘s Napoleon (in keeping with Ridley Scott‘s stated recent stance that he doesn’t care about period or region specific dialects) speaking in his American accent, says to a British diplomat “You guys think you’re so great because you’ve got boats.” And while I appreciate the fact that Scott and his team clearly have no interest in the Great Man as Hero of History model of storytelling, I unfortunately couldn’t figure out which model they had chosen instead.

If the whole thing had been as absurd as that scene I think I would have had fun, but the battles were shot seriously (and graphically – don’t see this if you care about horses). While I always love to see Vanessa Kirby (Josephine) the marriage plot here reminded me far too much of a horrible romance novel I read once about her.

I appreciate the nonchalance of Scott’s energy when it comes to a press tour or awards season, but I wish he’d bring a little more care to his actual films than is evidenced here.

Saltburn

Emerald, Emerald, Emerald…I want to both hug and slap you. There is so much campy goodness in this movie. The lighting! The Livestrong bracelets and casually popped collars! The Bloc Party and MGMT needle drops calibrated to make people exactly my age feel wistful for a time of Jaeger Bombs and ill-advised dorm make outs. Your casting was perfect: Rosamund Pike has maybe never been funnier, Barry Keoghan sulks so wonderfully, and Alison Oliver‘s bland fragility is well executed. (Jacob Elordi is also great, may someday have to write an essay about his movie star career being launched by the adoring lenses of two female auteurs.)

But – the plot – you lost it, seemed to have found it, and then stayed so close to the map that every attempt to shock became more boring, but somehow still as baffling than the one before it. I could ramble on for awhile, but in the end I think this amounts to a lot of very fun style hiding that there isn’t much substance.

Fun period detail, in this scene the family has all gathered to watch Superbad

Monica

Someone texted me while I was watching this Indie Spirit nominee and I summed it up parenthetically as “good, sad, very quiet” and I feel like that kind of says it all.

The story of a trans woman (Trace Lysette) who returns home to the small town she grew up in when her mom (Patricia Clarkson) is dying there’s not a lot of plot, but there is a lot of staring with emotional intent. The two central performances are great, and the story is well told, but co-writer/director Andrea Pallaoro seemed to have gone to the Koganana-making-Columbus school of shot framing: oblique, face obscuring, distance-emphasizing. All of which I found distracting. The power of this movie is in Lysette’s face, stop shooting everything from behind!

(Also, this is silly, but my actual favorite performance last year from Lysette was in her TikTok ridiculing Dave Chapelle for his transphobic “comedy.”)

American Fiction

Well, it’s the first move of the awards cycle that I wish I had seen before the New Year so I could include it on my Top Ten list (come on film distributors, people in midsize cites like good movies too!). This trailer started showing at my local theater what feels like 6 months ago, and I’ve been waiting!

The preview is hilarious, but thankfully does not include all the good jokes – genuinely I can’t remember the last time I laughed out loud in the theater. (My husband, who also loved it, remarked on the walk home, “how come no one makes comedies anymore, that was so great?”). And the movie works great as a satire of the high brow, mostly white, culture world that could stand to deflate a bit, without becoming knee-jerkily anti-intellectual.

But, what the marketing didn’t prepare me for was the genuinely moving famiyl drama that is truly at the heart of this. Jeffrey Wright is a great anchor, and many of the supporting turns are wonderful. (Sterling K. Brown is from STL, why did we have to wait until January to see this?!?) I particularly loved Wright’s sibling dynamic with Tracee Ellis Ross and missed her when she wasn’t onscreen.

Highly recommend.

Going to Mars: The Nikki Giovanni Project

Tim, who listened to this more than watched it with me, asked as it ended, “was the organizing principle of this just ‘isn’t Nikki Giovanni fun?'” And I think essentially, yes, if you include brilliance and talent in your definition of “fun,” which I do.

The whole time watching it, I kept thinking of the Elaine Stritch documentary from like ten years ago, which I wasn’t expecting, they aren’t artists I have ever thought of in the same breath before, but the structure of the docs – follow a legend around while they cope with aging, interspersed with older archival footage of them at their most famous – is very similar, and similarly affecting.

Both of these women live (or lived in the case of Ms. Stritch) truly unapologetically, which is obviously for Giovanni a source of pride, but also pain – relationships seem to be a struggle for her. But it’s truly inspiring to see portraits of women who have actually stopped giving a damn about the comfort of others as it pertains to their choices for their own lives.

The archival material is handled very beautifully here, and I really want to track down and watch the full interview of Giovanni and James Baldwin that is excerpted at many points in this, because it was suffused with so much love even when they were disagreeing with each other.

And the Nominees Are 2024: Round 3

The first awards show of the year is this weekend! And yes, the Golden Globes are trash, but they are making PR attempts to be slightly less trash, and I will be happy to give them a chance (especially because I’ll be on a flight during the Critic’s Choice this year and I don’t want have to wait until February for my first telecast!) I did manage to catch up with some of the Globes comedies that I missed (aka avoided) earlier in the year, here are my thoughts:

Nyad

This is a good Sunday afternoon on TNT movie. (It’s on Netflix, but you know what I mean.) A genre of sports biopic I enjoy, but wish could exist outside of awards conversations. (Bring back the mid-budget studio movie!)

Not that Annette Bening and Jodie Foster aren’t good – they’re great! They’re Annette Bening and Jodie Foster! And I really enjoyed their chemistry, and appreciated a film about female friendship that wasn’t about Female Friendship. It’s genuinely bold to make a movie about an unlikeable woman who is still inspirational.

Worth a lazy Sunday watch.

No Hard Feelings

“Raunchy” isn’t my favorite descriptor for a comedy, so even when this started getting good reviews I was pretty sure it wasn’t gonna be for me. But, it (mostly) surprised me. Both Jennifer Lawrence and Andrew Barth Feldman bring more charm and heart to this than the premise deserves and laughed out loud every time Natalie Morales and Scott MacArthur were onscreen. Tropey and predictable, but more fun than I was expecting.

Wonka

I did not expect to be seeing this when I first saw the picture of Timothée Chalamet looking like Gonzo from The Muppet Christmas Carol, but then I heard it was written and directed by Paul King who made my beloved Paddington 2 and I was in. This doesn’t rise to that level (few films do) and for a musical the songs are pretty forgettable (probably because they had to match the range of a decidedly not-a-singer Chalamet) but overall I enjoyed myself and was charmed by the razzle-dazzle.

Does this movie need to exist? No. But, it was a nice way to spend a Friday afternoon, even if only to think about how miserable Hugh Grant must have been making it.

Poor Things

The trailers for this made me nervous. Yorgos Lanthimos sometimes veers too close to horror for my comfort and I couldn’t tell how much of a Frankenstein story this was. And, it wasn’t scary, but I’m not as rapturous as a lot of film Twitter (or Threads) is about it either.

Lanthimos’s wavelength of self-conscious strangeness is hard for me to click into, and this in many ways feels peak-him. Emma Stone embodies this artificiality wonderfully, but that kind of artifice keeps me personally at an arms length from any emotional core of the story.

I know, I know, this is a “fable.” The artifice is part of the point, but the story being told – essentially what it would be like to discover patriarchy without socialization into it, is super interesting, and I would have liked to have felt closer. (Writing that out I’m realizing, that’s also basically the plot of Barbie, which I found much more fun.)

My main disconnect comes from the fact that the first half of this movie equates the act of sex with liberation in a way I found frankly kind of boring. Once Stone’s Bella discovers philosophy the whole thing got much more interesting. Although, I didn’t like the animal hybrid body horror stuff (personal ick), I did appreciate the steampunk production design.

The Color Purple

I’ve read this book, seen the 1985 film and the Broadway revival of the musical. So, I’ve obviously long found this story compelling and worthy of interpretation, but I’m not sure I needed this film version. There’s great performances, especially Danielle Brooks (who I saw on stage in the same role) and Taraji P. Henson (who should be cast in many more musicals). The choreography is really fun, and I like when a film musical leans into its theatricality like this.

But there was a strange glowiness of the tone which, considering the weight of the subject matter, felt oddly trite. Also, and I don’t know if this was a glitch at my particular screening, but the sound mixing was atrocious, the vocals were too quiet compared to the music, especially the percussion, and this score is built to showcase women belting! I felt robbed.

Bottoms

Let me start by saying, I’m glad this movie exists, and I think we should make more true comedies (and I loved the old-school touch of having bloopers in the credits). But, this was pretty not-for-me. Every member of the cast was charming and some moments made me laugh out loud. (Put Marshawn Lynch in more comedies! That’s a sentence I never thought I’d write, but I stand by.) But, something about the tone missed me. (See above thoughts on “raunch.”) And the shole fight club angle meant there was more blood and punching than I care to see played for laughs. Wholly aware this is a me issue.

Ayo Edebiri should still be cast in anything she wants to be forever.