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8/10
Beautiful, provocative, enduring story
8 January 2007
Warning: Spoilers
I saw this film at the Palm Springs Film Festival last weekend. The story is about accepting change in our personal lives, change that we cannot control. We can either spiral downward while blame others, or we can move forward, accepting the challenges we are faced with. The story follows two main characters; one is an older male, a painter, (Homero) and the other is a young girl (Mei), left behind by her mother. The painter has a difficult time accepting that he is going blind from an inherited condition, while at the same time he is visiting his father in a rest home that is already blind from the same condition. He does everything he can to not let his father know that he is going blind, even so far as to memorize passages of books so he can pretend to read them to his father during their visits. When he is told he only has about one week left to see he decides what "view" would bring him the most happiness and he pursues the task of seeing that view. Mei is a daughter of a prostitute and does not know her father. Her mother leaves her behind and goes across the border. Mei is left in a brothel and works as a maid to pay for the room and board for her and her grandparents. Mei lies to a potential boyfriend about her background but loses him after all because of the lies. While working in the brothel as a maid she is forced into new situations she would not otherwise choose. Homero and Mei's paths cross and the last five minutes of the film are beautiful, provocative and enduring. Both characters finally accept the challenges in their lives and make decisions to stop their emotional downward spiral. This film has renewed my faith in films made in Mexico. The last four I had seen were full of blood and gratuitous violence so I did not have my hopes up very high, I must say I was very pleasantly surprised. I thoroughly enjoyed this film.
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Blóðbönd (2006)
4/10
Predictable and slow
8 January 2007
Warning: Spoilers
Even though this film has a great cast and good acting it is still too predictable and slow moving. The lack of ability to communicate within a marriage, although frustrating, is predictable. The husband finds out that their child cannot possibly be his own so his wife must have slept with someone else and never told him he was not the father of their child. The husband gets mad and leaves the house for sometime to contemplate what he should do about this situation. Instead of talking to his wife and working things out he decides to sleep with another woman and start an affair with her. She is much younger and the two are not suited for each other, it is obviously an emotional outlet so he does not have to face the challenges of his marriage. Since he has developed a relationship with the child he thought was his son, this wins out over everything else and he ends up back with his wife, hence the title of the film The ending was predictable. The emotional turmoil the family goes through, including the wife and son, is all predictable. The story takes too long to be told. It would have been less predictable if the husband had not started an affair and actually talked to his wife and child during his emotional crisis.
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Sehnsucht (2006)
4/10
Fair, but predictable in most places
8 January 2007
Warning: Spoilers
I saw this film at the Palm Springs Film Festival and have to admit I might be too callous and jaded to rate this one fairly. This film is another story about an unfaithful man that is selfish and can't face the consequences for his actions. He is married to a good woman and travels out of town for a weekend training event and gets drunk and sleeps with another woman. Instead of ending it after one night he decides to continue to see this woman. After multiple times of seeing her he decides to stop and tells her he wants to end the relationship. The mistress falls from a balcony and presses charges against him for pushing her off when actually it looks like he was only moving forward towards her to comfort her and as she was pushing him away she lost her balance and fell. She decides to press charges against him for pushing her. The truth is you can't tell what really happens; I assume the film is deliberately left this way. Only because of this accident and charges being pressed against him he has to tell his wife what has happened. He is so overwhelmed with guilt he tries to kill himself and fails. The film also implies that either his wife or his mistress takes him back but does not state if this implication is true and if so which of the two women take him back. I would have to guess that the wife takes him back, just based on the background provided in the film. It was OK, but I would not recommend it as a must see, too many parts were predictable.
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8/10
Must See!
8 January 2007
I saw this film at the Palm Springs Film Festival and was fortunate to also participate in the Q&A session after the film with the director. This was a very good film about the struggles within the small villages in Africa that are lacking access to water. The film deliberately does not state a particular region of Africa because the story can be applied to almost anywhere across the continent. The film was really well casted and the cinematography was well depicted. I especially enjoyed the musical soundtrack. Bring a bottle of water with you to see this film because it will make you thirsty! We forget how difficult life is for others in regions of the world we are not very familiar with and I love these types of movies that remind us to remember others and their struggles. It is heartbreaking to think hundreds of thousands of people are struggling as those in this movie. The story focuses on one family in a village that decides to travel across a desert in search of water wells. There are no roads and no one can be trusted so their decision is life threatening but must be done because of the lack of water in their own village. The family crosses the desert and suffers tragedies along the way that bring you emotionally into the movie. There was one scene we had to laugh about, in the desert when the father and daughter were resting and leaning on the camel with a little make shift shade cover; they were on the wrong side of the camel because the other side had a LOT more shade then the sunny side they were on. Strongly recommend everyone to support films like this one, it's so important for us to help our neighbors and not just the ones with resources we want.
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The Situation (I) (2006)
8/10
Great Film!
8 January 2007
Great story about the chaos and constant change of events in Iraq and the damage caused from miscommunication. The movie provides a view into what happens when multiple entities are trying to work together while at the same time each is more interested in their own agenda. The multiple entities in this film included the CIA, the US Military, the Iraq police, an Iraq community leader, and an Iraq underground leader. In addition to these groups there was also a reporter and photographer smack in the middle. The movie is a fictional film, however it was written by a reporter who has been in Iraq for a long time, not embedded with the US military, but out working on her own, therefore even though the movie is a fictional film it is based on the realities of living and working in this war torn part of our world. The casting was excellent and the story unfolded perfectly. This movie required the viewer to pay attention and keep track of the players and each of their agendas. It was fast paced and kept the audience involved. It was not a "Hollywood" film full of gratuitous violence, but instead a deeper story about the people involved. I saw this movie at the Palm Springs Film Festival and also enjoyed the Q&A session which followed the movie. It is a provocative film that evokes an emotional reaction from the viewers regarding their opinions about the US being in Iraq, which was demonstrated during the Q&A session! One of the goals of the film is to provide a starting point for discussing the war and the events in Iraq. It is not a political statement, but instead a method to get people actively involved again.
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1:1 (2006)
7/10
Take your high school aged kids to see this one for sure!
8 January 2007
Warning: Spoilers
Even though the story of racism is not a new story, the message to stop racism cannot be delivered too many times. Any racism, within any country, against any ethnicity, only causes a perpetuation of violence so any film that sends the message to stop this perpetuation will always be supported by me. This film is about racism and it could have been done in any country, between any races, the story is the same, the ending is always very sad, but very real and true. This story is about a racial clash that comes up between the Danes and some Palestinian immigrants after a young Dane boy (Per) is found beaten up lying in the street. The sister (Mei) of the boy is dating a Palestinian boy (Hadi or Shadi?) who has a brother with a questionable past. Because of the timing of some events the brother becomes a likely suspect. The school friends of Per want revenge and take it out on the wrong person. One of the strongest messages in the film is about whether or not the boyfriend will report what he knows about his brother. He keeps some vital information to himself that causes you to stay engaged and maybe even enraged. The emotional development of each of the characters is excellent. Even the side story of strife between the mother and grandmother was played out perfectly. The end of the film does not tell you if the boy of the second beating tells anyone who did it, there is an opportunity to slow down the perpetuation of the violence at this point and the character has been developed so well that you want to believe that he does not seek revenge and never tells who beat him up. Too bad this film is not being shown in high schools!
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Ten Canoes (2006)
3/10
First film I have fallen asleep in
8 January 2007
David Gulpilil's voice had a nice originality to it that helped carry this film, unfortunately thou the film was too long and too quiet overall. This is the first time I have fallen asleep in a film and when I visited the ladies room after the film I heard from multiply other women that they fell asleep also or that their husbands fell asleep. I saw this film at the Palm Springs Film Fest where we always talk about the films while waiting in lines and several other folks commented about this film being too slow. The story definitely had some funny moments and told a good moral lesson but the path to get there was too painfully slow. The cinematography was great and the decision to switch from color to black and white, back and forth was very effective. The casting and costume design was very effective. If the story was more complex, or if the characters actually spoke more to each other and there was less of a narrative that might have helped this film hold my interest longer. Some might say I don't have the ability to look deeper into a film, well that might be, but it has to keep me engaged and awake before I can do that. The story is about the older generation teaching the younger generation some life lessons via the method of story telling, so the film ends with a not overtly stated "the moral of the story is"… along the way you get to see some beautiful back country.
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10/10
Take your kids to see this one for sure!
8 January 2007
Excellent documentary about a man, Phra Kru Ba Neua Chai, that used to be a professional Thai kick boxer, but did not find the career rewarding and became a Thai Buddhist monk instead. After a close friend of his dies he realizes his kick boxing career is not truly fulfilling so he abruptly stops his professional career and starts meditating to learn what it is he should be doing with his life. He decides on becoming a monk and opens a monastery high up in the hills along the Thai Burma border. This monastery is called Golden Horse Monastery and becomes a safe haven for orphaned boys from the surrounding villages. Many of these villages are along the route of drug smugglers so the villagers are often abused and scared into helping the drug war lords. Phra Kru Ba uses his kick boxing experience to train the boys in his orphanage to defend themselves only if needed and to help build the boys self confidence. The monastery started receiving donated horses being saved from slaughter houses, so these are used as well to teach the boys equestrian skills and how to care for another living creature. The work of this one single monk is to be commended and the film does an excellent job of telling a great story without imposing any commentary. The monk is not a traditional monk, but he clearly states he is helping the boys first, and a monk second, so a mix of skills are used to teach the boys life lessons. I am sure some Buddhist monks would cringe at some of Phra Kru Ba's techniques; however I am just as sure that they are the right techniques needed in such a tough environment. He is teaching these young boys how to be responsible and respectful, most of which came to him with zero life skills. They are learning life lessons that they would not have received if left alone in their villages. Some boys only stay a few weeks and return home while other boys stay for years. Some boys decide to become novice monks and are taught how to meditate and care for each other. Each novice is given a horse to care for and each novice is also taught how to teach the newest novice. By being assigned the task of teaching the newest novice how to train and how to care for a horse they themselves are learning they have these skills. You can see the confidence grow within these boys in a very short window of time and it is a beautiful experience to witness. The stories that unfold in this documentary are heart warming and honest. A great must see film.
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