Reviews
REVIEW: The Moment
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- Category: Reviews
- Published on 16 May 2013

by Morgan Davies
The Moment, the sophomore feature from director Jane Weinstock, is a slippery film: we never quite know whether what we’re seeing is reality or filtered through protagonist Lee’s unstable mind. Lee, a war photographer played by Jennifer Jason Leigh, is first convinced that her ex-boyfriend John (Martin Henderson) is missing, then that she murdered him, but as her therapist reminds her, any of her particularly intense convictions could simply be fantasies. She is suffering from PTSD from her wartime experiences and injuries, and has moved from a rehab facility for the body (where she met John) to one for her mind.
REVIEW: Greedy Lying Bastards
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- Category: Reviews
- Published on 11 May 2013

by Kelsey Straight
The conflicting ideals of science and politics have created misconceptions regarding climate change, as revealed by Craig Scott Rosebraugh’s documentary, Greedy Lying Bastards. Rosebraugh presents a fundamental struggle between scientific fact and political fabrication: where fact requires evidence, fabrication allows anything to masquerade as reality. The presentation of climate change as “the greatest hoax ever” does not come from humanitarianism, unfortunately, but from the oil industry and those politicians with direct ties to the oil industry. Rosebraugh’s documentary presents a world of individuals who need the earth for different reasons, either as a money-making resource, or as a home for our families and an environment for cultures. If we do not take care of the land that allowed our societies to grow, than the land will not take care of who we are in return.
REVIEW: The Sightseers
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- Category: Reviews
- Published on 11 May 2013

by Kelsey Straight
The quirky English humor and quintessential characters of Ben Wheatley’s The Sightseers both disturb us and make us laugh, often without establishing which was the appropriate response. The story follows Chris and Tina on their caravan holiday to a collection of eclectic sights, including the Crich Tramway Museum, the Ribblehead Viaduct, and the Keswick Pencil Museum. Having left her mother and their small English home, a stifling setting where Tina has lived until the age of thirty-four, Tina falls in love with a red-bearded serial killer, Chris. Their odyssey through the countryside is more geared towards personal identity than touristy locations, however. Tina exchanges her baggy 1980’s blue jeans for acid-wash thrift store leggings, and her codes of morality for codes of murder. All the while, Chris gathers material for the book he never begins writing, and Tina discovers that she is less his muse than he is hers. Their story unravels in the rainy countryside instead of on Chris’s blank pages, and every scene becomes a conflict they create for themselves.
REVIEW: Stories We Tell
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- Category: Reviews
- Published on 11 May 2013

by DeVon Hyman
"There is something kind of deeply uncomfortable with the idea of putting your life out there"
-Sarah Polley, AMNY, May 2013
True to the fact. A certain level of inner peace would have to be the prerequisite to an initiative being undertaken in the manner in which acclaimed Filmmaker Sarah Polley has done with her much heralded "Stories We Tell" which hit theaters on Friday.
Centered on a candid look at the reality which was Polley's birth and actual parents whom were responsible for her existence. For much of her life Polley has been under the belief that her mothers husband was indeed her biological father, only to learn recently and come to terms with that not being the truth. Her birth in actuality was the product of an affair which her late mom partook in.
REVIEW: KON-TIKI
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- Category: Reviews
- Published on 23 April 2013

by Joseph Williamson
Real, old fashioned adventurers are somewhat scarce in this day and age - there may be scientific expeditions in Antarctica, but the romance of Henry Morton Stanley stomping through the Congo isn’t quite as attainable in 2013. Safaris and treks through the Amazon are all well and good, but truly uncharted and dangerous exploration is getting harder to manage in the decade of Google Maps.
Not so in 1947. Enter Thor Heyerdahl, intrepid ethnographer - a man with a big idea, but no publisher willing to take him on. Desperately seeking conclusive proof of his theory - that Polynesia was first settled by ancient South Americans - he decides to take the four and a half thousand mile voyage across the Pacific Ocean himself. Furthermore, for this demonstration to have any validity at all, it must be done in the exact manner of the original settlers: a balsa wood raft, a large wooden oar as a rudder, and constructed with simple rope in lieu of stronger materials. The only concession to modernity is a two way radio.
REVIEW: Flex is Kings
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- Category: Reviews
- Published on 22 April 2013

by Morgan Davies
Flex is Kings, a feature documentary by Deirdre Schoo and Michael Beach Nichols, is a charmer of a movie: slick, funny, compelling and awe-inspiring, it’s that rare documentary that manages to be interesting and thought-provoking without leaving its audience depressed.
REVIEW: Silvi (Maybe Love)
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- Category: Reviews
- Published on 21 April 2013

by Christopher McKittrick
During a routine, 47 year-old Silvia (Lina Wendel) is told by her husband that he is moving out. Silvia knew their passionless marriage was essentially over anyway, but it still comes as a shock. With little to call her own and never being with anyone besides her husband, Silvia begins her search for love, because, as she tells someone else, "Actually, everyone wants someone to hold...someone who loves and comforts you. If that's not happening... something inside withers away. You become a lone warrior."
REVIEW: KALIFORNIA
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- Category: Reviews
- Published on 21 April 2013

by Kelsey Straight
Laura Mahlberg’s illustration of an old man who starts walking towards California from his caravan entire countries away (in Russia!) is a new take on the classic road movie, except here our protagonist is fifty years past coming-of-age and still in pursuit of better prospects in the west. One could say that the film has come a few decades after its genre’s peak, and the main character coincides with that reality. Visually stunning cinematography offers an array of sensations to the film, and despite a slow-going pace and essentially meek protagonist, audiences will revel in the look and the stories in the eyes of this character, a man full from his years and still searching for more.
REVIEW: Vergiss mein nicht (Forget Me Not)
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- Category: Reviews
- Published on 21 April 2013

by Christopher McKittrick
Though there are hundreds of terrible diseases, perhaps there is none as cruel as Alzheimer's disease, which not only slowly robs the sufferer of their mind, but tremendously impacts the sufferer's loved ones terribly as the sufferer gradually no longer recognizes them as they slip further and further into dementia. German documentarian David Sieveking explores the impact that Alzheimer’s disease has not only on his mother, but his entire family in Vergiss mein nicht (Forget Me Not).
REVIEW: Free Fall (Freier Fall)
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- Category: Reviews
- Published on 20 April 2013

by Angela Ramsay
In Free Fall (Freier Fall) the director, Stephan Lacant, takes us on a journey with this electrifying German film about police officer, Marc (Hanno Koffler), whose life appears to spin out of control after falling for his fellow co-worker.
At first, we are introduced to Marc who is self-assured and a typical male, and a police officer. Marc lives with his pregnant girlfriend Bettina (Katharina Schuttler), and they appear to have a genuine loving relationship. The story takes a turn and becomes really sizzling when Marc attends a training course and meets a new colleague named Kay (Max Riemelt). Why is it sizzling? Because Kay is another guy (male).



Reviews