American #998 (Dallas to JFK) appears to be leaving on time. (Surprise.) Except my “window seat” (12A) doesn’t have a window…terrific. JFK arrival around 7:15 pm. A train, Metro North, etc.
“On the whole, I’d rather be in Tunbridge Wells.” — Dryden (Claude Rains) in Lawrence of Arabia.
After debuting at the Toronto Film festival on 9.12, Edward Berger‘s All Quiet On The Western Front will stream on Netflix on 10.28.22. Germany’s submission for the Best International Feature Film Oscar costars Daniel Brühl, Albrecht Schuch, Sebastian Hülk, Felix Kammerer, Aaron Hilmer, Edin Hasanovic and Devid Striesow.
Thanks again to Telluride’s JulieHuntsinger for her classy, cultured programming picks (corralled under tough circumstances), gracious hospitality and never-say-die ebullience.
The last four days felt warm, familial and kinda glorious. For the most part I managed to put aside my enraged feelings about wokester critics (many of whom won’t even admit to their prejudicial “big changes!” agenda) and just submitted to the high–altitudesatori of it all. Happy to be here…to be alive.
In terms of genuine movie excitement did Telluride ‘22 seem relatively thin? Aside from HE’s idea of the Big Five — EmpireofLight, Close, Tar (despite certain reservations), Bardo (ditto) and ArmageddonTime — some felt that way.
I would’ve loved to have seen TheWhale, SheSaid, Banshees of Inisherin, Blonde, The Greatest Beer Run Ever, White Noise, TheFabelmans and even Don’tWorryDarling. But that’s the rough-and-tumble of programming early fall festivals.
SebastiánLeilo’sTheWonder is a somber, better-than-decent, glacially-paced period drama.
Set in rural Ireland of 1862, it’s about a struggle between the oppression of strict Irish Catholic dogma vs. a woman’s common humanity. I respected the effort, and certainly admired Florence Pugh’s performance as a willful, FlorenceNightingale-trained nurse. Perfect period sets. All the supporting perfs pass muster.
For me the standout visual element is the raw Irish countryside, and particularly those 16 or 17 shots of Pugh trudging across said terrain. After the sixth or seventh shot I was reminded of that magnificent2009Johnnie Walkercommercial with Robert Carlyle (i.e., “The Walk”)…5 & 1/2 minutes, a single tracking shot upon a gravel path in rural Scotland, brilliant choreography, a legend in the annals of advertising.
“What’s convincing is how easily Styles sheds his pop-star flamboyance, even as he retains his British accent and takes over one party scene by dancing as if he were in a ’40s musical.
“There’s actually something quite old-fashioned about Styles. With his popping eyes, floppy shock of hair, and saturnine suaveness, he recalls the young Frank Sinatra as an actor. It’s too early to tell where he’s going in movies, but if he wants to he could have a real run in them.”
The Styles film to really watch, in other words, is My Policeman:
Variety‘s Clayton Davis has gone apeshit over Lukas Dhont‘s Close, which I raved about from Cannes on 5.27.22. Clayton may not have seen Casablanca, but he’s definitely speaking the truth about Close. There’s no ducking it — this film is a masterpiece, and the people who are saying it’s too triggering are looking at it from an overly political perspective.
Immediately following is a 4pm Galaxy screening of Sebastian Lelio’s The Wonder (103 minutes), which stars Florence Pugh.
I’ll have a two-and-a-half-hour break before the final screening, Laure de Clermont-Tonnerre‘s Lady Chatterly’s Lover (126 minutes), which stars the non-binary Emma Corrin. It begins at 8 pm at the Sheridan Opera House.
I’m planning to take dozens of photos and post as many as I see fit.
My Telluride Express shuttle leaves tomorrow morning at 7am. The Montrose-to-Dallas flight leaves at 10:15am, and the Dallas-to-JFK leaves at 2:37 pm, arriving at 7:15 pm.