Below are reviews for the six films we ended up watching. Liz loves the french language, so we ended up seeing three french movies. My recommendation for someone new to the festival would be to see two foreign films, two American independent films, two documentaries, and one of the evening showings of a classic at the Open Space. That's what I'll do my best to do next year.
On to the reviews...
"The Valet" (PG-13)
"The Valet" is a light-hearted french comedy, effectively directed by Francis Veber, about a Paris valet, François (Gad Elmaleh) who is innocently caught in a paparazzi photo of billionaire Pierre (the famous french actor Daniel Auteuil) and his supermodel mistr
ess, Elena (Alice Taglioni). To avoid a messy, and expensive, divorce, Pierre convinces his wife, Christine (a devious Kristin Scott Thomas) that François, not he, is dating the supermodel. The movie then presses forward as a screwball romantic comedy, with Pierre paying both the supermodel and François to live together in the hopees of convincing his wife they are a real couple. The film does a nice job of keeping the impact of François' friends finding out he is "dating" a supermodel from falling into cliche, and his preoccupation with his own love interest, Elena (Virginie Ledoyen), has some touching moments. Still, while the film is plenty entertaining, it spends too much time building cheap laughs to fully develop any of the characters. The comedic performances (other than the cheeky Dany Boon as Richard) are overacted and slap-stick, and the movie never completely sheds it's "sit-com" pilot feel. Enjoyable, but certainly not memorable.
ess, Elena (Alice Taglioni). To avoid a messy, and expensive, divorce, Pierre convinces his wife, Christine (a devious Kristin Scott Thomas) that François, not he, is dating the supermodel. The movie then presses forward as a screwball romantic comedy, with Pierre paying both the supermodel and François to live together in the hopees of convincing his wife they are a real couple. The film does a nice job of keeping the impact of François' friends finding out he is "dating" a supermodel from falling into cliche, and his preoccupation with his own love interest, Elena (Virginie Ledoyen), has some touching moments. Still, while the film is plenty entertaining, it spends too much time building cheap laughs to fully develop any of the characters. The comedic performances (other than the cheeky Dany Boon as Richard) are overacted and slap-stick, and the movie never completely sheds it's "sit-com" pilot feel. Enjoyable, but certainly not memorable."The Lives of Others" (R)
An Oscar winner last year for Best Foreign Language film, this movie is nothing if not memorable. A historical film about the spying on playwrite Georg Dreyman (Sebastian Koch) by
the Secret Police (Stasi) of East Germany during the waning days of communism, the film charts the impact serveilance has on a society. Although slow to get off the ground, the film truly takes off in its final reel, paving the way for one of the most heartbreaking moments of cinema in the last year and puncuated by the most sincere and emotional conclusions movies have to offer. Ulrich Mühe gives one of the best performances of the year as Hauptmann Gerd Wiesler, the idealistic and by-the-books Stasi officer whose sympathy for the subject of his spying leads him to risk his career to protect people he's never met. Both a scary reminder of a not-so-distant period of history and a commentary on today's post-9/11 world, "The Lives of Others," is a powerful look at the actions of kind men in the face of overwhelming, instittutional oppression. A much watch.
the Secret Police (Stasi) of East Germany during the waning days of communism, the film charts the impact serveilance has on a society. Although slow to get off the ground, the film truly takes off in its final reel, paving the way for one of the most heartbreaking moments of cinema in the last year and puncuated by the most sincere and emotional conclusions movies have to offer. Ulrich Mühe gives one of the best performances of the year as Hauptmann Gerd Wiesler, the idealistic and by-the-books Stasi officer whose sympathy for the subject of his spying leads him to risk his career to protect people he's never met. Both a scary reminder of a not-so-distant period of history and a commentary on today's post-9/11 world, "The Lives of Others," is a powerful look at the actions of kind men in the face of overwhelming, instittutional oppression. A much watch."Fireworks Wednesday" (similar to PG-13; officially NR)
"Fireworks Wednesday" is a snapshot of a day around a housing complex in Iran on the eve of the Persian New Year. The constant sound of firecrackers going off in the background give the film a discerniting feeling as the film-makers attempt to weave a story of several relationships in various states of evolution and devolution. I've forgotten most of the characters' names, but the movie contains a soon-to-be-married young cleaning woman sent to a high-rise apartment, where she witnesses a couple preparing for a holiday even as their marriage falls apart. The film does a nice job dealing with the subtilities of domestic challenges in an Iran few Americans even know exists, but it can help the fact that the film's pacing is flat and its many characters are hard to follow or care about. The script, by Asghar Farhadi and Mani Haghighi, highlights this film; the rest falls flat.
"My Best Friend" (PG-13)
Another french comedy starring Daniel Auteuil, this time as François Coste, a Paris art dealer with no friends. On a bet with his assistant, Catherine (the lovely Julie Gayet), he has 10 days to produce a best friend or he'll have to give her a Greek vase he purchased for over $200,000. François eventually enlists the help of his taxi driver, Bruno (Dany Boon, also in "The Valet") to help him make friends. The fact that they become "best friends" as the movie progresses is obvious, the twists the movie comes up with in getting there are not. Unfortunately, those twists break the first rule in comedy; it's okay for your main characters to be unrealistic, but the world they inhabit should be grounded in reality. "My Best Friend" loses that grounding in its final reel, but it doesn't stop it from being a heartfelt look at loneliness and friendship. There's a great movie hidden in this storyline; "My Best Friend" only takes us halfway there.
"Paris, Je T'Aime" (R)
I'm usually not a big fan of vignette-based movies, and "Paris, Je T'Aime" is no different, even though I thoroughly enjoyed most, if not all, the vignettes. Especially memorable were the shorts about a dying woman and her husband, the lonely tourist (her French is horrific; her plight melancholic and memorable), and a story of a young man and his Muslim immigrant crush. The movie was directed by 18 of the most celebrated directors in the world (check out the official site for everyone's name; it's too long to mention here). Each short works in its own way, but like most collective movies, the individual parts are worth more than their sum. Some very moving moments, but the attempt at a collective, universal moment at the end of the film falls flat (it's too short and contains no real narrative strain). Worth watching, but nothing Oscar worthy."In the Shadow of the Moon" (documentary: NR)
"In the Shadow of the Moon" tells the story of the Apollo flight missings from 1969-1972; the story of man's trips to the moon, and, perhaps even more extraordinary, their returns. It can be easy in our world to overlook the fact that 9 brave and brilliant (white) men once walked on the moon(!), and this movie does an outstanding job of bringing that amazing fact back to the forefront of our thoughts. While the file footage and interview-led narrative with the original astronauts is impressive, I was most moved by the thought that once upon a time, the United States completed a political and cultural goal that inspired the entire world (instead of tearing it apart). Footage of a french woman in 1969 saying (I'm paraprhasing), "I always knew the Americans would do it; their such a wonderful people," will be enough to make even the hardest neo-conservative question what we've been doing internationally during the 21st-century.
Overall, I enjoyed the experience of all six films we watched. As I mentioned in the previous blog, the film festival is about more than "Just Great Films," although, more often than not, it has those, too, in spades.


