Venezia Film Festival 2010 Movies to remember

Postcards from Venice: Movies to Remember

As the Venice Film Festival heads into its closing stretch, visitors began speculating on the front runners for the awards to be handed out by the Jury headed by Quentin Tarantino. Many hoped that the Golden Lion would go to Detective Dee and the Mystery of Phantom Flame, Tsui Hark’s pinwheeling delight of a Chinese action film. Others noted, with fear and trembling, that Tarantino was seen vigorously applauding the Festival’s one squawking turkey. Could A Sad Trumpet Ballad, the Spanish clown catastrophe directed by Alex de la Iglesia (Ferpect Crime), take the top prize? Would Natalie Portman get Best Actress for her harrowing portrait of a troubled prima ballerina in Darren Aronofsky’s Black Swan? And, on the island paradise of the Lido, would it ever stop raining?
All will be answered on Saturday evening. For now, we offer an interim report on some of the most notable films at the 67th Mostra Internazionale d’Arte Cinematografica — la Biennale di Venezia 2010. Note to North American movie lovers: most of these works will also be shown at the Toronto Film Festival, which opens today.
(See the 100 best movies of all time.)
Detective Dee and the Mystery of Phantom Flame
Tsui Hark, who directed about half of the best films of Hong Kong’s golden age (Peking Opera Blues, Once Upon a Time in China, Zu: Warriors from the Magic Mountain) and produced most of the other half (A Better Tomorrow, A Chinese Ghost Story, Iron Monkey), returns in fabulous form with this gorgeous action picture about the intrigue attending the rise of history’s first female emperor. Carina Lau is Empress Wu, Li Bingbing her right-hand woman and Andy Lau the seventh-century “detective,” Di Rienjie, hired to solve the riddle of high-ranking officials who keep bursting into flames. A nonstop masterpiece of production design, narrative cunning and martial-arts mayhem (choreographed by Sammo Hung), Detective Dee is the first China-Hong Kong coproduction since Hero to make good on the grand promise of epic entertainment. —R.C.
Potiche
Suzanne Pujol (Catherine Deneuve) is the pretty, pampered, imprisoned wife of an umbrella-factory owner (Fabrice Luchini). She blithely overlooks his rudeness, his infidelities, his ignoring of her birthday. But when he falls ill combatting a work stoppage inspired by the local communist leader (Gerard Depardieu), and reluctantly lets her manage the business in his absence, Suzanne proves that French industry, and a turbulent household, can flourish under the right woman’s touch. Francois Ozon dusts off a 1970s boulevard comedy by Pierre Barillet and Jean-Pierre Gredy (Cactus Flower, 40 Carats) and turns it into a glittering showcase for Deneuve, still charismatic at 66. Depardieu offers warm support as a man who thinks himself enlightened but has lessons to learn from a housewife; and Karin Viard is a treat as Luchini’s secretary and mistress, who discovers the more fulfilling joys of entrepreneurial sisterhood. This bonbon of a film is as colorful as all the umbrellas of Cherbourg. This might have been a soggy Venice, but nothing can rain on Ozon’s parade — not with Deneuve leading it in song. —M.C.
13 Assassins
Takashi Miike, who turned 50 two weeks ago, no longer directs six or seven wildly inventive films a year; in 2010 the manic-impressive auteur has slowed down to a snail-like two movies, both of them at Venice. One is a sequel to his 2004 hit Zebraman, about an ordinary man who dons a superhero suit and battles the forces of evil. (Sound familiar, Kick-Ass fans?) The other is this churning, fairly traditional war drama set in the last days of the samurai. How can a dozen dedicated fighters, plus a crazy fellow who wanders into the action, overcome the attack of 200 professionals under the luridly evil Lord Naritsugu? Just watch! The good guys are aided by superior swordsmanship, a stampede of blazing cattle and more dynamite than was exploded in World War II. Miike calls this a “samurai terror film showing the flowers of life and death. Simple, radical, beautiful.” Fans of the director know he always makes good on his promises.

Silent Souls
A woman who charms men while she lives can still work her spell after she dies. In this delicate, mysterious road movie from director Aleksei Fedorchenko, the widower Miron resolves to bury his late wife Tanya in a sacred lake in West Russia, according to the strictures of the Merya culture. His companion is his friend Aist, who, we suspect, also loved Tanya. Along the way, in the Merya tradition, Miron shares intimate details of his life with Tanya. Fedorchenko doesn’t clear up all of the secrets of this marriage; that is part of the film’s subtle, folkloric power. It reminds us that our world still has many unexplored regions and rituals that at first may seem alien, but which speak to the essential human need to find a resting place for tortured souls and undying love. —M.C.
The Town
According to a statement at the beginning of Ben Affleck’s solid, standard heist drama, the Charlestown neighborhood of Boston boasts the world’s highest concentration of thieves and bank robbers. In The Town, some are smooth like Doug (Affleck), some are salty like Jem (The Hurt Locker’s Jeremy Renner), but all speak in a patois so cryptic that, for clarity, even the Americans here were reading the Italian subtitles. The two intelligible souls: an FBI agent (Jon Hamm from Mad Men) and Claire (Rebecca Hall, who was Vicky in Vicky Cristina Barcelona), the manager of a bank Doug’s gang has robbed and whom Doug lures into a semi-love affair, for no other reason than that, without it, there wouldn’t be a plot. These characters don’t range too far from stereotypes, but it’s a likable variation of the familiar theme, with a tangy Boston atmosphere that, as one character says, is “authentitious.” —R.C.
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Black Venus
In the early 19th century, Saartije Baartman, a Khoi tribeswoman from South Africa, was brought to Europe and exhibited, naked, among the medical establishment and salon society as the “Hottentot Venus” — an exotic, one-woman freak show. This true parable of racial and sexual exploitation is the subject of the searing, if overlong, biographical drama by Abdellatif Kechiche, whose The Secret of the Grain won Cesar Awards (the French Oscars) for film, direction and screenplay. In her forced tour of degradation, Saartije (Yahima Torres) finds two main enslavers: her lover and master Caesar (Andre Jacobs), who introduces her to doctors eager to prove that black people are more like apes than civilized men; and Reaux (Olivier Gourmet), a sort of P.T. Barnum of prurience, who pushes her into sexual slavery in the Paris bordellos of the day. Some scenes of Reaux’s manipulation of Saartije before an audience of giggling ladies and gentlemen are among the most painful in recent cinema; to watch them is to acknowledge complicity in four centuries of white men’s subjugation of black women (and men). But it all happened. After Saartije’s death at 26, in 1817, plaster molds fashioned from her corpse, and jars containing her genitals and brain were on display in a Paris museum until 1994. In 2002 her remains were returned to South Africa. —M.C.
Quentin Tarantino’s Impromptu Film Studies Class
He’s not just an auteur, an actor and the President of this year’s Venice jury, he’s also one of the most passionate and provocative of film educators. A graduate of Video Store U., Tarantino has seemingly seen every B movie made over the last 50 years in the U.S., Hong Kong, South Korea, South America, the Philippines and, of course, Italy. In conjunction with a Venice retrospective of Spaghetti Western director Sergio Corbucci, Tarantino showed up at a midnight screening of Minnesota Clay to give a lively, detailed, 12-min. lecture on Corbucci. Declaring that his remarks were “just for the people in this room, not for YouTube,” he advised everyone to shut off recording equipment — and ejected one fellow who kept filming him. An education and a confrontation: that’s what Tarantino gives you at Venice.—R.C.

By MARY CORLISS AND RICHARD CORLISS  Time.com

Ben Affleck and Rebecca Hall Premiere ‘The Town’ at Venice Film Festival

Yes it is Ben Affleck and Rebecca Hall Premiere ‘The Town’ at Venice Film Festival

The on-screen couple was joined by co-stars Jon Hamm and Jeremy Renner at the Wednesday, September 8 event which took place at Palazzo del Cinema.

Ben Affleck has brought “The Town” to Italy at VeniceInternational Film Festival. Accompanied by co-star Rebecca Hall who was dressed in a green flowing dress, the actor/director premiered the film on Wednesday, September 8 night at Palazzo del Cinema.

The red carpet event was additionally attended by other lead actors like Jon Hamm and Jeremy Renner who all donned formal black and white outfit. Another “Town” beauty Blake Lively, however, could not join them as she was busy filming her TV series “Gossip Girl” in New York City that afternoon.

“The social realism aspect of it was really important to me,” Affleck stated about the film, which is set in Boston, during a press conference. “I don’t think you can like a movie like this or believe a movie like this unless you have a strong sense of place and really believe that the characters are from there and what you see is really happening.”

“The Town” follows unrepentant criminal Doug MacRay who falls in love with a woman he and his partners took as a hostage at a bank robbery. With a dedicated FBI agent chasing the gang, MacRay and Claire Keesey’s romance has the potential to take them both down a dangerous and deadly path. This crime drama thriller will grace theaters across the nation on September 17.

aceshowbiz.com

Samurai in Venice: The Other Japanese Movie

With the comparative frenzy surrounding the screen adaptation of Haruki Murakami’s “Norwegian Wood,” Venice Film Festival attendees might be forgiven for overlooking that there’s another Japanese movie in competition for the celebrated top prize, the Golden Lion.

Those who’ve actually seen “Thirteen Assassins”, a remake of a venerated 1960s samurai drama made by maverick 50-year-old director Takashi Miike, probably won’t be forgetting it in a hurry though. The tale of violence and retribution in feudal Japan, screened in Venice Thursday and expected to attract big crowds when it opens in Japan later this month, builds slowly, but inevitably to a ferocious finale.

While not all critics were impressed, those who like the cinematic stylings of Quentin Tarantino may appreciate this offering from the extremely prolific director. Mr. Miike usually films at speed, making two to three movies a year, but opted for “Thirteen Assassins” to piece together a more considered tribute to the genre.

“Once the ‘Seven-Samurai’-style band of brothers is assembled, ‘Thirteen Assassins’ is pure pleasure: and it culminates in a magnificent 45-minute showdown that has to be the best final battle sequence in cinema since, oh, ‘Kill Bill’ at least,” Screen Daily wrote.

With the prize winners set to be named late Saturday in Venice, Mr. Miike’s film isn’t thought to be among the favorites, with some tipping U.S. movies like Darren Aronofsky’s “Black Swan” or Sofia Coppola’s “Somewhere”. And then of course there’s that Murakami movie.

One thing to remember: the year’s jury of judges is chaired by none other than Mr. Tarantino, who’s known to like Mr. Miike’s films so much he actually appeared in one, 2007’s “Sukiyaki Western Django”.

blog.wsj.com

Multiple love blooms in films at Venice festival

VENICE, Italy — It’s not clear who’s more daring, the German threesome or the French foursome.
In any case, multiple love is in the air at the Venice Film Festival.
Tom Tykwer presented his new film “Three (Drei)” here Friday, the story of a married couple who fall in love with the same man. French filmmaker Antony Cordier told a different tale earlier in the festival in his new film “Happy Few,” about two couples who form an immediate bond, which easily leads to switching sexual partners.
Both movies are in competition for the coveted Golden Lion, to be awarded Saturday evening at the festival’s end.
Cordier called his movie a search for “conjugal utopia” by today’s thirty-somethings who were raised with sexual freedom.
“They are trying to develop new chimeras as a result of this new sexual freedom. It is not bourgeois adultery lived in secret,” said Cordier, whose last film, “Cold Showers,” won France’s Prix Louis Delluc in 2005.
“It is an experience that happens to many people, it happens in many social brackets. We looked at this story because it is so ordinary and banal,” Cordier said.
In the film, Rachel meets Vincent when he works on a website for her jewelry business. She invites him and his wife for dinner with her husband, and before the friendship is cemented they all fall in love. Between the trysts, they keep up normal activities, going away together and out with their children.
But their attempt to have love without rules eventually is tested. Jealousies emerge and the couples need to confront the emotional price of their mutual, consensual affairs.
Marina Fois, who plays Rachel, said she agreed with Cordier’s preference not to analyze the characters in advance.
“He didn’t really want to talk about it beforehand, which is quite sweet because his characters aren’t people who premeditate things,” Fois said.
Cordier said he shot the love scenes without interruption, and cut them later.
He said the women were the engines in the movie, driving the relationships, organizing the normal life around the trysts.
“They make love 100 times in the movie, but one more time and everything becomes impossible,” Cordier said. “Reality is not as nice as the utopia they were dreaming of, which brings them to the end of the story.”
Tykwer’s “Three,” set in Berlin, peppers the Hollywood romantic comedy format with a bit of drama when a happy married couple, Hanna, played by Sophie Rois, and Simon (Sebastian Schipper) separately meet and fall for the same guy, Adam (Devid Striesow).
It’s Hanna who takes the plunge first, spending the night with Adam after running into him on more than one unexpected occasion.
Later in the film Simon meets Adam and sparks fly between them as well.
“It’s obvious that this film is full of romantic moments because the three actors fall in love with each other. So the fact that it became a comedy was just a coincidence,” Tykwer said at a news conference Friday.
Like Cordier, Tykwer sees the story as something that could happen to anyone.
“It’s a strange situation, but a bit banal if you wish, and there are some dramatic moments and extreme events and from this tension stems the comedy,” he said.
Such moments include the unexpected death of Simon’s mother his undergoing emergency surgery. While recovering, Simon meets a nurse with whom he had had a relationship 20 years earlier and who gives him some startling news. Amid all this, regular life, including unexpected love affairs, goes on.
The film reaches a resolution but Tykwer says it’s not aiming “to sell a new idea or a new institution. It’s not about deciding how we should be or in which way we (as a society) should be moving.”
In portraying Hanna, Rois said the question of marriage was also on her mind.
“I wanted to see with what stubbornness we try to stick to the idea of conventional families,” she said.
Tykwer debuted at the Venice film festival with his breakout film, “Run Lola Run” and returned with “The Princess and the Warrior,” his last German language film until “Three.”
Associated Press reporter Colleen Barry contributed to this report from Venice.