Five Favorite Films with Starlet Director Sean Baker

The writer-director behind this week's indie drama offers a glimpse into his favorite movies.

One of the buzz films at this year's SXSW festival, writer-director Sean Baker's Starlet explores the unusual friendship between a 21-year-old actress (Dree Hemingway) and an 85-year-old woman (Besedka Johnson) when their lives cross paths in California's San Fernando Valley. Featuring breakout performances -- especially from Hemingway, the daughter of actress Mariel and great-granddaughter of writer Ernest -- the movie is getting early praise from critics ahead of its release in New York and Los Angeles this week. We caught up with director Sean Baker recently, who shared with us an interesting list of his five favorite films.



Bad Lieutenant (Abel Ferrera, 1992; 77% Tomatometer)

This is torture. It was very difficult to leave off so many of my favorites from this list but I decided to go with my favorites that don't get as much attention as others so that hopefully it leads to people seeking them out. So these aren't in order -- love them all equally. Abel Ferrara's masterpiece Bad Lieutenant. I love NYC films and this truly captured the city's vibe of the early '90s. I could watch Harvey Keitel screaming, crying and smoking crack all day. Besides his amazing performance and Ferrara's vibrant realism, Zoë Lund wrote one of the tightest screenplays ever written. We only got one film from her as she tragically passed away in 1999. Thank you Zoë... this is an important film.




Oasis (Chang-dong Lee, 2002; 89% Tomatometer)

Chang-dong Lee's Oasis. Very little exposure in the States, however it was released on DVD and you can find it. An extremely daring film that made me cry about a "forbidden" love affair. I consider Chang-dong Lee to be one of the most important living directors. All of his films are worth checking out.




The Idiots (Lars von Trier, 1998; 70% Tomatometer)

Lars von Trier's The Idiots aka Idioterne. This was the 2nd Dogma 95 film and didn't get nearly the attention or acclaim as The Celebration. But I feel this is the quintessential Dogma film... combines scathing social commentary, laugh-out-loud, daring comedy and ultimately an extremely emotional and cathartic ending. This is von Trier's masterpiece.




Naked (Mike Leigh, 1993; 88% Tomatometer)

I love all of Mike Leigh's films but this is the one that had a big impact on me. Like all of films above, it beautifully combines comedy and drama. It was also a stylistic departure for Leigh, who still held on to the British social-realism vibe but delivered it in a very cinematic and calculated way. Also should be seen for Katrin Cartlidge who had a very bright but tragically short career.


Used Cars (Robert Zemeckis, 1980; 76% Tomatometer)

Robert Zemeckis' Used Cars. One of the most underrated and under-appreciated films of all time and my favorite comedy. Kurt Russell is genius in this film and I wish he would return to comedies because his delivery and timing are to die for. Excellent supporting cast including the wonderful Jack Warden who plays two characters -- dueling brothers. And kudos to Zemeckis and [co-writer] Bob Gale for writing a biting, social satirical and very un-PC script. "Jesus Palomino!"





Starlet plays the AFI fest in Los Angeles and opens in LA and New York this week.


Comments

Bob Thompson

Bob Thompson

Used Cars! Awesome pic.

Nov 6 - 02:01 PM

Smokie G.

Smokie Gonzalez

Hmm.. Cages or Keitel's??

Nov 6 - 03:15 PM

Reza T.

Reza Trikurnia

keitel, 1992

Nov 6 - 06:27 PM

Christopher Kulik

Christopher Kulik

Watched USED CARS again only recently. Hilarious, underrated gem, and Kurt Russell is terrific. There's a scene where the lot wants to interrupt the President's address to the nation with a midnight commercial. When reminded that he's "f*cking with the President," Russell responds, "Like he doesn't f*ck with us"?

Nov 6 - 07:28 PM

Keith Snarkey

Keith Snarkey

Nice... Monkeyface!

Nov 6 - 07:49 PM

Cybergosh

Cybergosh ~

These movies are good. I like movies.

Nov 7 - 12:46 AM

Hugo Emanuel Melo

Hugo Emanuel Melo

This is a pretty good list. I haven't watched "Oasis", tough. And I actually think "The Idiots" is one of Trier's worst films, altough not bad at all.

Nov 7 - 02:23 AM

Mark Rudman

Mark Rudman

I haven't seen it, but I think The Next Three Days could become a classic,
like other films whose duration is anything but equally divided; it reminds me of Bresson and Renoir, Condemned Man Escapes and what other than Grand Illusion:

Mark Rudman


NIGHT AT THE CROSSROADS:
Reconstructed from Andre Bazin?s unfinished book, Jean Renoir


There were abundant signs pointing in one direction:
the diamond merchant dead at the wheel of his car in his carriage house;
the diamond merchant?s wife?their name is Goldberg?
rolling into the street at the report of a pistol in the night;
the Bugatti?s lights jabbing at the fog as it roared through the dark winding streets
after the smugglers; the furtive, unfocused looks of the villagers,
the smell of rain, the squishy, mist-covered fields;
the svelte, electric murderess, who, having imbibed some poison falls
limply into Maigret?s arms, and Maigret,
as he awkwardly administers first aid, glimpses?
with his drooping eye and indirect yet hawklike gaze?
the betraying scar on her left breast, a clue to her less than
aristocratic origins. The mystery is made more mysterious
by the absence of three reels, lost by one of the actors after the film was shot.
There?s only one still from the film in Bazin?s unfinished volume on Renoir:
in it there are six men and no women.
Bazin left no commentary on Night?, which needed him more
than all the others because it made its way into the world
maimed, distorted, involuntarily obscure.


TLS

Dec 30 - 01:12 PM

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