Discland
edited by Jonathan Doyle
Mafioso (The Criterion Collection, 3.18.2008) Nino Badalamenti is a supervisor in a car manufacturing plant who hasn't taken a vacation in over two years. On his way out the door to visit his beloved childhood hometown of Sicily -- with his blonde wife and daughters -- Nino is handed a package by his boss and asked to deliver it to a powerful and influential Sicilian gangster named Don Vincenzo. Once in Sicily, Nino has a hoot seeing friends and family, but his wife has trouble fitting in and is unfairly dismissed as a snob by Nino's family. Even more worrisome, Nino finds himself entangled in an intricate web of secret mafioso dealings and is eventually sent on an unexpectedly... elaborate errand. (continued)

Upcoming


July 2

Hancock

July 3

The Whackness

July 4

Diminished Capacity

Gonzo: The Life and Work of Hunter S. Thompson

Holding Trevor

Kabluey

We are Together

July 9

Full Battle Rattle

July 11

A Man Named Pearl

August

Eight Miles High

Garden Party

Harold

Hellboy II: The Golden Army

Journey to the Center of the Earth

Meet Dave

Roman Polanski: Wanted and Desired

The Stone Angel

July 18

A Very British Gangster

Before I Forget

The Dark Knight

The Doorman

Felon

Lou Reed's Berlin

Mad Detective

Mamma Mia!

Space Chimps

Take

Transsiberian

July 22

Two Tickets to Paradise

July 23

Boy A




 

"Young at Heart"

I can't write about this until tomorrow, but the hype has turned out to be absolutely true -- Stephen Walker's Young@Heart is the reigning heart movie of the LA. Film Festival (and in both senses of the term, delivering both warmth and sadness) and will be a guaranteed winner when it goes out commercially.


And sooner or later, trust me, it will do that. If it comes out later this year, it's almost guaranteed to end up as one of the five nominees for Best Feature Documentary. I'm serious. It's not a "great" documentary, but it touches you big-time.

I'm just going run John Anderson's Variety review for now (it went up last night), and put something up myself over the weekend.

"Viewers have seen a lot of rock 'n' rollers onstage carrying bottles, but they're not usually full of oxygen," John begins. "Of course, the average age of most rock groups isn't 80, as it is for the subjects of Young@Heart, an irresistibly joyous, tearful and, most importantly, musical doc about a band of senior pop singers whose repertoire includes 'Golden Years, 'Should I Stay or Should I Go' and 'Stayin' Alive.' Theatrical odds may be long, but no one would exit this British TV production feeling they'd wasted their money.

"The narration, by director Stephen Walker, suggests an NPR feature, and the episodic structure is pretty pat -- several members of the Young@Heart chorus are picked out for closer study during the six-week lead-up to their annual public performance. But the performers are all charmers, singing or just speaking their way through music by Radiohead, Jimi Hendrix, the Clash and James Brown.

"When asked, those performers admit a preference for classical music, but when they attack a song like the Ramones' 'I Wanna Be Sedated,' they do so with passion. Gusto. They throw away their walkers.

"Where Young@Heart goes totally right is its inclusion of special music videos directed by the film's producer, Sally George, which feature the aforementioned Ramones song as well as Talking Heads' 'Road to Nowhere.' The very image of these aging headbangers in an MTV format is funny and melancholy -- two members die during the final week before the big show, and membership is euphemistically said to be 'in flux.'

"But their humor is so genuine and their enthusiasm so infectious, it would seem impossible for an aud not to be swept away -- especially when, following the death of one member, the group sings 'Forever Young' at a prison near their base in Northhampton, Mass.

"The leader of the group is the much younger Bob Cilian, who's a "taskmaster," as one member puts it. Cilian gets frustrated during the weeks-long rehearsals of the Pointer Sisters' 'Yes We Can Can,' the song's 70-odd 'cans' confusing the group (and at least one viewer). Eventually, though, most of the kinks are worked out.

"Production values are fine, if not spectacular, but applying a high gloss to Young@Heart wouldn't make sense, anyway."

"Transformers"<< previous | next >>Joel Siegel is dead

Posted by Jeffrey Wells on June 29, 2007 at 03:01 PM

comment #1

Edward [TypeKey Profile Page] says ...

'I Wanna Be Sedated,' Hilarious. I'm there.

Posted by Edward [TypeKey Profile Page] at June 29, 2007 04:17 PM

comment #2

T.Holly [TypeKey Profile Page] says ...

"Indie films crave great reviews," and somewhere between the critical sushi we devour and the long critiques we (I) don’t have time to read, lies John Anderson's instantly brilliant, compact reviews; lots of them, except when he’s on vacation.

Posted by T.Holly [TypeKey Profile Page] at June 29, 2007 04:26 PM

comment #3

T.Holly [TypeKey Profile Page] says ...

HE and Microsoft word don't mix well. I hate Bill Gates too.

Posted by T.Holly [TypeKey Profile Page] at June 29, 2007 04:36 PM

comment #4

cjKennedy [TypeKey Profile Page] says ...

If you click on Tools, AutoCorrect and 'AutoFormat as you type' then uncheck 'straight quotes with smart quotes' you'll fix the "satanic symbol for apostrophe" problem when pasting from Word.

Feel free to continue hating Bill Gates though.

Posted by cjKennedy [TypeKey Profile Page] at June 29, 2007 09:07 PM

comment #5

MAGGA [TypeKey Profile Page] says ...

I hate to admit this, because pre-judging movies should be a crime, but a movie about aging wannabe-rockers makes me want to stay as far away from the cinema as I can, and I would bet that applies to a lot of people. If the word keeps being good we will be obligated to see it, of course

Posted by MAGGA [TypeKey Profile Page] at June 30, 2007 02:33 AM

comment #6

cjKennedy [TypeKey Profile Page] says ...

Don't feel bad MAGGA, when I was deciding what to see at LAFF I specifically remember reading the blurb, laughing snarkily and moving on. There are just so many ways this kind of material could go horribly wrong.

Posted by cjKennedy [TypeKey Profile Page] at June 30, 2007 09:04 AM

comment #7

George Prager [TypeKey Profile Page] says ...

CAUTION: NO ONE WILL BE SEATED DURING THE TERRIFYING COLOSTOMY BAG SEQUENCE.

Posted by George Prager [TypeKey Profile Page] at June 30, 2007 09:32 AM

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