Showing posts with label Olivier Assayas. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Olivier Assayas. Show all posts

Sunday, December 12, 2010

Los Angeles Critics (Social Network vs. Carlos)

The Los Angeles Film Critics Association, now in their 35th year, hosted a battle between Carlos the Jackal and Mark Zuckerberg the punk. genius. billionaire. The Social Network co-founder won. But not without some concessions... including a tie.



Picture: The Social Network
[Runner up: Carlos]
Director: (tie) Olivier Assayas for Carlos and David Fincher for The Social Network
Actress: Kim Hye-Ja in Mother
[Runner up: Jennifer Lawrence in Winter's Bone]
Actor: Colin Firth in The King's Speech
[Runner up: Edgar Ramirez in Carlos]

Supporting Actress: Jacki Weaver in Animal Kingdom *check out this acceptance speech*
[Runner up: Olivia Williams in Ghost Writer]
Supporting Actor Neils Arestrup in A Prophet
[Runner up: Geoffrey Rush in The King's Speech]
Screenplay Aaron Sorkin for The Social Network
[Runner up: The King's Speech]
Cinematography Matthew Libatique for Black Swan
[Runner up: Roger Deakins for True Grit]
Music (tie) The Social Network and Alexandre Desplat The Ghost Writer
Production Design Guy Dyas for Inception
[runner up: The King's Speech]
Documentary Last Train Home
[Runner up: Exit Through the Gift Shop]
Experimental Jean Luc Godard's Film SocialismeForeign Film Carlos (France)
[Runner up: Mother (South Korea)]
Animated Film Toy Story 3
[Runner up: The Illusionist]
New Generation Lena Dunham for Tiny Furniture
Legacy of Cinema Award Serge Bromberg, Henri-Georges Clouzot's Inferno, and the F.W. Murnau Foundation and Fernando Pena for the restoration of MetropolisCareer Achievement Paul Mazursky


The win for Jacki Weaver is good news for that fine Australian film.  They did a good thing, sweetie. Though Animal Kingdom was the first or near-first screener out, it didn't necessarily have a strong "watch me" hook for Academy voters who hadn't been paying attention to Sundance buzz. I've said ever since January that if people watch this movie, she'll be nominated. Simple as that. But you have to get the voters to watch. This vote of confidence from Los Angelenos can't hurt.


I'm also thrilled for Last Train Home which is my choice for Best Documentary of the Year ...unless Prodigal Sons counts as this year... I get so confused. I'm totally horrified that it didn't make Oscar's finalist list. Unless of course it wasn't eligible for some reason. It's so tough to track with docs and shorts and whatnot, these eligibility requirements and windows.


Finally, it's good to see LAFCA staying true to their own impulses with all the foreign film love. This group tends to not be as beholden to Oscar frontrunners as many other critics groups are. That said, I'm still unsure about how I feel about Carlos winning film prizes. I know it was released theatrically but wasn't it made as a TV miniseries?


ONE FINAL IMPORTANT NOTE: South Korea's Mother & France's A Prophet, which both won awards today with Los Angeles critics, represent flip sides of the same Oscar coin. Both were submitted for Oscar consideration last year in the foreign film category but were not released in Los Angeles theaters in 2009 rendering them ineligible for other Oscar nominations that year. They both received theatrical releases in 2010, and because of Oscar rules on that matter, only Mother is now eligible for Oscar consideration (in all categories EXCEPT foreign film since it had its shot last year). A Prophet, having been nominated in its only eligible category last year, is not eligible for any further consideration. Make sense?
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Friday, September 17, 2010

Nathaniel's New York Film Festival: Coming Soon

The New York Film Festival starts officially on September 24th. Critics screenings have already begun but so far I've been in absentia. I have my reasons though the selection committee and certain cinephiles would surely scoff at them so they will go unnamed. This morning I picked up my credentials but opted to skip Carlos the Olivier Assayas film about Venezuelan revolutionary Ilich Ramirez Sanchez or "The Jackal" as he's infamously known in history and in the movies. I love Assayas (Summer Hours + demonlover = movie heaven plus rare artistic range!) but I can't do 5½ hour movies. I just can't!

That's one of the reasons people will scoff (oops. so much for unnamed). I've heard it's terrific but I know my limits. My back and ass know them, too. Hopefully I'll get a chance to see it in its piecemeal French miniseries form at some point. I love serialized drama as much as anyone but for me that's a television-specific experience and it should stay where it belongs.

While exiting the Walter Reade I spotted a "coming soon" poster for Desperately Seeking Susan.


It's not every day you see a "coming soon" poster for a movie that's 25 years old starring your favorite celebrity of all time. Director Susan Seidelman will speaking to the crowd at the screening (Sept 23rd -- get your tickets) and Rosanna Arquette and Aidan Quinn will also attend. If they blasted "Into the Groove" through the speakers and Madonna made a surprise appearance in her original costume I would die on the spot with a stupid grin on my face. What a way to go.

Susan is not part of the official festival (shame) though the fest usually does have a few retros. See, NYFF isn't exactly known for comedy if you know what I mean. They lean hard on Cannes lineups but only the dour subtitled selections. If NYFF goes "mainstream" it's usually for something gloomy, like say dead children a la Clint Eastwood's Changeling but not dead children a la Rachel Getting Married because that movie was too warm and humane! I'm partially joking since I love the NYFF but that 2008 selection committee decision will haunt me forever. They crazy. I shan't ever forgive them.

My point is this: in one particular NYFF year I sat through three films in a row from multiple countries starring voyeuristic barely verbal loners who stalked / killed women. I can't even talk about it! I just can't.

For 2010, I'm most excited for the following seven in roughly this order:
  • Another Year -because it's a Mike Leigh film. That's all I need.
  • Uncle Boonmee Who Can Recall His Past Lives -because it won the Palme D'Or and I found Apichatpong Weerathesakul's Tropical Malady so worthwhile in its enigmas.
  • The Social Network -because people keep saying it's "a perfect 10".
  • My Joy -because Nick loved it.


  • Meek's Cutoff -because Michelle Williams and Kelly Reichardt's last collaboration Wendy & Lucy was so moving. I'm sometimes allergic to westerns, though, so we shall see.
  • Poetry -because I still think about Lee Chang-dong's Secret Sunshine frequently and staying power is not properly rewarded at the cinema.
  • Black Venus -because even though Guy Lodge didn't love it, it sounds fascinating.
I'll see other pictures too but those have made me the most curious.

And because Jonathan Glazer's Birth (2004) seems to be coming up frequently in discussions round here lately, you should probably know (should you be in NYC) that one of the special events this year is an evening with film scholar David Thomson (The New Biographical Dictionary of Film) in which he will screen and discuss this wonderful and misunderstood picture.
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Saturday, April 24, 2010

Olivier Assayas' Summer Love-In: Tell You More? Tell You More?

Craig here, taking a look at a recent DVD release.

L'heure d'été. Or, more precisely, how about Summer Hours? A title that rolls delectably off the tongue, eh? Either way, it's a title that conjures up a certain, almost sensory, feeling. There's something nostalgic about it, as if it might recall a specific time in the distant past when warm days and lighter evenings were what we all lived for.

This week saw the Criterion DVD release of Olivier Assayas' beguiling 2008 film, and indeed several scenes, especially the very last one, come almost perfectly close to approximating that wistful, aerated feeling brought on as the remnants of summer fade away. Although, perhaps the title of another recent French film, Private Property, is also apt to describe the overriding themes of Assayas' film. Summer Hours is about the very things given, taken, held close or that may get passed down the family line: objects, keepsakes, the house you grew up in. The film is about these treasurable things, but more so the memories of the people who own(ed) them.

Three siblings - brothers Frédéric (Charles Bering) and Jérémie (Jérémie Renier) and sister Adrienne (Juliette Binoche) - and their families convene on their mother Hélène's (Edith Scob) French country estate, their childhood home, to celebrate her 75th birthday. A feeling of change, of a personal era coming to a close is in the air, as Hélène is insistent about how to go about the business of bequeathing her belongings. Some months later Hélène has passed away and the family have to decide on the matter of dividing up and/or selling the house and its valuable heirlooms - which include some rare artworks (paintings by Corot, panels by Odilon Redon), furniture and drawings bestowed to Hélène by her beloved late uncle, celebrated artist Paul Berthier.


As can often be the way with such deep-rooted family matters, the decision to either pack up and move on, or to keep the house in the family name causes some consternation for the siblings: Jérémie and Adrienne, who live and work abroad (China and New York respectively), are keen to sell, but the older brother Frédéric, who lives in Paris, wants to keep the house. It's a simple premise, yet tied up with several knotty concerns regarding who should get what - and not just confined to within the family; several buyers and collectors also seek interest in the estate. Should what is, or was, theirs remain so, or should they break away and hand ownership to the state?

Now, the ins-and-outs of inheritance issues and family friction may not sound as if it would make for an enlightening ninety-plus minutes, but these familial matters form the crux of the story in an easeful and intriguing manner. The narrative has much to subtly say about generational differences and similarities and the way the valuable oddments of family history carry with them a recollective charge. Is Hélène's cherished bureau better off collecting dust in the old house, or in Paris' Musée d'Orsay (which, incidentally, first commissioned Assayas to make the film, then pulled out later on - but still assisted with the loan of artworks), where it will at least be seen and admired by many, albeit with the remnants of life - photos, notebooks, a lifetime of fading fingerprints - forever wiped away?


Summer Hours, though infused with a sense of pensiveness not much seen in Assayas' work since the latter parts of 2004's Clean, is agreeably scattered with some mirthful moments; it actually does a grand job of interspersing these two aspects throughout its duration beautifully. Such moments where the siblings - allied in their mourning during the practical, often emotionally fraught task of settling their inheritance - recall happy early days together, and bond affectionately over the tough decisions, contain a generous warmth of feeling; despite the matter at hand, there are no clichéd, chest-beating rows over who deserves what. And one effortlessly elegant scene, where their longtime housekeeper Éloïse (Isabelle Sadoyan) walks the perimeter of the empty house trying to find a way in - whilst Assayas' camera pans to track her path from inside the house - is achieved through a single, wordless take which manages to both plaintively suggest closure and foretell a hopeful new chapter, for both family and residence.

The entire cast are uniformly excellent, and, fittingly, work as a convincing family unit - though special mention should go to Berling as the older brother (his character's arc is followed more closely than the rest); and it's nice to see Eyes Without a Face's Edith Scob in a touching, pivotal role. There's so much on offer, both visually and narratively, to savour in Summer Hours. Assayas has made a film that takes its time to reveal the intricacies hidden within those special, memorable moments in life; the almost Zen-like placidity of his direction creates an appealing air of melancholy like few other recent films. If it sounds too twee or overly sentimental, it isn't - and the moneyed milieu of the setting contains no air of superiority: ultimately its themes, regardless of class, strike a universal chord. It unabashedly says, We only have these things in our lives for a fleeting amount of time - make the most of the people who provide the unforgettable hours while they surround us.


With the start of sunny season just about to take hold, what better time than to take a look at one of Olivier Assayas' very best films. Does anyone fancy spending a few summer hours in the kindly company of blond Binoche and kin?