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FILM SHOWCASE Last Login: 7/9/09

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A GOOD ISOLATED CHARACTER STUDY ON FILM

MOON Directed by: Duncan Jones Running time: 97 minutes Release date: May 12, 2009 Genre: Drama, Sci-Fi/Fantasy and Thriler Distributor: Sony Pictures Classics MPAA Rating: R This unique film was screened at Tribeca Film Festival and it had gained a buzz from its premiere at Sundance and like many I was anxious to see what it was all about. The program indicated by Tribeca Film Festival...More

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TO THRILL OR NOT TO THRILL; THAT IS THE QUESTION by Gerald Wright

THE FOURTH KIND Directed by: Olatunde Osunsanmi Running time: 98 minutes Release date: November 6, 2009 Genre: Thriller, Sci-Fi, Horror and Supernatural Distributor: Universal Pictures MPAA Rating: PG-13 This is the first major film written and directed by Olatunde Osunsanmi. It claims to be a re-enactment of original documented footage. It also claims to use never before seen archival footage...More

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MJ'S "THIS IS IT" PREMIERE by Gerald Wright

Posted on 10/30/09 at 9:14 PM | Last edited on 10/30/09 at 10:00 PM

Mood:
Fresh
"THIS IS IT"

Directed by: Kenny Ortega

Running time: 1 hour 51 minutes

Release date: October 28, 2009

Genre: Documentary and Musical/Performing /arts

Distributor: Columbia Pictures

MPAA Rating: PG

The public interest in the death of 50 year old Michael Jackson and the "This Is It" concert that was planned for 50 concerts which was scheduled to begin back in July 2009 and was to continue through March 2010, made a statement to the world. In light of his passing the posthumous film was made from hours of footage of preparations and rehearsals for the shows.

Prior to the film's showing a red carpet from Nokia Theater in Los Angeles was screened via satillite to 17 countries. Celebrities from Paris Hilton to last minute arriving Will Smith was interviewed which made this gala tribute screening a most prestigous event. However, once the film began (although it was a 5 minute signal failure) the magic was in the air.

This exciting and sometimes somber film is a rare look at the final days of Michael Jackson which used approximately 80 hours compiled into close to 2 hours. One could only marvel at the behind-the-scenes footage of the legendary "gloved one". His work ethics was one of a perfectionist who knew how to stage, perform, dance and orchestrate his music. The rehearsal footage shot in high definition, included Jackson performing his hits "Thriller", "Beat It", and lists goes on. His new songs "They Don't Care About Me" and "Earth Song" is something I'm sure will be released on the proposed album. An accompanying album to the film titled the same as the film will be a compilation inspired from the documentary. Of the Album, Sony said, "Disc one will feature the original album masters of some of Michael's biggest hits arranged in the same sequence as they appear in the film" and stated that "the disc ends with two versions of the 'never-released 'This Is It' song used in the film's closing sequence.

Collaborators and close friends are included, giving this film a real sense of what goes into a workday with Michael Jackson. I see it as a hard working and festive means of employment that one can only learn from.

This is a film everyone, no matter the age, must see. It is a distinctive treat for the eyes and ears.



(FOR MORE FILM REVIEWS by Gerald Wright go to [url=http://www.HDFest.com]www.HDFest.com, [url=http://www.CriticalWomen.net]www.CriticalWomen.net, and [url=http://www.FilmShowcase.Blogspot.com]www.FilmShowcase.Blogspot.com)

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THE HAPPENINGS AT NYIIFVF '09 by Gerald Wright

Posted on 10/25/09 at 10:16 PM | Last edited on 10/27/09 at 6:08 AM

The New York International Independent Film & Video Festival (NYIIFVF) is one of the largest independent film festivals in the world. The NYIIFVF was founded in 1993 and has been recognized by the film and entertainment industry as one of the leading film events on the independent festival circuit. The festival hosts film, music and art events in the two entertainment capitals of the United States: New York and Los Angeles.

NYIIFVF attracts many global entries, including: Australia, Brazil, Sweden, Kenya, Japan, Canada, France, Israel, Italy, Mexico, Colombia, Russia, Germany, Spain, India and the U.K. The scope of the festival ranges from high profile to novice, so one experiences an array of films and individuals driven by independent movie making.

The NYIIFVF is a competitive event and is dedicated to making things happen for emerging filmmakers and screenwriters. The festival has cultivated excellent relationships with thousands of companies in both cities.

**Below a film review**



DEW (Dauw)

Directed by: Ben Jurna & Carrien Dijkstra

Running time: 72 minutes

Genre: Documentary in Dutch with English subtitles

In a tribute to the late Hans Essenberg (cameraman, cinematographer and actor) who began this project of filming the internationally acclaimed artist Marc Mulders, is a film that takes an up-close look at his fascinating Dutch art. After the death of Hans Essenberg, Ben Jurna and Carrien Dijkstra took on the task of making a full length movie honoring both men.

Born in Tilburg, Netherlands in 1958, Marc Mulders has been known for years for his expressionist oil artwork is captured on film in his creative environment. His canvases, past and present gives a sense of his power and talent with his sensual paintings of flowers and wild animals that is painted from live subjects. He sometimes stands on thorns and sharp objects that he is working while in his motivationIly mode. I was extremely impressed with his majestic stained glass work Een Tuin van Glas (A Garden of Glass) from De Nieuwe Kerk in Amsterdam. Housed in 15 Dutch museums, this documentary examines his work as the public gazes in amazement. What troubles me about the famous artist is that he paints flowers when they are in bloom yet in the autumn and winter he turns his attention to dead rabbits,deer and butchered cattle.

This film shows a personal interview by art journalist Hans den Hartog with Marc Mulders as he asks what motivates him. Yet, Mulders complexed feelings on spirituality versus the TV world (fake reality) troubles him. Marc Mulders born a Catholic, found himself left attending church alone once his parents stopped going. As he became an adult people spoke of him as "The Catholic Artist".


Filmmakers Jurna and Dijkstra not only take a journey into Mulders life but they give a picturesque view of serine background and backdrops of clouds and comforting landscape to set the tone and theme for the viewer to ease into a fine documentary that is very enlightening.

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WOMEN ISSUES INFLUENCE THE BIJOU by Gerald Wright

Posted on 10/24/09 at 10:11 AM | Last edited on 10/25/09 at 10:43 AM

THE WEDDING SONG (Le Chant des maiees)

Directed by: Karin Albou

Running time: 100 minutes

Release date: October 23, 2009 (limited)

Genre: Art/Foreign, Drama, War and Romance in French and Arabic with English subtitles

Distributor: Strand Releasing

MPAA Rating: N/R

In this coming of age period piece set during the Third Reich's occupation of Tunis in 1942, the story opens with a quasi-documentary sequence that spirts off into a narrative setting of the friendship of two 16 year old adolescent girls Nour (Olympe Borval) a Muslim and Myriam (Lizzie Brochere) a Jew who live and share the same house in a modest community in harmony. Each girl secretly desires the other's life: while Nour regrets that she doesn't go to school, Myriam dreams of love and romance. Myriam is also envious of Nour's engagement to her cousin Khaled, unfortunately Khaled can't find work which halts his marriage to Nour. Myriam's mother Tita (Karin Albou) decides to marry her daughter to a rich Jewish doctor who she doesn't love, and Myriam's dreams of love and romance dwindles away.

As the Nazis enter Tunis pursuing the policies of the Vichy regime and imposes restrictions on Jews, Khaled who is a confused young man takes a job as an informant for the German Army. With rising political upheaval and Khaled's help in locating Jews, the two girls must take sides and drift apart. However the more they grow apart the more they need each other.

Filmmaker Karin Albou centers the artistic direction of this movie using cold shades of color which encouages Tunisia's exotic image. The setting is also filled with tension and apprehension of what the once harmonial neighborhood of Tunis is about to endure.

This film features bold and dynamic performances by newcomers Lizzie Brochere and Olympe Borva. Director/writer Karin Albou brilliantly crafts the dimension of two young emancipated women's lives in an environment that is repressive towards women.



MOTHERHOOD

Directed by: Katherine Dieckman

Running time: 90 minutes

Release date: October 23, 2009 (limited

Genre: Drama and Comedy

Distributor: Freestyle Releasing

MPAA Rating: PG-13

This dramedy turn character study of motherhood in urban NYC is fascinating and hilarious. Starring Uman Thurman as Eliza Welch a former fiction writer who now resorts to blogging with her own site called "The Bjorn Identity." She is married to an absent-minded eccentric husband named Avery played by Anthony Edwards and have two young children. Her domestic lifestyle has put her creative ambitions on hold. They reside in one of those "once in a lifetime" situations; two rent-stabilized apartments in a walk-up tenement building in upscale Greenwich Village.

The plot developement strengthens when Eliza decides to enter a contest and write 500 words answering the question, "What Does Motherhood Mean To Me", run by a parenting magazine. Uma Thurman is unique as an energized mom and creating a role that is quite good. She has a great supporting character with Sheila (Minnie Driver) her best friend who is pregnant and without a mate.

I personally enjoyed the children of the Welch family. Six year old Clara (Daisy Tahan) who attends kindergarden is perky and fun to watch. The toddler of the household is Lucas played by David and Matthew Shallip, who innocently finds mischief. This is the meat of the plot where Eliza shows how exhausting it is to raise kids along with the overwhelming task of running a household, battling for parking space during alternate side parking showdowns and prepare for a birthday party.

The audience will be entertained with the playground park mothers and nannies with kids while watching the many backdrop sequences of the NYC everyday people.

This is a fun-filled study on being a mom with solid performances by a good cast.



(UNTITLED)

Directed by: Jonathan Parker

Running time: 96 minutes

Release date: October 23, 2009

Genre: Comedy, Musical/Performing Arts and Romance

Distributor: Samuel Goldwyn Films

MPAA Rating: N/R

This a satire that makes fun of nuance personalities of New York's comtemporary artsy world. Two competitive brothers; one who is eclectic and plays piano named Adrian Jacobs (Adam Goldberg) and the other brother Josh (Eion Bailey) who is a commercially successful painter.

Though the plot is a little pretentious it centers on how the two brothers are showcased by a stunning woman named Madeleine Gray (Marley Shelton), who commissions art showings and concerts in the Chelsea area of the city. Josh who is the stable and favorite of the Jacobs parents is in love with Madeleine, however she has fallen for Adrian who puts on bizarre avante-guarde musical concerts. The complications of the story is when Josh's highly commercial art work is sold to corporate clients discreetly out of the gallery's backroom which limits Josh's creative talent.

The theme of the film is not to be realistic and luckily so, because it doesn't hit its mark with dry trendy humor. Perhaps one could say that the tone and the amount of restraint in the humor is fun to watch. However it does not deliver in its funny interplay. The simplest way of looking at comedy is to say that it surprises, startles, shock or delights us and the essentail aspect of all comedy is that it goes beyond the ordinary, the dull and the familiar. This movie lacks most of these elements and I found myself searching for understanding of this vague idea of what is really funny in relation to analyzing and understanding it.



AMELIA

Directed by: Mira Nair

Running time: 111 minutes

Release date: October 23, 2009 (wide)

Genre: Drama and Biopic

Distributor: Fox Searchlight Pictures

MPAA Rating: PG-13

Amelia, is a dramatization of the life of Amelia Earhart. Based on the books East to the Dawn by Susan Butler and The Sound of Wongs by Mary S. Lovell this film chronicles Earhart's rise to fame and follows the relationship between Earhart and her husband, publisher, manager and promoter George P. Putnam.

Hilary Swank as Amelia Earhart, Richard Gere as George Putnam and Ewan McGregor as Gene Vidal are the major characters of this lavish movie.

The film opens up as she is piloting a plane in the clouds and most of the audience can guess this is her last flight. Soon after the film sequence flashes back to how she becomes the first woman to fly across the Atlantic (as a passenger), the film shows how she is thrust into the role of America's Sweetheart. In this lengthy movie the story written by Ron Bass and Anna Hamilton Phelan take liberties by sugar-coating this biopic with an elaborate mixture of a romantic/business relationship she has with George Putnam which turns into a marriage. Reality has it that Earhart was promoted into this stardom of the skies merely by a staged means of publicity. The clever Putnam marketed her for personal recognition and she went along with it for exposure, money and fame.

While the film glorified her existence and purified her long lasting extra-marital sexual affair with pilot Gene Vidal, it lacked any form of excitement. Of course, she was an inspiration to people everywhere during the depression years, the film and Hilary Swank's performance did capture the personality of a woman flirting with danger and standing up as her own. The plot placed a heavy emphysis on her larger than life charisma and how outspoken she was. Richard Gere and Ewan McGregor's performances were at best alright. This is not due to their acting credibility but from the standard theme characters they were scripted to play. However, it became tedious as the story of this famed aviatrix rolled on.

The final scenes predictably gave both Amelia and George a destined outcome. Unfortunately, it gave me a lackless movie to endure.

(FOR MORE FILM REVIEWS by Gerald Wright go to [url=http://www.HDFest.com]www.HDFest.com, [url=http://www.CriticalWomen.net]www.CriticalWomen.net and [url=http://www.FilmShowcase.Blogspot.com]www.FilmShowcase.Blogspot.com )







.

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GOOD HAIR HAS ITS OWN LANGUAGE by Gerald Wright

Posted on 10/18/09 at 9:42 PM | Last edited on 10/19/09 at 9:18 PM

Mood:
Fresh
GOOD HAIR

Directed by: Jeff Stilson

Running time: 1 hour 35 minutes

Release date: Oct. 9, 2009 (limited)

Genre: Documentary and Comedy

Distributor: Roadside Attractions

MPAA Rating: PG-13

Chris Rock as one of the writers of this fascinating film takes an interesting look at the social and economical implications that hair has held specifically for African American women. The movie examines its connection to black pride, race and gender. Its context have taken place in the mainstream press and media; however, the similarities and differences between the hair of women from the dominant culture and the hair of women of African American decent have not been fully explored.

In an interview with Chris Rock, he explained that his young daughter Lola asked him, "Daddy, how come I don't have good hair?" He decided to make this movie and find answers to her question and satisfy his own curiousity.

This film is not only deeply original and brave but it sparks humor in its journey to beauty salons, scientific labs, cosmetology training, and Indian temples where hair weaves come from. Chris Rock is the main character who navigates the investigation and candid interviews with Nia Long, Raven Symone, Maya Angelou, Kerry Washington, Ice-T, Paul Mooney, and Rev. Al Sharpton. He tackles a range of issues that are highly charged, both in the arena of racial, social and political issues. Big business topics are brought to light as it is found out that mainstream corporations profit and the African American community doesn't always share in this.

The research on the symbolic and moral meanings of hair in the black communities invigorates the analysis of the linquistic and social construction of personal and group identity. It demonstrates that hair is just not hair in the eyes of women, yet their is a racial division. Their is an invisible difference in Euro-American women's hair culture, however their is a blantantly obvious difference to the African American women's hairstylings.

Exploring the significance of hair in the black culture, this movie shows how women have redefined beauty for themselves and used their hair as a symbol of self-confidence and advancement. This is the set-up for the subplot of a flamboyant hair styling contest from Atlanta, Georgia, that is exciting and entertaining. The styling of hair, props and dance routines are showcased in various forms for monetary competition.

As for the question of "what is good hair"? I find that in the eyes of the one who has their hair styled. African American hair can range in texture from straight to tightly curled. If you are African American and want to wear your hair in some of the sleek, straight styles that are popular today, then using some method of straightening is usually necessary. Hair straightening is a process using a straightening comb heated to a high temperature. The pros in this is that no chemicals are used, if you want to go back natural it is reversible, and it's less expensive than chemical straightening. However, the cons in the process is that repeated heat styling eventually damages your hair, there's a risk of burning the scalp-face-ears, expensive for long thick hair, and bad weather can revert hair back to its natural state. Next is chemical straightening for a permanant alternative. Relaxers are the most common form of chemical straightening for African American hair which contains sodium hydroxide (lye) or calcium hydroxide. The benefits in this is permanent results and sleek, shiny hair that can be cut or styled in any number of ways. The drawbacks are hair damge and breakage, serious chemical burns to the scalp, and can be very expensive if done by a stylist every six to eight weeks depending on hair texture. And the other alternative is hair weaves that are attached to the natural rooted hair. This is the new market of natural hair from India which has turn into a big profit enterprise that is highlighted in the documentary.

The minor flaw in the movie is that Mrs. Chris Rock did not give her opinion on the matter of how old a young girl should go through the process of getting her hair straightened.

Whatever method of hair styling you prefer, it is a personal choice. However, I found GOOD HAIR to be a fascinating, funny and informative flick.

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A BIOPIC & DOC FOR THE WEEKEEND by Gerald Wright

Posted on 9/26/09 at 1:05 AM | Last edited on 9/26/09 at 1:26 AM

Mood:
Indifferent
COCO BEFORE CHANEL (Coco Avant Chanel)

Directed by: Anne Fontaine

Running time: 110 mins.

Release date: Sept. 25, 2009 (limited)

Genre: Drama, Romance and Biography in French with English subtitles

Distributor: Sony Pictures Classics

MPAA Rating: PG-13

The life of the famed French fashion designer Gabrielle "Coco" Chanel (Audrey Tautou) in this film begins in her early years as a strong will orphan to which her father never returned for her. Having to survive as a poor young woman in a hard Paris culture once leaving the orphanage, she finds herself working as a singer and a seamstress in a provincial bar. She earns her nickname "Coco" from the song she sings with her older sister Adrienne (Marie Gillain).

However, as a cabaret performer with a weak voice who sings to an audience of drunks, the emancipated female protagonist falls back on her talent as a seamstress at a local tailor shop. There she meets a regular customer named Baron Etienne Balsan (Benoit Poelvoorde) who later becomes her protector. As a young thin courtesan, Coco finds refuge at the Baron's stud horse farm and lives as a kept woman.

Audrey Tautou's performance is quite elegant and is reminiscent of the Shirley McClain made for TV movie version, however Tautou displays a more realistic adaptation. This version shows her as the petite and boyish person she really was in real life.

The film gives a well defined structure and puts an emphasis on internal congruity. While the actors achieve the goals of the plot. These were good choices in casting for the roles they played.

Romance and tragedy takes charge in the story when Coco finds love with an Englishman named Arthur "Boy" Capel while sharing her bed with Baron Balsan. Her life takes off as a ladie's hat-maker/dress-maker, but soon it finds a pitfall. As in any romantic tragedy to be a successful genre to work for film directors it must depend on the cinematography, plot and narrative drive, characters, acting and cultural discourses. Discourses are particularly pertinent to this genre as the subject matter, events and characterizations are historical. It allows the the audience to see and understand this in their own modern day minds.

The film will capture attention because the tremendous journey of Coco from orphan to successful fashion designer who became a timeless symbol in a once male dominating industry, apart from lifeless romantic angle the movie could have made better.



CAPITALISM: A LOVE STORY

Directed by: Michael Moore

Running time: 126 mins.

Release date: Sept. 25, 2009

Genre: Documentary

Distributor: Overture Films

MPAA Rating: R

The production company's synopsis states that with both humor and outrage, Michael Moore explores a taboo question: What is the price that America pays for its love of capitalism? The examinating of corporate dominance on the everyday lives of Americans (and by default, the entire world).

While today the American dream is more of a nightmare as families pay the price with their jobs, their homes and their savings. Filmmaker Moore's movie takes the viewer into the homes of ordinary people whose lives have been destroyed and takes a look for explanations in Washington D.C. and elsewhere. His ultimate quest is to answer some of the questions that plague the masses.

The thought is good in this film, however movie is poorly structured into a romp on the beauracrats and politicians. Rather than taking a serious look at the issues and placing some satire in his film composition, he orchestrates a 2 hour plus Michael Moore one-man show. It's too bad he couldn't do a better job.

FOR MORE REVIEWS by Gerald Wright go to HDFest.com ([url=http://www.HDFest.com]www.HDFest.com), Critical Women on Film "he Said, She Said" ([url=http://www.CriticalWomen.net]www.CriticalWomen.net ) and Film Showcase ([url=http://www.FilmShowcase.Blogspot.com]www.FilmShowcase.Blogspot.com)

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A SOLID CINEMA WEEKEND

Posted on 9/20/09 at 2:58 PM | Last edited on 9/20/09 at 6:26 PM

Mood:
Fresh
35 SHOTS OF RUM

Directed by: Claire Denis

Running time: 102 minutes

Release date: September 16, 2009

Genre: Drama in French with English subtitles

Distributor: The Cinema Guild

MPAA Rating: N/R

In this profoundly warm and tender story set outside Paris, Lionel (Alex Descas) a metro conductor lives with his daughter Josephine (Mati Diop) in a bustling apartment complex. Josephine is a beautiful university student who finds love in another tenant named Noe (Gregoire Colin) a handsome young man, while Lionel is drawn into a relationship with another neighbor of the complex Gabrielle (Nicole Dogue). Gabrielle drives a taxi and is a friend of everyone in the building.

The storyline focuses on the strong father and daughter relationship. The close knit family bonding interferes with any other romantic involvement in their life. Complications and the mysterious complexities that surround evolving relationships, whether romantic or parental are the force in this rare movie. The plot is driven by what people say and what they hold back, by meaningless pauses between words and significant glances. As their lives are pulled in different directions, father and daughter realize they must finally confront their past in order to deal with their individual destinies.

This intentionally slow starting plot associated with strong performances by an exceptionally good cast evolves into a solid film to enjoy.



THE BURNING PLAIN

Directed by Guillermo Arriaga

Running time: 111 minutes

Genre: Drama

Distributor: Magnolia Pictures

MPAA Rating: R

Writer and director Guillermo Arriaga of Amores Perros (2000), 21 Grams (2003), and Babel (2006) puts up a film told in a non-linear narrative, where events of the plot are revealed out of sequence.

The film starts off in the mid-1990s in a small New Mexico town bordering Mexico where Gina played by Kim Basinger, a wife and mother of four children (2 daughters and two sons) is having an affair with a local man Nick (Joaquim de Almedeida), who also has a wife and two sons. Gina's daughter Mariana (Jennifer Lawrence) finds out about the love affair and in an accident (?) Nick and Gina are killed in their secretive hide-away romantic trailer.

What sets this plot reeling is that teenage Mariana and one of Nick's teenage sons Santiago meet after their funeral and develop their own secretive relationship. Soon Mariana becomes pregnant with Santiago's child and they run off to Mexico despite their family's disapproval. Mariana delivers a baby girl named Maria and abandons her new formed family and changes her name to Sylvia (later played by Charlize Theron).

Plot skips 10 years where Sylvia works as a waitress in Portland, resorting to sleeping around with various men and having thoughts of suicide. However, young Maria (Tessa Ia) is search for her birth mother and the plot thickens.

This dramatic ensemble host brilliant performances and projects very intense tragic love stories from different places and times, with characters trying to find the healing powers of love, forgiveness and redemption.



DIL BOLE HADIPPA! (My Heart Goes Hooray!)

Directed by: Anurag Singh

Running time: 2 hours 25 minutes

Release date: September 18, 2009

Genre: Drama, Comedy, Romance and Sports in Hindi with English subtitles

MPAA Rating: N/R

Bollywood superstars Rani Mukherjee and Shahid Kapoor team up for the first time on screen for a fun loving movie about romance, the spirit of the game of cricket and sexual equality.

Set in India, beautiful Veera (Rani Mukherjee) lives in a small village and can play cricket as well as (if not better) any man. She works in a local theater group performing in a mustache and beard on stage as a guy opposite an attractive woman. When she learns that Rohan (Shahid Kapoor) the famous Brit cricket player will captain the male only team in India, she decides to try-out for the team disguised as a man (using her stage make-up).

In the theme of Bollywood, rythmatic dance sequences light up the screen (choreography by Vaibhavi Merchant, Chinni Prakash & Rekha Prakash), along with lively songs furnished by Pritam. The vivid colors of the costumes designed by Manish Malhotra, Mamta Anand and Soniya Tommy illuminates a spectacular ensemble of characters.

This often exciting romantic sports film has many moments of comedy supplied by the very talented Rani Mukherjee impersonated a male cricket player while romancing her co-star Shahid Kapoor. She displays a perfect sense of comedic timing. In several scenes, such as the locker room scene when her sexual identity is almost exposed, I and the audience was laughing out of our seats.

Many may consider this movie a chick flick. Many may not understand the game of cricket. However, it doesn't make a difference because I believe everyone will enjoy this film.

(FOR MORE FILM REVIEWS by Gerald Wright go to [url=http://www.HDFest.com]www.HDFest.com, [url=http://www.CriticalWomen.net]www.CriticalWomen.net, and [url=http://www.FilmShowcase.Blogspot.com]www.FilmShowcase.Blogspot.com )

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THE OTHER MAN review by Gerald Wright

Posted on 9/12/09 at 3:29 PM | Last edited on 9/13/09 at 7:49 PM

Mood:
Fresh
Directed by: Richard Eyre

Running time: 90 minutes

Release date: September 11, 2009 (NY & LA)

Genre: Drama, Romance, and Adaptation

Distributor: Image Entertainment

MPAA Rating: R

This is a movie based of a short by Bernhard Schlink with the same title of infidelity and the uncovering of it after years of a so-call blissful marriage.

Liam Neeson is Peter, the CEO of a London computer software company who has been married to Lisa (Laura Linney) for 20 years. However, this very edgy, dark, psychological and quite mysterious thriller sets Peter on an obsessive journey to uncover the truth surrounding the disappearances of his wife while she is off on her business trips. When he discovers that she has been receiving romantic emails and mobile messages from a man he never knew existed he is determined to find out the identity of this other man in his spouse's life.

Ralph is masterfully played by Antonio Banderas, who is the other man who Lisa has a romantic and sexual interlude with during her time away from her husband Peter. He is a suave con man who seduces Lisa, however her character is one that needs two people to complete her life. Laura Linney gives a magnificent performance as a woman who is different things to different people and juggles with her love.

Hurt and vengeful Peter flies to Milan to seek out the mysterious Ralph against the advice of his estranged daughter Abigail (Romola Garai). As a result of his search, Peter discovers the secrets of his enigmatic wife and her lover who is less than what he appears to be.

The plot opens the world of love, betrayal and forgiveness. But more than that, learning about the unpleasant things of that someone you think you knew very well.



Director Richard Eyre keeps the rhythm evenly paced and the story development brings out superb performances by a brilliant cast.

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INDIES NOT HITTING THE MARK by Gerald Wright

Posted on 9/7/09 at 5:43 PM | Last edited on 9/7/09 at 9:43 PM

Mood:
Rotten
SANDSTORM

Directed by: Michael Mahonen

Running time: 75 minutes

Release date: September 4, 2009

Genre: Drama, Crime and Political in Chinese with English, French and Spanish subtitles

Distributor: Requisite Films

MPAA Rating: Unrated

Based on the persecutions of Falun Gong practitioners in China, Sandstorm is a fictionalize story of torture, conscience awakening and tolerance.

Filmmaker Michael Mahonen makes his debut as a writer/director with this film. He adopted the Falun Gong practice and researched the persecution of the followers by the cruel and corrupt Chinese government which prompted him to make this film. However, he assumes the audience is famliar with the subject matter and he does not lay out a backstory of a non-fiction story to start his fictionalize tale. The actual story is that hundreds of practitioners of a meditation and exercise based spiritual movement were marked as criminals by the ruthless Chinese governmeent. According to human rights groups, more than 35 deaths, 35,000 arrests, pervasive tortures, and the burning of as many as 7.8 million books written by the controversial founder of Falun Gong, Li Hongzhi. Most world citizens recall Tianamen Square, in Beijing, where protesters demanded their rights. In China, Falon Gong's point of view has been banned by using secret plots to frame, slander and exterminate this popular world-wide spiritual movement.

This film sets itself in the world of mid-level police officer Hetian Ying played by Rong Tian who has the horrible task of torturing confessions out of Falun Gong followers. Ying is a mild mannered man and lives with a wife and daughter played by Zeng Ziyu and Annie Li. It seems that a monumental sandstorm cripples the city of Beijing and the plot indicates that this is due to the vengeance of a higher power. Ying had not picked his daughter up from scholl due to the road crossing. Now he and his wife are waiting for their daughter who is out there somewhere.

The scenes flashback to his interrogation of a female Falun Gong follower and now prisoner brilliantly played by Lili Li. Ying's supervisor played by Steve Hong threatens torture to the death if necessary, however Rong Tian's character of Ying is performed in a manner that adds dignity to a weak man. Ying must come to grips with what is right and what is wrong in his duties as a policeman, and then learn to open his eyes to being humane.

This film has a clear message of shedding light on a critical human rights issue barely acknowledged by people outside of China, however the movie lacks any real substance in storytelling. The setting never allows the audience to see the sandstorm which flushes the whole premise of the movie down the toilet. Great message - but a bad film.



TICKLING LEO

Directed by: Jeremy Davidson

Running time: 90 minutes

Release date: September 4, 2009

Genre: Drama

Distributor: Barn Door Pictures

MPAA Rating: Not rated

Set around the days of Yom Kippur, this is a contemporary narrative that follows three generations of one Jewish family whose secrets from WWII that haunts them.

When Zak Pikler played by Daniel Sauli gets word that his estranged eccentric poet/retired liteature professor father Warren Yitzchak Pikler brilliantly played by Lawrence Pressman is suffering from dementia in his secluded Catskills lakehouse, drives up from New York City with his newly pregnant girlfriend Delphina played by Annie Parisse. The story grinds out a loosely true account of how Jews who were rounded up in 1944 Hungary and were placed in ghettos. They were told to establish Jewish Councils known as Judenrat. However, reportedly as history has it certain heads of Councils negotiate with Adolph Eichman to send fellow Jews off to concentration camps. Then the plot skips back too quickly to the contemporary setting where the relatives of this dysfunctional family argues with each other over their lack of familial cohesion.

This could have been a worthwhile film to watch, but the movie strains the audiences' attention span with an unbalanced plot. The production of this film is troubling, due to the one week before hand rehearsals and the 14 day shooting schedule. It delivers pointless dialogue and limits great actors Eli Wallach and Victoria Clark to minimal parts that have trouble getting off the ground.

To say the least - This is a bad movie.

FOR MORE FILM REVIEWS by Gerald Wright go to HDFest.com [url=http://www.HDFest.com]www.HDFest.com, Critical Women on Film for He Said, She Said reviews [url=http://www.CriticalWomen.net]www.CriticalWomen.net, and Film Showcase [url=http://www.FilmShowcase.blogspot.com]www.FilmShowcase.blogspot.com .

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ANOTHER ANG LEE FILM by Gerald Wright

Posted on 8/26/09 at 5:37 PM | Last edited on 8/29/09 at 7:27 PM

Mood:
Fresh
TAKING WOODSTOCK

Directed by: Ang Lee

Running time: 121 minutes

Release date: August 26, 2009

Genre: Drama, Comedy, Musical/Performaning Arts and Adaptation

Distributor: Focus Features

MPAA Rating: R

Born Li An in the southern agricultural town of Chaochou in China, Ang Lee a Taiwanese American Academy Award film director, has won numerous film awards worldwide. He is quoted as saying; After making several tragic movies in a row, I was looking to do a comedy - and one without cynicism....also a story of liberation, honesty, and tolerance.

Taking Woodstock is a film adaptation of the 2007 book of memiors Taking Woodstock: A True Story of a Riot, A Concert, and a Life, written by Elliot Tiber. This is a period piece film that depicts the Hippie and Flower Children's traditional values, relationships, and family values surrounding the 1969 Woodstock Music and Arts Festival.

Demetri Martin stars as Elliot, a young man who inadvertently played a major role in putting together the Woodstock Nation event while working at his parents' motel in the Catskills. He worked as an interior designer in Greenwich Village during the summer of 1969 and felt too caught up by the gay rights movement, however he had a dependency with the family motel business operated by his mother Sonia and father Jake Teichberg hilariously played by Imelda Staunton and Henry Goodman. Elliot returns to save the motel before the bank takes it over.

The setup and context of the movie is a plot that brilliantly captures the unique communal experience of the rock festival, along with great performances by an ensemble cast of Jonathan Groff as Michael Lang the producer of Woodstock Ventures who makes an offer to land owner Max Yasgur played the veteran actor/comedian Eugene Levy. Emile Hirsch plays a wacked-out recently returned Vietnam vet and the magnificent Liev Shreiber gives a great performance as Vilma a cross-dressing ex-Marine.

Elliot finds himself swept up in a generation-defining experience that would change his life which highlights an unusual summer experience.

This is a movie that will leave the audience in sheer delight.

FOR MORE FILM REVIEWS by Gerald Wright go to [url=http://www.HDFest.com]www.HDFest.com and [url=http://www.CriticalWomen.net]www.CriticalWomen.net for He Said, She Said film reviews.

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GENRES FOR EVERYONE by Gerald Wright

Posted on 8/21/09 at 10:06 PM | Last edited on 8/28/09 at 3:17 PM

Mood:
Fresh
INGLOURIOUS BASTERDS

Directed by: Quentin Tarantino

Running time: 2 hrs. 32 mins.

Release Date: Aug. 21, 2009

Genre: Action, Drama, War and Satire

Distributors: The Weinstein Company & Universal Pictures

MPAA Rating: R

Actor and screenplay writer Tarantino directs this slick wide-eye epic movie centering around World War II and Nazi occupied France.

Colossally structured chapters navigates the audience into a plot opening epologue of ONCE UPON A TIME IN NAZI CCUPIED FRANCE when Shosanna Dreyfus played vigorously by Melanie Laurent escapes the execution of her Jewish family at the hand of Nazi Colonel Hans Landa brilliantly portrayed by Christoph Waltz. In fear of her life as a witness to the murders, she flees to Paris and forges a new identity as a the owner and operator of a movie house.

Brad Pitt, in a very funny yet diabolic and cynical performance plays Lt. Aldo Raine, a scalp taking Nazi fighter. He recruits something similar to a Dirty Dozen group of Jewish soldiers to hunt Nazis in France. The rogue group of soldiers are joined by German actress and undercover secret agent named Bridget von Hammersmark impressively played by Diane Kruger, to kill the leaders of the Third Reich. However, Shosanna and her lover Marcel have plans of revenge.

As in most Tarantino films, his thriller is a broad genre that includes numerous and often overlapping sub-genres. His movies are characterized by fast pacing, high intensity action, and a list of resourceful heroes who alter the master plans of more powerful bad guys. The sub-genre in this movie is a mystery story of who will get caught by the Nazi villians, but it is distinquished by the structured thriller plot. The soundtrack enhances the movie by the themes that made spaghetti westerns so popular. But, I cannot forget that Q.T. is an extensive music lover as well as a cinematic innovator.


The cast includes Eli Roth as Sgt. Donny Donowitz, Michael Fassbender, Daniel Bruhl, Til Schweiger, Gedeon Burkhard, B.J. Novak, Omar Doom and Jacky Ido as Marcel who add to the action, conspiracy, erotica and satire.

While the summer movies failed to entertain us, Q.T.'s movie is an exciting summer flick.



SIKANDAR

Directed by: Piyush Jha

Running time: 110 mins.

Release date: August 21, 2009

Genre: Drama, Thriller and Politics in Hindi and Urdu language with English subtitles

Distributor: Big Pictures

MPAA Rating: N/R

This is a heart-filled story of a 14 year old boy named Sikandar Raza in Jammu and Kashmir, India. He lives in a military controlled environment where rebels advocate violence, however he enjoys the game of soccer and school. Unfortunately, he lost his parents by the hands of militants and lives with his aunt and uncle.

Parzaan Dastur gives a brilliant performance as Sikandar, a young boy who loves playing soccer and being with a new girl in his school named Nasreen. Another outstanding performance by a young actor is given by Ayesha Kapoor who portrays 14 year old Nasreen. She is the conscience keeper of Sikandar who finds a loaded pistol and decides to keep it.

What makes this small budget film a gem is how the filmmaker weaves a political and psychological thriller together, while orchestrating a coming-of-age movie from the middle east. The protagonist of this narrative is given a great dialogue that authenticates the story. This story consists of the elements of a thriller and a drama film. These movies are usually slower paced and involves a great deal of character development along with plot twists and this movie gets it right. In the psychological sense, the conflict between Sikandar and Nasreen is mental and emotional, rather than physical, until their violent resolution. This is why Sikandar excels and delivers a powerful plot along with terrific performances.

The supporting cast members R. Madhavan, Sanjay Suri and Arunoday Singh give stimulating performances that add to the creation of a solid movie.



STILL WALKING

Directed by: Kore-Eda Hirokazu

Running time: 114 mins.

Release date: August 21, 2009

Genre: Drama in Japanese with English subtitles

Distributor: IFC Films

MPAA Rating: N/R

This is a delightfully warm and sweet movie yet disturbing as it looks at a dysfunctional family overcome adversity.

Yokoyama Ryota played by Abe Hiroshi is the 40 year old son the the Yokoyama family. He is an art restorer and has recently married a widow with a 10 year old son from a previous marriage, who is joining him on a rare visit elders home. The problem is his elderly parents who lived in the same dwelling which was once a thriving medical clinic, which is now none-existant.

As the family re-unites to remember their oldest son Junpel, who died as a child in a terrrible accident many years prior problems begin. He finds it very uncomfortable with his father Kyohei played by Harada Yoshio who expected him to take over the medical practice. His mother Toshiko played by Kiki Kirin is sarcasticly remarking about every little thing around her. His older sister Chinami played by YOU is previleged with a rich husband who brags about his wealth. The hidden secret is that Ryota has just lost his job and is hoping another job will come along.

The themes of the characters interacting as respective couples and family members in various scenes are of a typical dysfunctional family, bonded by love as well as resentments and secrets. The film blends a subtle balance of gentle humor and wistful sorrow of dead son who everyone wish did not die.

Still Walking takes the audience through a cinematic journey examining parents whose behaviour scars and harms their children to such a degree that often seems like there can be no resolution to the damaged caused. As a result the children grew into adulthood feeling inadequate, unloved and worthless.



FOR MORE FILM REVIEWS by Gerald Wright go to [url=http://www.HDFest.com]www.HDFest.com - [url=http://www.CriticalWomen.net]www.CriticalWomen.net He Said, She Said,- and [url=http://www.FilmShowcase.Blogspot.com]www.FilmShowcase.Blogspot.com .

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