Author: festreviews
2019 TIFF Movie Review: WESTERN STARS (USA 2019)
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The Boss himself, Bruce Springsteen performs his critically acclaimed latest album and muses on life, rock, and the American dream, in this intimate and personal live-concert film co-directed by himself. Being his first full-length film to carry his name as director, the fact must have affected the Boss getting to his head.
Springsteen offers his advice on love, loss, change and other assorted matters prior to each song he performs and there are quite a few of his performances on screen so that it the films become over preachy. Springsteen is no great sage either. No one wants to keep hearing him expel his personal demons.
The choice of the Glen Campbell song “Rhinestone Cowboy” he performs is an odd choice to end the movie. The only good thing about the film is watching him perform his live album concert songs with his orchestra.
2019 TIFF Movie Review: WORKFORCE (Mano de Obra) (Mexico 2019) ***
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‘The plight of the abused and underpaid Mexican worker” is the theme in David Zonana’s extremely watchable debut feature. A construction worker , Claudio falls to his death tragically while on the job, prompting his brother, Francisco (the film’s protagonist) and widow to seek justice on their own terms. Director is himself born in Mexico City where the story is set.
Their grief shifts to fury when medical tests allegedly indicate there was alcohol in Claudio’s system. Claudio never drank. However, by claiming he was intoxicated on the job, the house’s owner evades responsibility and the need to pay Claudio’s widow. Francisco watches and grasps for an opportune moment in all this. When the owner suddenly dies, Francisco takes control and moves into the house and brings in other families.
Nothing is what it seems as the craftily told tale unfolds. Director Zonana demonstrates both the corrupt business systems in place and the extreme that human beings will go in order to survive with a bang-on surprise ending.
2019 TIFF Movie Review: THE BAREFOOT EMPEROR (Belgium/Netherlands/Croatia/Bulgaria 2019) ****
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An emperor is set to rule a rejigged, newly nationalist Europe, in Jessica Woodworth and Peter Brosens’ (King of the Belgians) political satire. Rushing home but unaware of news of his kingdom’s collapse, Belgian King Nicolas III (Peter Van den Begin) is mistakenly shot in Sarajevo, caught in a theatrical reenactment of Austrian Archduke Franz Ferdinand’s 1914 assassination.
He wakes three days later on a Croatian island in Josip Broz Tito’s former summer home, now a discreet otherworldly off-grid sanatorium for the rich and famous run by the ominous Dr. Otto Kroll (Udo Kier). This is Kafka meets Monty Python and feels like a Roy Andersson made deadpan comedy. Each patient is given the name of his room with patients going around called Arafat, Richard Burton and Gorbachev.
The comedy mostly works in a laugh a minute movie that is entertaining more than insightful.
2019 TIFF Movie Review: ROCKS (UK 2019) ***
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Theresa Ikoko (Story by), Theresa Ikoko | 1 more credit »
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2019 TIFF Movie Review: LE DAIM (DEERSKIN) (France 2019) ****
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DEERSKIN (LE DAIM) is off kilter comedy best described as humour that is a cross between Jacques Tati and Yorgos Lanthimos. The film is irrelevant and features comedic set-ups like a talking deerskin jacket and a killing fan blade.
The protagonist of the story is an odd enough character, Georges (Oscar Winner Jean Dujardin of THE ARTIST) that goes mental with his ultimate goal in life to be the only one to be wearing a jacket. To achieve this aim, he has to kill of or steal from anyone with a jacket. In addition, with a gift of a video camera, he poses as a filmmaker.
When staying at a hotel after his wife leaves him, he meets an equally weird bartender, Denise (Adele Haenel0 who ends up being his film editor. Director Dupieux (the little seen RUBBER) has the talent of observing the simple hilarity from everyday human behaviour. And like the Jacques Tati comedies, LE DAIM can be watched again and again.
2019 TIFF Movie Review: DOLEMITE IS MY NAME (USA 2019) ****
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From start to end this is Eddie Murphy’s movie. He commands screen presence and captures audience attention with his personal touch in this entertaining biopic of comedian Rudy Ray Moore, who became a legend in midlife with his outlandish 1970s Blaxploitation character Dolemite. Murphy’s life followed Ray Moore’s in a way which makes him perfect for playing the character.
The film tells the story of Moore, a struggling singer and comedian working in a record store in early-1970s Hollywood. Every type of hustler populates the neighbourhood, most with a wicked repertoire of obscene insults. Moore begins picking up their patter, drawn from the rich African-American tradition of “the dozens.”
He creates a stage character, Dolemite the pimp, records some especially profane routines, and soon rockets from shop clerk to ghetto superstar. It is when he starts making movies that the real film begins. Director Brewer and Murphy make the prefect combination i the creation in might what be the most outrageous and entertaining biopic of the year.
2019 TIFF Movie Review: THE VAST OF NIGHT (USA 2019) ***
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Styled in the 50’s TV series Twilight Zone, the film follows, literally, two youths seeking the source of a mysterious frequency that has descended upon a town in New Mexico. They investigate and eventually encounter its origin in the span of a single night. This exactly what happens in the story from the start to the end, so that there are no surprises at all.
Patterson’s film is an exercise of style and atmosphere, which at least works in an otherwise predictable script that takes the story to its eventual ending. The film is too talky for a midnight madness entry for TIFF and it does not help that the sound system at Ryerson Theatre is not the best with the result that one really has to concentrate to make out the often muffled dialogue.
But the film succeeds through his use of sound, variation of camera angles and dialogue that parodies the future of the then modern technology.
Film Review: THE GOLDFINCH (USA 2019)
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Peter Straughan (screenplay by), Donna Tartt (based on the novel by)
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Based on the Pulitzer Price Winning book by Donna Tartte, one wishes the film would contain a more solid and credible story, but what transpires onscreen is mired by two glaring flaws (two incidents that are totally inconceivable that they destroy the entire film.
John Crowley directs with the same care and over-caution as he did in his last BROOKLYN but goes off with the pacing. For a crime caper, the film moves more like his BROOKLYN romance drama.
Decker (Ansel Elgort) was only 13 when his mother died in a museum bombing, sending him on an odyssey of grief and guilt, reinvention and redemption. Through it all, he holds on to one tangible piece of hope from that terrible day: a priceless painting of a bird chained to its perch, The Goldfinch – that he had kept from the bombing.
The film is a coming-of-age tale with criminal plots, personal secrets, and the transformative power of art thrown into the story.
The film opens with the mysterious and introverted Theodore Decker (Elgort) holed up in an Amsterdam hotel, desperate and facing a lethal threat. His story since childhood then unfolds in layers of rash decisions and sudden betrayals. Young Theo (Oakes Fegley) saw his privileged life with his mother shattered one day on a visit to an art museum. In the aftermath of an attack among the masterpieces, one priceless 17th-century oil painting goes missing. What happened to the The Goldfinch? And how will its disappearance follow Theo across America throughout his whole youth and on to his Dutch hideout? Clues are provided to the audience and it does not take a genius to put two and two together that Decker has the painting.
The two coincidental plot flaws are:
- the coincidental re-meeting of Theo and Boris as adults in a bar out of the blue in NYC. Just how many bars are there in NYC and how big is the city? And the timing?
- the over tidy Hollywood-Style happy ending where all comes too neatly in place to bring the film to a conclusion
Elgort is perfect in the role, showing both the charm and darker shadows that have marked his best work. Kidman is as compelling as ever in every frame. And a stellar cast of actors — Finn Wolfhard, Jeffrey Wright, Sarah Paulson, Luke Wilson — turn up as characters who further complicate Theo’s jagged path.
The big plus of the film is that Goldfinch was shot by the legendary, Oscar-winning cinematographer Roger Deakins, who gives it a polish appropriate to its high-stakes, high-crime story.
2019 TIFF Movie Review: ZANA (Kosovo, Albania 2019)
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Things never seem to be going well for a Kosovar woman and her husband. After bearing a first child that is accidentally killed by soldiers in the war, she is infertile, unable to bear another child. The child killed is called ZANA which is the film’s title.
Haunted by her long-suppressed past and pressured by family to seek treatment from mystical healers for her infertility, she struggles to reconcile the expectations of motherhood with a legacy of wartime brutality while slowly succumbing to madness. Director Kastrati spends a lot of screen time on the woman’s demise and suffering.
No matter what she does, she begets the wrath of all around her – from her husband, mother-in-law, own mother and father and even her witch doctor. Kastrati cannot decide whether to go for a happy or sad ending as evident near the close of the film thus leaving her film without purpose (except the message of suffer, suffer, suffer!) despite the feminine trials.
Trailer: https://vimeo.com/354587606














