Blind Mountain

Tuesday, September 4, 2007 

Blind Mountain is a Chinese film about a college educated woman who is tricked into visiting a remote village on the pretense of looking for medicinal herbs and is instead sold into bondage as a slave-wife.

The film succeeds in sustaining a sense of danger and tension from the opening to the final frame, literally. The heroine is also well-treated, portrayed as respectable, strong, and intelligent she makes good and logical choices – that is despite the horror and tension of the situation, she is not reduced to being a horror movie victim. The film also explores the lack of overt malice and moral ambiguity of the captors, and makes a case for why previous victims might have chosen to accept their fate, adopting a tolerable life amidst the incredible beauty of the Western mountains of China.

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2007 Telluride Film Festival

Posted at 15:00:15 GMT-0700

Category: Films

Great Expectations

Monday, September 3, 2007 

Sunday morning we went to the Great Expectations short film series. This year they were all Mexican shorts.

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  • Fish Soup was fast and funny. A family gets visited by a bird.
  • Distinguishing Features was a very sad short about a woman and her near-do-well son, and his disappearance.
  • End of the Line was an interesting story about a romance on a bus line outside of Mexico City, but didn’t really pay off in the end.
  • Coco Y Nico was a sort of avant guard animation/live action mix about a woman and her lover (who was animated scratchies). The technique was more interesting than the story.
  • A Small Death was funny and a pleasure to watch. A boy steals a purse and ends up delivering a running commentary on the people around him and his life as he paid the price for doing so.
  • If I Die Far From You was amazingly powerful for a short. It felt like a difficult (in a good way) feature and really stuck long after seeing it.
  • Venus was a sort of odd short nominally from the perspective of a Virgin Mary Icon. It was a little slow….
  • Ver Llover was a touching short about a young couple in love and growing out of their village. Funny and touching.

Carolyn found the funniest short, I’ve seen (possibly ever) and posted the YouTube link to Spider (2007).

https://vimeo.com/13070194

2007 Telluride Film Festival

Posted at 15:17:15 GMT-0700

Category: FilmsGeopostPositiveReviews

The diving bell and the Butterfly

Sunday, September 2, 2007 

Julian Schanbel introduced the late showing of the film in his pajamas. He was funny and earnest and very open about the emotions behind the movie with respect to the death of his own father. The introduction set the tone for the movie which is similarly inspiring, honest, and deeply moving, though perhaps not quite as much so as he promised. It’s a wonderful story of courage and strength and inner resolve and tragedy. And moments of great levity. Mathieu Amalric is brilliant.

We had a bit of discussion about the translation of scaphandre to “diving bell,” it’s not quite apropos to the movie and is not the literal apparatus shown in the movie, but far more euphonious than “The Hardsuit and the Butterly”

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2007 Telluride Film Festival

Posted at 00:05:15 GMT-0700

Category: Films

Die Falscher

Sunday, September 2, 2007 

The Counterfeiters tells the story of a Jewish counterfeiter who’s artistic skills protected him when he was arrested by the Nazis, and how he led a band of skilled printers protected under a Machiavellian Schindler-like SS officer as they embarked on the largest counterfeiting operation in history.

The movie was very well done, engaging, fun, with good acting and a very compelling story. The character conflicts seemed a bit rote and the character types played a little too close to standards, but overall a very worthwhile film to see and enjoyable.

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2007 Telluride Film Festival

Posted at 00:00:16 GMT-0700

Category: Films

Persepolis

Sunday, September 2, 2007 

We saw this really amazing film by an Iranian film maker, based on the graphic novel Persepolis. The film was the best we’ve seen so far. I really wonderful relief from some fairly indulgent films. A tribute to Pierre Ressient that was technically rough and really only engaging for the extended family. More of a home movie tribute than a film, though Pierre himself is quite amazing and his nebulous yet defining influence on the film industry is astonishing.

We also saw Werner Herzog’s travelogue of his vacation to Antarctica as a resident artist at McMurdo, Encounters at the End of the World. He’s a brilliant enough that his travelogue is interesting, but primarily just beautiful and occasionally funny.

Persepolis is a brilliant film. The characters are engaging and fun and adorable; more compelling and human than any animated film I’ve seen, and more so than most live action films. The story is tragic and painful and challenging and yet very real and despite being a devastating critique of Muslim rule in Iran, and a painfully honest indictment of the Shah, of British meddling, of the US influence in the Iran/Iraq war, and a sharp social critique of expat life, it was intimately apolitical.

Marjane Satrapi spoke after the film and is as quick-witted and funny as her characters. She was an absolute delight to listen to.

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2007 Telluride Film Festival

Posted at 00:00:16 GMT-0700

Category: Films