I have been on a movie-watching tear this month and so instead of my regular monthly round-up, I'm going bi. Bi-monthly, that is! At least for March!
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Undertone
The premise of this horror film by newcomer director Ian Tuason is a pretty excellent one: Evy (Nina Kiri) and Justin (Adam DiMarco) co-host a paranormal podcast. Evy is the skeptic and Justin is the believer. They are sent a series of audio files where a guy records his girlfriend to prove that she talks in her sleep. Extremely creepy shit ensues...and it begins "leaking" into Evy's life.
I loved haunted media stories (The Ring made an enormous impact on me as a teen). The idea that you can become "cursed" by hearing or reading the wrong this is something that is personally quite scary to me. However, Undertone fumbles the bag here by trying to do too much in one film. In addition to the haunted audio premise, Evy is caring for her dying mother. She also's pregnant from her shitty boyfriend. She's also drinking again. Undertone wants to be all of the following: haunted media horror, pregnancy horror, motherhood horror, mental health horror, religious horror, demonic possession horror, and old person horror. It incorporates elements of all of these things and just never comes together in a coherent and satisfying way.
To give credit where credit is due, I was terrified for a good portion of the film. I saw it in the theatre, which was the right move (scarier on the big screen), and I was curled up into a ball in my seat for probably two-thirds of the movie. However, the climax goes so big and so extra, throwing all kinds of shit at the wall, that I became very quickly not-scared and started laughing at it (they unironically use the phrase "witching hour" at one point) and just cringing and waiting for it to be over.
I think Ian Tuason has some great ideas and instincts, he just needs to hone his craft. I'd recommend Undertone to horror lovers. Just because I was disappointed doesn't mean you will be!
Grade: C+
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Sirat
Spanish film Sirat has a banger of a premise but delivers something very different. A middle-aged man, Luis (Sergi Lopez), travels with his young son, Esteban (Bruno Nunez Arjona), to a rave in the Moroccan desert that he think his runaway daughter might be attending. After showing her picture to many ravers with no luck, a group of people tell him that there is going to be another rave even deeper in the desert and she might be there. Luis asks to follow this group and they try to warn him that the terrain will be difficult and dangerous to cross, but Luis insists and they relent. This found family of misfits--Steffi, Josh, Tonin, Jade, and Bigui--bond with the father and son and help them out. But then some fucked up shit happens. And then some even more fucked up shit happens.
Sirat is incredibly anxiety-producing. I was just waiting for the other shoe to drop, and when it did, it was not what I was expecting at all. The problem is that so much epically bad shit happens in such a short amount of time that the film bypassed tragedy and went headlong into comedy. Don't get me wrong, I'm someone who kind of digs "trauma porn", but there was something about the pacing of this film where it just started to feel silly... and I don't think that was the director's intention. Perhaps he was trying to say something about the absurdity of life and how quickly things can go from bad to worse, but it felt a bit cheap to me.
All that said, Sirat is a very unique and unforgettable film. A lot of people have really liked it (and the use of rave music as a dominating, smothering presence is pretty genius). But I wanted this to be a movie about a guy looking for his daughter in a hellish pit of uncaring ravers and Sirat just...wasn't that.
Grade: B
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The Secret Agent
The Brazilian film The Secret Agent was a very rewarding and rich viewing experience. I'm sure it would have been even more rewarding if I knew much about Brazilian history or politics. But even knowing the bare minimum (Brazil was under a military dictatorship from 1964 to 1985), I was still able to follow along and appreciate the film deeply.
Starring noted hunk and good actor Wagner Moura, the movie mostly takes place in 1977. Moura plays Armando Solimoes, a former researcher and professor, trying to live as best he can under a fascist regime. Going by an assumed name--Marcelo--Armando travels to the city of Recife to stay at a communal safe house for leftists and political dissidents overseen by the indomitable Dona Sebastiana (Tania Maria). Armando wants to be in Recife because his son, Fernando, is living there with Armando's in-laws. But Armando isn't safe. He finds out that an old enemy of his--a man with money and political power--has hired a hit man to take him out. He must wait patiently to get a forged passport so he can leave the country with Fernando. And the clock is ticking. The film also follows the hit man and his assistant as they get closer and closer to finding Armando.
Despite the high stakes, The Secret Agent is a surprisingly chill movie. There are only a few action sequences and a lot of the film is just people hanging out and talking. It's a film that shows that even under a violent dictatorship, life goes on. People go to the movies, fuck, and talk about their kids. People drink and smoke and go to parties. Even if they know intellectually that they could be shot in the back of the head tomorrow. There's an odd comfort in that.
In a world filled with movies as insubstantial as cotton candy, The Secret Agent is a steak dinner. It rewards patience, doesn't hold your hand, and gives no easy answers. It's a good watch.
Grade: A-
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It Was Just an Accident
It Was Just an Accident is a pleasingly tense and surprisingly funny film by celebrated Iranian activist filmmaker Jafar Panahi. Panahi's films boldly criticize the Iranian regime and he has served prison time for his art.
In It Was Just an Accident, a man (Ebrahim Azizi) and his wife and daughter are driving home one night when they hit a dog, which damages the car. They travel to a nearby auto repair shop to get the car fixed and when the man enters the shop, a mechanic, Vahid (Vahid Mobasseri), hears him from another room and is stopped dead in his tracks. Vahid served time in prison for political dissent and there was a sadistic prison guard named Eghbal who had a prosthetic leg and who tormented and beat Vahid during his time in prison. Vahid doesn't know what Eghbal looks like because he was always blindfolded during the torture, but he will never forget the distinctive sound Eghbal's leg made when he walked. And the man who just walked into the shop is making the exact same sound.
Vahid is so sure that this is Eghbal that he follows the man and later knocks him unconscious, kidnaps him, and prepares to bury him alive in the desert. But the man protests and says he is not Vahid's tormentor and that he lost his leg recently, not years ago. So Vahid gags him, ties him up, and locks him in a box in his van and contacts a friend to help him identify the man. This friend refuses to get involved, but gives him the name of a woman, Shiva (Mariam Afshari), who can help him. As Vahid seeks to confirm the identity of the man so that he can, presumably, kill him, the group of people involved gets bigger and bigger and the situation gets more complex and fraught.
It Was Just an Accident brilliantly walks the line between dark comedy and tense thriller. Even during its funnier or more absurd moments, the film never loses its bite. It also moves in an interesting philosophical direction near the end when Shiva and Vahid have to decide what to do with this guy. Is he Eghbal or not? And if he is, are they stooping to his level? But if they show mercy, will they come to regret it? There's so much to explore here and given that I'm not Iranian I'm sure I'm missing a ton of cultural context that would add even more depth to this already excellent film.
Grade: A
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Fackham Hall
Fackham Hall is a light little creampuff of a movie compared to the ones above. Directed by Jim O'Hanlon, Fackham Hall is a parody of Downton Abbey, Gosford Park, and other "upstairs/downstairs" movies and shows. The jokes fly fast and furious with a mix of sight gags, crude humor, slapstick, and witty dialogue.
Lord and Lady Davenport (Damien Lewis and Katherine Waterston) are looking forward to the marriage of their youngest daughter, Poppy (Emma Laird), to her first cousin Archibald (Tom Felton). Because the Davenports have no male heir (their sons John, Paul, George, and Ringo all died in terrible accidents), Fackham Hall will pass on to Archie so it is imperative that Poppy marry him to make sure her family isn't evicted. But Archie is the worst and Poppy wants to marry for love!
Unfortunately, their elder daughter, Rose (Thomasin McKenzie), is a dried up spinster at age 23, so no one will marry her. But when Poppy leaves Archie at the altar, the pressure is on for Rose to marry Archie instead and save Fackham Hall. There's only one problem (besides Achie being the worst)...
Rose has been getting to know Eric Noone (Ben Radcliffe), a young man who grew up in an orphanage and now runs errands for the nuns. He arrived at Fackham Hall with a mysterious letter, but the housekeeper, Mrs. McCallister (Anna Maxwell Martin), put him to work as the hall boy and no one says no to Mrs. McCallister. In any case, Rose and Eric have a lot in common despite their enormous class difference and Rose is thinking she might want to marry for love too.
If you like Downton Abbey and similar shows and movies, you'll probably get a kick out of Fackham Hall. For me, it was a nice break from all the heavy movies I've been watching recently.
Grade: B
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Honey Bunch
Like Undertone, Honey Bunch is a horror film that's trying to do too much. But unlike Undertone, Honey Bunch *really* swings for the fences and gets points for ambition and weirdness. Directed by Madeline Sims-Fewer and Dusty Mancinelli, Honey Bunch follows a woman, Diana (Grace Glowicki), who is taken to a strange medical clinic in the woods by her husband, Homer (Ben Petrie). She was in a car accident that she has no memory of, but she is assured by Homer and Farah (Kate Dickie), a medical assistant who works at the clinic, that the innovative methods of the clinic's founder, Dr. Trephine, will make her good as new. Never mind that Dr. Trephine seems mysteriously absent from the clinic.
As far as we can tell, these "innovative" procedures involve pilates-type exercises, a strict diet, and pills Diana is told to take before bed...and not much else. Still, Diana does begin to recover memories. She also sees a woman hanging out near the woods who looks suspiciously like the portrait of Dr. Trephine's dead wife. So that's pretty weird. Oh, and also Diana has terrifying visions/dreams every night and ends up sleepwalking all around the clinic grounds.
The directors of Honey Bunch clearly have a passion for film as they directly reference both Rebecca and The Stepford Wives. But it also brought to mind the body horror of Cronenberg films and the campiness of American Horror Story. There is so much going on and for a film that is less than 2 hours long, it felt long.
The reveal of what is actually happening at the clinic is a good one, but overall I really wish Honey Bunch had been more focused. There are a lot of red herrings thrown out there to fool and confuse the audience and when the movie reveals its hand, you don't look back at those details and say "Oh, it makes sense now!" Instead you say, "Ok, but why did that [detail] happen? And what was [other detail] about?" At least that's how I felt...and maybe it's the kind of movie you need to watch twice to put together all the pieces. But I think it's as simple as the directors wanted this movie to be too many things at once. Like Undertone, I admire the directors' passion and vision, but I wish they had "killed their darlings" a bit more to make a cohesive and coherent final product.
Grade: B-















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