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2019 TIFF Movie Review: SEA FEVER (Ireland/Sweden/Belgium/UK 2019) ***
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SEA FEVER is a cross between mystery and horror similar to the ALIEN film franchise. The film is set in the sea where a bizarre creature hitches a ride on a departing trawler.
The assorted crew is comprised of a young female red-haired scientist Hermione Corfied), a couple who needs a big haul of fish to pay their debts (Dougray Scott and Connie Nielsen) and others waiting to be disposed off by the creature and its living microbes. It does not help that the crew believes that the red hair will bring bad luck on the trip. It is assumed that the boat leaves Ireland since most of the characters speak with an Irish accent.
The horrors come fast and furious aided by some effective and scary special effects. All works rather well except for the loose end that the creature is still in the waters after everything is over, ready and able to eradicate the human race when it attacks the next boat.
2019 TIFF Movie Review: DIRT MUSIC (Australia/UK 2019)
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Jack Thorne (screenplay), Tim Winton (novel)
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DIRT MUSIC is based on the acclaimed novel by Tim Wintin adapted to the screen and directed by Gregor Jordan. It is a tale of three luckless people entangled in a relationship set in the backdrop of stunning Western Australian coast captured beautifully by cinematographer Sam Chiplin.
Georgie, (Kelly Macdonald) stuck in a loveless relationship with legendary local fisherman Jim Buckridge (David Wenham) becomes enamoured with Lu (Garrett Hedlund), a young poacher who is encroaching on her tyrannical partner’s territory. Georgie has an affair with Lu. But Lu takes off to the wild coast island while Georgie searches for him. The trouble with this tale is director Jordan’s desire to stylize his storytelling that unfolds in flashbacks in a non-chronological order. Or perhaps he is following the novel.
But it is not only confusing but frustrating and takes a while before one can figure out what is going on. How British actress Macdonald got sucked into doing this Aussie piece is also intriguing.
2019 TIFF Movie Review: DISCO (NORWAY 2019)
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2019 TIFF Movie Review: THE TWENTIETH CENTURY (Canada 2019) ***1/2
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In Mathew Rankin’s feature debut THE TWENTIETH CENTURY, he draws his inspiration from the old movies in terms of German impressionism and from more recent fellow Winnipeg filmmaker Guy Maddin’s gothic films. The film has a refreshing humour and it a laugh-out loud moment every minute or so, that one does not want the film to end.
In short, the film is a bizarre biopic of William Lyon Mackenzie King (David Beirne), which reimagines the former Canadian Prime Minister’s early life as a series of abject humiliations, both professional and sexual. Though cartoonish in its looks, beware as there are segments of S&M, violence, sex, humiliation and other assorted nasties that should all be taken with a grain of salt.
The film is set in Toronto and likely with too Torontonian references like the Baron of of Mississauga and Ossington Apartments that might be over the heads of audiences not living in Toronto. Still the film is a most original delight.
2019 TIFF Movie Review: HUMAN CAPITAL (USA 2019) ***
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Stephen Amidon (Novel), Oren Moverman
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HUMAN CAPITAL the 2019 version is based on both the 2004 Stephen Amidon novel and the Paolo Virzi’s 2013 film, so one would expect some exceptional storytelling. Director Meyers keeps the audience on their toes with a suspenseful and dramatic retelling, that one should not complain.
There is an intersecting timeline in the story which is a bit confusing at first till one realizes that it is what it is – i.e intersecting timeline told through 3 chapters each depicting one character’s version of the events. The story follows Drew, a real-estate agent who hastily invests with Quint, a powerful elite operator of an “invisible” high-risk/high-reward hedge fund; Carrie, Quint’s wife, who wants to use her family’s money to save a heritage theatre from development. A hit and run accident ties in the events.
The multi-start cast Liev Schreiber, Marisa Tomei, Peter Sarsgaard, Maya Hawke and Alex Wolff each deliver excellent performances that help make the movie.
2019 TIFF Movie Review: DESERT ONE (USA 2019) ***1/2
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In 1976, director Barbara Kopple made the Oscar Winner HARLAN COUNTY, USA about unionization of coal miners which is one of the most moving documentaries ever made. DESERT ONE is the named of the failed operation endorsed by then President Jimmy Carter to rescue the American hostages held in the American Embassy in Iran under control by Ayatollah Khomeini.
Khomeini would release the hostages only if the U.S. return the Shah which the U.S. refused. In the accident during the execution of DESERT STORM several soldiers lost their lives and the rescue aborted.
The film pays tribute to the dead soldiers. Director Kopple recognizes that women are just as important as men are the unsung heroes themselves. She organizes the pick of the interviews for the wives of the deceased as she did centring on the wives of the coal miners, many widows after mining accidents in HARLAN COUNTY U.S.A.
Kopple also has a heart for Jimmy Carter who graces the film with lots of screen time. A moving film that demands to be seen.
Film Review: DOWNTON ABBEY (UK 2019) ***
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Julian Fellowes (characters), Julian Fellowes (screenplay by)
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DOWNTON ABBEY is a British historical period drama/comedy written by Julian Fellowes and directed by Michael Engler. It is a continuation of the television series of the same name, created by Fellowes, that ran on ITV from 2010 to 2015. Much of the original cast returns, including Hugh Bonneville, Jim Carter, Michelle Dockery, Elizabeth McGovern, Maggie Smith and Penelope Wilton. If nothing is known of this series, all is not lost. The film stands on its own. However, for those familiar and for those with a keen admiration for the series, a lot of nostalgia will be in place.
DOWNTON ABBEY works as the kind of pompous British fare that common audiences (like myself) like to look up to and to admire the British wealthy and royalty.
The film is set in the fictional Yorkshire country estate of Downton Abbey in 1927, where it depicts the lives of the aristocratic Crawley family and their domestic servants in the post-Edwardian era—with the great events in history having an effect on their lives and on the British social hierarchy.
TV series transitioned to film need a particular special event. For the majority of TV series transitioned to film, a vacation abroad seems the most common excuse to warrant a full length feature film outing, examples being MUNSTER, GO HOME, HOLIDAY ON THE BUSES, KEVIN AND PERRY GO LARGE and most recently, ABSOLUTELY FABULOUS. The excuse here for DOWNTON ABBEY is a royal visit to Downton Abbey by King George V and Queen Mary.
The film is grounded by the main plot of the King’s visit and the extensive preparations that go with the visit. This main plot is not sufficient to hold the entire movie and several subplots are quite obviously inserted to support the story. Among them are the gay exploits of the butler as he grows brave enough to eventually find romance in the times when gays were outlawed, the abuse of the Abbey household at the hands of the over-prude royal staff, the attempted assassination of the King, the quarrel of the Smith and Wilton characters and of course, some romance thrown in for good measure. All work quite well just as the cooperation of the DOWTON ABBEY staff.
Academy Award Winner, Maggie Smith (way back when from THE PRIME OF MISS JEAN BRODIE) is given the script’s best comical punch lines and thus steals the show. The apt supporting cast do not fare much badly either.
This reviewer who sees more than 350 films annually with no time left for television, has not seen a single episode on TV, so take this review with a grain of salt. However, a fellow film critic who is a total fan of the series was pleasantly pleased with the full length feature. DOWNTON ABBEY is a pleasant enough feature on the TV series and with some luck, should win over a few converts as well.
2019 TIFF Movie Review: THE OTHER LAMB (Ireland/Belgium/USA 2019) ***
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Cults make great premises for movies. This year alone, there has been films like MIDSOMMAR, MARIA’S PARADISE and ONCE UPON A TIME IN HOLLYWOOD that tackled the evils of cults and their leaders. WE THE LAMB (former title: THE OHER LAMB) adds in the additional female component where this cult is made up only of one male the leader who calls himself the shepherd and the others his women who are either his wives or daughters.
Films like WE THE LAMB require audiences to put their total belief in their premise and when they do, the film tears the concept apart. Director Malgorzata Szumowskareally gets into the skin of the lead character who knows nothing about the outside world. Her mother was one of the leader’s wives and she is about to become one.
Though one can predict what happens at the end, director Malgorzata Szumowska still scares his audience with her creepy tale of a creepy male. Cinematography of the countryside and the ‘Eden’ that the cult finally finds looks stunning.
2019 TIFF Movie Review: THE PLATFORM (EL HOYO) (Spain 2019)
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This is a prison movie. The prison: The Pit — a provocative permutation of a panopticon whereby hundreds of cells are vertically stacked, and hollowed out through the middle. Each day, a platform adorned with a decadent feast descends through the tower from its summit. It stops on each level for a few minutes, keeping those near the top well-fed, and those at the lower levels fighting for leftovers.
A citizen of a not-too-distant dystopia voluntarily incarcerates himself with the promise of increased social mobility upon release, but becomes so radicalized by his captivity that he will risk everything to ride a devilish dumbwaiter on a one-way ticket to protect a pannacotta, a symbol for an important message for the authorities. Every prison needs an escape plan.
THE PLATFORM has one where the pannacotta has to survive going down to ground level. Director Gaztelu-Urrutia’s production sets are superb, the atmosphere chilling and creepy while his characters desperate and dangerous. The trouble is that the logic does not make sense, especially the pannacotta message. A good premise that fails to follow through.









