Buffista Movies Across the 8th Dimension!
A place to talk about movies--old and new, good and bad, high art and high cheese. It's the place to place your kittens on the award winners, gossip about upcoming fims and discuss DVD releases and extras. Spoiler policy: White font all plot-related discussion until a movie's been in wide release two weeks, and keep the major HSQ in white font until two weeks after the video/DVD release.
I just watched the Netflix original documentary Heroin(e), about 3 middle aged women (a fire chief, a judge, and a missionary) fighting heroin and other drugs in West Virginia, and if there is one property that is crying out for Melissa Leo to play the fire chief, it is this! They look and sound so much the same! I am now trying to cast the other two ladies mentally, but it almost seems like Melissa Leo is the only working actress playing over 50 but under 60!
ETA- Looked over other actresses born about the same time as Melissa Leo, and I think Bonnie Hunt should play the judge and Sharon Lawrence the missionary, but I don't think they get a lot of work...
At TIFF. Saw The Shape of Water yesterday and Good Lord, is that movie ever made for Buffistas. It was all that the trailer promised and more, a ravishingly romantic fable about a girl and her fish prince, played completely sincerely and with all the virtuosic cinematic skills del Toro has in his arsenal. Michael Shannon gives that dude who played Vidal in Pan's Labyrinth a run for his money as a terrifying monster in a human-face.
I went to an afternoon showing and was pleasantly surprised by del Toro showing up for a Q&A afterward. He was hilarious and passionate and had an endearingly potty mouth and I could have listened to him talk for hours. My kittens are on this film winning the People's Choice Award (the biggest prize a film can get in TIFF, which is not really award-driven). The only other film I've seen that could give it competition is Lady Bird, Greta Gerwig's marvellous directorial debut.
Other than those two, it's been hit-and-miss at the festival. Quite a few well-intentioned films that made me do a side-eye and go, "O'RLY"? Ones that would be worth seeking out if they ever became available here: BPM, about the AIDS crisis and the lives (and deaths) of its activists in Paris in late 80s and early 90s, which was both angry and tender and made me ugly-cry several times; Under the Tree, an Icelandic film about an escalating neighborhood dispute that went to all kinds of places I wasn't expecting. It had this amazingly deadpan and black sense of humour that struck me as very Scandinavian.
I, Tonya is getting a lot of buzz: [link]
Saw The Shape of Water yesterday and Good Lord, is that movie ever made for Buffistas. It was all that the trailer promised and more, a ravishingly romantic fable about a girl and her fish prince, played completely sincerely and with all the virtuosic cinematic skills del Toro has in his arsenal.
Eeee! Eeeeeee!
Hey, have you, or are you, going to see
The Lodgers?
It's getting a lot of buzz for being a good, creepy gothic, but I can't find any information on a release date for it.
Oy, I'd forgotten how exhausted TIFF could be. Day #5 and fading fast. Thank goodness I only have two films tomorrow.
Hey, have you, or are you, going to see The Lodgers?
As the luck would have it, I *have* seen The Lodgers! It was my first film of the festival on Saturday. It's a gorgeously atmospheric piece of work but a bit thin on the story, I found. But then, one doesn't really watch Gothic horror for the plot. If it's simmering dread and moody vistas and repressed longing you want, the film's got plenty to offer.
Among the lot I watched today was Alexander Payne's Downsizing. The first half of the film was like a pitch-perfect Charlie Kaufman-esque surreal satire, then the second half... goes to kinda weird places. I found it entertaining throughout but not sure the film holds together entirely. More successful, for me, was A Fantastic Woman, the trailer for which I'd linked to upthread. It's an emotionally devastating drama from Chile about a transgender woman whose much older lover dies suddenly - she then has to suffer the indignities heaped on by her partner's family while trying to process her own grief. It's hard to watch at times but never dreary or depressing. Instead, it is suffused with vibrant emotions which struck me as almost operatic, anchored by an extraordinary performance by its lead actress (Daniela Vega) who is herself trans. I can't recommend it highly enough.
But then, one doesn't really watch Gothic horror for the plot. If it's simmering dread and moody vistas and repressed longing you want, the film's got plenty to offer.
That is
exactly
what I watch Gothic horror for, so that's perfect!
t the cliche tag never closes for me
Guys, I cannot wait to see this: [link]
That movie is gonna make me cry.
That looks good, Steph. In related news, I discovered that Olive Byrne was Ethel Byrne's daughter and Margaret Sanger's (birth control advocate) niece. Byrne's mom was one of the first female victims of institutional force feeding while imprisoned for helping women get access to birth control.
I bet Olive would have had a lot to say about Themiscyra.
I saw that a couple of days ago! It's a solid biopic and marvellous on the representation front. Rebecca Hall, who plays Elizabeth Marston, is particularly wonderful. I kinda wished it
had spent more time on the creation of Wonder Woman though.