Friday, December 28, 2018

Bird Box: For The Birds? Or Something More...




Post-apocalyptic storytelling on screen can often and ironically come off as far more far-fetched and doomed, so to speak, than the freaky future contemplated as now - and Bird Box is no exception. Directed by Susanne Bier and adapted from the novel penned by rocker Josh Malerman of the Detroit band High Strung, Bird Box, along with John Krasinki's A Quiet Place released earlier this year, may perhaps in their dual confounding logic, be more illuminating and fascinating as sci-fi/horror genre cultural artifacts.

Sandra Bullock stars in Bird Box as the fiercely independent artist, designated feminist protagonist and single mother by choice, Malorie. Caught up suddenly in late stage pregnancy as a mystery toxic atmosphere sweeps across the planet precipitating mass unexplained suicide everywhere, Malorie joins a group of terrified humans fleeing to the safety of a barricaded nearby home. And after collectively figuring out that indiscriminate insanity is caused by viewing a mystery entity inciting the plague, they all don blindfolds. 

But after the birth of her child as well as that of another cloistered woman there, followed by the eventual death of everyone else months later, Malorie escapes with the two toddlers - and a couple of canaries referred to in the title - to a reported safe haven miles away across forests, seas and death-defying rapids. And yes, all the while blindfolded against the menacing plague - which has progressed into inexplicably turning some selective humans into assistant assassins as well. And all the while with no feasible explanation whatsoever, as to why fleeing blindfolded into the wilderness wouldn't lead to their demise well before any invisible force in pursuit.

But taken instead as a socio-political 'see no evil, hear no evil' phenomenon in these chaotic present times, along with A Quiet Place and it's alternate sensory terror - monster aliens in pursuit through hearing - one might speculate about the more intimately visceral and personal terror emerging on screen. Say, in contrast to the preceding Cold War horror genre focused on cognitive human invasion as politically metaphorical mind control. 

In other words, the world we live in now, where fear and an overwhelming mass sense of powerlessness that is internal and frighteningly invasive through those very sensory channels. Counting intrusive, invisible, intimate and inescapable government deep state digital and cell phone surveillance - not to mention the progressive, seemingly irreversible death of the planet from environmental devastation. And the essential powerlessness of all of us against these doomsday scenarios for real - protective blindfold or not.

St. Agatha Movie Review
 

The horror genre's most effective weapon is what's going on just a cringe away in the real world. And if we're talking creepy proceedings behind closed doors at a Catholic convent and pertaining to the mental and physical torture of young unwed mothers while disappearing their newborns into a profiteering adoption farm - what more harrowing relevant reality than the scandal that ensued across the 20th century in such homes in Ireland. Counting sadism and mass graves, of both the girls and their children.
 

Not to mention the recent indictments here in this country, with the Church accused of being in collusion with the courts to send troubled juveniles off to detention centers run by the Church for profit - who didn't need to be there. In addition to the just released report that the Trump Administration is shipping among those thousands of caged immigrant children, to Bethany Christian Services - an adoption agency with ties to the family of Education Secretary Betsy DeVos.
 

And to conveniently bypass any political controversy like the right to life movement or Catholic Church culpability in Darren Lynn Bousman's nuns run amok horror spree, St. Agatha, the narrative is set back in 1957 rural Georgia, and the Church has severed ties with an apparently disobedient head nun (Carolyn Hennesy. Meanwhile, young expectant mother Mary (Sabrina Kern), opts to turn up at the convent maintained by a staff of sullen when not macabre nuns, until the birth of her child.
 

What ensues for the remainder of this deepening, darkly laced diabolical torture fest, is basically wildly wicked women at their worst, a maniacal generation gap standoff with those young terrorized female victims, and something best left to the decidedly warped imaginations out there having to do with, let's just say, weaponized cash and umbilical cords. Or something like that.


THE LOAD [Teret]: What Doesn't Kill You Makes You...Disappear

A tense, muted, never less than simultaneously grim and confounding, historically laced road movie venture into the heart of darkness of a disappeared country, The Load opts for subtlety over sensationalism. Directed by Serbian Ognjen Glavonić, the story follows truck driver Vlada (Leon Lucev), who appears to be transporting an unknown, secretive cargo across a terrifying landscape from Kosovo to Belgrade, being subjected to NATO bombing in 1999. Not only bombing the population, NATO is likewise conducting a propaganda blitz, dropping leaflets across the land intended to convince civilians that destruction, invasion and occupation are their glorious democratic future. While The Load has been cited as referencing the highway thrillers Henri-Georges Clouzot’s The Wages of Fear, and Williams Friedkin’s retelling, Sorcerer.  


Glavonić, who has emerged from a young, post-communist Yugoslavia generation of filmmakers, appears most personified here in a despondent, directionless nomadic youth Vlada picks up along the way. An aspiring musician who plays some of his songs on a cassette for Vlada - when asked about the group, the youth's reply provides a stinging metaphor expressing the fate of the broken, disappeared and Western imperialist devoured Yugoslavia itself: My group no longer has a name, because the band broke up when everyone was gone.

While the inferences of The Load remaining ambiguous regarding casualties of war and culpability, have been referred to as a praiseworthy artistic preference - perhaps the truth resides elsewhere. No less than that this Serbian-French collaboration is an ironic co-production between that NATO invader/exploiter and victim country. Which might update and expand that Winston Churchill axiom: History is written by the victor's filmmakers.

Likewise an intriguing update that might have made for an insightful postscript, would have been the inclusion of the current shadow CIA regime change factory known by its front name CANVAS, and secretly functioning in the present time in Serbia. And where self-declared coup president of Venezuela Juan Guaido had been trained to do just that. While preceded by their regime change factory operation that succeeded in the imprisonment there of Socialist President Slobodan Milosevic for war crimes, a subsequent Hague trial and imprisonment over the course of many years  - and with Milosevic ultimately declared innocent long after he had died in prison at the Hague, for lack of adequate medical care for a serious heart condition.

The Load is a feature of the 2019 New Directors/New Films, and more information is at filmlinc.org/festivals/new-directors-new-films-2019.



 Prairie Miller

Tuesday, December 18, 2018

Mika Fired Up

                                             

Saturday, December 8, 2018

The Women Film Critics Circle Award Nominations 2018

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The Women Film Critics Circle has announced the 2O18 nominations for the best movies this year by and about women. And outstanding achievements by women, who get to be rarely honored historically, in the film world.

The Women Film Critics Circle is an association of 80 women film critics and scholars from around the country and internationally, who are involved in print, radio, online and TV broadcast media. They came together in 2004 to form the first women critics’ organization in the United States, in the belief that women’s perspectives and voices in film criticism need to be recognized fully.

WFCC also prides itself on being the most culturally and racially diverse critics group in the country by far, and best reflecting the diversity of movie audiences.

Critical Women On Film, a presentation of The Women Film Critics Circle, is their journal of discussion and theory. And a gathering of women’s voices expressing a fresh and differently experienced perspective from the primarily male dominated film criticism world.

BEST MOVIE ABOUT WOMEN
Mary Shelley
Roma
The Favourite
Widows
                                            Elle Fanning As Mary Shelley
BEST MOVIE BY A WOMAN
Can You Ever Forgive Me?
Leave No Trace
The Kindergarten Teacher
You Were Never Really Here
BEST WOMAN STORYTELLER [Screenwriting Award]
Sara Colangelo: The Kindergarten Teacher
Debra Granik: Leave No Trace
Tamara Jenkins: Private Life
Audrey Wells: The Hate U Give

BEST ACTRESS
Toni Collette, Hereditary
Olivia Colman, The Favourite
Viola Davis, Widows
Maggie Gyllenhaal, The Kindergarten Teacher
BEST ACTOR
Ben Foster, Leave No Trace
Ethan Hawke, First Reformed
Viggo Mortensen, Green Book
Hugo Weaving, Black 47
BEST COMEDIC ACTRESS
Helena Bonham Carter, 55 Steps
Olivia Colman, The Favourite
Kathryn Hahn, Private Life
Melissa McCarthy, Can You Ever Forgive Me?
BEST YOUNG ACTRESS
Elle Fanning, Mary Shelley
Elsie Fisher, Eighth Grade
Thomasin McKenzie, Leave No Trace
Amandla Stenberg, The Hate U Give

                                             Yalitza Aparicio in Roma
BEST FOREIGN FILM BY OR ABOUT WOMEN
Capernaum
Happy As Lazzaro
Roma
Zama
BEST DOCUMENTARY BY OR ABOUT WOMEN
RBG
Say Her Name: The Life And Death Of Sandra Bland
Seeing Allred
Shirkers

                                          WOMEN'S WORK: WIDOWS

WOMEN’S WORK/BEST ENSEMBLE
55 Steps
Ocean's Eight
The Favourite
Widows

SPECIAL MENTION AWARDS

                           Haifaa Al-Mansour, First Saudi Woman Director
COURAGE IN FILMMAKING
Haifaa Al-Mansour, Mary Shelley
Sara Colangelo, The Kindergarten Teacher
Sandra Luckow, That Way Madness Lies
Jennifer Fox, The Tale
COURAGE IN ACTING [Taking on unconventional roles that radically redefine the images of women on screen]
Helena Bonham Carter: 55 Steps
Viola Davis: Widows
Nicole Kidman: Destroyer
Melissa McCarthy: Can You Ever Forgive Me?
*ADRIENNE SHELLY AWARD: For a film that most passionately opposes violence against women
Call Her Ganda
I Am Not A Witch
On Her Shoulders
Say Her Name: The Life And Death Of Sandra Bland
*JOSEPHINE BAKER AWARD: For best expressing the woman of color experience in America
If Beale Street Could Talk
Life And Nothing More
The Hate U Give
Widows
*KAREN MORLEY AWARD: For best exemplifying a woman’s place in history or society, and a courageous search for identity
93 Queen
On The Basis Of Sex
Roma
Woman Walks Ahead
*THE INVISIBLE WOMAN AWARD: [Performance by a woman whose exceptional impact on the film dramatically, socially or historically, has been ignored]
Yalitza Aparicio, Roma
Glenn Close, The Wife
Andrea Riseborough, Nancy
The Women Of Widows
BEST SCREEN COUPLE
A Star Is Born
Crazy Rich Asians
Disobedience
If Beale Street Could Talk
BEST FEMALE ACTION HEROES
Adrift
55 Steps
Black Panther
RGB
MOMMIE DEAREST WORST SCREEN MOM OF THE YEAR AWARD
Krista Allen, Party Mom
Toni Collette, Hereditary
Nicole Kidman, Destroyer
Jacki Weaver, Widows
BEST EQUALITY OF THE SEXES
Black Panther
Like Me
On The Basis Of Sex
Widows
BEST ANIMATED FEMALES
Incredibles 2
Liyana
Mary And The Witch's Flower
Mirai No Mirai
BEST FAMILY FILM
Eighth Grade
Incredibles 2
Science Fair
The Hate U Give
WFCC HALL OF SHAME
Bryan Singer
*ADRIENNE SHELLY AWARD: Adrienne Shelly was a promising actress and filmmaker who was brutally strangled in her apartment in 2006 at the age of forty by a construction worker in the building, after she complained about noise. Her killer tried to cover up his crime by hanging her from a shower20rack in her bathroom, to make it look like suicide. He later confessed that he was having a "bad day." Shelly, who left behind a baby daughter, had just completed her film Waitress, which she also starred in, and which was honored at Sundance after her death.
*JOSEPHINE BAKER AWARD: The daughter of a laundress and a musician, Baker overcame being born black, female and poor, and marriage at age fifteen, to become an internationally acclaimed legendary performer, starring in the films Princess Tam Tam, Moulin Rouge and Zou Zou. She also survived the race riots in East St. Louis, Illinois as a child, and later expatriated to France to escape US racism. After participating heroically in the underground French Resistance during WWII, Baker returned to the US where she was a crusader for racial equality. Her activism led to attacks against her by reporter Walter Winchell who denounced her as a communist, leading her to wage a battle against him. Baker was instrumental in ending segregation in many theaters and clubs, where she refused to perform unless integration was implemented.
*KAREN MORLEY AWARD: Karen Morley was a promising Hollywood star in the 1930s, in such films as Mata Hari and Our Daily Bread. She was driven out of Hollywood for her leftist political convictions by the Blacklist and for refusing to testify against other actors, while Robert Taylor and Sterling Hayden were informants against her. And also for daring to have a child and become a mother, unacceptable for female stars in those days. Morley maintained her militant political activism for the rest of her life, running for Lieutenant Governor on the American Labor Party ticket in 1954. She passed away in 2003, unrepentant to the end, at the age of 93.
CONTACT: Criticalwomen@gmail.com