Gravity

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US | 2013 | Directed by Alfonso Cuarón

Logline: A medical engineer and an astronaut struggle to survive in earth’s orbit after an accident leaves them adrift in space.

Apparently Angelina Jolie twice turned down the role of Ryan Stone, the medical engineer with not an awful lot of flight simulator landing success to her credit. Natalie Portman was then approached, followed by tests from Rachel Weisz, Naomi Watts, Marion Cotillard, Abbie Cornish, Carey Mulligan, Sienna Miller, Scarlett Johansson, Blake Lively, Rebecca Hall, and Olivia Wilde. Finally the role went to Sandra Bullock. And she’ll probably get an Oscar nod for performance. Not that I think it’s anything special, but I’m prepared to put money on a nomination.

Which brings me to my main issue with this extraordinary movie. The two lead roles, which are the only on screen roles in the whole movie. George Clooney plays Matt Kowlaski, the cowboy in a spacesuit (in a role intended for Robert Downey Jr.), and Ed Harris is the voice of Misson Control in Houston. And that’s pretty much it. Oh, there’s another astronaut, but you never see his face, and he doesn’t say anything of note.

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George Clooney and Sandra Bullock, two actors better known for their comedy and light drama, than their attempts at serious drama, two of the most recognizable A-list Hollywood actors. It just didn’t work for me. All those female actors who tested are too familiar, except perhaps Rebecca Hall. A movie like Gravity demands unknowns or close to it. Not matinee idols.

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Cuarón is an immensely talented director, anyone who’s seen Y Tu Mamá También (2001) and Children of Men (2006) can attest to that. The screenplay to Gravity was co-written between Cuarón and his 32-year-old son Jonás Cuarón, and as a visual narrative it’s sensational. But the dialogue is frequently corny and mostly unnecessary. A version of Gravity sans dialogue could work as profoundly as 2001: A Space Odyssey (1968), or Solaris (1972).

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Gravity is without a doubt a technical marvel; the photo-realistic CGI and model work is astonishing. I’m tempted to see the movie a second time on the giant IMAX screen where I’m sure it would be nothing short of breath taking. It’s a shame Bullock and Clooney were cast; their combined smoothed out plasticity weighs the movie down (pun intended).

Steven Price’s score brings gravitas to the movie’s lofty setting (puns unintended), and frequently provides punctuation and tension where normally a sound effect might. Keep in mind for approximately 85 minutes Gravity is in space or zero g. It’s an ambitious movie to say the least, and for the most part Cuarón pulls it off. 

SUFF cockumentaries!

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Unhung Hero

US | 2013 | Directed by Brian Spitz

Logline: A young man embarks on a quest to rationalise his obsession with his penis size, or lack thereof.

Patrick Moote has a small dick. But he’s a nice guy, and he doesn’t understand why there are such huge social implications to having a tiny package. His fiancée dumped him when he proposed on national television. She told him later it was because he had a small John Thomas. Women can be so cruel! So Patrick grabbed debut director Spitz and head off into the great unknown to discover why humankind are so obsessed with schlong size. The short answer is that we live in a modern world that has been pornofied. But it goes deeper than that. Patrick pulls out many shortcomings, but also gains enlightenment with serious girth. He even scores a cool new girlfriend. Go Patrick, it ain’t the size of your boat, it’s the motion of the ocean!

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For much of this rather endearing, and frequently funny “cockumentary” (as Patrick coins it) I was convinced it was another one of those elaborate faux documentaries, like Babelfish from a few years back. But by the end I decided it probably was real, and Brian Spitz just happened to be very lucky with the footage he got. Either that, or he paid off a number of people to get some of those dramatic moments on tape. Either way, Unhung Hero is one of the more original cringe inducing, cheeky grin documentaries of recent years. My only real gripe is that we never actually got to see or even get told just how small Patrick’s weiner was! Oh, the humanity!

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Unhung Hero screens as part of the Sydney Underground Film Festival, Saturday 7 September, 4:30pm, Cinema Two, The Factory Theatre, Marrickville.

 

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The Final Member

Canada | 2012 | Directed by Jonah Bekhor & Zach Math

Logline: The quest for a museum owner to find the final specimen to complete his extensive array of phalluses.

There is a museum called the Icelandic Phallological Museum, it is the world’s only exhibition space dedicated to the appendage we know as the penis, and owner, operator and dick obsessive Siggi Hjartarson, now aged 70, has garnered an extensive collection over the past thirty years. He has everything from a bull’s penis bone to an enormous sperm whale schlong (only a third of it, and still bigger than a small man!), but he has yet to acquire the penis of a man.

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Enter Tom, the strange American, and Pall, the Icelandic womanizer. Tom is middle-aged and is quietly desperate to give Elmo, his ample member, the fame he feels it deserves. He intends to have him removed and donated to Siggi’s museum. Pall, on the other hand, will offer his penis to Siggi post death. The race is on.

The Final Member is one of those utterly charming, wonderfully peculiar discoveries. It doesn’t attempt to be anything other than what it is, and it’s something completely unique, blackly comic, and rather bizarre; as slight as it is profound. It is the tale of Siggi and Tom, two phallus-obsessed aging men, grappling with the deeper meaning of manhood, and the elusive masculinity of being cocksure.

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The Final Member screens as part of the Sydney Underground Film Festival, Sunday 8 September, 5pm, Cinema Three, The Factory Theatre, Marrickville. 

Elysium

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US | 2013 | Directed by Neill Blomkamp

Logline: In a future where the very wealthy have left the over-crowded, disease-ridden, trash-strewn Earth and inhabit an orbiting space station an ex-con finds himself embroiled in a dangerous mission.

Science fiction wunderkind Neill Blomkamp delivers his much-anticipated follow-up to the blistering extraordinary District 9 (2010), one of the best sf movies of the past twenty years. This is a separate story that could be in the same universe, just much further down the track. Elysium is a socio-political action thriller with more than enough firepower and thuggery.

Matt Damon plays Max, living in the massive ghetto that is Los Angeles, AD2154, working the line in one of the huge robot factories. His childhood sweetheart Frey (Alice Braga) is a nurse at a nearby overrun hospital. Disease and decay is rife, and Frey’s young daughter has terminal leukaemia.

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Just like the near future of Blade Runner, the uber-rich have left Earth, and reside in a Stanford Torus design space station built by mega-corporation Armydyne, known as Elyisum (as the word is Greek for a part of the Underworld, it’s an odd name for a paradise, but hey). Jessica Delacourt (Jodie Foster) is a high-ranking Government official in charge of keeping the riff-raff out, the illegal immigrants from Earth entering Elyisum. She employs a mercenary known as Kruger (Sharlto Copley) to eliminate the trouble. 

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Max finds himself on borrowed time, and with the aid of smuggler hacker Spider (Diego Luna), and the reluctant participation of Armadyne CEO Carlyle (William Fichtner, Max is cyber-wired for international sabotage. But Kruger is the gremlin in his side.

With District 9 Blomkamp’s background in visual effects came to the fore, and the results were photo-realistically stunning. He also exhibited a no-holds-barred approach to the violence, keeping it sudden and graphic. He brings the same game to Elysium. The special effects across the board are superb. The legendary conceptual designer Syd Mead, who provided Ridley Scott with Blade Runner (1982) magic, is onboard, as is the inexhaustible Richard Taylor from New Zealand’s amazing Weta Workshop.

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What Blomkamp’s screenplay lacks in originality makes up for in terrific pacing, and strong characters; Max by the central role, but it’s the support cast that bring real gravitas (the exception being Jodie Foster whose stilted, grappling with a French accent and unconvincing dialogue is jarring), with Copley’s psychopathic rogue threatening to devour everyone in sight; truly one of the best and nastiest villains of recent years.

Watching Elysium and marvelling at the gritty, futuristic spectacle of it all, not to mention the topical politics, it suddenly dawned on me that Blomkamp is the man who should be directing the cinema adaptations of William Gibson’s cyberpunk Neuromancer, and Richard Morgan’s Altered Carbon, two of the greatest hard-sf novels ever written. But unfortunately he isn’t. Here's to more Blomkamp hard-sf cinema. 

Rewind This!

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US | 2013 | Directed by Josh Johnson

Logline: A documentary tracing the history and influence, both culturally and commercially, of home video.

An endearing, affectionate, and at times downright geeky look at one of the most influential elements of pop-culture from the 20th Century, especially in terms of how it shaped an industry and defined domestic living, Rewind This! is a documentary aimed squarely at the nostalgic X-Gens, whilst winking at the iGen hipsters. I’m not talking about Internet, this was something invented twenty years earlier. This is the history of the Video Home System, known to Joe Public as VHS!

In 1971 Japanese corporation JVC developed a consumer video recorder for the home. The world was changed forever. VHS and Betamax (the rival - and better quality – format) battled it out for world supremacy during the late 70s, and the cheaper format one because, basically, your average consumer wasn’t that concerned with quality. The early 80s saw the inclusion of cinema-released movies on video tape (albeit panned and scanned), and before you could crack wood, the San Fernando Valley was all over it; VHS was porn industry heaven.

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If you’re a Gen-X like myself you’ll remember Jane Fonda’s Workout Video (1983), which revolutionised the exercise regime for housewives. You’ll remember the fantastic cover art that for much of the 80s dominated the shelves of video stores, back when most titles were facing cover out, not spine out. Those wonderful few years when movies on video were inexplicably free of classification and young movie buffs could rent “adult” (R-rated) movies they were restricted from seeing in the theatres.

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There will never be another period quite like that of VHS. Rewind This! champions the trashy nature of this global phenomenon. To put it in perspective, DVD quality lasted less than ten years before being superseded by Blu-ray. VHS was king of the viewing platform for nearly thirty years! But for the creatives – I’m talking budding filmmakers here – VHS was accidentally essential. The rewind and pause functions on the VCR machine meant you could study how a big Hollywood or foreign arthouse director and editor constructed a scene. The language of film became ownable.

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Rewind This! features many great anecdotes and musings from collectors and aficionados, filmmakers (big and small) and distributors. What was once the most mainstream part of our existence now seems curiously underground. There’s something fascinating about how the retro appeal of VHS continues to flourish, despite all its trappings and limitations.

Analogue recording videotape. Lest we forget? No chance.

Rewind This! screens in Sydney as part of Possible Worlds Festival of American & Canadian Cinema, Saturday 17 August, 6.30pm, Dendy Newtown. 

It Felt Like Love

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US | 2013 | Directed by Liza Hittman

Logline: A young and naive teenage girl feels the need to pursue a boy several years older in response to her slightly older girlfriend’s sexual prowess.

Like Evan Glodell's Bellflower a debut feature that exudes a pure sense of cinema; soaked in atmosphere, bristling with anticipation, drifting with a moody attention to detail, yet aloof and detached like a contemptuous breeze. In the throes of adolescent curiosity and confusion It Felt Like Love hits all the right spots, but refuses to reach around.

Gina Piersanti plays 14-year-old Lila, the only child of a disinterested father, a mother who is either in hospital or has passed away. Her neighbouring friend is a boy several years younger, her best friend Chiara (Giovanna Salimeni), is two years older (a lifetime when you’re a teenager), and Lila feels it intensely.

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It’s summer in Brooklyn, New York City. Boredom is rife, and the ennui of kidulthood permeates everything. Chiara and her current boyfriend Patrick (Jesse Cordasco) make out at any opportunity, and Lila tags along like a spare tush at a wedding. Then college student Sammy (Ronen Rubenstein) sidles past one day at the beach and Lila is infatuated.

With a sensual visual narrative style very similar to that of Australian director Cate Shortland (Somersault, Lore) and a perspective that slides between provocative and dangerous, reminiscent of French director Catherine Breillat, writer/director Liza Hittman captures a beautiful sense of urgency and identity whilst riding that often elusive, but powerfully resonant tone exhibited by the best European fare.

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The performances by mostly first-timers are spot on, but it’s Piersanti in the central role of lonely Lila that commands the movie, she is definitely one to watch. Like the amazing Kate Jarvis in Andrea Arnold’s Fish Tank, the camera loves Piersanti, and it’s obvious she has talent in spades.

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Liza Hittman has one of the year’s best first features on her hands, a bold and beautiful movie, and yet another testament to the impressive digital calibre of the Red Epic camera.

It Felt Like Love screens in Sydney as part of Possible Worlds Festival of American & Canadian Cinema, Saturday 17th August, 6.30pm, Dendy Opera Quays. 

White Reindeer

US | 2013 | Directed by Zach Clark

Logline: After an unexpected tragedy a suburban woman struggles to put her life back together in the days leading up to Christmas.

A labour of love for Zach Clark who wrote, produced, directed, and edited this bittersweet, black as coal comedy about one woman’s clutching of straws as she reconciles with life’s rich tapestry of cruelty and desire. If Bad Santa is the wicked bourbon, then White Reindeer is the naughty eggnog.

It’s almost a one-woman show as Anna Margaret Hollyman’s Suzanne plays front and centre, stumbling from one peculiar situation to the next, grasping for the light switch in the darkness of her quiet despair. It’s a pearler performance indeed. Laura Lemar-Goldsborough lends terrific support as a stripper called Autumn, whose real name is Fantasia (it’s that kind of comedy), who oozes charisma, but quietly charms.

Also of note, peripheral, but crucial to Suzanne’s catharsis, are Joe Swanberg and Lydia Hyslop as Suzanne’s swinging neighbours George and Patti. They’re only in only a few scenes, but very funny as they ingratiate themselves into Suzanne’s life. They could almost have their own movie. 

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Christmas time has never felt so endearingly kitsch as it is in White Reindeer. There’s a Guy Maddin-esque surrealism to the atmosphere, a melancholy that permeates the droll sense of humour. Suzanne’s predicament teeters on being pathetic, but then she pulls herself back from the abyss. The ghost of Christmas present will be her saviour; she only needs to decide whether she follows the spirit of the past, or the call of the future.

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Amidst Suzanne and Fantasia’s partying indulgences (the lofty dandruff of Santa Claus!) and the revelations of the indiscretions of the husband she thought she knew, there is a curiously touching festive movie at the heart of White Reindeer. The devious tone is delicate, but oh so deliberately tugging at the heartstrings. You might not be aware of it whilst the tinsel unfolds, but Suzanne’s tender plight is one holly-tinted satire that’s sure to win many hearts and minds.

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A Teacher

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US | 2013 | Directed by Hannah Fidell

Logline: A high school teacher’s life starts to unravel as she realises the affair she is having with one of her students is coming to an end and she is in too deep.

Diana (Lindsay Burdge) is making a terrible mistake, but the reality is that it’s too late. The audience knows this from the start. Diana knows this, but she can’t help herself. A Teacher is a thriller that burns slow like a drama. It’s a searing and sad tale of lust found and love lost with superb performances and assured direction.

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Apparently based on the experience of the writer/director when she worked as waitress and was attracted to a younger patron, yet there is a topical relevance to the premise in recent crimes that have made worldwide news, most infamously that of American teacher Mary Kay Letourneau. Of course this kind of thing happens all the time, but what makes Hannah Fidell’s movie so compelling is that it presents the narrative almost exclusively from Diana’s point of view.

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A Teacher is a study of female desire, regardless of morality. Lindsay Burdge is amazing in the role, especially in the scenes as she begins to lose control and breaks down emotionally. The the centre of her affection, the apple of her eye, her dangerous obsession, is Eric (Will Brittain), a handsome, effortlessly charming young man who is enjoying the moment, but as soon as cracks begin to form, he knows its time to jump ship.

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The movie is great looking, shot mostly with available light, exuding a naturalism in mood, tone, performance, and production. It’s a brisk film, less than eight minutes in length, but long enough to establish a solid emotional core. Hannah Fidell knows when to linger, and it is in these moments where the essence of this forbidden love lies an uncomplicated beauty and sensuality, most notably in the sequence where Eric and Diana get out of Austin, Texas, for the weekend.

A Teacher broods and unfolds with a restraint that is both powerful and compelling. It is urgent and sexy, but the confliction and torment soon overwhelms, and the movie finishes a perfect collapse.

A Teacher screens as part of Sydney’s Possible Worlds Festival of American & Canadian Cinema, Saturday 10 August, 8.30pm, Dendy Newtown. 

My Awkward Sexual Adventure

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Canada | 2012 | Directed by Sean Garrity

Logline: In an effort to win back his ex-girlfriend, a conservative accountant inadvertently enlists the help of a stripper to help him gain sexual prowess, leading him to experience cross-dressing, S&M, and romantic truth.

A thoroughly disarming and slyly charming rom-com. Oh gosh, am I reviewing such a movie?! Yes, I am, and despite the movie’s less than witty title, this urban tale of male self-discovery at the hands of a lonely exotic dancer, and at the expense of a less-than-perfect relationship is definitely a case of the funny love story that could (I couldn’t bear to mention that hyphenated genre more than once!)

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There’s nothing new under the sun with the plot, it’s a story we’ve all seen a dozen times (even when it’s not one of those kinds of movies), but it’s the way this story is told that is as fresh and juicy as the rock melon that serves as a guide to delivering cunnilingus like it should. Yes, it’s as funny and yet awkwardly sexy as it sounds. Sean Garrity has directed a comedy of errors that hinges on snappy dialogue and great performances, and this movie sports a great cast. Even the supporting roles are solid.

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Jonas Chernick is Jordan, the dorky corporate who is a complete fizzer between the sheets. His long-term girlfriend, Rachel (Sarah Manninen), has the back of her camel broken when Jordan proposes to her after yet another night of unsexy perfunctory sex sans orgasm. She dumps him. He flaps about like a fish out of water and seeks a shoulder to cry on in the form of womanizer buddy Dandak (Vik Sahay) who is humouring an arranged engagement with coy Reshma (Melissa Marie Elias). At a strip club Jordan gets blind drunk and is kicked out into a pile of garbage. Cue: Julie (Emily Hampshire) ending her club shift and trying to help Jordan into a cab.

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Jonas’s performance is very reminiscent of a couple of classic blunderers, David Schwimmer’s Ross from Friends and Steve Carell’s Andy from The 40-Year-Old Virgin. But the real star of the movie is Emily Hampshire, who shines as the spunky stripper who excels in the kitchen. Sarah Minninen also has great charisma, and there’s a hilarious mouthing off scene between Rachel and Jordan that is one of the movie’s many comic highlights.

(Special mention goes to Mike Bell as Julie’s neighbour, Naked Tom, who sports an enormous schlong. Was that a prosthetic, or not; I couldn’t help but wonder amusedly of the audition process if it was real).

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My Awkward Sexual Adventure is the perfect date flick for those who wouldn’t be seen dead at a rom-com in the cinema. Embrace the candid antics of these hapless romantics and relish the dirty-minded playfulness. Light as a feather, sweet as a peach, and pussy-whipped like cream, it’s the best adult fun you’ll have all weekend!

My Awkward Sexual Adventure screens as part of Possible Worlds American & Canadian Film Festival, Friday 16 August, 6:30pm, Dendy Opera Quays.

Man of Steel

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US/Canada/UK | 2013 | Directed by Zack Snyder

Logline: A young man is forced to confront his alien heritage, and the magnitude of his existence on Earth, when malevolent members of his race arrive on Earth with a catastrophic agenda.

Forget Superman Returns (2006), Bryan Singer’s ill-fated sequel to the original Superman movies of yesteryear, Man of Steel is the Superman movie we’ve been waiting for (although I still really want to know what Kevin Smith’s Superman Lives script – with Nic Cage attached - would’ve been like). The movie has divided audiences, and it’s easy to see why; Man of Steel is closer to the vivid comic book stylised narrative and action violence than any previous Superman movie.

Zack Snyder has succeeded superbly, just as he did in re-booting Romero’s cult classic Dawn of the Dead almost ten years ago, and delivers a movie rich in character, bursting at the seams with symbolism and sub-text (more on that in a moment), and featuring some of the most blistering, hammering (er, hang on, this is DC, not Marvel) scenes of superhero vs. supervillain combat ever committed to celluloid (er, digital file).

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Henry Cavill is a brilliant casting as Kal-El, known to his adoptive parents as Clark Kent, but known to the world as “Superman”. However, in a nice scripting and directing touch the name Superman is only mentioned one-and-a-half times in the whole movie. Yes, a half, as the omnipresent Lois Lane (Amy Adams, probably miscast, but never mind) takes it upon herself to interpret the “S” on Kal-El’s uber chainmail suit of armour as another word and not the concept of “hope” as Kal-El explains. She’s interrupted before she can finish the word, and it’s one of several moments of sly and subtle humour.

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Michael Shannon chews the scenery, giving Jack Nicholson and Heath Ledger a run for their money, as General Zod (I wonder what Terence Stamp thinks?) He is one pissed off military leader, and is hell bent on terra-forming Earth after Jor-El (Russell Crowe attempting to Shakespearenise [Ed: ?!] the role) took it upon himself to seal the fate of Krypton’s people by giving his son all the power and code of origin. Zod and the Man of Steel are set to battle it out hard and good.

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Antje Traue as General Zod’s right-hand woman Faora-Ul makes for a most fetching Krypton warrior, all voluptuous attitude and menace, while Kevin Costner (two Robin Hoods as Kal-El/Clark Kent’s fathers?!) and Diane Lane do solid work as the Smallville locals, Jonathan and Martha Kent, who’ve harboured a monumental secret. When Jonathan explains to his son that the world isn’t yet ready for whom he really is, the Christian faith seeps through the comicbook cracks and spreads liberally across the farmland.

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Yes, the religious iconography, symbolism, and metaphors are rife, but curiously they don’t deter from the movie’s primal superhero appeal. Okay, so the Man of Steel is probably the Second Coming. We see him turn his cheek, do battle against Heaven’s fallen angel, and receive apparitional advice from his All-Mighty father. But Snyder manages to keep his movie on the right side of absurdity, although the Greatest American Hero moment of Kal-El grappling with his extraordinary flying ability has borderline.

Man of Steel will age well, I can feel it in my bones. Now, who’s going to play Lex Luthor, and they had better not play him for comic relief!

NB: If you keep your eyes peeled, there’s a beautiful and pivotal moment when Henry Cavill’s visage morphs briefly into that of Christopher Reeve.

Revelatory documentaries!

Revelation - 16th Perth International Film Festival July 4 – 14th

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Interior. Leather Bar.

Hollywood heartthrob and agent provocateur James Franco and fellow filmmaker Travis Matthews put themselves out on a limb and create a re-imagining of something precious few have ever seen: the notorious and legendary - amongst cinephiles – missing forty odd minutes that director William Friedkin was forced to cut from his controversial movie Cruising in order to secure an R-rating from the MPAA, and not get slapped with the kiss-of-death X cert. Just what were in those forty minutes? Al Pacino deep undercover as a NYC homosexual prowling an underground gay club in search of a vicious serial killer. As perversely fascinating as that sounds Interior. Leather Bar. is far more interesting as a documentary on the organisation, auditions, and rehearsals during the making of this maverick indie exploration of desire and identity on film. What is ultimately exposed and studied is the creative process stripped back.

 Friday 11th, 10pm, C1 Luna

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London – The Modern Babylon

Director Julien Temple takes the viewer on a kaleidoscopic journey through the annals of London’s development from the turn of the century right through into the new millennium. It’s a paen and a lament wrapped up in greasy fish’n’chip paper and thrown into the gutter of Trafalgar Square. Temple’s perspective is a very personal one, deeply entrenched in socio-politics. This is not a travelogue to entice tourism, but it does celebrate the city in a contemptuous fashion. This is a richly archived, darkly fascinating history of a city plagued by problems; poverty and social disease, racism and classism, but also a city that has continued to pick itself up from its knees and blossom once again, if only until the next thrashing. The montage of extraordinary archival footage is intercut with Londoners, both ordinary folk and celebrities, recounting their love/hate relationship with the metropolis. Temple punctuates with a selection of gritty songs of (mostly) yesteryear, no doubt plucked straight from his own collection.

 Saturday 6th, 1.45pm, C2 Luna, Saturday 13th, 8.30pm, SX, Sunday 14th, 3pm, C1 Luna

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The Act of Killing

An utterly original take on the inhumanity of humankind, this lengthy documentary follows a clutch of former Indonesian death squad leaders as they recount and, more curiously, reenact (and film) the killings they did on thousands of innocent men, women, and children in the mid-60s. It’s a hard pill to swallow, as the appalling nature of their acts is strangely and disturbingly lightened in tone as the central figure is of a charming disposition. It’s not surprising Werner Herzog and Errol Morris are the executive producers, as this kind of provocative documentary filmmaking is right up their alley. At times surreal and beautiful, at times heartbreaking, at times utterly grotesque, the violence of truth is exposed and laid bare. But time is a beast unto itself. Forty years have passed and these sanctioned murders have been buried. Now they have been exhumed and the repercussions have a resonant edge all of their own.

 Sunday 7th, 2pm, C4 Luna, Saturday 13th, 11.30am, C1 Luna

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Exposed

“There is freedom in vulgarity,” says Bunny Love, an American burlesque performer. And in this frightfully endearing exposé on the risqué side of cutting edge burlesque – New Burlesque, if you will – a bunch of performers from the US and the UK talk candidly about the trials and tribulations of this confrontational stage art, but more importantly, the passion they share for its unabashed exhibitionism and stalwart individualism. Some of these people are damaged souls that have found solace behind the nakedness, some are considered freaks by the conservative norm, but in the realm of the burlesque they are normal. It is this portrait that filmmaker Beth B. brushes with broad strokes, coaxing deeper ideals from within the sexual mind. Exposed isn’t designed to titillate, despite the inherent nature of burlesque’s leftfield eroticism. There are many insights into the nuts and cracks of the burlesque revival of the past twenty years, with a vibrant and sly sense of humour, and plenty of nudity whipped up into a frenzy of political drag. 

Tuesday 9th, 9pm, C1 Luna, Sunday 14th, 7pm, C4 Luna

The Summit

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Ireland/UK/Switzerland/US | 2012 | directed by Nick Ryan

Logline: A documentary about the tragedy and controversy that involved two-dozen mountaineers on K2 in 2008.

Fashioned in the same compelling way as Kevin MacDonald’s brilliant Touching the Void (2003), by using extraordinary re-enactments interwoven with interviews, but also utilizing existing video footage and still photography, this is documentary filmmaking at its most powerful and mesmerizing; utterly suspenseful, beautifully shot, and undeniably fascinating.

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K2, the second highest natural peak in the world, is often shadowed by the exploits of climbers conquering Mount Everest. The reality is, attempting to reach the summit of K2 - nicknamed the Savage Mountain – is a far more dangerous endeavour than its higher Tibetan neighbour. For every four mountaineers that reach the summit K2, one will perish on descent.

The death is a tragedy that becomes a statistic. One of hundreds. 

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Over 48-hours from August 1st, 2008, a tragedy occurred that resulted in the deaths of eleven climbers, members of several teams, including Sherpa’s. It was a terrible loss that became a controversy, as many conflicting stories emerged from the survivors, of which there weren’t many.

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At the heart of the documentary is the story of Irishman Ger McDonnell, a hero who broke the mountaineers’ unwritten code (leaving a climber for dead who wanders off or falls or is too incapacitated to move). McDonnell attempted to rescue three Korean climbers who were incapacitated and perished in an ice collapse from the notorious serac that overhangs the equally notorious bottleneck, all of which is in the Death Zone (above 8000 metres).

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McDonnell’s immediate family are desperate to find out the truth of what happened on that perfect cloudless day that turned into the perfect storm of grief. The inherent confusion surrounding the events (time and space become very fragile in the Death Zone) and with only a clutch of survivors, the truth lay with just two people: the Italian Marco Confortola and Sherpa Pemba Gyalje.

As contrast to the recent events there is the first conquering of the mountain by the Italians in 1954 with fantastic footage of the gung-ho team setting off and on the Savage Mountain itself. Combining stunning widescreen cinematography of K2, brilliant CGI compositing of climbers upon the mountain, and an editing/narrative style reminiscent of a thriller, The Summit is one of the best documentaries of the year.

The Summit screened as part of the 60th Sydney Film Festival. 

I Am Divine

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US | 2013 | Directed by Jeffrey Schwarz

Logline: A documentary on the life and career of Divine, a drag queen, and the muse of director John Waters.

Harris Glenn Milstead was never going to be the shy and retiring type. From his time spent in hair salons as a young boy, he knew from an early age he was destined to perform a little differently. He was bullied at school and although he dated a girl for several years, deep down he knew he needed to step up to the plate to bat for the other team. But it was Baltimore maverick film director John Waters who was instrumental in creating the extreme exhibitionist sensation known to the world as Divine.

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This isn’t an “underground” documentary, and as such it doesn’t get its paws anywhere near as grubby as one of Waters’ early features, but it still manages to successfully champion the body of work and the work of body that was Divine, “the most beautiful woman in the world”, and at one career defining point, “the filthiest person alive!”

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Divine’s rise to stardom has the result of several key elements: John Waters no-holds-barred approach to no-wave stylistic excess, the early 70s climate of sexuality in society, and Glenn Milstead’s sheer tenacity and fearlessness. After appearing in several of John Waters’ early black and white Super-8mm and 16mm movies that had been showing on the underground Midnight Movie circuit it was the dirty shock glamour of Waters’ first colour feature (a 35mm blow-up), Pink Flamingoes (1972) - made for ten grand, which was a huge budget for Waters at the time – that propelled the drag queen to the attention of Hollywood A-listers who queued with others to see the movie.

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It wasn’t until 1984 that Divine finally reached the mainstream he (she) always had dreamed of. It was Hairspray, also John Waters’ most accessible and successful movie. Divine had been on the up and up, having appeared in several more of Waters’ features since Pink Flamingoes, including Female Trouble and Polyester, and also Paul Bartel’s Western spoof Lust in the Dust.

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Divine was set to star in a guest capacity on Married ... With Children which, at the time, was one of the most successful sit-coms in America. But Milstead’s obsession with eating had done irreparable harm to his heart and on the night before he was due to start work on the TV show he suffered a massive coronary and died in his sleep.

Jeffrey Schwarz has made a very affectionate and endearing portrait of Divine and his conquering of the world of female impersonation to become an international drag icon. Numerous celebrities are interviewed including many of his film colleagues, John Waters, Mink Stole, Tab Hunter, Ricki Lake, but also his mother (whom the film is dedicated to, as she passed away during post-production).

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I Am Divine screens as part of Revelation - Perth International Film Festival, Monday 8 July, 7pm, Paradiso, and Saturday 13 July, 11pm, C1 Luna. 

The Crash Reel

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US | 2013 | Directed by Lucy Walker

Logline: A documentary about the rise, crash, and rehabilitation of Kevin Pearce, a furiously talented young snowboarder, and of those around him who were affected.

Kevin Pearce, or KP as he was nicknamed by his loyal followers, was a gifted athlete; an adventurous child who tackled and mastered skateboarding and surfing before moving on and conquering the highly competitive extreme sport of professional snowboarding. When I say, “conquering” he didn’t actually reach the heights he was aiming for, but he had the aptitude, and he had the momentum.

Then, one bright clear New Year’s Eve morning on the slopes of Park City, Utah, KP launched himself down into the half-pipe for a day’s training leading up to the 2010 Winter Olympics, three months away. He caught a toe edge and slammed into the icy packed snow, a full face-plant from a drop of about three metres. He was knocked unconscious, bleeding from his mouth, nose, and his left eye bloodshot - all of it being videoed by his mate.

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Pearce underwent surgery, was in a coma for two weeks, and endured a two-year rehabilitation program. He was very lucky to survive, and was left with TBI (Traumatic Brain Injury), resulting in memory loss, tremors, mood swings, and a very fragile head. But Pearce wanted to return to snowboarding; firmly believing he had what it took to be a champion again.

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Director Lucy Walker’s compelling and heartbreaking documentary is helped tremendously by Kevin’s innate charisma and endearing personality. But also of great exception is the fifteen years of video footage taken by various family and friends that tracks his obsession with snowboarding. It’s as if the film has been created, rather than molded.

The Crash Reel is awesome documentary filmmaking, challenging the viewer’s opinions, revealing very raw human emotions, the vulnerability of the human psyche, but even more importantly, the fragility of the human body. A friend of mine once said, “Nothing good ever comes from sport.” Of course this is a massive generalisation, but the kernel of truth points to the extreme sports, those that continue to push the human body into doing things they were never, ever, meant to do. When Kevin Pearce first started snowboarding the half-pipes were 8 or 9 feet high, but by the time of his accident they had reached the 22 foot-high mark giving snowboards serious air at serious speed.

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Kevin Pearce’s family and his close-knit friends feature prominently, his mother terrified of his desire to return to the sport that almost claimed his life and has left him with permanent scars on his brain and the psychological handicaps that come with that. His Down Syndrome brother constantly cries over KP’s decision. His older brothers and father try to reason with him. His mother takes him to visit another snowboarder who has suffered two TBI’s. It’s a sobering experience.

The Crash Reel screens as part of the 60th Sydney Film Festival; Monday 10 June, 2pm, at Event Cinema 9, and Sunday 16 June, 5:05pm, at Event Cinema 4, George Street. 

Blackfish

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US | 2013 | Directed by Gabriela Cowperthwaite

Logline: A documentary about the sometimes-devastating consequences of keeping orca, ferociously intelligent creatures, in captivity, and the trainers who work with them.

There’s a quote from the late Carl Sagan, the renowned cosmologist and science communicator (amongst other things); “It’s of interest to note that while some dolphins are reported to have learned English – up to fifty words in correct context – no human begin has been reported to have learned dolphinese.” While this might sound like a silly observation there is much weight behind it.

Orca - more commonly known as killer whales (a troubling, but sadly accurate description) - share much with dolphins, most notably their fierce intelligence, for these are sentient creatures, capable of a wide range of emotions and are equipped with a complex understanding of the power and breadth of language.

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Of course humans needed to have these magnificent mammals controlled so they could harness their spectacular presence and showcase them for profit. And so Sealand of the Pacific and SeaWorld were created.  Tilicum was captured as a baby in 1983, and is now nearly 7 metres long and weighs in at 5,400 kilos. His dorsal fin is collapsed and he was involved in the deaths of three people.

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Tilicum isn’t the only captive killer whale to have responded aggressively toward humans. It is this fascinating and distubring documentary that raises the very serious question of whether such facilities as SeaWorld, essentially a large swimming pool with sea cells for when the whales aren’t performing, should be in operation. Or to be more precise, whether animals such as killer whales, should be in captivity.

Numerous former SeaWorld trainers are interviewed; many of them overcome with emotion when describing the treatment of Tilicum and of the circumstances surrounding the death of trailer Dawn Brancheau, who was killed by Tilicum in 2010. One interviewee is certain that in forty or so years we will look back on this period and shake our heads at the barbaric nature of keeping these magnificent mammals in captivity.

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If you’re an animal lover, you’ll find much of this documentary hard to take, but its essential viewing for anyone even remotely interested in the future welfare of our planet’s inhabitants. Cleverly and profoundly, director Gabriela Cowperthwaite has stated her case. SeaWorld repeatedly declined to be interviewed for the doco, and that speaks volumes.

Blackfish screens as part of the 60th Sydney Film Festival, Friday 7 June, 8:45pm, and Saturday 8 June, 12.30pm, at Event Cinema 4, George Street.