Tuesday, January 21, 2014

12 Years a Slave (2013) ✭✭✭✭✭



A true American horror story, 12 Years a Slave offers a flaming indictment of the nation’s Original Sin. Set in the 1840s, the film chronicles the tragic life of Solomon Northrup (Chiwetel Ejiofor), a prosperous black musician and family man, who is conned into leaving the free and friendly confines of Saratoga for the promise of a lucrative gig in Washington, DC. Once in the capital, he is kidnapped, beaten and soon finds himself just another piece of chattel for sale in New Orleans’ notorious slave market. What follows is a grim, wrenching spectacle from the underbelly of the American saga, as Northrup desperately attempts to survive amid those who would deny both his freedom and his humanity.


Based on Northrup’s memoirs published in 1853, 12 Years a Slave is a story that would be unbelievable if it weren’t true. Director Steve McQueen would also likely be accused of sensationalism, especially in his bleak, time-shifting prologue, which comes very close to cartooning with overwrought despair and tidbits of passionless sexuality. The majority of the film consists of a perfectly paced extended flashback, with McQueen unspooling Northrup’s complex backstory with a mesmerizing efficiency. He has to overcome some challenges along the way, most notably the script’s high-falootin’ dialogue, which makes almost every character sound like an Oxford literary scholar. This stilted verbiage, even if accurate to the period, can make a film seem phony and stagebound, and it’s a path last year’s Lincoln generally avoided. But McQueen persists and and to his credit make it work. By the thirty minute mark, his players’ grandiose speeches seem intrinsic, and lend the story yet another antecedent of classical tragedy.


While Ejiofor’s charismatic rendering of the resilient Northrup has been showered with award noms, and rightfully so, 12 Years a Slave surrounds him with a brilliant battery of support. Paul Dano, back in his true element playing a craven bully, personifies the thuggish blue-collar enforcers who sadistically relished the dirty work of slave oppression. Benedict Cumberbatch shines as a prissy plantation owner who personally finds slavery distasteful but penury even worse, and Alfre Woodard makes a perfect ice queen who has used her wiles to play the game and secure her master’s favor.


During his ordeal, Northrup is bought, sold and borrowed a few times, eventually landing on the  steamy, miserable cotton fields of a planter named Epps (Michael Fassbender). Epps serves as the anti-Northrup, and this character starkly embodies the cruelties and contradictions of institutionalized slavery. His tortured relationship with a bewitching slave named Patsy (Lupita Nyong'o) is infused with the same denials and delusions that still plague issues of race and sexuality in this country. In the sweatbox of Louisiana high summer, as Fassbender’s fair complexion drips with perspiration and rage, Northrup slowly learns to twist the lies of his master to his own advantage and, with the help of a Canadian carpenter (Brad Pitt), breaches the savage limits of plantation power.



12 Years a Slave is McQueen and Fassbender’s third collaboration. The pair have developed a unique chemistry, like a latter day Scorsese and DeNiro. McQueen is also developing into a master filmmaker, with the ability to cleverly rev up his stories and deliver dramatic payoffs that stun. At the 60 minute and 90 minute marks, respectively, are sequences of brutality that will leave audiences gasping. The latter, filmed as a nearly 5 minute continuous take, is an extraordinary example of blocking and choreography and a true must watch for aspiring filmmakers. There is a lot of loose talk these days about slavery and succession, with Tea Party politicians and states’ rights advocates attempting to cast the venal practice as a minor blot on Dixie's proud social history. Hopefully 12 Years a Slave will serve as a reminder of the depths we are capable of sinking, and a wake-up call to the ignorant souls who would take us back there.










12 Years a Slave (2013) ✭✭✭✭✭



A true American horror story, 12 Years a Slave offers a flaming indictment of the nation’s Original Sin. Set in the 1840s, the film chronicles the tragic life of Solomon Northrup (Chiwetel Ejiofor), a prosperous black musician and family man, who is conned into leaving the free and friendly confines of Saratoga for the promise of a lucrative gig in Washington, DC. Once in the capital, he is kidnapped, beaten and soon finds himself just another piece of chattel for sale in New Orleans’ notorious slave market. What follows is a grim, wrenching spectacle from the underbelly of the American saga, as Northrup desperately attempts to survive amid those who would deny both his freedom and his humanity.


Based on Northrup’s memoirs published in 1853, 12 Years a Slave is a story that would be unbelievable if it weren’t true. Director Steve McQueen would also likely be accused of sensationalism, especially in his bleak, time-shifting prologue, which comes very close to cartooning with overwrought despair and tidbits of passionless sexuality. The majority of the film consists of a perfectly paced extended flashback, with McQueen unspooling Northrup’s complex backstory with a mesmerizing efficiency. He has to overcome some challenges along the way, most notably the script’s high-falootin’ dialogue, which makes almost every character sound like an Oxford literary scholar. This stilted verbiage, even if accurate to the period, can make a film seem phony and stagebound, and it’s a path last year’s Lincoln generally avoided. But McQueen persists and and to his credit make it work. By the thirty minute mark, his players’ grandiose speeches seem intrinsic, and lend the story yet another antecedent of classical tragedy.


While Ejiofor’s charismatic rendering of the resilient Northrup has been showered with award noms, and rightfully so, 12 Years a Slave surrounds him with a brilliant battery of support. Paul Dano, back in his true element playing a craven bully, personifies the thuggish blue-collar enforcers who sadistically relished the dirty work of slave oppression. Benedict Cumberbatch shines as a prissy plantation owner who personally finds slavery distasteful but penury even worse, and Alfre Woodard makes a perfect ice queen who has used her wiles to play the game and secure her master’s favor.


During his ordeal, Northrup is bought, sold and borrowed a few times, eventually landing on the  steamy, miserable cotton fields of a planter named Epps (Michael Fassbender). Epps serves as the anti-Northrup, and this character starkly embodies the cruelties and contradictions of institutionalized slavery. His tortured relationship with a bewitching slave named Patsy (Lupita Nyong'o) is infused with the same denials and delusions that still plague issues of race and sexuality in this country. In the sweatbox of Louisiana high summer, as Fassbender’s fair complexion drips with perspiration and rage, Northrup slowly learns to twist the lies of his master to his own advantage and, with the help of a Canadian carpenter (Brad Pitt), breaches the savage limits of plantation power.



12 Years a Slave is McQueen and Fassbender’s third collaboration. The pair have developed a unique chemistry, like a latter day Scorsese and DeNiro. McQueen is also developing into a master filmmaker, with the ability to cleverly rev up his stories and deliver dramatic payoffs that stun. At the 60 minute and 90 minute marks, respectively, are sequences of brutality that will leave audiences gasping. The latter, filmed as a nearly 5 minute continuous take, is an extraordinary example of blocking and choreography and a true must watch for aspiring filmmakers. There is a lot of loose talk these days about slavery and succession, with Tea Party politicians and states’ rights advocates attempting to cast the venal practice as a minor blot on Dixie's proud social history. Hopefully 12 Years a Slave will serve as a reminder of the depths we are capable of sinking, and a wake-up call to the ignorant souls who would take us back there.










Wednesday, January 15, 2014

Rolling Family (2004) ✭✭✭✭




This rough-hewn Argentinean import is a slaphappy hybrid of Little Miss Sunshine and The Wages of Fear. Delightfully goofy from start to finish, the film chronicles an ill advised road trip of 1200 misadventure-filled kilometers from Buenos Aires to the remote hinterlands of Misiones. Family matriarch Emilia (Graciana Chironi), an 83 year-old drama queen, has received an invitation to a family wedding where she is to be maid of honor. Wishing to see her birthplace one more time, she summons her daughters and in-laws and grandchildren, who all enthusiastically agree to accompany her.



This loving, close-knit family is not only prone to hysterics; they are also appallingly cheap. Son-in-law Matias (Nicholas Lopez) just happens to have a home made camper, built on a 1958 Chevy pick-up truck, and before long a dozen energetic members of Emilia’s extended family cram into the rusting heap until every sloppy weld and hastily applied rivet threatens to rupture. Amid a toxic cloud of exhaust fumes, the sagging contraption sets out on the highway, where a strange and wacky world of exotic scenery, family bickering and dreadful humidity await it.

The idea of seeing Argentina from a Chevrolet soon begins to lose its luster, as old Emilia intersperses her periods of aggressive bossiness with fits of self pity and occasional imaginary heart attacks. As the driver, Matias labors to maintain the illusion that he is in charge of the situation, but the rivers of sweat cascading down his paunchy belly tell us otherwise. Meanwhile back in the camper, all manner of maladies beset the brood, including toothaches, squalling babies, lost puppies and pubescent cousins discovering the secret joys of sexual exploration. And other issues arise, including the expected ones from taking an overburdened, 50 year-old vehicle on a long trip into the steamy jungle.


Shot documentary style, the film appears to have been loosely scripted with plenty of room for improvisation. Director Pablo Trapero scores big with this approach. He captures the family’s arguemenative angst and makes it feel like a genuine product from decades of shared history. It doesn’t hurt that he had the courage to cast family members and other non-professionals in key roles, and the risk paid off. The production’s lack of polish infuses every scene with a slight off-kilter dynamic that somehow manages to be both deeply familiar and strangely intriguing.



Those of us who have taken the occasional family road trip from hell will know all too well the daffy plight of Rolling Family, and revel in its unique silliness. And while we wouldn’t want to take part in such a cockeyed journey, we have to admire this family’s resilience and determination to not be undone by their self-inflicted fallacies and foibles.

IMDb


Roma (2018) ✭✭✭✭✭

Alfonso Cuarón’s directorial career has dealt with everything from updated Dickens ( Great Expectations ) to twisted coming of age ( Y Tu Ma...