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Palm Springs International Film Festival



compiled
by S. James Wegg
(12/28/07)

continued from main page

Detectives

Nanking
Nanking

Beaufort
Beaufort

Hairspray
Hairspray

Body of War Body of War

Body of War Shake Hands With the Devil

The Orphanage The Orphanage

U.S. sleuthing can be found in Jieho Lee’s quartet of Chinese proverbial tales, The Air I Breathe; Taxi to the Dark Side, from Alex Gibney (no-holds-barred director of Enron:  The Smartest Guys in the Room);  Paul Soter’s Watching the Detectives and—with an investigation of self—Sam Zalutsky’s You Belong to Me.  From Europe the pursuit of criminals comes in many styles and languages:  Spain offers a queer-crime comedy, Juan Flahn’s Boystown and a trio of private dicks in Icar Bollaín’s Mataharis; Fanny Ardant stars as a crime writer in French director Claude le Loch’s Roman de Gare; Shaky González’s perfectly named Pistoleros is one of two Danish films and brings new meaning to “Show me the money!”; Bulgaria brings a murder mystery where the only female inspector on the Sofia force must do better than the men in Iglika Trifonova ‘s Razsledvane (Investigation); Russia figures in the title of the Georgian serial-killer flick, Rusuli samkuthedi (The Russian Triangle) and from Russia itself comes Nikita Mikhalkov’s 12, with more than a passing resemblance to Reginald Rose’s (writer)/Sidney Lumet’s (director) classic 12 Angry Men.  Heroin and the fine art of the double-cross can be found in the Asian cop-under-cover, as Hong Kong’s Derek Yee’s latest, Munto (Protégé) is screened.

Dilemmas

Moral, political and ethical conundrums have provided fodder for the big screen since its invention.  This time the situations span an impressive range of emotional and geographical territory.  Set in 1920s Vietnam is Charlie Nguyen’s tale of impossible love, Doung Mau Anh Hung (The Rebel).  In Johnnie To’s Exiled (Fongchuk), a quintet of aging gangsters attempt to thin their own ranks as their bullet-based partnership winds down.  Religious belief and the mores of the modern world come under Turkish filmmaker Özer Kiziltan’s Takva – A Man’s Fear of God.  How far would you go to let your son get the life-saving operation he so desperately requires?  The Serbian response will be found in Srdan Golubovic’s Klopka (The Trap).  Denmark weighs in on the still-too-common reality of child abuse (Peter Schønau Fog’s The Art of Crying), while neighbour Finland delves into the brave new world of a laid-off labourer who reinvents himself as a male escort (Aleksi Salmenperä’s A Man’s Job).  Family matters in Daniele Lucchetti’s Mio fratello è figlio unico (My Brother Is an Only Child)and from a gay perspective in Canadian Laurie Lynd’s charming Breakfast With Scot.  From the French part of “True North Strong and Free” comes François Delisle’s take on abandoning husband and child for a fling with a musician (Toi, a.k.a. You).  Finally, Helen Hunt finds her seat in the director’s chair with the opening night feature, Then She Found Me.  Also starring Hunt, it’s the “What else could possibly go wrong?” tale of midlife crisis plus.  Matthew Broderick, Bette Midler and Colin Firth provide the angst and, hopefully, the salvation.

With all of that drama, thank goodness for Hairspray, which will also be served up in an outdoor sing-along with the stars (should the presenters of Come Sing Messiah feel threatened?).

Disabilities

Global maturing can be witnessed by the ever-growing body of work inspired, incited or imbued with the countless stories that were formerly hidden away from the triumphant majority of normal.  From Acquired Brain Injury (so often invisible that reprehensible assumptions are made unhampered by fact) to the far too obvious impairments manifested by missing limbs or paralysis, thank goodness filmmakers are showing the world the incredibly diverse, heroic and life-loving community of those formerly known as handicapped.

Italy leads the way with Cristiano Bortone’s tender study of blindness in a ten-year-old boy (Rosso Come il Cielo a.k.a., Red Like the Sun)and a gay couple’s struggle when one of them falls into coma (Ferzan Ozpetek’s Saturno contro, a.k.a. Saturn in Opposition).  In Jagdhunde (Hounds) German filmmaker Ann-Kristin Reyels studies the positive effect a mute young girl can have on a family that’s on the verge of disintegration.  Chemical-induced deformities set on the stage of the Iran-Iraq war raise many issues that have confounded power mongers since the invention of gun powder in Rasoul Mollgholipoor’s Mim Mesle Madar (M for Mother).  One of two films from China follows a woman who abandons her disabled husband, but perhaps too soon in Wang Quanan’s Tuyade Hunshi (Tuya’s Marriage).  Couldn’t happen here.  Those who imagine seeking a transgender operation as a disability would be well advised to take a peek at Canadian Gwen Haworth’s She’s a Boy I Knew.  The physical human condition is explored from two points-of-view by American filmmakers:  paralysis due to a soldier’s bullet in Phil Donahue’s, Ellen Spiro’s Body of War—repeated daily in war zones around the globe; the institutionalization of those living with disabilities is chronicled in the short documentary Body & Soul: Diana & Kathy—hopefully long enough to make its point to the anonymous owners or upper management of so many long-term care facilities where commerce trumps care.

With so much new, the PSIFF brain trust wisely remembers its roots.  Two special presentations, (Frank Borzage’s silent film marvel, Seventh Heaven (1927)—complete with a live performance by Paul Gilman of his original score and Josef von Sternberg’s masterpiece, Crime and Punishment) will serve to remind both seasoned viewers and today’s current crop of filmmakers that new doesn’t always equate with better.

Festival Interviews:

Özer Kiziltan, director of Takva: A Man's Fear of God
Peter Schøneau Fog, director of The Art of Crying

Canadian Features:

World Cinema Now:
3 Little Pigs, Patrick Huard
Breakfast with Scot, Laurie Lynd
Numb, Harris Goldberg
Shake Hands with the Devil, Roger Spottiswoode
The Stone Angel
, Kari Skogland
You, François Delisle

Super Charged Cinema:
End of the Line, Maurice Devereaux

New Voices/New Visions:
Continental, A Film Without Guns, Stéphane Lafleur (French, with subtitles)

True Stories :
The Bodybuilder and I, Bryan Friedman
She's a Boy I Knew, Gwen Haworth

Awards Buzz - Best Documentary Feature:
A Promise to the Dead: The Exile Journey of Ariel Dorfman, Peter Raymont

Awards Buzz - Best Foreign Language Film:
Days of Darkness (L’Âge des ténèbres), Denys Arcand (Canada, France)

Reviews

Title

Director/Country

Salim Baba

4 stars

Indian flag Tim Sternberg

Freeheld

5 stars

American flag Cynthia Wade

Sari's Mother

4 stars

American flag Iraqi flag James Longley

Body & Soul: Diana & Kathy

4 and a half stars

American flag Alice Elliott

Takva: A Man's Fear of God

4 stars

Turkish flag Özer Kiziltan

Body of War

4 stars

American flag Phil Donahue, Ellen Shapiro

Nanking

3 and a half stars

American flag Bill Guttentag, Dan Sturman

The Art of Negative Thinking
(Kunsten å tenke negativt)

4 and a half stars

Norwegian flag Bård Breien

The Art of Crying
(Kunsten at græde i kor)

4 stars

Danish flag Peter Schøneau Fog

Duska

3 stars

Netherlands flag Russian flag Jos Stelling

Gone With the Woman
(Tatt av kvinnen)

2 and a half stars

Norwegian flag Petter Naess

Beaufort

3 stars

Israeli flag Joseph Cedar

Late Bloomers
(Die Herbstzeitlosen)

4 and a half stars

Swiss flag Bettina Oberli

Donsol

2 stars

Philippine flag Adolfo Alix Jr.

Shake Hands With the Devil

4 stars

Canadian flag Roger Spottiswoode

Days of Darkness

3 stars

Canadian flag French flag Denys Arcand

Shelter

3 and a half stars

American flag Jonah Markowitz

The Orphanage
(El Orfanato)

5 stars

Spanish flag Juan Antonio Bayona

     

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