Posts Tagged ‘review’

Mill Valley Film Festival - Benji and Judah

Friday, October 10th, 2008

A year after befriending her wheel-chair bound neighbors, film student and first-time filmmaker Hannah Guggenheim, began to shoot them as subjects for her master’s thesis project at SFSU. She continued to pursue the story for years after finishing her degree.  The result is Benji and Judah, an emotionally powerful story centered around twin brothers born with spina bifida, (a birth defect that involves the incomplete development of the spine during pregnancy) and their mother, Jeanette, who struggles to find a home for her physically-challenged sons and seven other children. The film screened at this yearʼs  Mill Valley Film Festival as part of the Home In the Heart series.

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Benji & Judah

The film chronicles the twinsʼ lives from infancy to teenage years and begins with Jeanette explaining, how while pregnant, she had been given the grim news of their condition. She was advised to terminate the pregnancy but chose against it. Soon after the boys were born, she and her husband divorced, leaving Jeanette a single mother of eight. As the documentary unfolds, Jeanette is illustrated as the rock of the family, whose quest to provide a safe environment for her children inspires independence and strength in her sons. The family, living in limited-term government housing,  face eviction and Jeanette exhausts every possible resource to find a wheel-chair accessible home.

Much of Benji and Judah is filmed from the twinsʼ perspective. Guggenheim taught the brothers to use cameras, realizing that their story would be better told with their assistance. Four years of footage was slimmed down to just thirty-one minutes of joy, struggle and persistence.

With camera in hand, Benji and Judah come alive with the silliness of teenage boys, making faces at the camera and picking on each other as siblings do. But they also allow us an intimate view into the ups and downs of their experience. We are invited to their 17th birthday party, bowling excursions, senior prom and long hospital visits. The bond between the brothers is evident but we are also provided insight into the different nature of each twin: Benji who exudes quiet strength and Judah, whose hard shell masks a lifetime of frustration and pain.

Benji and Judah is a story about defying the odds. An inspiring story of the determination of the human spirit, it will certainly find a home in your heart.

by Arami Reyes, FilmClick.com

Film Review - “The Highway Home”

Tuesday, September 30th, 2008

HWYHOMEThe Highway That Never Reaches Home…I admit it: I am not a girl who is particularly sensitive to feminist issues.  Yes, I believe that men and women should be treated unquestionably equally, but I have never been to a female rights protest and I do not scoff at rap videos nor shake my head at beer ads.  However watching The Highway Home, I felt a sense of gender piety that made me wanted to start a feminist rally on Shattuck Avenue.

SPOILER ALERT:  At first glance the film The Highway Home, written and directed by Laurel Hunter, had real potential: attractive 16-year-old girl wants to rebel through cutting class, running away, and falling in love with a 20-something year-old drug dealer who she meets in a pool hall. Great.  Never mind the overly abundant narration that cluttered the first 6 minutes of the film, I could look past that in the promise for sex, drugs, and scandal.  However, as the seventy-minute film unfolded, it became apparent that MTV’s The Hills had more potential for action.

When we first meet the beautiful protagonist, Jamie, played by Erika Frost who makes her film debut, we have no idea how old she is yet we know she is under 21 because she tries, unsuccessfully, to convince the pool-hall bartender  to serve her alcohol.  Perhaps the audience might have sympathized with her more had she been clever enough to persuade him to serve her, but no, this only foreshadowed the remainder of the film throughout which she continues to do everything wrong.  But, as I said, we want to want to like her, so we can overlook the fact that she is not a con artist.  However, the second she sees her boyfriend-to-be, she immediately decides “she would never love anyone else again”.  The set up establishes her naiveté, but unfortunately, despite her experiences, she never grows any wiser.  Perhaps it was just bad acting, but the root of Jamie’s helplessness and desire to escape the “authority” of her home was entirely unclear. Frost always appeared content and even-tempered; she did not even show hostility towards her air-headed, but attentive mother.  Jamie’s reaction to her slobbish, self-pitying father manifested in stealing cigarettes and smoking them while staring into the clouds.  Her family did not exactly enforce strict authority and subsequently, she was not the most active rebel.  In fact, the way that the mother seemed to care for and attend to her daughter made me question why Jamie did not just ask her for the $500 that Jamie needed to bail her boyfriend out of jail when he is incarcerated for possession with intent to sell acid.  Jamie is so helplessly in love with her boyfriend (for no apparent reason-note that he lives in a motel and only substantial dialogue is his fantasy of committing a robbery), that she runs away from home, even though she cannot be with him.

While Hunter may have intended to portray Jamie’s attraction to a free-spirited rebel, the little interaction and even less chemistry made Jamie’s actions seem uncharacteristically rash and even somewhat random. In a desperate, immature act of rebellion, I could not help but wonder, what exactly what she was running from at home? Yes, her parents split up, but her home-life seemed reasonably benign.  The only reasonable explanation for Jamie’s lack of strength is her mothers similar, weak character.  Her mother suffered from (poor acting) as well as her relationship with a married man, who she inexplicably rejects when he finally leaves his wife, only to flirt with both detectives looking for her daughter, one of which ends up being a homosexual who dates her ex-husband.  When Jamie finally leaves home, sleeps with a hippy stranger, lives in a house with a stoner and a women who ends up being the girlfriend of the lying hippy, Jamie ends up doing acid by herself and crashing her car.

When she wakes up she screams out for her mother who, as we already know, is just as weak and helpless as her daughter.  More unfortunate than the poor acting choices and the meager dialogue, was the plot itself, that leaves Jamie right where she began, if not worse.  Bloody and alone, Jamie’s cry for help epitomized her lack of character development, and her essential role as a damsel in distress.  Lead blindly around by her fleeting school girl crushes that she mistakes for love, Jamie never stops to think.  She is a child who never becomes a woman, but only ruins herself further, without any apparent ammunition.  I find it difficult to digest the fact that a woman wrote and directed the film, seeing as the primary flaw is the weak female character who both begins and remains utterly helpless to take control of any minute detail of her life.   Essentially, there is no character development, growth, or plot arch, in fact it appears to simply end in the middle, when Jamie might have some chance for redemption.  The film’s redeeming qualities were occasional witty lines that referenced current events like “new age Oprah crap”, in a film that otherwise portrayed women as powerless figures who exist only impulsively and in awe of men.

by Lily Saltzberg, FilmClick.com
http://filmclick.com/lilsaltz

I also saw this film and I have some different thoughts than Ms. Saltzberg, although I agree with her review substantially, so I thought I’d add to it.  I’ve been thinking about this film for a day or two before posting this review, hoping that it would all click in my mind and I would understand where the filmmaker was coming from, at least.  But, I can’t make sense of it.

I’m coming to the rally.  This film was like a bad 1980’s after school special.  One choice leads to another for the misguided, oblivious, main character Jamie and rarely does she show any sign of awareness of her free will.  I give little fault to the actors, most of whom gave adequate performances in a poorly conceived and executed script.  As far as Frost’s performance, it is very one-note, but I blame the director for letting that happen.  I’ve been accused of liking everything, finding value in tiny parts about a film that everyone disliked.  I find little to like in this film besides the opening credits, Darren Shroader’s performance and a few out-of-the-blue one liners.  On the other hand, if it was conceived as a bad 1980’s after school special, then it is totally awesome and you should check it out and laugh.  Plus, you never got nudity on television back then.

I’ll speak particularly to a few points of the film.  There were many things which were unrealistic, which is what this film attempts to depict, I guess.  One example: one of the lead detectives investigating the main character’s run away disappearance is homosexual, a fact which is slowly revealed in the film.  The main character’s mother finds out that the detective is spending time with her ex-husband and jumps to the conclusion that they’re in a homosexual relationship.  I guess we can assume prior knowledge of her ex, but the filmmaker makes a point of the mother looking at the way they’re dressed when she figures it out.  The depiction of homosexuality here is odd/possibly insulting, but I won’t go into that.  So, the mother says that she’s going to make sure she gets custody of the daughter and that the detective gets fired.  This is backed up by the homosexual detective’s partner. Admittedly, this film is set in nowhere, so maybe this stuff matters in small-town-state-that-ends-in-a-vowel and the military, but this doesn’t make sense.  Unrealistic, even in the early 1990’s or whenever this film is set.  Since when is being homosexual grounds for denial of custody?  I also doubt that what the detective does on his own time is grounds for dismissal, despite the extenuating circumstances.  The other detective is very interested in a heterosexual relationship with the mother, although he makes a point to ask her out when it is all over.

Also, in the ending of the film the main character Jamie, during an acid-induced trip, sees Christ-like visions of a man she’s slept with, which leads to her eventual demise.  I can only guess that this is meant to illustrate that a godlike obsession with men has led to her downfall?  If so, it gives the film an anti-male sentiment, which I have no beef with, as Jamie is taken advantage of by men in the film from a certain perspective, but it removes any blame for her actions from her as a character.

As she screams for her mother during her dying moments, I don’t care.  There’s no struggle for her, no reason for me to feel pity or empathy.  Her mother is portrayed as someone who does her best to help her, not someone who abandoned her or didn’t teach her right.  If she screamed for her Dad, it would’ve made more sense.  If she reached out to her parents, her annoying intermittent narrator/basil exposition friend at school, or anyone with her real feelings of hurt, shame, joy, it might’ve connected us to her and her journey.  But, it’s not there.  If this is not meant to show the real world, the filmmaker hasn’t done her job illustrating it to the audience.  If this is the real world, then natural selection has done its job as Jamie fades away at the end of the film.  Natural selection will do similar work to this film, I imagine.

by Christopher Potter,  FilmClick.com producer
http://www.filmclick.com/cspotter

Photo courtesy of http://www.thehighwayhome.com/press-pr.04.01.08.htm

Festival Report: NewFest Has Much to Take Pride In

Monday, June 23rd, 2008

NewFest 2008 

NewFest: The NY LGBT Film Festival
6.5.08 – 6.15.08
New York, NY

Harbinger to the full-out Pride festivities that will commence later this month, the 2008 NewFest Film Festival took place June 5-15 and showcased some of this year’s best LGBT film/video offerings from around the global.  NewFest celebrates their 20th Anniversary with this year’s festival, and has much to celebrate indeed!  Over the past 20 years, NewFest has distinguished itself as one of New York’s premiere LGBT film organizations, marked by a proven dedication to not only entertain audiences but, even more importantly, to educate and empower the LGBT community and the metropolitan region at large.  I was privileged enough to catch several screenings at this year’s fest, including: The Storm, Affinity, The Open Diary of R, and OMG/HAHAHA

The Storm

The Storm
Director Paris P. Pickard’s 10 minute short chronicles a dark and stormy night where a woman succumbs to the temptations of alluring and equally ominous sirens.  The Storm presents as an almost experimental/abstract film with a vague narrative, absence of dialogue, and heavy reliance upon mood and suggestion.  The film’s main strength resides in its strong atmospheric overtones that reflect a similar type of unsettling, ominous tenor that Roman Polanski achieved in his 1965 classic film, Repulsion.

Affinity

Affinity
British author Sarah Waters has cultivated somewhat of a “cult” following around her popular, twisting tales of Victorian-era lesbian love, in both novel and film forms.  This year, Affinity takes its turn at big-screen adaptation, joining the ranks of other adapted Waters works including Tipping the Velvet and Fingersmith.  Set in dark and murky Victorian London, Affinity follows the complex and bizarre relationship that forms between a grieving high-society lady (Anna Madeley) and a strangely alluring, imprisoned mystic woman (Zoe Tapper).  While falling a bit short of the brilliance that Tipping the Velvet achieves, Affinity does deliver with absorbing atmospherics, jarring plots twists, and strong performances from both Madeley and Tapper.

The Open Diary of R

The Open Diary of R
This Brazilian short falls victim, perhaps, of being just a bit too short.  It would seem that 16 minutes is just not enough time to fully flesh-out onscreen characters to identify and sympathize with, which is exactly what this type of angst-driven, high school crush story relies upon.

OMG/HAHAHA

OMG/HAHAHA
Easily my favorite film of the festival, OMG/HAHAHA is a clever, self-aware reflection of this generation’s MySpace/YouTube/Facebook-saturated youth.  Constructed as a series of loosely- connected vignettes – with angsty stories ranging from unexpected pregnancy, to homophobia, to dying parents, and existential musings on life – the film touches upon the types of themes you would find on the most “professionally-Emo” kid’s MySpace page, with all the aptly included emoticons and web-jargon to boot.  In the Q&A following the film, director Morgan Jon Fox paid verbal homage to the clear influence of both Lars Von Trier and Gus Van Sant, who’s inspiration is clearly evident in OMG/HAHAHA’s improvisational style, cinemagraphic simplicity, and narrative structure.  Fox, a Memphis-native himself, also utilized local acting and musical talent to form the film, epitomizing the very nature, charm, and power of true grassroots Indie filmmaking.

Missed out on this year’s NewFest Festival?  Live in the New York area?  Well, then you’re in luck!  From August 22-24, you can catch “The Best of NewFest” at the BAM Rose Cinema where a selection of the festival’s top winners and fan favorites will be reprised.

For more information, visit: http://www.newfest.org/

By Meghan Chandler, FilmClick Staff, mchandler@filmclick.com

Festival Report: NewFest 2008: The NY LGBT Film Festival

Tuesday, June 17th, 2008

NewFest 2008 

NewFest: The NY LGBT Film Festival
6.5.08 – 6.15.08
New York, NY

Cruise over to midtown Manhattan and scope the 20th annual NewFest, New York’s LGBT Film Festival. Hundreds of films crowd just a few screens at the AMC Loews on 34th Street, so the block-busting lines this past week have rivaled even those for the testosterone-fueled Iron Man and Indiana Jones spectaculars. Luckily, NewFest’s lines keep out of the way, as they naturally lean to the left. The fest is not without it’s flagship premiers, though. Another Gay Movie: Gays Gone Wild is apparently a laugh riot, although I must confess I missed the first one as well, which premiered at NewFest in 2006. This year’s special events included workshops and seminars on producing independent films, producing independent queer films, and the importance of networking. Included in ticket prices was an access pass to the Festival Lounge, a place to network with other independent filmmakers and enthusiasts.

ChrisandDon 

I caught an experimental program that included shorts by a favorite of mine, Guy Maddin, and an interesting Austrian filmmaker named Ulrich Seidl. Although neither is an exclusively queer film director, both shorts seemed to have a good grip on the fundamentals of the genre (Seidl’s literally). Queer cinema has definitely carved an identity onto the walls of the indie cave, and is even now breaking out into the light of mainstream, thanks to monumental efforts by organizations like NewFest and its devoted members and fans. My experience ended on a touching note, as Don Bachardy, the star of Guido Santi and Tina Mascara’s striking documentary Chris and Don: A Love Story, strode down the aisle after the film was over and held a Q & A. The film recounts the lives of two openly homosexual Los Angeles socialites in a loving relationship that spanned some 30 years. Don survives his (significantly) older partner with pride, courage, and a quirkiness that allows for some truly gorgeous on-screen moments.

ForbiddenActs

The most brilliant, though, was a video piece by photo/video artist Todd Herman called Forbidden Acts, which features disabled, black, and sexually ambiguous poet Leroy Moore reading several of his heart-stopping poems. Out of his wheelchair, he drags his impaired and misshapen body across the floor, while Mr. Herman fixes him in a distorted world of media, and yet he is able to still give us a bit of his marvelous and optimistic textual imagery.

For more information about the film festival, please visit: http://www.newfest.org/

by Michael Prall, FilmClick Staff, mprall@filmclick.com

Festival Report: Brooklyn International Film Festival

Monday, June 16th, 2008

BIFF 

Brooklyn International Film Festival
5.30.08 – 6.08.08
Brooklyn, NY

The heat wave here in New York is ushering in a host of new film fests. A juggernaut of under-the-radar indie jewels make the Brooklyn International Film Festival’s 10th year extra special, gracing several viewing screens this side of the bridge at venues including: Brooklyn Lyceum, Brooklyn Heights Cinema, the super cool Greenpoint’s Studio B, and East Coast Aliens neighborhood theater and green screen studio.

I caught a free showing of experimental and animated shorts there on June 5th, including Carolyn and Andy London’s heroically hand-rotoscoped short, Letter to Colleen. The first time I caught this little gem was at BE Film Underground a couple months back, and this time I fell in love with its stripped-down, punky aesthetic, Ralph Bakshi-esque musical taste, and sly sense of humor. Also snuck into the program was another epic Signe Baumane toon snippet, The Very First Desire Now and Forever. Check her out.

fix

The festival’s big winner was the fast fan favorite, Fix, a madhouse story from Italian-American-by-way-of-Bangkok Tao Ruspoli, about a race across Los Angeles to make an important rehab appointment. Another shining star was Crawford, a salient portrait of George Bush’s descent upon a small Texas town by David Modigliani, a favorite at SXSW last year, and winner of an audience award this year at BIFF. Also, Alison Murray’s Carny was BIFF’s best documentary feature. Ms. Murray depicts the trials and tribulations of carnival workers struggling amid today’s down-turning economy and cultural melting pot.

crawford

At the Brooklyn Heights Cinema I was able to catch a Spanish short, Killing Time, that combined bloodlust and existentialism with ease and an Estonian narrative called The Class, a clever story about a pair of middle-school kids who have had just about enough peer abuse and decided to do something about it. The thematic Cinergy (this year’s festival’s subtitle) was definitely in effect for this program, but violence fueling violence makes the whole world blind, or something like that, and by the end of the screening I must admit I felt a bit Cinergized out.

For more information about the film festival, please visit: http://www.wbff.org/ 

by Michael Prall, FilmClick Staff, mprall@filmclick.com