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INSIDE

March 16, 2023 By Leave a Comment

INSIDE

If INSIDE were a short film, anything up to the Academy™ definition of same, which is to say, 40 minutes or less including the credits, it would be an incisive deconstruction of art as commerce rather than aesthetics driven by a powerful performance by Willem Dafoe. Instead, it runs for 1 hour and 45 minutes,… Read More »

Tagged With: art thief, contemporary art, evil technology, metaphor, New York City, starvation

INCREDIBLE BUT TRUE (INCROYABLE MAIS VRAI)

July 31, 2022 By Leave a Comment

INCREDIBLE BUT TRUE (INCROYABLE MAIS VRAI)

One of the many delightful things about Quentin Dupieux’s films is that they do not waste our time. They are a marvel of economy while at the same time seriously introducing a wealth of bemusing ideas in their tightly written, superbly absurd plots. And so it is with INCREDIBLE BUT TRUE (INCROYABLE MAI VRAI), a… Read More »

Tagged With: France, middle class, recoil, semi-legal medical procedue, time travel

MANDIBLES (Mandibules)

July 22, 2021 By Leave a Comment

MANDIBLES (Mandibules)

In MANDIBLES, Quentin Dupieux takes us on a road trip with two lovable innocents and an outsized housefly. Why there is an outsized housefly in the trunk of a dilapidated Mercedes just waiting to be discovered/rescued/exploited by this pair of misfits is never explained, nor does it need to be. This latest excursion by Dupieux… Read More »

Tagged With: buddy film, class system, France, road trip

KEEP AN EYE OUT (Au Poste)

March 4, 2021 By Leave a Comment

KEEP AN EYE OUT (Au Poste)

The French title of Quentin Dupieux’s latest film, KEEP AN EYE OUT, relies on a clever bit of wordplay in its two words, AU POSTE. One of the meanings of poste is police station, where the action takes place. Another is post, as in taking up one’s post. There are more, the translation of which… Read More »

Tagged With: 1970s, murder, oyster, police drama, pun, satire

CYRANO, MY LOVE

December 13, 2020 By Leave a Comment

CYRANO, MY LOVE

CYRANO MY LOVE is an ebullient comedy of errors that recounts the fraught confluence of art, commerce, and egos that gave birth to Cyrano de Bergerac, the most successful play in French theater history. As witty and wise as that character himself, it is a love letter to the creative process that spares none of… Read More »

Tagged With: Belle Epoque, Comedie Francaise, Cyrano de Bergerac, Paris, playwright, Sarah Bernhardt, stage, theater

PILGRIMAGE

September 3, 2017 By Leave a Comment

PILGRIMAGE

PILGRIMAGE tells a dour tale of faith and fanaticism. Set in 13th-century Ireland, it blends mysticism with realpolitik in a time and place so distant from ours that a subtext of imperialism might be almost too subtle, while the vicious commonplaces of summary justice, revenge, and casual violence are all too vivid A prologue set… Read More »

Tagged With: battle, Christianity, fairy fort, fanaticism, gore, holy relic, Ireland, monastery, monks, Normans, religion

LOST IN PARIS

June 21, 2017 By Leave a Comment

LOST IN PARIS

The spirit of Jacques Tati is alive and well in LOST IN PARIS, a charming comedy of coincidences (or is it fate?).  As stylized as it is heartwarming, it is an unexpected love story set against the magical backdrop of Paris, with every movement, from a roasted red pepper on the loose, to a love… Read More »

Tagged With: Canada, homeless man, missing aunt, Paris, romance, rucksack, Statue of Liberty

THE RED TURTLE

January 17, 2017 By 1 Comment

THE RED TURTLE

We are reminded in THE RED TURTLE how superfluous words can be. This animated fable from Studio Ghibli, aimed more at adults than at children, is a thoughtful film about the cycle of life, and a sublime cinematic achievement. A masterpiece, in fact. Starting with a shipwreck, it tells the story of a castaway marooned… Read More »

Tagged With: castaway, desert island, destiny, fable, Family, miracle, shipwreck, turtle

THE BRAND NEW TESTAMENT (Le tout nouveau testament )

December 29, 2016 By Leave a Comment

THE BRAND NEW TESTAMENT (Le tout nouveau testament )

THE BRAND NEW TESTAMENT is a clever and wise deconstruction of dogma and patriarchy. Taking as its premise that God  (Benoît Poelvoorde) is real, but less than benevolent, it gives us the story of his other child, the one who didn’t get her own book and who doesn’t like the status quo and takes it… Read More »

Tagged With: fantasy, God, homelessness, poetic justice, religion, satire, testament

MISS PEREGRINE’S SCHOOL FOR PECULIAR CHILDREN

September 26, 2016 By Leave a Comment

MISS PEREGRINE’S SCHOOL FOR PECULIAR CHILDREN

I have not read the eponymous novel on which MISS PEREGRINE’S HOME FOR PECULIAR CHILDREN Is based, but a quick check of the of the Wikipedia entry for it reveals that for the screen adaptation many of the characters have been modified and plot point changed. This is not uncommon, and when the original source… Read More »

Tagged With: book to screen, grandfather-grandson, monsters, needle-like teeth, Peculiars, supernatural, time travel

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