Cinefranco 2018 Review: CARBONE (CARBON) (France 2017) ***

Carbone Poster
Trailer

2:11 | Trailer
Danger of losing his business, Anthony Roca, an ordinary man, develops a scam that will become the heist of the century. Overtaken by the crime, he will have to deal with betrayal, murder and settling.

Director:

Olivier Marchal

Writers:

Ali Hajdi (original idea), Olivier Marchal (adaptation) | 3 more credits »

The title of this dark thriller CARBON comes from the fact of France trying to limit carbon emissions by industrial companies.  

One such company that meets the quota belongs to the protagonist of the film, Antoine Roca (Benoît Magimel),  Unfortunately the firm is in huge debt and he cannot meet the daily cash flow.  It is a family business from his in-laws who treat him as a loser.  His father-in-law is played by no less than Gerard Depardieu who is a real meanie in the story, belittling Antoine and cutting him off from his son.  Antoine’s wife is not sympathetic either.  Faced with the threat of losing his firm, Antoine mounts a scam which will become the burglary of the century.  Entangled with gangsters, he must cope with betrayal, murder, and settling of scores.  

The selling of carbon is a bit confusing but the film still works as an entertaining thriller.  Depardieu shows his star power stealing every scene he is in.

Trailer: https://www.imdb.com/title/tt6183834/videoplayer/vi859944985?ref_=tt_pv_vi_aiv_1

Film Review: VENOM (USA 2018) ***

Venom Poster
When Eddie Brock acquires the powers of a symbiote, he will have to release his alter-ego “Venom” to save his life.

Director:

Ruben Fleischer

Writers:

Jeff Pinkner (screenplay by), Scott Rosenberg(screenplay by) | 5 more credits »

Discounting SPIDER-MAN, VENOM is the first of the Sony Pictures Universe of Marvel Comics.  The filmmakers ensure that there is some brand distinction from the Warner Brothers (DEADPOOL, BATMAN vs. SUPERMAN) and Disney (THOR, IRON MAN) Marvel collaborations, so it is of no surprise that VENOM comes out like a hybrid of the existing Marvel action hero or anti-hero films.  VENOM is quite good and more to come would be welcome.

Ruben Fleischer who made ZOMBIELAND, makes a clear stamp in VENOM, which in truth is a horror story.  There is an alien parasite than inhabits the host, our hero and a nasty one at that – a shapeless gelatine blob looking like black jello gone bad.

Shot in both New York City and San Francisco, director Fleischer makes sure the audience is reminded of the filming locations.  There is a scene where the infected Eddie Brock freaks out on a cable car ride.  There is an elaborate chase involving cars and a motorcycle compete with special effects that is reminiscent of one of the best car chases in film history – Peter Yates’s BULITT.  What makes the car chases in past films stand out is their continuity.  This is missing in VENOM’s vehicle chase, but it is still pretty impressive.

Tom Hardy, the English actor who has proven his acting chops in LOCKE and LAWLESS and who has been in everything from DUNKIRK, INCEPTION to the MAD MAX reboot is a perfect choice for the antihero.  In plain clothes, he is Eddie Brock, the TV reporter  who has a hot show ‘The Eddie Brock Report’ who wants to do the right thing and expose the very bad people.  One of these bad people happens to be Drake (Riz Ahmed) of Life Enterprises who has just brought back parasites from outer space.  Drake has a weird and unbelievable (but, hey, this is a comic book film) plan of bonding human and parasite to inhabit outer planets when Earth fails.  Trouble is the humans and parasites do not match and the humans die.  But Brock makes a good fit.  Brock has a girlfriend, Annie (Michelle Williams) who help him when he is infected.

VENOM is largely harmless entertainment.  The monster does possess an enormous tongue, which the filmmakers cannot deists but use in a kissing scene.

VENOM contains lots of brilliantly executed action scenes all with pyrotechnic explosions and special effects combined.  Comic and action fans should be content.  There are also some crazy scenes, like the one Eddie, when first infected dunks himself in the lobster tank of a posh restaurant and starts munching on the raw crustaceans.  Williams and Hardy make good romantic chemistry.  Hardy is sufficiently versatile enough to pull off a crazy anti-hero performance, in fact one of his best.  Riz Ahmed, one of my favourite actors makes a sufficiently sinister villain.  Stan Lee makes his usual cameo appearance.

Audiences are advised to stay right to the end of the closing credits as there is a last surprise scene involving VENOM.

VENOM is an entertaining enough action hero movie and one should be eager for the next instalment.

Trailer: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u9Mv98Gr5pY

Film Review: BAD TIMES AT THE EL ROYALE (USA 2018) ***1/2

Bad Times at the El Royale Poster
Trailer

Seven strangers, each with a secret to bury, meet at Lake Tahoe’s El Royale, a rundown hotel with a dark past. Over the course of one fateful night, everyone will have a last shot at redemption – before everything goes to hell.

From the music, songs and vintage cars, the film’s setting appears to be the 60’s – a time when political correctness are not in place.  This might explain the girl cat fight (for male chauvinist audiences to get off on) scene in the middle of the film – similar to the gypsy girl fight put on for the entertainment of 007 James Bond in Terence Young’s (Young a director who loves to put in cat fights in his films) FROM RUSSIA WITH LOVE.

The film arrives with quite the bit of hype that anything can happen and the film is quite the mind-f***.  That said, audiences will be pleased to note that they will not be disappointed.

The film involves seven strangers, each with a secret to bury, who meet at Lake Tahoe’s El Royale of the film’s title, a rundown hotel with a dark past. Over the course of one fateful night, everyone will have a last shot at redemption – before everything goes to hell.

The film begins with an unseen stranger renting a room at El Royale.  He removes the carpet and floorboards to hide a bag of loot before being blown (shot dead) away.  The film moves forwards 6 months with the arrival of the seven strangers.

First to arrive is Father Daniel Flynn (Jeff Bridges) entering the empty hotel foyer only to be greeted by vacuum cleaner salesman Sullivan (Jone Hamm) and backup Motown singer, Darlene Sweet (Cynthia Erivo).  They are eventually greeted by the desk clerk, Miles (Lewis Pullman – yes, Bill Pullman’s son).  Later arrivals include a bad ass female, Emily (Dakota Johnson) with her even more bad ass sister (Cailee Spaeny) in tow.  Every person has a secret and no one is who he or she seems.  Father Flynn is no priest.  Sullivan is no vacuum cleaner salesman and Miles is no ordinary hotel clerk either.  One by one, the guests are done off, pretty much as in Agatha Christie’s TEN LITTLE INDIANS but with a difference.  This is a bad ass fucked up movie and be prepared to jump  out of your seats.  Not once but may times.  Director Godard, who also wrote the script ensures that there are lots of surprises around every corner.  So, be a little patient as the film has a bit of a slow start.

There are a few segments that could have been left out like the politically incorrect cat fight scene, without much change in the story.

All the actors appear to be having fun, hamming up their roles, especially THOR star Chris Hemsworth (a regular in Godard films) playing the villain, Billy Lee.

For a 60’s setting, the atmosphere is well created and believable.  All details from wardrobe, vintage cars to music are in order.

The film contains a good satisfactory ending where the deserving characters get to live and the bad ass guys get their come-uppance.  BAD TIMES AT THE EL ROYALE should satisfy bad ass movie fans with bad ass entertainment, Tarantino/Rodriguez style.

Trailer: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=y7wzBVARwaU

Cinefranco 2018 Review: COMMES DES GARCONS (LET THE GIRLS PLAY)

Let the Girls Play Poster
Trailer

The story of the first all-female soccer team in France, which started as a provocation but became a revolution.

Director:

Julien Hallard

This definite crowd pleaser set in the late 60’s is the story of how the first all-female football team was formed in France.  (Other European cities like Italy, England and Ireland already had theirs). 

 The film centres of Paul Coutard, a 30-year-old sports journalist sporting the Betales-like haircut of the 60’s at daily newspaper Le Champenois. Charming, childish and a womaniser, he does exactly what he pleases.  When his boss forces him to plan the newspaper’s annual fair together with Emmanuelle Bruno, the discreet and beautiful executive assistant, Paul has the crazy idea to organize a women’s soccer match for the first time.  A romance begins between Paul and Emmanuelle. 

The film has nothing that audiences have not already seen before, including the current degrading of females by male chauvinist administration.   But the comedy should be taken in all good fun, entertaining as it is.

Trailer: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YqVD-XL67EM

Cinefranco 2018 Review: UNE PART D’OMBRE (THE BENEFIT OF THE DOUBT)

The Benefit of the Doubt Poster

A woman in a  car is murdered.   David is a happy young father who has a wife he loves, two adorable young children, and a tight-knit tribe of friends who David and his family always go away on holiday with.  

However, on returning from their last trip away in the Vosges, David is taken in for questioning by the police as part of the woman’s murder investigation.  Before long the investigation reveals that all is not what it seems behind the happy and respectable facade of David’s life.   David has been having an affair in Poland unknown to his wife.  Davids character is not perfect.  He often loses his temper that results in arguments with his family and friends. 

The ultimate is whether David is guilty, the answer to which director Tilman keeps the audience guessing right to the very end. The audience wants David to be innocent, but his character is questionably and annoying, so that his innocence is also doubtful to the audience.  This way, Tillman’s film works best as a psychological thriller.  Though Tillman is a male director, he captures very well the feminine points of view in all the events.  

The film ends with the court’s decision on David whether guilty or not guilty, but this not not mean that he committed the deed or not.  Lots of clues for those who love mysteries.

Trailer: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZKwcjUFCJho

Film Review: THE HATE U GIVE (USA 2018) ***

The Hate U Give Poster
Trailer

Starr witnesses the fatal shooting of her childhood best friend Khalil at the hands of a police officer. Now, facing pressures from all sides of the community, Starr must find her voice and stand up for what’s right.

Writers:

Audrey Wells (screenplay by), Angie Thomas (based upon the novel by)

The film earns its title THE HATE U GIVE from the very early scene in which an ex-con father, Maverick, just released from prison instructs his two children, daughter Starr (Amandla Stenberg) and son on the black person’s code as well as the survival technique when confronted by a cop, especially a white one.  When accosted, both hands must be in full view of the cop, so that he does not become nervous and reach for his weapon.  This Starr commits to memory.  Later in the film when she and friend Khalil (Algee Smith) get pulled over for not signalling a turn, she puts her training into practice.  Khalil, however reaches for his hair brush and ends up

shot by the cop.  Both the cop and Starr are shocked.  The riots and protests that occur when the white cop goes free is what propels the film’s story.

This is a story right out of today’s headlines – cops’s misuse of authority; minorities targeted; cops acquitted, riots etc. etc.

Based on Angie Thomas’s award-winning bestseller, THE HATE U GIVE is as urgent and gripping as its source material, with performances that deepen the impact.  It is time and again that a cop shoots an innocent person dead.  So common is this news that most of what occurs on screen often seem cliched.  The common things that come to mind is “We have seen all this happen, time and again.” 

Angie Thomas’ novel makes the story personal and does its best to have the readers and the audience identify with the protagonist.  Starr Carter (Stenberg) lives two lives.  In her working-class neighbourhood, she is Starr Version One, at home among family and friends, just being her teenage Black girl self.  At school she is Version Two, code-switching her speech and behaviour to fit in with the rich, white world of her classmates.  One night back in the neighbourhood she reconnects with her childhood sweetheart, Khalil who is shot dead with her as the key witness.  There are only two witnesses: the police officer and Starr.  Caught between worlds at a time when she is still working out who she is, Starr struggles to make the right choices. Should she testify or keep the code of silence demanded by the neighbourhood drug lord (Anthony Mackie)? Should she listen to her uncle Carlos (Common), a police officer who urges her to trust the justice system? And what can she say to her friends at school?

These questions are dealt with to some detail which makes the film interesting.  Chris, Starr’s new boyfriend is too kind and obliging for credibility.  Director Tillman is also quick to manipulate his film for the purpose of crowd pleasing.    When Starr video records the rough house attics the cops pull on her father,  the film is quick to have her utter the words “I have to right to record this.”  These lines got loud cheers from the audience at the screening I attended.  There are two other similar segments in the movie that got the audience applauding.  The ways the cops mistreat the blacks are also too well geared to anger the back folk.  The white characters are mostly easy targets for a angry black audience which makes the film seem even more manipulative.  But Starr’s charter is at lest to shown to be perfect.  Her character is allowed to get angry and hurl a rock at the cops during an angry protest scene.

Stenberg displays sufficient range of emotions to serve her character.  Anthony Mackie is almost too good-looking to portray the bad guy drug King-pin.  Common’s cop is well written character that offers a cop’s point of view.

THE HATE U GIVE ends up a well orchestrated film, the only flaws being it being too manipulative, predictable and a crowd pleaser.  This film contains as a result no surprises and no new insight.

Trailer: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3MM8OkVT0hw

Film Review: AT FIRST LIGHT (Canada 2017) ***

At First Light Poster
Trailer

The film follows a high school senior, Alex Lainey, who has an encounter with mysterious lights that appear over her small town. She soon develops dangerous, supernatural abilities and …See full summary »

Director:

Jason Stone

Writers:

Jason StoneJason Stone (story by) | 1 more credit »

AT FIRST LIGHT is a low budget Canadian sci-fi suspense drama set in s small American town.  (The film according to the imdb database had shooting locations in Nevada but the closing credits give acknowledgement to the town of Porterville, California.)  AT FIRST LIGHT is impressive for the reason that it is a small film, all departments performing at their best.

Do not expect the special effects of sci-fi first contact blockbusters movies like FIRST CONTACT, CLOSE ENCOUNTERS OF THE THIRD KIND and ARRIVAL.  The only spaceship effects are six or so circular mysterious orbs of lights in the sky that a driver chases at the start of the film.  The best of the special effects are the levitation of a vehicle from the ground.  But these suit the movie.  nothing more elaborate would give the impression of falsehood.

AT FIRST LIGHT is a film about first contact.  This film intelligently shows that first contact need not be physical.  It occurs as light, experienced by Alex (Stefanie Scott) when she swims and is affected by the light of the film title.  She experiences her life flashing through her brain and finally emerges dazed and confused from the contact.  The story starts from this point.

Sean (Théodore Pellerin), her childhood friend who has a crush on her, and Alex go on the run after this close encounter with the mysterious orbs of light.  Alex learns that she has  extraordinary powers that she has no idea how to control – pretty much like SPIDER-MAN  learning how to use his super powers – them.   As the two flee from their families, the police and a covert government agency, Alex and Sean find themselves at the centre of an unprecedented event in human history.  First contact.   As her powers grow stronger and more dangerous, Sean must decide whether staying with Alex and discovering the truth behind her transformation is worth dying for.

The actors, mostly young teens deliver outstanding performances, that should make them rising stars.  A few of them are already well known and have been in other films  The main lead, Alex, played by Stefanie Scott has been in the INSIDIOUS movie.  Théodore Pellerin has been seen in ITS ONY THE END OF THE WORLD and last year’s BOOST, my favourite Canadian film of the year.

The film can cater to cinephiles, sci-fi fans and even teenagers.  Despite its simplified story-line the filmmaker and crew has proven once again it is not the story in the movie that counts, but how the story is told.  AT FIRST SIGHT might not be the best movie of the week but it is certainly the one most worth a look at.

Trailer: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ItIz6RAign4&t=5s

Film Review: THE OLD MAN & THE GUN (USA 2018) ***1/2 Review:

The Old Man & the Gun Poster
Trailer

Based on the true story of Forrest Tucker and his audacious escape from San Quentin at the age of 70 to an unprecedented string of heists that confounded authorities and enchanted the public.

Director:

David Lowery

Writers:

David LoweryDavid Grann (based on the article by)

THE OLD MAN & THE GUN is a seniors film for sure from its subject, setting, protagonists and even in pacing.  One will definitely notice the film’s slow pacing but don’t let the slowness fool you.  The script, based on David Grann’s 2003 article in The New Yorker titled “The Old Man and the Gun” contains a lot of details that could easily be overlooked.  The film is in many ways a clever one with more insight uncovered if (the film) discussed later.  Director Lowery’s excuse for his film being slow is echoed by the words of Robert Redford in the film’s opening cafe scene; “It is my style.”

The film is based on the true story (or mostly true as the opening credits boast) of career criminal, prison-escape artist, and amicable bank robber Forrest Tucker (Robert Redford).   The film opens with one of his successful bank hold-ups.

Having first been put away at age 15, Forrest had spent much of his life in jail and much of his energy breaking out – he successfully escaped incarceration 18 times. Forrest is, in the film in his seventies, free, and living in a retirement community, yet he cannot resist the lure of another bank heist.  He assembles a gang (the cops nickname ‘the over-the-hillers’) who, though armed, rely mainly on creativity and charisma to claim their loot.  They are pursued by Detective John Hunt (Casey Affleck), whose official duty is galvanized by the purity of his love for the chase.  The film’s setting is 1981 with Forrest still robbing banks.

For reason of not revealing any of the film’s spoilers which will certainly  diminish the film’s entertainment, the key plot points will not be mentioned in this review and so naturally, a lot of the script’s brilliance cannot be detailed.  So, take it with some faith that there are a few bouts of brilliant in the script.

It is one thing to make a film politically correct but to have Detective John’s wife as a black played by Tika Sumpter is going a bit overboard.  I doubt that this was the case in real life.

But THE OLD MAN & THE GUN is not really about cops and robbers, bank robberies or prison escapes.  It is about life and and what one does with ones life.  The film’s message is to ” Keep on and keep keeping on…” which in the case of Forrest is to keep robbing banks.  It is a universal message that results in this seniors film also having a universal appeal.  Robbing banks is in Forrest’s blood and he cannot change it.  When he is imprisoned, Forrest’s newest love interest Jewel (Sissy Spacek) convinces him finally to say put and not plan an escape.  This he does but to completely change his nature of robbing banks is an impossibility with him.  As the song goes in the 80’s hit tune that is played in the film – The Kink’s “Lola”, Well that’s the way that I want it to stay and I always want it to be that way – for my Lola.

This film has been reported to be Robert Redford’s last acting role and the film is a slow but well-thought out and executed entertainer!

Trailer: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d7rlUe-Thvk

Film Review: MY GENERATION (UK 2017) ***

My Generation Poster
Trailer

The cultural revolution that occurred in the 1960s England is explored in this documentary.

Director:

David Batty

“You’re only supposed to blow the bloody doors off!”  These are the unmistakable words that belong to actor Michael Caine, made more famous by Steve Coogan when he does his Michael Caine impersonation in Michael Winterbottom’s films THE TRIP and THE TRIP TO SPAIN.  These words are uttered and shown with the clip from Peter Collinson’s 1969 heist movie THE ITALIAN JOB the film MY GENERATION in this very entertaining documentary narrated by Caine himself begins.

The good old days.  This is a phrase many use but are these really the good old days.  Michael Cain questions the period of the 60’s – the period after the War, after the blitz and when food rations took effect.  With poverty, unemployment, are these really the good old times?  It takes the then generation, as Caine narrates to make a change.  Caine claims himself at the age of 33 then, to be the grandfather of that generation.

The title MY GENERATION is taken from the song by the English rock band The Who, which became a hit and one of their most recognizable songs.  The song was released in 1965 has been said to have “encapsulated the angst of being a teenager,” and has been characterized as a “nod to the mod counterculture”.

The doc is extremely watchable and entertaining for several reason, the foremost being the film references.  Everyone loves the movies, especially in the 60’s.  But as Caine narrates, the films were made on Dukes and Duchesses and the upper class, followed by a clip of a David Niven film with him wearing a top hat.  The film goes on to the David Lean’s classic BRIEF ENCOUNTER where the characters now speak as the working class English do.  This is the love story of the last meeting between Trevor Howard and Cilia Johnson, a film most film aficionados are familiar with.

Doc is revealed in acts.  Act 1: Something in the Air.  The song says it.  “We all have to get it together now!”  Act 2: I Feel Free. and Act 3: Always not what it Seems

The film’s best segment is the collection of montages of what is wrong with the world (the riots, the atomic bomb, the Vietnam War) played on screen to the tune of the Rolling Stones song “I can Get No satisfaction”.  Caine emphasizes the influence of bands of the 60’s – the Stones, the WHO and of course, the Beatles.

This is typical British school boy mentality.  When the old guard tells the boys not to do it, the boys always find away to do it.

MY GENERATION are the young of the 60’s.  They are the pop stars, the models, the photographers and Cockney at that.  Models given screen time include Jean Shrimpton and Twiggy shot by photographers like David Bailey.  The film attacks the class system particularly the upper classes.  While celebrating the young, Caine makes his point against drug use, that became rampant in the 60’s particularly marijuana and LSD.

Overall, MY GENERATION offers a good nostalgic look at the 60’s, particularly 60’s London.  Wonder if there would be making docs on the 70’s, 80’s and 90’s and if they do, who would be narrating?

Trailer: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uFxwkToatSg

Film Review: A STAR IS BORN (USA 2018) ***

A Star Is Born Poster
Trailer

2:31 | Trailer
A musician helps a young singer and actress find fame, even as age and alcoholism send his own career into a downward spiral.

Director:

Bradley Cooper

Writers:

Eric Roth (screenplay by), Bradley Cooper (screenplay by) | 3 more credits »

The third remake after the Judy Garland/James Mason and Barbra Streisand/Kris Kristofferson entries, A STAR IS BORN, Academy Award Best Actor nominee Bradley Cooper’s

directorial and screenwriting debut arrives in Toronto for a commercial release right after great hype at both the Venice and Toronto International Film Festivals.  Having high expectations, I was ultimately disappointed.  The film is good but not that good, falling into the trap of the typical failed romantic drama due to personal demons and artistic conflict – predictable storyline of personal conflict and over-staged drama.

The film opens with super singer Jackson Maine (Cooper) performing live at a huge concert.  It is an amazingly shot scene complete with a screaming crowd, astounding acoustics and musical performance, setting the stage for more outstanding performances to come.  And they thankfully are, whether performed by Jackson or his rising star, Ally (Lady Gaga).  But Jackson is clearly on a self destructive course.  He arrives at a bar after the opening concert, dropped off by his chauffeur.  He ends up in a drag bar (because Lady gag has the hit gay positive song, “Born This Way”) where he is impressed by Ally’s performance of La Vie En Rose.  Apparently she is so good, she is the only non drag performer allowed to sing there.  Jackson takes her home and this is the beginning of the relationship in which Jackson also grooms Ally to be a star.

The rest is history and the story almost everyone in the movies is aware off.  As Ally rises to fame, Jackson downward spirals into losing his.  Jackson also suffers from a hearing problem and has a rift with his older brother and manager (Sam Elliot, who is good but mumbles half his dialogue).

Cooper’s film captures the atmosphere of the rich and famous, from the parties, the glare of the spotlight, the attraction of fame as well as the pain that comes with it.

The main trouble is that it can safely be said that the audience has seen all this before -a star’s rise to fame, her lose of identity (clearly mentioned a few times to make its point) and conflict of interest.  Cooper’s film attempts to bridge the gap between having a solid relationship and a successful singing career   This does not happen.  One basically has to give up family life for musical fame.  This story is more effectively told in the gut wrenching documentary BAD REPUTATION, about the life and career of girl rock and roller Joan Jett, that coincidentally also opens this week.  BAD REPUTATION puts A STAR IS BORN to shame.  BAD REPUTATION is the real thing where Jett maintains her identity, ditches family life to launch a successful music career that audiences can root for an identify with.  A STAR IS BORN, unfortunately sinks into predictable melodrama  at many points.

The film also suffers from having two protagonists Jackson and Ally instead of just concentrating on Ally.  Cooper is ok, he has his star charm but it is Lady gaga that makes the movie.  She does not look anything like the Lady Gaga everyone is used to seeing and it is her that the audience sees that a real young and rising star is born.  Move over Madonna!

Still A STAR IS BORN will be well received by many as a love story that hovers between the shadow of tragedy and the bright light of artists at their peak as observed by many of the teary eyed audience (mainly females) who left the theatre at the promo screening.

Trailer: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iPxGl3B2I4A