The Academy Awards for Best Picture were announced last week and I've seen all but two of them (click on the title to read my commentaries for The Post, Darkest Hour, Call Me By Your Name, Lady Bird, The Shape of Water, Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri, and Dunkirk). Since I always like to see all of the nominees before the big ceremony I decided to cross the remaining two off my list this week. I started with Phantom Thread (which opened in SLC during Sundance) last night. In the glamorous fashion world of post-war London, the House of Woodcock is run by Reynolds (Daniel Day-Lewis), a difficult, self-indulgent, meticulous, and fastidious designer, and his sister Cyril (Lesley Manville). Women come and go in the self-proclaimed confirmed bachelor's life and he has Cyril dismiss them whenever they interfere with his genius. Then he meets Alma (Vicky Krieps), a free-spirited waitress who becomes his muse and, eventually, his lover. She immediately upsets his well-ordered world and it seems that she, too, will be dismissed but Alma gives as good as she gets in a twist that I honestly did not see coming. It is a film that, I suspect, will not appeal to everyone because it is more character driven than plot driven but I was absolutely enthralled by the constant volleying back and forth between the three characters for dominance. There is a scene where Reynolds takes Alma's measurements which, in my mind, is absolutely brilliant because it reveals each of the character's motivations without a word. Reynolds is consumed by his need to reinvent Alma, Cyril is coolly assessing her rival for Reynolds' attention, and Alma is hopeful that she will become more than just a model. I love Daniel Day-Lewis and he gives a mesmerizing performance (rumored to be his last). In one scene he is so incredibly debonair and charming that it is easy to see how a woman could be completely undone by just a smile but in the next he is a petulant child complaining about too much noise at breakfast and his steely gaze over the top of his glasses could reduce a woman to tears. He is simply riveting in every scene and I am sure that I will have to own a copy just to watch him work his magic over and over again. Krieps and Manville are also excellent, particularly in a scene where the two women have a battle of wills over a doctor's visit. The film is gorgeous to look at and I loved the swelling piano and strings of the score. Again, this film is not for everyone but it is right up my alley and I loved it!
Thursday, February 1, 2018
Monday, January 29, 2018
Sundance Film Festival 2018
Another successful Sundance Film Festival has concluded and I thoroughly enjoyed my experience this year. I was able to see fifteen films, including everything that I really wanted to see, and I liked them all, some more than others. My first film was You Were Never Really Here which stars Joaquin Phoenix as tormented hit man, suffering from PTSD as the result of an abusive childhood and his experiences as a soldier in Iraq, whose weapon of choice is a hammer. He is hired to rescue a young girl but, when the rescue goes awry, he discovers that he was set up and vows vengeance on everyone involved. It is a brutal but strangely beautiful film about a deeply flawed character finding redemption which is a favorite theme of mine. Next I saw Don't Worry, He Won't Get Far on Foot, another film starring Joaquin Phoenix. This is the true story about cartoonist John Callahan after he becomes paralyzed in an alcohol-related car accident. He uses his cartoons, which feature very dark humor, as a way of coping with his paralysis and as a means of achieving sobriety. Phoenix gives a riveting performance, as does Jonah Hill as his sponsor, and I liked the inclusion of Callahan's actual cartoons. My next film was Blindspotting which I picked because it stars Daveed Diggs (the original Lafayette/Jefferson in Hamilton). Diggs and Rafael Casal play Collin and Miles, two childhood best friends who now have a tense relationship. Collin has recently been released from prison and is about to complete his probation. We eventually learn that both of them committed the crime but, because Collin is black, he was the only one held responsible. There are a lot of themes explored in this film but I found it to be an incredibly powerful commentary about racism that resonated with me deeply. Diggs was at the Q&A after the film which just about blew my mind! Next up was Lizzie, one of my most anticipated films of the festival. It is a psychological thriller exploring the reasons behind the killing of Lizzie Borden's family. Both Chloe Sevigny and Kristen Stewart give outstanding performances and I haven't been able to stop thinking about it since I saw it. Another highly anticipated film was Colette, which tells the true story of one of the most celebrated writers from the Belle Epoque. Keira Knightley stars in this lush bio-pic about a woman whose husband takes credit for her work until she eventually asserts her independence. I love a good period piece but this also taps into the current zeitgeist of female empowerment. Next, I was able to attend a free midnight screening of the documentary Believer about Dan Reynolds, the Imagine Dragons frontman, and his attempts to reconcile his LDS faith with the church's policy towards its LGTBQ members. This documentary is extremely well done and finds just the right balance between highlighting a significant problem within the church (suicide is currently the number one cause of death for young people in Utah) while still being respectful. I love Imagine Dragons and I really respect Dan Reynolds for the position he has taken. Last Monday my only film was Wildlife, the directorial debut of Paul Dano (who was at the Q&A after the film). In the late 1950s, a family with a history of moving from place to place has recently settled in a rural town in Montana. The teenage son must deal with the disintegration of his parents' marriage when his father leaves his mother on her own to fight wild fires. It is a simple but tragic story, anchored by an incredible performance by Carey Mulligan as a woman trapped by her circumstances. Tuesday night I saw Hereditary, a horror film about the devastating effect a mysterious woman's death has on her family. This film has an almost unbearable feeling of tension leading up to the final resolution. I like to be genuinely scared, rather than shocked, by horror films and this one legitimately scared me (and the rest of the audience as well because there was much nervous laughter and even screaming). On Wednesday I was able to take my students to a screening of Ophelia. In my opinion, Ophelia is the most thinly drawn character and her fate is the most unsatisfactory in Shakespeare's version so I found her backstory to be incredibly compelling and her final resolution to be empowering in this retelling. The film is beautiful and Daisy Ridley is fantastic in the title role. My only complaint is that the final duel deviated from Lisa Klein's novel (upon which the film is based), turning what could have been a powerful moment into a silly slow-motion melodrama. On Saturday I had three films! The first was An Evening With Beverly Luff Linn which is a comedy of the absurd. I don't even know how to describe this farce except to say that the over-the-top performances by Aubrey Plaza, Emile Hirsch, and Jemaine Clement made me laugh out loud. The next film was The Miseducation of Cameron Post, starring Chloe Grace Moretz in a truly affecting performance as a young woman who is sent by her Evangelical family to a gay conversion camp after she is found having sex with a girl. It is a poignant look at a group of teens learning to accept themselves. The last film of the day was Puzzle which, surprisingly, ended up being a favorite from the festival. Kelly Macdonald plays a wife and mother living an uneventful life in the suburbs who discovers a passion for jigsaw puzzles which leads to her awakening. Who knew that a character driven film about completing puzzles could be so compelling? As director Marc Turtletaub stated in the Q&A, it is a coming-of-age story about a 40 year old woman and I really liked it. Yesterday I also had three films, beginning with Hearts Beat Loud. I loved this film so much! It is a tender story about a father-daughter relationship starring Nick Offerman and Kiersey Clemons and it is just lovely! During the summer before she leaves for college, a young woman begins writing songs with her father and, when one of them becomes popular on Spotify, he tries to compel her to stay in order get a record deal until he realizes that he needs to let her go. I absolutely loved the scene where Frank hears their song being played in a coffee shop! The next film was The Happy Prince, starring Rupert Everett as Oscar Wilde during the last years of his life after being imprisoned for gross indecency. Everett gives an amazing performance but I sometimes found the timeline to be a bit muddled as it is framed by Wilde's recollections on his deathbed interspersed with nonlinear flashbacks. As a teacher of British literature, I really loved the use of Wilde's writings as voice-over narration throughout the film. My final film of the festival was The Catcher Was a Spy which was a highly coveted ticket. Paul Rudd plays Moe Berg, a major league baseball player who joins the OSS during World War II and is tasked with determining whether Germany is building an atomic bomb. I thought the ending was a bit anticlimactic but I enjoyed it as a fan of espionage films. It was a wonderful ten days and, as always, my favorite part was talking to the people I met in line. My favorite conversation was with two really cool guys about the brilliance of A Ghost Story which screened at Sundance last year! I can hardly wait for next year!
Saturday, January 27, 2018
Utah Opera's Moby-Dick
Utah Opera’s premiere of Heggie and Scheer’s Moby-Dick had three strikes against it. First, Herman Melville’s novel, upon which the opera is based, is definitely not my favorite. As an English teacher it pains me to admit that I have never actually made it all of the way through. I find the endless minutiae about the whaling industry to be mind numbingly dull. Second, I am not usually a fan of modern operas sung in English. I much prefer the classics sung in German and Italian. Third, the run of this opera coincided with the Sundance Film Festival and I didn’t think I would be able to fit it in. However, the more I learned about the production the more intrigued I became and I decided to get a ticket. Last night I interrupted my Sundance screenings to see it and I am so glad that I did because it is brilliant! Surprisingly, I found the condensed version of the novel performed on the Capitol Theatre stage to be anything but dull. I was completely captivated by the story of an obsession for vengeance. When the Pequod sets sail from Nantucket, the crew is excited about the riches they will earn, Greenhorn (Joshua Dennis), a newcomer to whaling, is eager for the adventure of seeing the world, Queegueg (Musa Ngqungwana) longs to see his island in the South Pacific again, and Starbuck (David Adam Moore) laments the dangers of whaling and fears that he will never see his wife and son again. Soon Captain Ahab (Roger Honeywell) tells them that the real mission is to find the white whale that took his leg and offers a gold doubloon to the sailor who spots Moby Dick first. When the crew is about to harpoon a whale, Ahab orders them to stop because it isn’t his whale. Three months later the crew is bored and prone to fighting so Starbuck demands that Ahab let them hunt. After spearing a whale, Starbuck pleads with Ahab to return to Nantucket to repair the leaking oil barrels and to seek medical attention for the cabin boy Pip (Jasmine Habersham) who was thrown overboard. Ahab refuses and Starbuck contemplates killing him before his obsession dooms them all. Ahab descends further into madness and, when the whale is finally spotted, deems it his destiny to kill it himself in an epic battle which kills everyone on board except Greenhorn who utters these immortal words when he is rescued: "Call me Ishmael." The music is beautiful and haunting and I especially loved it when the chorus chants "Death to Moby Dick." All of the principals sing their roles brilliantly and I was struck by the pathos in every performance, particularly by Moore! The men's chorus not only sings but does an outstanding job with the choreography to convey the movement on a ship, whether it is raising the sails, harpooning a whale, rendering the blubber into oil, or riding out a storm. The sets and costumes were constructed by Utah Opera and they are fantastic. Finally, the build up to the battle between the whale and Ahab is intense and I was not disappointed with the special effects (which I will not spoil for those still planning to see it) in this scene. I was very pleasantly surprised by how much I loved this opera and I highly recommend getting a ticket to the final performance on Sunday.
Friday, January 26, 2018
Cash on Delivery at HCT
Wednesday night I took a little break from the Sundance Film Festival to see Cash on Delivery, a lighthearted slap-stick comedy, at Hale Centre Theatre. Eric Swann (Bryan Dayley) began defrauding the office of Social Services by accepting payments for nonexistent lodgers at his house two years ago after losing his job at the Electric Company. Social Services, becoming suspicious of so many payments being sent to the same residence, sends Mr. Jenkins (Mark Fotheringham) to investigate. Swann enlists the help of his actual lodger Norman McDonald (Greg Larsen) and his uncle George (George Anderson) in order to keep up the ruse with not only Jenkins but his wife (Michelle Linn Hall), Norman's fiancee (Shannon Ricks), a grief counselor (Margie Johnson), an enthusiastic undertaker (Ben Parkes), a marriage counselor (David Marsden), and Jenkins' superior Ms. Cowper (Alison W. Henriksen). Chaos ensues as each of them are forced to tell one outrageous lie after another and impersonate fictional characters, including one who is supposed to be deaf and two who are supposed to be dead, until the whole thing unravels with hilarious consequences. At one point, I couldn't remember who was impersonating whom! I laughed and laughed at all of their antics! Every member of the cast, especially Dayley and Larsen, has impeccable comedic timing and the British accents are entirely believable. The physical comedy is an absolute hoot, especially when one of the characters who is pretending to be dead is stuffed into a window seat and I always love a comedy that features lots of slamming doors. My only complaint is that I couldn't see some of the action because a large couch blocked my view from the left side of the stage (perhaps the scenic designers are so used to creating sets for the theater-in-the-round that they need some practice for a more traditional stage). It was such a fun evening and I highly recommend this show but, as always, tickets are going fast (go here).
Note: This was quite the departure from all of the dark and edgy films I've been seeing at Sundance!
Note: This was quite the departure from all of the dark and edgy films I've been seeing at Sundance!
Thursday, January 25, 2018
Sundance Student Screening 2018
I have a wonderful group of seniors this year! I had a lot of the students as sophomores two years ago so I had an instant rapport with them. They trust me and so they are willing to share their opinions and discuss the pieces of literature that we read. Last semester we read Hamlet and we had some epic discussions about characterization. One of the things I asked them to think about as we read was if they thought the characters were the architects of their own doom. They came to the conclusion that all of the characters deserve their fate except for Ophelia. The girls, especially, were really angry about her treatment because they saw her as a pawn for all of the men in her life. Some of the students were so interested in Ophelia as a character that I eventually recommended the novel Ophelia, by Lisa Klein, which tells the story from her perspective. Imagine my surprise when some of them starting reading it (one girl asked for it for Christmas!). This is why I do what I do! Every year I am given tickets to a student screening at the Sundance Film Festival and I was emailed a list of films to choose from in early December. I noticed that there was a film called Ophelia and, when I read the description, I realized that it was based upon Klein's novel. Of course I had to choose it and, when I announced it to my students, they cheered out loud. My 50 allotted tickets were claimed within days and they have been so excited, practically counting down the days! We were able to see the film yesterday and to say that the students loved it would be an understatement. They discussed it all the way home on the bus! It is so special to me to be able to share my love of film with my students and the fact that they were so engaged with this particular film is something that I will never forget! I have had so many wonderful experiences at the Sundance Film Festival this year (a full wrap-up is coming soon) but this tops them all! A huge thank you to the Sundance Institute for offering these screenings to students free of charge.
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