I've been feeling down in the dumps about not being at TIFF for the first time in 5 years. The festival just started couple of days ago, with limited in-person component as well as virtual screening, but it's geo-locked in Canada :(
I will so miss your TIFF reports.
New York Film Festival, which opens in a week, also has a decent-sized virtual screening component, and the tickets for those are on sale right now!
However, thanks for posting this since I can't wait to see
Nomadland.
I also got tix for Christian Petzold's
Undine
and
La Nuit des rois,
which is more for work than anything else.
I wanted to get tickets for
On the Rocks
(the new Sofia Coppola) but it was already sold out. I thought about getting
David Byrne's American Utopia
but it will be on HBO soon enough.
I'm seeing Undine as well! The reviews on the film from Berlinale were mixed, but Petzold is such an interesting filmmaker that I think even his less successful films would be interesting to watch.
I wanted to get tickets for On the Rocks (the new Sofia Coppola) but it was already sold out.
Looks like I snatched the last few tickets for that one, sorry! I think it is set to stream on Apple+ just 2-3 weeks later. I also got tix for the opening and closing night films (the first of the Steve McQueen trilogy, and French Exit, for the Michelle Pfeiffer of it all). That said, the one I'm most psyched about after the Chloe Zhao is probably The Truffle Hunters, which is about a bunch of old men and their dogs hunting for expensive truffles in Italian countryside. The trailer looks charming: [link]
If anyone's interested, here's the trailer for The Craft: Legacy.
Oh, ooh!
I may add that to my traditional H'ween movie marathon (this is my marathon and there are additions that may make no sense to you and movies missing that would be in your movie marathon). I've actually dropped The Craft, Mark I from the rotation for the last couple of years. I also added a movie that came with a quality warning, The Last Keepers: "When the teenage daughter of a reclusive family of artists falls in love with an unusual boy at school, she awakens mysterious powers and discovers ancient family secrets that will change her life forever." Starring Aidan Quinn, Virginia Madsen, Olympia Dukakis. Sounded okay, despite the reviews.
This movie, man. Filmed at peak leaf season in New England, it's absolutely gorgeous, visually. I don't know if it's the script or the ingenue lead, but anytime the movie moves indoors, even to the evocative, atmospheric seekrit attic spellwork room, you can hear brakes screech. Everybody works really hard, but it's literally a bad movie. If you inflict it on yourself, at least run it on mute with your finger on the FF button.
Chocolat (anything I learned about Depp after this movie was released does not affect my joy in this movie) and A Monster in Paris join Angelica Huston, Mai Zetterling and Rowan Atkinson in Roald Dahl's The Witches, and everlasting must-have, Hocus Pocus. Despite my Tim Curry love, The Worst Witch has been dropped from the H'ween festival list, though I'm thinking of adding Legend--if I can get past all the incipient Tom Cruise of it. It's like watching The Last Samurai with my thumb over his face throughout the movie and pretending it's all just fine without him.
Where was I? Oh, adding The Craft, mark II to the list. Or otherwise, adding Mark I back in.
My first reaction to the trailer is that they look SO YOUNG and my second thought was that that's kind of refreshing, having high school students on screen that actually look to me like kids
Oh, that looks fun! And it's making me a little nostalgic for my pixie cut of many years.
I have to think about what my Halloween marathon would be. I watch so many of my favorite horror movies whenever I want anyway. I do really like Trick 'r Treat (2007) at Halloween, though. And the original Halloween, too!
I think the trailer for The Craft sequel looks fun. I've seen a couple of Serious Goth types complaining that it looks like "witchy aesthetic" Instagram posts, but others of us are pointing out that most of those IG users are trying to recreate the aesthetic of the original movie, so whatever.
I have to think about what my Halloween marathon would be. I watch so many of my favorite horror movies whenever I want anyway.
The struggle is real.
ha! I knew there would be people on this board who'd be interested, especially at this time of year.
Of course! Now I really want to watch the original again. It's been years.