No Movie Pick
of the Week this edition. There’s only two films, so I don’t like handing out
prizes in a two horse race.
I did want to highlight for Perth film lovers, the Revelation Perth International Film Festival 2014 opening next
week on the 3rd July and running through until the 13th
July. This is a festival of quality independent films and a truly international event with many of the creative forces, behind the films, flying in for Q & A sessions with the screening of their work. We are very lucky.
In case you didn’t know, I’m an independent author
by choice. I like the freedom to create stories that I choose, how I
choose, and release them when it suits me. While it’s probably a more labor
intensive road—because I do EVERYTHING—I pay that price because I think my work
benefits from that freedom.
Filmmakers face similar choices, and sometimes
when they follow their hearts and not a big studio’s budget, they create truly
astonishing, wonderfully unique art. Check out some of the films showing at the
Revelation Film Festival this year and I guarantee you will be salivating.
Incredible, incredible choices. So get some friends or go on your own and make
some friends, but go see at least a couple of these films. The people behind
Rev are passionate cinephiles and they deserve your support. They’ve certainly
got mine. Don’t ask me out to anything from the 3rd to the 13th.
I’ll be going to the Rev with all the other film lovers.
If you still want to read the reviews for the week,
they follow the Revelation Film Festival information.
Here’s a couple of picks from the Festival, but there are so many.
Click through on the link and check them out. You can purchase tickets here HERE and since each
film only has a limited few dates, I suggest you pre-purchase or buy a Festival Membership or
multiple entry pass that will give you access to all the films. I’m
assured these are films you will want to see. I’m listening to the experts and
catching these. So many amazing films, so little time.
The Congress
The
Congress follows actress Robin Wright playing herself, who, faced with a
dwindling acting career, elects to give-up her actress self to the studio. The
studio then scan every inch of her body and every expression she can muster, so
that she can live forever in whatever movies they choose to make, all she has
to do is give up her identity as an actress. But times change and all decisions
have ramifications. What follows is the
kind of mind-bending speculative science fiction that opens up endless utopian
possibilities and limitless dystopian nightmares. With a visually stunning and
deeply psychedelic palette The Congress explores virtual reality,
transforming-chemistry, the collapse of identity, copyright, the function of
performance, the hallucinatory nature of reality and the deconstruction of time
itself. In The Congress Folman has created a visually stunning, profound movie. With a cast that includes Harvey Keitel and
Paul Giamatti, this is an exceptional work.
When she died, Chicago nanny Vivian Maier left behind boxes of
coats, hats, old clothes and 100,000 photographic negatives. Chanced upon by
John Maloof, when he purchased a box of negatives at an auction, and following
as he slowly archives the incredible photographs, organises an exhibition of
the work and tries to get it recognised by the art world. Meanwhile a far
larger mystery needs to be uncovered, and Maloof finds himself wondering about
the life of the mysterious photographer and what possessed her to take so many
photographs...
Under The Skin
In Under
The Skin Scarlett Johansson plays Laura – an alien who has taken on the form of
a beautiful woman in order to lure men to their deaths with the promise of sex.
Adapted from the book of the same name by Michael Faber, the film stunned
audiences when it screened at Venice Film Festival.
Many of the
scenes where Johansson's character picks up men were unscripted conversations
with non-actors, filmed with hidden cameras. Director Jonathan Glazer – whose
previous feature credits include the excellent Sexy Beast and Birth – crafts a
visually stunning science fiction film that, as the movie progresses,
transforms Scotland into an alien world. Complete with a haunting soundtrack by
Mica Levi, Under the Skin is a remarkable, bold and sensuous science fiction
movie that examines gender, sexuality and what it means to be human. The
Guardian’s Peter Bradshaw rated the movie 5/5, describing it as “visually
stunning and deeply disturbing: very freaky, very scary and very erotic. “
Cold in July
When
Richard (Six Feet Under and Dexter’s Michael C Hall) Dane kills a burglar the
locale police inform him that he’s killed a wanted, dangerous man. It appears
to be an open-and-shut case and Dane returns to his daily life. But then he
meats the dead man’s father, the angry, vengeful Ben Russel (the always
excellent Sam Shepard), and then things really start sliding out of control…
Based on the novel by cult author Joe R. Lansdale, Cold In July is a
rare thriller that throws the audience deep into contemporary film noir movie
set in rural Texas. With a cast that includes an excellent turn from Don
Johnson, as well as Hall and Shepard, multi award winning director Jim Mickle
(whose credits include We Are What We Are and Stake Land) turns in a powerful
crime drama that will keep audiences on the edge of their seats till the final
credits roll.
To Be Takai
George Takei first entered the public
imagination playing Sulu in the cult TV series Star Trek, a role
reprised in subsequent movies, and which alone would have guaranteed him a
significant place in the pop cultural pantheon. But George Takei’s career has
extended far beyond the bridge of the legendary star ship Enterprise, taking in
numerous popular television shows, films and theatrical productions, as well as
regular appearances on Howard Stern’s radio show. He has also garnered millions
of online followers thanks to his Facebook posts that move from the wryly
humorous to the camp to the political. Perhaps most importantly Takei has
become an outspoken activist for same sex marriage and equality.
Director Jennifer M. Kroot has gained
exceptional access to Takei’s life, and she follows the actor and his spouse
through numerous public appearances and speeches as well as their home life.
What emerges through these sequences – and interviews with the Takeis as well
as Star Trek cast members (including Leonard Nimoy, Nicholle Nichols, Walter
Koenig and a very - perhaps unintentionally - funny William Shatner), alongside
family members, friends and activists - is a portrait of a man deeply committed
to equality and social justice.
Locke ✪✪✪✪
Showing at the Revelation Film Festival 3rd – 13th July Perth
Opens in Australia: 19th
June 2014
USA: 25th April UK: 8th April 2014
Other Countries: Release Information
Perth: Luna Palace Cinemas
OUR THOUGHTS
I take my beanie off (it’s cold in Perth at the moment) to filmmakers and scriptwriters who can create such a dramatic piece filmed entirely in the cabin of a car with one lead actor driving the entire film. He only interacts with the cast via his phone. Tom Hardy plays Ivan Locke, a man whose life spins out of control during a two-hour drive to London.
How can the filmmakers make such a great cinematic
experience with such a constrained focus and minimal budget and filming time?
The script, my friends, the script. Plus a top notch actor and a fine director.
Hundreds of millions they spend on these rubbish sci-fi flicks we’ve endured
this last year (all except Edge of Tomorrow, my fave) and all they needed was a
good script. Producers of Transcendence and After Earth, go see Locke and
learn. Please learn.
STUDIO BLURB
Ivan Locke (Hardy) has worked diligently to craft the life
he has envisioned, dedicating himself to the job that he loves and the family
he adores. On the eve of the biggest challenge of his career, Ivan receives a
phone call that sets in motion a series of events that will unravel his family,
job, and soul. All taking place over the course of one absolutely riveting car
ride, LOCKE is an exploration of how one decision can lead to the complete
collapse of a life. Directed by acclaimed filmmaker Steven Knight (EASTERN
PROMISES, DIRTY PRETTY THINGS) and driven by an unforgettable performance by
Tom Hardy, LOCKE is a thrillingly unique cinematic experience of a man fighting
to salvage all that is important to him.(C) a24
THESE FILMS BELOW ARE
GENERAL RELEASE AND NOT PART OF THE REVELATION FILM FESTIVAL
Transformers: Age of Extinction ✪✪✪
Opens in Australia: 19TH
June 2014
USA: 13th June
2014 UK:
1th July 2014
Other Countries: Release Information
OUR THOUGHTS
First up, before you see this film do make a
bathroom stop. It is 2 hours and 45 minutes. I didn’t check this little detail,
so about eighty minutes in I felt the urge, but thought I would wait until it
was over. Little did I know that would be another eighty-five leg-crossed
minutes.
The reviewers hate this one. The only thing that
could make it worse for the general consensus is if Adam Sandler was in it—they
hate him as well.
However, bizarrely—and I say bizarrely because I barely
liked the other Transformer films—I didn’t mind this film. Neither did my
family mind it (and I keep telling you, they are tough on films). I can’t see what is
worse in this than the other three. This one, at least, is unabashed about its
offering: it’s loud, over the top CGI, with action forever, and the token girl
with tiny shorts, and a script with an even tinier storyline. Age of Extinction
has Mark Wahlberg, and that’s a whole big improvement over Shia LaBeouf.
If you are a fan of Michael Bay’s unsubtle work,
you love these big, popcorn, CGI films, then this one is for you. Enjoy it in
all its loud glory, and ignore the critics. We saw it in 3D IMAX, which was
quite the experience. Just remember the bathroom first, right!
STUDIO BLURB
TRANSFORMERS: AGE OF EXTINCTION begins after an
epic battle left a great city torn, but with the world saved. As humanity picks
up the pieces, a shadowy group reveals itself in an attempt to control the
direction of history...while an ancient, powerful new menace sets Earth in its
crosshairs. With help from a new cast of humans (led by Mark Wahlberg), Optimus
Prime and the Autobots rise to meet their most fearsome challenge yet. In an
incredible adventure, they are swept up in a war of good and evil, ultimately
leading to a climactic battle across the world. (C) Paramount
Yves
Saint Laurent ✪✪✪✪
Opens in Australia: 3rd
July 2014
USA: 20th June
2014 UK:
21st March 2014
Other Countries: Release Information
Perth: Luna Palace Cinemas
OUR THOUGHTS
It should be an exciting piece of cinema, a French
film about a French style fashion icon and how the house of Yves Saint Laurent
came to be. What I found was that YSL seemed rather a bore, and I wanted to
know more about his partner, Pierre Bergé. The shame of it is that I started thinking I wish Hollywood would
take this story and make the film. That is a rare occurrence. For the most
part, they totally mess up when they translate these foreign films and the
story invariably loses what makes it special. However, I think this film needs
a touch of the Hollywood glamor.
STUDIO BLURB
Yves
Saint Laurent is an epic odyssey of creation, love, glamour and fashion and
gives us a privileged insight into the mind and life of one of the greatest visionary
designers of our time.
This
fascinating film unveils the life of prolific French fashion designer Yves
Saint Laurent. At just 21 years, Saint Laurent is called upon to run one of the
world’s great fashion houses – Dior. During his triumph there, he meets Pierre
Bergé. Lovers and business partners, together they create the Yves Saint
Laurent company and revolutionise the world of fashion. Yves Saint Laurent is
an epic odyssey of love, creation, glamour and style; with a privileged insight
into the mind of a great visionary, and the doubts and demons behind the
genius. Receiving full support from Pierre Bergé and the Yves Saint Laurent
Foundation, the filmmakers utilise breathtaking original YSL designs, including
the acclaimed 1976 Ballets Russes Collection, and film inside Laurent’s opulent
homes from Paris to Marrakech. (Arabic, Russian, French, Japanese, English).
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