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he 26th annual
Palm Springs International Film Festival, Jan.
2-12, included fifty of the
Academy Award-nominated foreign films. Here's the best of a fest that includes
American studio, independent and overseas cinema.
Wild Tales,
Argentia, dir.
Damián Szifrón
Winner of 10
Argentine Academy Awards and
Best Foreign Language Film from the
National Board of Review, Wild Tales is visually resplendent and bleakly hilarious. Szifrón's six short films include a bride going ballistic when she finds out her new husband had a previous affair and two drivers who take road rage to a whole new black comedy level.
Script, direction and acting melded perfectly.
Match,
USA,
Stephen Belber
Adapted from Belber's stage play, Match pits dance instructor
Patrick Stewart against two interlopers (
Carla Gugino,
Matthew Lillard) who pretend they want to interview him about his artistic past. But a sexual liaison and a paternity question turn up the heat in this lovely gem of a work, written and directed with brio by Belber.
Stewart's deliciously outrageous role is, well, matched, by Gugino, whose tears prompt our own.
1001 Grams,
Norway,
Bent Hamer
Writer-director
Hamer, a longtime
Palm Springs favorite, again mixes quirkiness with carefully depicted emotion.
Norwegian scientist
Marie (
Ane Dahl Torp) takes over from her dying scientist father in caretaking the national prototype of a kilogram. In subtly absurd fashion, she goes to an international convention in
Paris and falls in love, while reps from countries carry around their own kilos, as if they were nuclear bombs. Hamer and his actors are masters of subtlety and grace.
The 100-Year-Old Man Who Climbed Out the
Window and
Disappeared,
Sweden,
Felix Herngren
A crazily robust film in which a centenarian (
Robert Gustafsson) runs away from his retirement home and his picaresque adventures include drug dealers, a circus elephant, clueless police and a backstory which reveals his mistaken identity as a developer of the atomic bomb, an unwittingly double agent and his chance meetings with
Stalin,
Franco,
Truman and
Reagan. Herngren cleverly makes the twists plausible and earns much laughter in this audience favorite.
Tokyo Fiancée,
Belgium/
France.
Canada,
Stefan Liberski
Pauline Etienne embodies the charm of a young
Audrey Hepburn, as a 20-year-old
Belgian girl who wants to be
Japanese, until she finds their customs and rules inexplicable. When she falls in love with her handsome, Japanese student of
French (Taichi Inoue), their seemingly perfect romance takes a hit from a natural disaster. Liberski has in
Etienne a greatly gifted young actress who carries this gorgeously shot feature.
The Duke of Burgundy, UK,
Peter Strickland
At first glance, Strickland's portrait of the sadomasochistic relationship between a wealthy mistress (
Sidse Babett Knudsen) and her maid (
Chiara D'
Anna) looks like an artsy throwback to '70s
European softcore, with tastefully psychedelic soundtrack by the group
Cat's Eyes. But as the film progresses, we realize this couple is controlled by the seeming slave and fissures appear in their nontraditional but loving life together. Strickland's camera wisely creates tension and obliquely suggests how far one woman's fantasies can go, unrestrained.
The Sound of
Redemption: The
Frank Morgan Story,
USA, N.C. Heikin
Alto sax legend Frank Morgan had no one less than a family friend,
Charlie Parker, bless his horn. But
Morgan's history of heroin and criminal behavior kept him away from his music for thirty years, until a triumphant, belated return.
Director Heikin has constructed a visually rich, emotionally fulfilling doc, framed by a special
San Quentin prison concert by the Frank Morgan
Tribute band.
Red Army, USA/
Russia,
Gabe Polsky
Slava Fetisov is a retired hockey great, who, before his time with the
Detroit Red Wings of the
NHL, was part of a
Soviet hockey team whose greatness and dominance were offset by their virtual imprisonment by their government. Polsky plays with American jingoism, one moment showing the seemingly emotionless Red Army team, the next revealing how their coach, a former
KGB officer, mistreated them. By the time the
Russians come to the NHL and raise the level of play, Polsky and his charmingly offbeat subject,
Fetisov, have captured the viewer's heart and mind
- published: 14 Jan 2015
- views: 561