Cinequest – Forgetting the Girl: ooooof! so this is a horrror movie…

Forgetting the Girl starts out like a romantic comedy about a quirky but appealing guy with some emotional issues, and then sucker punches the audience by revealing itself in the final 15 minutes to be a horror film.  The abrupt change of pace is both a strength and weakness of the film.

This is the first feature from director Nate Taylor, from a story by Peter Moore Smith.  I understand that the sudden, explosive violence is supposed to rock the viewer, but I think that I would have enjoyed the film more if the early tone had better prepared me for the darkness to follow.  Instead, the early part is too much Guy Meets Girl, etc.  Taylor then lingers too long on the episodes of horror at the end.  Taylor might benefit from screening Michael Powell’s disturbing horror classic Peeping Tom a few times more to improve the pacing.

Taylor does an excellent job with a red herring in the plot, and shows real promise at producing creepiness and tension.

I saw Forgetting the Girl at its world premiere at Cinequest 22, with the audience packed with friends and family of the filmmakers.  This audience responded more enthusiastically than I think most will.

Cinequest – Dorfman: nothing to see here, move along

Dorfman is a well-intentioned indie about a woman who has been sacrificing her own life to support the self-absorbed men in her life.  Moving from the San Fernando Valley to the newly vibrant downtown LA (colorful and trendy, yet edgy) helps bring her a renaissance of spirit.

Unfortunately,the promising premise is betrayed by a cliche ridden screenplay, and poor direction and editing.  The star, Sara Rue, doesn’t bring much to the party, either.  The film only works as a travelogue for downtown LA.

The wily veteran Elliott Gould and Haaz Sleiman (The Visitor, Nurse Jackie) are both good, but they’ll both see much better material than this.

Cinequest – Happy New Year Grandma!: when Grandma is evil

Monserrat Carulla in HAPPY NEW YEAR, GRANDMA!

The high stress care of a difficult 88-year-old grandmother is tearing a Basque family apart. They think that she’s addled, until one family member after another come to realize that she actually is lucid and diabolical.  She’s so evil that it becomes either her or them.

Monserrat Carulla makes the most of the delicious role as the conniving grannie.  You may have seen her in the excellent Spanish horror film The Orphanage.  The rest of the cast is excellent, too.

It’s a dark comedy and much, much darker than American audiences are used to.  She does some very bad things to sympathetic human characters and to innocent animals.

This Spanish movie is in the Basque language and is also titled Urte Berri On, Amona!.

Cinequest – Come As You Are: two wheelchairs, a white cane and some condoms

The road trip comedy Come As You Are is about three disabled young Belgian men who yearn to discard their virginity.  Two are in wheelchairs and one is blind.  After hearing about a brothel that caters to guys with special needs, they plot a road trip to Spain’s Costa del Sol.  They need their parents to send them with a male nurse, but not to come along or know the true destination.  All goes well, until the parents withdraw their permission and our heroes sneak off under the care of a necessary evil, a no-nonsense female nurse.  Their getaway is expedited by a very funny 11 year-old kid sister.

Along the way, their individual personalities are exposed (for better and for worse) and they experience real unsheltered freedom for the first time (with its pluses and minuses).  It’s a little movie with some poignant moments among the laughs.

The film, titled Hasta La Vista in Europe, is mostly in Flemish, with some French and English.

Cinequest – Children of the Green Dragon: competing for a warehouse and the pizza girl

CHILDREN OF THE GREEN DRAGON

In Children of the Green Dragon, a hangdog Hungarian real estate agent must avoid getting fired by selling a rundown warehouse that is currently rented to a shady Chinese import company.  The Chinese watchman is tasked, for his part, to prevent the sale of the warehouse – or face an additional year of involuntary servitude.  Surprisingly, they bond.

This movie is about the  culture clash between the two guys.  Their relationship blossoms despite that and despite their competing job interests.  Then both become fascinated by an edgy pizza delivery woman.  It’s a funny and sweet little film.

The film is titled A Zold Sarkany Gyermekei in Hungarian.

Cinequest – King Curling: surprising hilarity from the Norse ice

This Norwegian comedy, set in a sport that even the Norwegians find to be odd and boring, is HILARIOUS.  The star of a curling team suffers a psychotic breakdown and, after years of treatment, is released from an asylum heavily medicated.  To win money for a friend’s lifesaving operation, the curling team must win a tournament and the star needs to go off his meds to regain his game skills.

It’s a broad comedy, but the key is that the actors aren’t trying to be funny, a la Jack Black or Will Ferrell.  Instead, they play it absolutely straight, relying on the characters, situations and dialogue to generate the laughs.  And laughs, they are aplenty.

The curling star tries to maintain despite his recurring hallucinations of floating pink lint.  One of the Norwegian curlers, a womanizer with unusually low standards,  keeps lapsing into American gangsta street talk.  Another has a long-lost father who turns up as, of course, a Rod Stewart impersonator who doesn’t sound remotely like Rod Stewart.  And then there’s the kissing dog.  You gotta see this movie – it’s a top drawer broad comedy.

It’s playing again at Cinequest tonight (March 2) and tomorrow (March 3).

Movie shot on a cell phone

This one-minute movie, Discovery of the Woodsprites by Jadrien Steele, was shot on a cell phone.  Sandisk was a sponsor of Cinequest 2010, and four films shot on cell phones – all less than a minute and six seconds – were shown before most features at the festival.  You can watch all four movies at 4 Movies Shot on a Cell Phone

Here is Discovery of the Woodsprites.

A Little Help: pulling herself out of malaise

A Little Help is a Jenna Fischer vehicle that illustrates the depth that Fischer can bring to even a shallow character.  In this dramedy, Fischer is suddenly widowed and must reassemble her life and support her quirky 12-year-old son despite the intrusions of her shrill, micro-controlling sister (Brooke Smith) and their chilly mother (Leslie Anne Warren).  Fischer’s biggest challenge is helping her son navigate social life at his new school, where he has told a preposterous lie on his first day.

Kim Coates steals every scene as a medical malpractice attorney.  Ron Liebman sparkles as the blowhard father.

Writer/Director Michael J. Weithorn made the very smart decision to hold Fischer’s character accountable for the bad choices she has made in her life.  If she were instead written as a completely innocent victim, the story would have lapsed into cliche.  Instead, it’s a pretty good movie and a fine showcase for Jenna Fischer.

[youtube:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dI2qIul29Iw]

Blogging from Cinequest: Potiche

This delightful French farce of feminist self-discovery is the funniest movie in over a year, and another showcase for Catherine Deneuve (as if she needs one).   DeNeuve plays a 1977 potiche, French for “trophy housewife”, married to a guy who is a male chauvinist pig both by choice and cluelessness.  He is also the meanest industrialist in France – Ebenezer Scrooge would be a softie next to this guy – and the workers in his factories are about to explode.  He becomes incapacitated, and she must run the factory.

Now, this is a familiar story line for gender comedy – why is it so damn funny?  It starts with the screenplay, which is smart and quick like the classic screwball comedy that American filmmakers don’t make anymore.  And the cast is filled with proven actors who play each comic situation with complete earnestness, no matter how absurd.

Director Francois Ozon, best known in the US for Swimming Pool and 8 Women, adapted the screenplay from a play and has a blast skewering late-70s gender roles and both the bourgeoisie and the proletariat.  Gerard Depardieu plays the Communist mayor, who is both the husband’s nemesis and the wife’s former fling.   Two of the very best French comic players, Fabrice Luchini and Karen Viard, shine in co-starring roles as the husband and his secretary.

Fortunately, Potiche will have an American releases on April 1.

Blogging from Cinequest: War Games and the Man Who Stopped Them

This documentary tells the remarkable Cold War spy story of Army Colonel Ryszard Kuklinski.  In his service on the Polish General Staff, Kuklinski saw that the Warsaw Pact’s war plans for an invasion of Western Europe would inevitably lead to the nuclear obliteration of Poland.  To avoid that horror, he passed on the Warsaw Pact war plans to the West so NATO could strengthen its stance and thereby deter the invasion by making it a less attractive option for the Soviets.

Kuklinshi passed over 40,000 pages of secret Warsaw Pact documents to the CIA – the largest act of espionage in world history.  After the screening, Director Dariusz Jabloński said that Kuklinski considered himself a Polish soldier doing his duty, not a spy for the West.

Kuklinski died just before he could be interviewed for this documentary.  However, Jabloński did secure interviews with the senior commanders of the Soviet and Polish militaries, former Polish heads of state, CIA officers and Kuklinski’s widow, as well as screen shots from Warsaw Pact war simulations.  At 110 minutes, it’s a little long, but the story is compelling.