Category Archives: Drama

The Phoenician Scheme

The Phoenician Scheme                 4 stars

If you’ve seen a Wes Anderson movie before you already have an idea of what to expect. His best includes The Royal Tenenbaums, Moonrise Kingdom, The Grand Budapest Hotel and Asteroid City. (Also, remember The Fantastic Mr. Fox). Anderson has a unique style identified by faded colors, stationary cameras, and characters with stilted and rapid fire speaking that is instantly recognizable. His new film, The Phoenician Scheme, is no different and shares themes as well as actors from previous films. Common devices he uses are espionage and parental challenges, both of which are present in this one. There are two main characters that cover the entire film. There is the shady industrialist, Zsa Zsa Korda (Benicio Del Toro of Sicario and The French Dispatch) who has an uncanny ability to survive multiple plane crashes and his estranged daughter, Liesl (Mia Threapleton who is a newcomer) who he wants to leave his empire to and who happens to be a nun. Korda is in the process of setting up a vast infrastructure project to secure his legacy, but he needs the cooperation of a series of odd characters to “cover the gap”; that is, to help fund his project. Thus, his travels to various parts of the globe to try to secure their cooperation by doing odd things like having a basketball shooting contest in a railroad tunnel. It’s also clear that these various businessmen have not been treated all that well by Korda. There is also an assembly of rival industrialists who are trying to thwart Korda’s plans, thus the assassination attempts. The all-star supporting cast includes Jeffrey Wright, Benedict Cumberbatch, Tom Hanks, Bryan Cranston, Riz Ahmed and Scarlett Johansson. Bill Murray, a Wes Anderson regular even makes an appearance as God in what appears to be scenes of the afterlife. Throughout the movie it’s the great pairing of Del Toro and Threapleton with a little help from Michael Cera as Bjorn, a Norwegian tutor that really makes the movie. They have a good sense of comic timing while applying Anderson’s trademark style of deadpan delivery. Amid all the zany happenings lies a message of the care of a parent for their child even if it’s not delivered well. Considering all the movies that have been made by Wes Anderson over the past thirty years, The Phoenician Scheme is one of the better ones even if the style is very familiar.

Night of the Kings

Night of the Kings            3 suns

Night of the Kings is in the category of Spotlight meaning that it has been appearing at a number of film festivals prior to reaching Sundance. The story occurs inside a legendary prison in the Ivory Coast known as MACA. Though the army keeps the prisoners locked inside, the prison is really run by a prisoner known as Blackbeard. He and his friends use this control to profit from the prisoners. There is a tradition observed among the prisoners that during a red moon a “Roman” or storyteller is named who must entertain them with a great story told verbally. Thus, Blackbeard chooses a young prisoner who has just arrived and names him as the new Roman, so he gets the unenviable job. He is up to the task and weaves a fantastical story blending reality with legendary fables that enthralls the prisoners, sometimes to a frenzy. It is amazing that the filmmakers were able to pull this production off with a huge number of cast and extras. As a Westerner it is difficult to understand the beliefs being expressed here including the worship of someone who appears to be a common criminal.

Fire in the Mountains

Fire in the Mountains                     4 suns

Although I didn’t fully understand it Fire in the Mountains was one of my favorites of the international films. Set in the Himalayan mountains of India, we follow a couple trying to eek out a living in a poor village. They have a young son who cannot walk and there is no road to their part of the village, so the boy must be carried down a trail for trips to the doctor. The mother pleads with officials to get a road built and listens and trusts in the doctors who use Western medicine. The father however, wants to believe in the local religion as preached by the shaman with its folk remedies involving animal sacrifices and elaborate rituals. Funding both views puts enormous stress on the finances of the family leading to conflict. (There is also the threat of being attacked by a leopard in the woods!) The performances were completely convincing and the expansive mountain views were great to look at. Since this movie deals with a culture I know little about there are aspects about it that made little sense to me, but I still found it to be a fascinating story.

Prime Time

Prime Time         4 suns

The Polish drama Prime Time portrays a fictional hostage situation in a TV studio on live TV om New Years Eve, 1999. A young 20 year-old, Sebastian (Bartosz Bielenia) takes control of the studio with a gun and demands that he be allowed to read his statement to the nation on live TV. The situation becomes a standoff between Sebastian and the television staff and police. The tension between the parties is realistically represented as the police struggle with ways to handle the situation without getting people killed. We also see how the relationship between hostage taker and his two hostages changes as the hours pass by. The actor Bielenia is especially talented with his range of emotions. I saw this same actor only a few months ago in the Polish drama Corpus Christi with his character impersonating a priest in a small village. The producer of Prime Time said he needed to place the film in the nineties to show the importance of television at that time and to avoid the widespread availability of the internet and social media.

The Pink Cloud

The Pink Cloud                  4 suns

In The Pink Cloud a young couple, Giovana and Yago who have just met are forced to live together in a city apartment in Brazil after the world has suddenly been enveloped by a deadly pink cloud that can kill almost instantly. The two can only communicate with others through their laptops and phones and have to order food and supplies shipped to them through tubes. The circumstances lead them to starting their own family and raising a son which goes on for several years. The interesting thing is how one of them adjusts well to the involuntary confinement and isolation while the other faces a level of anxiety that puts stress on the relationship. There are some interesting games played with neighbors through the apartment windows! The film was written and filmed well before the pandemic so it’s interesting how some of the character’s experiences are the same as what we have been going through. The filmmakers said that the only change they made was in the news casts changing from a cloud covering only Brazil to one covering the whole world. I have to give a big hand to the actors that carried out this job and made the movie believable and realistic.

One for the Road

One for the Road              4 ½ suns

The road trip romance One for the Road from Thailand was quite a pleasant surprise. Set in New York city and Thailand, Boss, a young Thai bar owner in New York gets a call from his long time friend, Aood who has cancer and doesn’t have long to live. He wants Boss to come back to Thailand to help him see his former girlfriends one last time so he can return something to each one. It then becomes a road trip with the two of them making the journey to each very reluctant girlfriend. Through flashbacks we gradually get more of the story of the past relationships, with each encounter having an American pop song to go along with it. Eventually, the story gets even more interesting as we find out more about the past and the secrets begin to come out. I was very curious about how it would turn out in the end. This is a topnotch romance drama out of director Baz Poonpiriya, who may be new to directing. (Have not heard of him before.) The performances are all excellent as well. See it if you get the chance.

Mrs. Harris Goes to Paris

Mrs. Harris Goes to Paris               4 stars

2022’s Mrs. Harris Goes to Paris, directed by Anthony Fabian, is about as light a movie as they come while being completely charming. Starring Lesley Manville (who commanded her role in Queer last year) as Ada Harris, a middle-aged housekeeper for wealthy clientele, it is like a fairy tale for older women. The movie is based on a novel and is set in 1950’s London. Mrs. Harris is kind, does her work diligently and likes to spend time with her friends (Ellen Thomas and Jason Isaacs). One day at the house of one of her employer’s she spies a genuine Christian Dior dress and falls in love with it, but it is like a dream that can never be realized. Later, Harris, whose husband was killed in the war, suddenly comes into some money and there is no doubt what she must do. Fly to Paris and buy one of those Christian Dior dresses! She charms her way into a Paris Dior fashion show where she is very out of place with the high society crowd but manages none the less to form friendships with company employees and acquaintances of Christian Dior while butting heads with the boss (Isabelle Huppert). There are a few bumps along the way as she manages to buy the dress, lose it and then get it back again. But the charm comes into it as she performs selfless acts for those around her, making their lives better, as well as changing the course of the company, Christian Dior. It’s all very light-hearted and unlikely and a pleasant break from the serious dramas, horror and action movies I’ve seen lately. You won’t be disappointed.

Sinners

Sinners                 5 stars

Ryan Coogler’s new movie, Sinners, about vampires invading a small rural Black town in 1930’s Mississippi, defies genre. While it certainly is a horror movie, it is also a gangster movie and a musical featuring an assortment of Blues numbers with varying styles. It’s hard to believe that this is only Coogler’s fifth time directing, previously directing Creed, two Black Panther movies from the Avengers universe and Fruitvale Station. This time it is in a setting he truly makes his own and is something that could only be made by Coogler. And it is also the fifth time he has featured Michael B. Jordan in a prominent role; this time actually making it two roles with Jordan playing twin brothers, Smoke and Stack. The pair were gangsters in Chicago having acquired a fortune during prohibition, and before that were soldiers in World War I, but now they have returned to their hometown and plan to open a juke joint and make more money. The pair are unsavory, certainly and won’t hesitate to hurt someone who crosses them. Smoke is the serious one of the two, while Stack is more flamboyant. The twins buy an old sawmill from a white man, paying cash, being assured that the Ku Klux Klan is a thing of the past, words that will haunt them later in the film. They link up with Sammie (Miles Caton), a young preacher’s kid who is a master Blues player on the guitar and will play a major part in the events to follow. The brothers reunite with a number of the townsfolk they knew from before and it is clear there is a long history at play here, especially with the women that includes Mary (Hailee Steinfeld) and Annie (Wunmi Wosaku). The recruiting of musicians, cooks and patrons for the evening’s entertainment takes a good hour of the movie during which we get a taste of the music of the time. It’s apparent to me that the Blues figures highly in Ryan Coogler’s background. It is only after the party starts that we get a hint at the bloodbath that is to come. But first we get a massive display of the music and dancing created here where we see figures from beyond the present dating back to old African culture and future entertainment with musicians on electric guitars and DJs. After the first of the vampires arrives at the venue, it occurred to me that this resembled Quentin Tarantino’s and Robert Rodriguez’s From Dusk Till Dawn, the vampire movie from the nineties. As the action filled killing progresses, the characters are not sure who they can trust and suspicions fall on those who were previously close. This was a familiar element that I remember from John Carpenter’s The Thing, when a blood test was used to clear the suspects. Here the act is the forced eating of garlic, a plant fatal to vampires. Everything leads to a final confrontation that leaves few survivors. Not only is Sinners easily the best horror film of the year so far, it gives us an impressive collection of cultures that were a part of the South in the 1930’s including Black, Chinese, native American’s and Irish. I don’t know how long Coogler worked on this soon to be classic, but he certainly had a lot to say. Be sure that you stay all of the way through the credits and don’t miss the multiple endings.

Empire of Light

Empire of Light                  3 ½ stars

Empire of Light by director Sam Mendez (who is better known for 1917 and the James Bond films) is an old-fashioned romance movie about a love that is not meant to be. This movie is about a small group of people who work in a once grand movie theater on the southern coast of England in the early 1980’s. The theater still attracts customers, but it clearly has seen better days as parts of the building have fallen into decay and lack of use. There we meet one of the employees, Hilary (the award-winning Olivia Colman), a middle-aged woman who does some of the theater’s menial tasks and has some hints of mental issues. The other employees are considerably younger than Hilary, other than the projectionist, an interesting older man (played by Toby Jones). Hilary is in an abusive relationship with the manager, Mr. Ellis (a detestable Colin Firth) who routinely asks her for sessions of sex on demand. One day a new employee is hired there. He is Stephen (Michael Ward), a young black man in his early 20’s. Since this is the eighties and tolerance isn’t really a thing yet, the area is plagued with gangs of young skinheads who like to beat up on black men, so Stephen has plenty to deal with. It seems natural that he and Hilary would soon become better acquainted, but things can’t be maintained given these circumstances. Even so, seeing what Stephen is going through gives Hilary the courage to stand up to the abusive Ellis in dramatic fashion. The film moves rather slowly at times but gives us a deeper understanding of the characters in the story. It is quite a departure from Mendez’ more popular works. The movie was nominated for Best Cinematography in 2023, which is well deserved.

Burden

Burden                 3 stars

I Missed Burden at Sundance 2018 as it was a hard ticket to get and was an award winner at the festival. Then somehow it wasn’t released to theaters until 2020. Burden is a true story about a poor white man, Mike Burden (Garrett Hedlund), raised on the hatred toward blacks so prevalent in the South. Mike serves the KKK in the small town of Laurens, South Carolina and works as a repo man for a small rent to own company. In both roles he works for Tom Griffin (Tom Wilkinson) who is the Grand Dragon of the local KKK chapter and to whom he regards as a father. Griffin, who preaches white supremacy and violence, has acquired the local dilapidated movie theater in town and turned it into his dream, a museum to the KKK called The Redneck Museum, where the exploits of the Klan such as lynching and cross burnings are glorified. The town has a substantial black population so the museum soon catches the attention of Rev. David Kennedy (Forest Whitaker) who leads protests against the racist museum but in a peaceful manner, in the spirit of Martin Luther King Jr.  Kennedy still honors his uncle who was lynched by the Klan decades earlier. Then we follow the challenges that Mike faces when he starts seeing Judy (Andrea Riseborough from 2018’s Nancy and 2020’s gorefest, Possessor), a dirt poor single mother who does not approve of Mike’s involvement with the KKK. The movie gives us a picture of the hatred and violence that blacks continue to receive, but this has been done so often in movies before. (See Blackkklansman) The movie is set in the 1990’s so what I don’t see is a representation of the much more subtle forms of racism that are common today. Think of Charlottesville, 2017 and the treatment blacks get from some white police officers. The acting is very good. Hedlund was made for this kind of role, a head strong uneducated white southerner redneck (see also On the Road and Mudbound). I thought the movie didn’t give us enough reason to believe his transformation that led to him leaving the Klan. Though the movie is based on a true story, it has a predictable feel to it. Burden is worth seeing but I wouldn’t call it an award winner.