Reviews

3 Reviews
Sort by:
Filter by Rating:
The Night Agent (2023– )
9/10
Exceptional, Gripping, Touching
31 May 2023
I don't do reviews. But this series got to me. The casting, acting, storyline, characterization, and suspense had me every second. I truly enjoyed it.

So many Netflix series leave me feeling sorry that I've just lost many hours of life and for what? This series was worth every minute.

I binged the first four episodes in one sitting. I could not stop myself, stayed up too late and missed sleep. No regrets.

It came from a mind that really gets how to entertain. Not for a second was I unable to suspend disbelief. I think I really felt all the feelings the author wanted me to feel. I hope you enjoy it as much.
3 out of 12 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
Climax (I) (2018)
10/10
Not For Everyone
5 January 2020
Warning: Spoilers
At last I have to review this film. Let me start by saying that it is the most engrossing film I have ever seen. I saw Noe's "Enter the Void" and I've seen plenty of disturbing films, but none quite as raw as this. I thought I could never watch this again, after the first viewing, but I love the opening dance scene so much (I've watched it at least a dozen times and it never gets old) that recently again I was compelled to watch to the end with my jaw on the floor. It was as insanely gripping as the first time.

I judge films primarily by how well they allow me to suspend disbelief. "Climax" - after the puzzling but still disturbing opening scene before credits - starts a little banal, straight up interviews with dancers, predictable questions, mostly predictable answers, but stay with it because it is integral to how the film develops. Then at about 9m is the amazing dance scene. My son is a break dancer so I love this kind of dance. The dance is quintessentially French - unrefined, raw, sexy, chaotic, dirty, sweaty, unbelievably talented. The whole film has that French feel to it - the women don't give a damn and are all the sexier for it. Only Ebert's review notes that this entire 6 minute dance sequence is shot in one take, no cuts to make it more energetic. It is quite energetic enough. But this is an important distinction. This film was made with uncompromising devotion.

By this time I adore all the dancers, but now we hear them talking to each other privately and revealing shocking attitudes that they usually keep private. There is no filter here and no moral compunction. I start to lose my affection for most of them, but now they are human, not just dancing paragons. I also start to get sucked in and forget I am sitting in darkness watching a film. By the time "something is kicking in" I am completely lost in the film, no trace of disbelief, and I remain rapt until last frame.

I did a lot of acid back in the 60's and had some really bad trips but none this bad because I did not overdose. How do you behave when you are completely disoriented, terrified, and confused? The worst in you sometimes comes out. There are scenes where a character sees another character in severe physical and/or emotional distress but the watcher simply cannot handle it and moves on. Sober, any of them would have stopped to sympathize and help, but not in this hellish dystopia. They have lost all ability to connect cause with effect.

I've been there. A bad trip is as ugly as it gets, and this film portrays it perfectly. I can completely understand if a viewer who has never tripped doesn't get it, but I do, and I think I am Noe's target audience. Still, the educated viewer who can't appreciate the attention to detail about the bad trip can appreciate the detail and love with which this film was shot, and the talent of the dancers.

I felt that most reviews I read missed the point. This is not a film to be analyzed. It is not aimed at the left cortex. Observations about the camera work and acting are helpful but don't address the end effect the film has on the watcher. Bottom line: how did it make you feel? For me - severely disturbed, captivated, grief-filled, horrified, sad. To me that is the mark of a great film.

Other reviewers praise Sofia Boutella, who is amazing, but I think Romain Guillermic steals the show. There are scenes where those eyebrows are positively evil and sexy at the same time. But it is hard to pick a favorite, they are all so remarkable in this film.

Do I recommend it? I don't know. Noe is known for disturbing films and they are not for everybody. I hope you will watch it simply because something crafted this beautifully deserves to be appreciated.
98 out of 155 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
Direct Hit
5 March 2019
I've never given a movie a rating of 10 before. This movie hit me on every emotional level I can be hit. It felt like it was made for me, and, judging from most of the people who were moved enough to write reviews, it hit them similarly.

I was surprised and disappointed that the Ebert review, with which I usually agree, was so low at 2 stars. I think you have to have had a certain set of experiences to truly "get" this movie, and if you do, every scene, every line, every nuance hits you right between the eyes. If you don't perhaps it's just another formulaic story about the value of family.

The story's essence is the emotional conflict we all have with our families - inextricably attached and yet simultaneously repulsed. As the father of an adult daughter whom I love desperately and who is completely estranged from me by her mother, to my dismay and shame I saw a lot of myself in Rex, and that was gut-wrenching. I am not an alcoholic and I have an upper middle class income from a rewarding profession, but in her absence I am left with the ugly awareness of having failed my daughter in so many ways. Every missed opportunity to connect, every misunderstood plea for emotional closeness, every selfish parental moment haunts and shames me. This movie, and this story, captured every aspect of that perfectly. The acting, casting, production, timing, flow, score, all were right on target. I can't think of a single thing I would change.

Woody Harrelson was perfectly cast for Rex and he did not disappoint. But for me the prize goes to Brie Larson. Her stoic depiction of adult Jeanette captures perfectly the curse of one who carries a heavy conflict around that nobody else but their family can understand. Every blink, every pause, every sideward glance silently conveys the inner pain of that conflict in a way that leads the viewer to believe that only they understand it. For me this is movie acting at its subtle best.

If you have a perfect family and are a perfect person, this movie will bore you senseless. If you disowned your family decades ago it will seem stupid. But for the rest of us this movie is a shot straight to the heart and will reveal to you a lot of the meaning behind your family conflicts.
1 out of 2 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink

Recently Viewed