Film Review: CRAZY RICH ASIANS (USA 2018) ***1/2

Crazy Rich Asians Poster
Trailer

This contemporary romantic comedy, based on a global bestseller, follows native New Yorker Rachel Chu to Singapore to meet her boyfriend’s family.

Director:

Jon M. Chu

Writers:

Peter Chiarelli (screenplay by), Adele Lim (screenplay by) | 1 more credit »

 

CRAZY RICH ASIANS is a likeable though occasionally cliche-ridden American romantic comedy-drama film directed by Jon M. Chu from a screenplay by Peter Chiarelli and Adele Lim based on Kevin Kwan’s 2013 novel of the same name.  The film boasts both to be the first film by a major Hollywood studio  (Warner Bros.) to feature a majority Asian American cast in a modern setting since THE JOY LUCK CLUB (1993) and likely the first film to be mostly shot in ultra-modern Singapore and parts of Malaysia standing in for the Lion City.

The rom-com plot is quite simple.  Rachel Chu (Constance Wu) a NYU Economics Professor is brought back to Singapore by her boyfriend Henry Golding (Nick Young) to meet his family.  Nick Young belongs to the wealthiest family in Singapore, unbeknown to Rachel.  Rachel is put to the test by Henry’s super-strict mother, Eleanor (Michelle Yeoh) where proving herself is still not enough for the mother’s approval.  Needless to say, the man gets his girl at the end.

As far as performances go, Wu and Golding are ok as the couple.  It is Michelle Yeoh (Once a Bond girl and martial-arts star) who shines, her every look and speech making a solid impact.  The funniest of the cast is TV’s SUPERSTORE’s Nico Santos who plays Eleanor’s procurer, Oliver who keeps everything in gear and Eleanor happy.

Singapore (nicknamed Asia for Beginners) is a multi-national society that is very different from any other Asian city.  The Government is also very strict that Singapore be always presented in a good light.  Singapore banned, for example Peter Bogdanovich (THE LAST PCITUE SHOW, WHAT’S UP DOC?) and his film SAINT JACK about a ex-British soldier returning after the War to set up a brothel in Singapore.   Bogdanovich submitted a false script, Jack of Diamonds to the Ministry of Culture for approval and shot a totally different film instead.  When boasting about the incident back in the States, the Singapore Government got wind of it and banned him from ever entering Singapore again.  IN CRAZY RICH ASIANS, Singapore is displayed in all its modernity and prosperity from the first scene at Changi International Airport when Nick Young and girlfriend step off the fictitious airline.  The couple is immediately whisked to Newton Hawker’s Centre, where a full display of local food fare is displayed for the audience and for Rachel.  The famous triple towers Marine Bay Sands, the timeless Raffles Hotel with the palm trees in the courtyard and the Merlion (lion with the tail of a mermaid) statue sprouting water, are a few of the famous landmarks on display in the film.

As the film is catered to a North American audience, most of the characters speak English with a western (be it American or British) accent.  Only a few of the cast speak the commonly heard English.  One of Auntie Eleanor’s friends utters one of these when the couple arrive at the house disrupting a Bible Study: Christianity-lah!”  But it is Auntie Neena, Rachel’s best friend’s mother (Koh Chieng Mun) who is given the most lines to speak in Singapore’s pidgin English.  Koh is a total riot with the film poking fun at the way English is spoken by a local.  In Singapore, the most common language spoken is Hokkien, a Chinese dialect.  That is never heard in the film, though the language is referenced in the scene where Rachel plays mah-jong with Eleanor with the other ladies. “They won’t understand us (English), Rachel says, “They only understand Hokkien.”  In another scene, Eleanor explains that Rachel can never be accepted because she is not ‘kah-kee nang’ (a Hokkien phrase meaning ”own people, or ‘same flesh’).  But one glaring omission in the film is the presence of Singapore minority ethnic groups – the Malays and Indians that make up 20% of the population.  Only two Singh guards are shown in the film, guarding the family mansion as security.

Audiences who favour romantic comedies are in for a treat.  A super-Singapore setting, crazy rich and colourful characters, well choreograph set-ups and laugh-out loud humour all make a well paced crowd pleaser with a happy ending.

CRAZY RICH ASIANS has at the time of writing grossed around $150 million based on a $30 million production cost.  The other totally Asian American film SEARCHING starring John Cho (HAROLD AND KUMAR) about a Korean American searching of his missing daughter is also grossing in a huge profit.  The sequel for CRAZY RICH ASIAS has already been announced by Warner Bros.  There is clearly a huge demand for Asian American films that has just been realized.

Trailer: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZQ-YX-5bAs0

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TIFF: 2018 Review: LES SALOPES or the Naturally Wanton Pleasure of Skin (Canada 2018) ***

Movie Reviews of films that will be playing at TIFF (Toronto International Film Festival) in 2018. Go to TIFF 2018 Movie Reviews and read reviews of films showing at the festival.

Les Salopes or The Naturally Wanton Pleasure of Skin Poster
Revealing women, showing men Dermatology professor Marie-Claire is embarking on a new project linking skin cells and sexuality, when unexpected events disrupt her professional, family and intimate life.

Director:

Renée Beaulieu

 

Soft porn, art movie or soft porn art in the guise of an art movie?  Marie-Claire (Brigitte Poupart), in her mid-40’s is a professor of dermatology, embarking on a study of how skin cells are affected by desire. 

Director Beaulieu also puts in her two cents worth about the sex theory.  Meanwhile, promising student Sofia (Charlotte Aubin) hopes to find tangible proof of love on the cellular level.  Director Beaulieu gives Marie-Claire a loving family, a sexy and loving husband (who still have sex with her) and two children.  Things get to a boil when they find out what mummy is up to.  Beaulieu’s film is more intriguing than it sounds as her subject faces different situations resting fro her sexual promiscuity. 

 As expected, there are lots of erotic and sex scenes.  Brigitte Poupart is winning as the film’s subject.

Trailer: (unavailable)

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TIFF 2018 Reviews: LIGHT AS FEATHERS (Netherlands 2018) ***

Movie Reviews of films that will be playing at TIFF (Toronto International Film Festival) in 2018. Go to TIFF 2018 Movie Reviews and read reviews of films showing at the festival.

Light as Feathers Poster
15 year old Eryk lives with his mother, grandmother and great-grandmother in a small village in Poland. He has a too intimate relation with his manipulative and dominant mother. Eryk is in …See full summary »

Director:

Rosanne Pel

Writer:

Rosanne Pel

LIGHT AS FEATHERS is heavy family drama done minimalist style with the audience left to interpret the incidents happening on screen as to cause and effect.  The film’s setting is a Polish village with the characters speaking Polish despite the film being a Dutch production.

The film centres around a young impressionable youth Eryk (Eryk Walny) who lives with with his dissatisfied mother (she complains about how life is leading her nowhere at the start of the film), Ewa (Ewa Makuula) and grandmother in a Polish village.  Eryk plays rough games like wrestling with the other boys while having his neighbour Klaudia (Klaudia Przybylska) as his girlfriend.  

Things are not going too well with the family especially for Eryk – no ambition, no career guidance and no male role model.  Things come to a boil when Eryk gets Klaudia pregnant.  Pel’s film is brutal too watch with some mean dialogue spoken as well.  Mother to Eryk” “I regret giving birth to you.”  Pel gets her message of youth confusion across but does not offer any solutions.  

Eryck is at least showing signs of maturity towards the film’s end.

Trailer: https://vimeo.com/253635858

 

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TIFF 2018 Review: KINGSWAY (Canada 2018) ***

Movie Reviews of films that will be playing at TIFF (Toronto International Film Festival) in 2018. Go to TIFF 2018 Movie Reviews and read reviews of films showing at the festival.

Directed by Bruce Sweeney

This dysfunctional comedy is done with much of the Bruce Sweeney wit that viewers of his previous films DIRTY, LAST WEDDING and EXCITED are used to.  And it is bitingly funny.  Take the first scene with Matt (Jeff Gladstone) in his psychiatrist office. “I am better.  I don’t need to be here and I can leave.” 

 So he gets up and leaves the office.  But Matt is not better but getting worse, even considering suicide.  It does not help that his wife, Lori is having and affair but worst of all, his dysfunctional family is butting in trying to do what they think is best for him – which is not.  The bossy sister, Jess (Camille Sullivan) and mother, Mary (Gabrielle Rose, who is always a pleasure to watch) will not leave Matt alone, even stooping so low as to confront Lori for him.  Director Sweeney knows how to tread the fine line between anxiety and crazy and often the line is blurred.  

One wishes that there would be something deeper in the story or some message  for the audience but Sweeney’s film is so entertaining, no one really cares for anything deeper.  The fantastic cast do a great a job as well.

Trailer: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=r2ILcjp-x44

 

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TIFF 2018 Review: CONSEQUENCES (Slovenia/Austria 218) ***1/2

Movie Reviews of films that will be playing at TIFF (Toronto International Film Festival) in 2018. Go to TIFF 2018 Movie Reviews and read reviews of films showing at the festival.

Consequences Poster
After being sent to a youth detention centre, 18-year-old Andrej has to fight for his place within the group of inmates while getting closer to Zeljko, their informal leader, and struggling to keep his repressed secret in the dark.

Director:

Darko Stante

Writer:

Darko Stante

“If you fuck up, there will be CONSEQUENCES.”  so says one of the supervisors at a youth detention centre to the youth under him, who obviously think it an idle threat.  CONSEQUENCES is the impressive directorial debut of Slovenian filmmaker Darko Štante centring on one such troubled youth, Andrej (Matej Zemljic).

  Andrej does not go to school, throws temper tantrums and is prone to anger, violence and lies.  His parents have given up on him and therefore send him to a youth detention centre where he survives the bullying and gangs, owing to the fact that he is strong and feisty enough to challenge whoever gives him a hard time. 

 The film does not delve into the reasons behind Andrej’s anger but shows him to be awkwardly sensitive in  few incidents.  He is kind to his pet rat and sympathetic to a family he is about to rob as they have a backward daughter.  The film is less a coming-of-age saga than an account of the youth’s self discovery. 

 The film is supposedly based on the director’s own experiences working with youth in a correctional facility and it shows.

Trailer: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6W8v3feKptE

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TIFF 2018 Review: ANTHROPOCENE: THE HUMAN EPOCH (Canada 2018) ***1/2

Movie Reviews of films that will be playing at TIFF (Toronto International Film Festival) in 2018. Go to TIFF 2018 Movie Reviews and read reviews of films showing at the festival.

Anthropocene: The Human Epoch Poster

 

Filmmakers filmmakers Jennifer Baichwal and Nicholas de Pencier return with their latest and third of their trilogy after MANUFACTURED LANDSCAPES and WATERMARK, entitled ANTHROPOCENE: THE HUMAN EPOCH.  

The doc, written by Baichwal and narrated by Swedish actress and Oscar winner Alicia Vikander is a disturbing doc that demands to be seen for it explores human impact on the Earth.  The film’s first scene is that of molten metal.  

The site on display is north of the Arctic circle in what Baischwal describes as Russia’s most polluted city.  This is where the world’s largest metal smelting industry is located.  Baichwal and her crew travel the world documenting evidence of human domination – from concrete seawalls that cover 60% of China’s mainland coast, to psychedelic potash mines in Russia’s Ural Mountains, to vast marble quarries in Italy, to surreal phosphate tailings ponds in Florida.  

ANTHROPOCENE: THE HUMAN EPOCH is a spectacular film – Baichwal’s best of her trilogy.  She has spent an immense amount of time on research and travels resulting in this magnificent educational documentary.

Trailer: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=44RYqgKwfSQ

 

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TIFF 2018 Capsule Review: EL ANGEL (Argentina/Spain2018) ***1/2

Movie Reviews of films that will be playing at TIFF (Toronto International Film Festival) in 2018. Go to TIFF 2018 Movie Reviews and read reviews of films showing at the festival.

El Angel Poster
Carlitos is a seventeen-year-old youth with movie star swagger, blond curls and a baby face. As a young boy, he coveted other people’s things, but it wasn’t until his early adolescence that…See full summary »

Director:

Luis Ortega

Not since THE OMEN has evil been given a more deliciously portrayal as in the angelic innocent face of Damien the satanic child.   Loosely based on the infamous Argentinian serial killer dubbed “Death Angel”, EL ANGEL (THE ANGEL) follows an innocuous-looking, all blond hair and cherubic face but deeply sinister thief whose lawlessness escalates exponentially when he takes up with a career criminal. 

 Carlitos (Lorenzo Ferro) has decent parents who discouragers him from stealing but Carlitos does so because he revels in it.  Trouble really begins when he meets Ramon (Chino Darín), the son of criminals, the attraction he feels (for both crime and also for Ramon as evident in one homo-erotic scene) causes him to up the ante and engage in more serious criminal activity.  Soon, the young men are killing.   

Director Ortega is surely fascinated with subject and the film shows mostly the glamour that goes with the killing and robbing.

Trailer: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jfNtW7xkvzM

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TIFF 2018 Review: BIRDS OF PASSAGE (PAJAROS DEVERANO) (Colombia/ Denmark/Mexico,/France 2018) ***

Movie Reviews of films that will be playing at TIFF (Toronto International Film Festival) in 2018. Go to TIFF 2018 Movie Reviews and read reviews of films showing at the festival.

Birds of Passage Poster
During the marijuana bonanza, a violent decade that saw the origins of drug trafficking in Colombia, Rapayet and his indigenous family get involved in a war to control the business that ends up destroying their lives and their culture.

 

BIRDS OF PASSAGE plays like a Colombian style GODFATHER epic.  Both films begin with a young couple’s love.  In BIRDS OF PARADISE, Raphayet (José Acosta) is captivated by Zaida (Natalia Reyes) at her “coming out” ceremony, and is determined to come up with the enormous dowry her mother and family matriarch Úrsula (Carmiña Martínez) demands.  This where the trouble starts.  He gets the dowry from drug money involving wats between clans that eventually is too difficult to solve.  The film is good study of how things get seriously totally out of control from a small incident which in this case is Rapha’s trigger happy outsider Moisés.

BIRDS OF PARADISE is a colourful film (though a lot of colour is blood red) showing Colobia as many have not seen before, especially with the indigenous Wayuu customs, traditions, and celebrations  In addition there is the classic tragedy  arising from pride, greed, and the clash between the old and new worlds.

Trailer: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_cbzb4pXZT0

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TIFF 2018 Review: LET ME FALL (Iceland/Finland/Germany 2018) ***1/2

Let Me Fall Poster
Drawing on true stories and interviews with the families of addicts, this harrowing portrait of addiction follows Stella and Magnea through the decades as precarious teenage years morph into perilous adulthoods.

LET ME FALL follows the downward spiral of Magnea through decades from teenager to adult through drug addiction.  The trouble with Magnea is that she never ever genuinely wishes to turn her life around.  

She is happy to give blow jobs in to fat, ugly blokes in order to earn a fix.  In the film, there is an almost unwatchable scene in which she is forced to give one even before she showers and after that, gets punched up instead of him keeping his promise.  “Nobody wants you, you are ugly,” he says to her at another point in the film before throwing her out into the street.  One cannot but still feel sorry of Magnea.  

Magnea’s parents have given up on her because she has constantly lied to them and has failed to show any gratitude for their care.  LET ME FALL is understandably a very difficult film to watch.  It is set in the Icelandic capital of  Reykjavik.  Diretcor Baldvin  Z (LIFE IN A FISHBOWL) draws his film on true stories and interviews with the families of addicts.  Magnea and her friend Stella are portrayed by two different sets of actresses for their teen and adult years.  

The film alternates between their teen and adulthood, which sometimes  get a bit confusing.

Trailer: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PO_-KcTMQnU

TOFF 2018 Review: ENDZEIT (Germany 2018)

Movie Reviews of films that will be playing at TIFF (Toronto International Film Festival) in 2018. Go to TIFF 2018 Movie Reviews and read reviews of films showing at the festival.

Ever After Poster

Carolina Hellsgård’s occasionally chilling second feature is a zombie philosophical film that follows two women fighting for their lives in a post-apocalyptic world overrun by zombies.  

The voiceover informs the audience at the beginning that a plague has swept the world and that Weimar and Jura are the only surviving cities left.  The two women are Vivi (Gro Swantje Kohlhof), vulnerable and numb and Eva (Maja Lehrer), whose icy indifference make the two initial enemies that eventually bond because Vivi can repair cameras, having experience working on eBay.  It all sounds too silly. 

 The premise of the zombie-ed world is too far-fetched to be believable and who really cares about these two women anyway.  What about the rest of the surviving population?   The only thing going for the film is the cinematography by Leah Striker with nicely shot countryside landscapes.  

The zombie attack scenes are well done though.  The mix of horror and philosophy of friendship does not work.

Trailer: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d_nPQ4Inzbw

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