TIFF FILM REVIEW: Michael Hazanavicius’s ‘The Artist’

Jean Dujardin and Bérénice Bejo in Michael Hazanavicius’ black-and-white marvel ‘The Artist’

By Ray Bennett

TORONTO – The word irresistible is bandied around a lot in reviews but it is the only way to describe Michael Hazanavicius’s marvellous black-and-white silent movie “The Artist”.

A treat for film lovers, it is set in Hollywood in the 1920s and tells of a headliner whose star is fading and a newcomer who is about to hit the heights as silent pictures give way to talkies.

Filmed in the boxy Academy ratio, the film was shot in colour and then adapted to sumptuous black-and-white with all the atmosphere of the time and the over-the-top screen acting that went with it. It is silent, but there some surprising and very funny tricks with sound.

Jean Dujardin, who starred in the director’s French spy spoofs, “OSS 117”, plays George Valentin, a gallant swashbuckler reminiscent of Douglas Fairbanks, whose derring-do is matched by his resourceful and equally talented Jack Russell terrier Uggie.

The film opens with a screening of Valentin’s latest smash hit and the handsome and debonair ham is shown as he takes in the applause of his adoring audience.

As the cameras flash outside the cinema, however, a jaunty young woman named Peppy Miller, played by Hazanavicius’ wife Bérénice Bejo, contrives to trip over the star and the fotogs egg the two on to share a kiss.

Headlines in the trades ask who is the mystery girl as Peppy lands a job as an extra in the same studio where Valentin works, and there’s a joyous scene in which, separated by a backdrop, they share dancing that leads to a meeting.

Enchanted, Valentin persuades his reluctant producer Al Zimmerman (John Goodman) to give her a job and another captivating sequence shows the pair doing retakes of a simple scene that they both fluff as they realise they have fallen in love.

It’s romantic and silly and utterly beguiling. But Zimmerman decides to make only talkies from then on and Valentin elects to try to buck the trend without success. The film follows his downward spiral as Peppy’s career takes off and there will be tears and much laughter before the exhilarating climax.

Guillaume Schiffman’s cinematography is filled with ravishing black-and-white images that evoke not only the days of silent films but also the way movies will develop into the ’40s with homages to Orson Welles pictures and more.

French composer Luduvic Bource provides a vast range of musical styles to capture the comedy, drama and pathos, and the director adds many cues from top composers from Hollywood’s golden age that only add to the fun. Buffs might object to the use of one of Bernard Herrmann’s themes from “Vertigo” in a crucial scene, but it works beautifully.

Goodman is perfectly pugnacious as the no-nonsense producer and James Cromwell evokes the character actors of the time with his droll performance as a loyal chauffeur. Familiar faces such as Penelope Ann Miller, Ed Lauter, Missy Pyle and Ed Lauter also contribute vivid moments.

The comic timing and lovely dancing that Dujardin and Bejo display will endear them to audiences who cherish movie entertainment of the highest order. There is a sly moment at the end when the French director reminds us how important Europeans were to the development of Hollywood.

There will be adoring audiences, and there will be awards.

Venue: Toronto International Film Festival; UK release: Dec. 30, Entertainment; Cast: Jean Dujardin, Berenice Bejo, John Goodman, James Cromwell, Penelope Ann Miller, Missi Pyle, Malcolm McDowell, Ed Lauter; Director, screenwriter: Michel Hazanavicius; Producer: Thomas Langmann; Director of photography: Guillaume Schiffman; Production designer: Laurence Bennett; Music: Ludovic Bource; Editors: Anne-Sophie Bion, Michel Hazanavicius; Costume designer: Mark Bridges; Executive producers: Daniel Delume, Antoine De Cazotte, Richard Middleton; Production: Thomas Langmann presents a La Petite Reine, Studio 37, La Classe Americaine, JD Prod, France3 Cinema, Jouror Production-uFilms co-production; UK rating 12A, runs 100 minutes.

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TIFF FILM REVIEW: ‘The Forgiveness of Blood’

Tristan Halilaj plays a teenager caught up in a violent family feud in 'The Forgiveness of Blood'

Joshua Marston’s “The Forgiveness of Blood” offers the Hatfields and the McCoys Albanian style taken seriously with a good deal of suspense. It screens tonight and Sunday at the Toronto International Film Festival, and at the BFI London Film Festival on Oct. 13.

By Ray Bennett

California-born filmmaker Joshua Marston, whose award-winning 2004 picture “Maria Full of Grace” dealt with Columbian drug dealing, turns his attention to the conflict between ancient traditions and modern life in Albania in “The Forgiveness of Blood.” Continue reading

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TIFF FILM REVIEW: Gus Van Sant’s ‘Restless’

Mia Wasikowska and Henry Hopper in Gus Vant's 'Restless'

By Ray Bennett

TORONTO – “Restless” is a regrettably lame title for Gus Van Sant’s little film about a love affair that flourishes in the face of death, which against the odds is insightful, witty and charming. Annabel is beautiful and delicate, and dying of cancer. Enoch is beautiful and delicate, and quite bonkers after surviving a car crash in which his parents were killed. It’s a romance doomed from the start, and it sounds insufferable. Continue reading

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TIFF: Sunshine, music and Liona Boyd at the CFC picnic

Liona Boyd and Ray Bennett at Norman Jewison’s annual CFC picnic during TIFF

One of the treats at the Toronto International Film Festival is Norman Jewison’s annual picnic at the Canadian Film Centre and it was a pleasure there today to meet the London-born Canadian classical guitarist Liona Boyd.

We have Notting Hill, Toronto and Los Angeles in common. I asked the acclaimed musician, who is now a singer/songwriter, about her film work and she recalled the time she played solo for Maurice Jarre when he scored Alfonso Arau’s 1995 Keanu Reeves picture “A Walk In The Clouds”.

She said she was in awe of the Los Angeles session players but was nonetheless disappointed not to see her name listed with the rest of the orchestra when the CD was released.

“Then I turned it over and saw that it said I was featured as a special guest of Maurice Jarre, and I felt very embarrassed,” she said.

Boyd has a new album due out and lots of her great recordings are still available widely. It’s all wonderful stuff.

Norman Jewison was on hand as usual to greet the hundreds that show up for a relaxed barbecue in the sunshine. There was an appropriate acknowledgment of 9/11 and then Jewison spoke about the growth and significance of the CFC, which he did so much to support. He noted that the movie business isn’t built on banks and financing, but on talent.

Henk Van der Kolk, one of the founders of TIFF, was there to promote a new film festival he will launch in Panama next April and Ron Base was there (with his Loblaws VP wife Kathy Lenhoff)  talking about his upcoming novel, the highly anticipated sequel “The Sanibel Sunset Detective Returns”

Here’s more about Liona Boyd and about Ron Base

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TIFF FILM REVIEW: ‘Moneyball’ starring Brad Pitt

Brad Pitt as Oakland A's general manager Billy Beane in Bennett Miller's 'Moneyball'

By Ray Bennett

TORONTO – “Moneyball” is very much about baseball, a traditional sports yarn about trying to beat the odds, but it is much more about family, breaking with tradition and economics, and it allows Brad Pitt to show again that he is not only a movie star but also an actor of substance. Continue reading

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TIFF FILM REVIEW: George Clooney’s ‘The Ides of March’

Ryan Gosling plays an idealistic political campaign worker in ‘The Ides of March’

By Ray Bennett

TORONTO – The title “The Ides of March” gives away what George Clooney thinks about politics: it’s a place where people will stab you in the front. As director, star and one of the writers, Clooney delivers an engrossing drama set during a US presidential campaign but his real story is about one man’s disillusionment.

Corruption in politics no longer shocks anyone so it’s thanks to a clever script and an intelligent performance by Ryan Gosling as an idealistic campaign press secretary named Stephen Myers who has his integrity compromised that the film works so well.

Most of the young politicos I have encountered are as ferociously cunning as veteran party schemers but the determination of Myers to do the right thing is credible due to Gosling’s initial earnest charm and brash confidence.

As the venal and unforgiving nature of the older pros causes the wool to fall from the young man’s eyes, Gosling’s demeanour turns to a chill blankness that gives a fairly prosaic turn of events considerable force. The shrewd arc of the plot peels the onion of devious plotting on all sides.

Based on a play titled “Farragut North” by Beau Willimon, the script by Clooney and Grant Heslov, and Willimon, establishes quickly the electric pace of the campaign for the Democratic candidacy of Pennsylvania Governor Mike Morris (Clooney).

Morris is almost too good to be true, a gleaming icon of liberalness whose position on all points matches Myers’ view of the way the world should be. Still, he’s in a tight race with right-win Senator Pulman and his campaign manager, Paul Zara (Philip Seymour Hoffman) has an equally wily and ruthless opponent in Pulman’s campaign manager Tom Duffy (Paul Giamati).

Clooney portrays Morris as many would imagine the star himself would be if he ever ran for office, except that the governor has a beautiful wife and children. He exudes integrity and authority, and as writer and director, the actor takes time for a small scene of endearing domesticity between husband and wife.

As we know from real events, political campaigns attract the brightest young men and women, and there’s always a nubile intern fresh from college. The usual pickup line usually involves asking simply which college football team the young woman supports, so that the sly question “Bearcat? Buckeye?” flatters not only her smarts but implies that she’s pretty enough to be a cheerleader.

Myers falls into that when blonde Molly Stearns (Evan Rachel Ward) makes her availability clear and when after a romp in a hotel room he answers the phone and dismisses her presence as the cleaning lady, she texts for future encounters by asking if he’d like his room cleaned.

As the race for endorsement in Ohio becomes more intense, the opposing campaign managers wheel and deal with the votes of an influential Ohio senator (Jeffrey Wright) vital to the outcome. When Molly becomes pregnant, Myers discovers that he’s not the only politico to forget one of his cardinal rules: Don’t fuck the interns.

Hoffman and Giamati are as good as you would expect as the two pros, Ward makes Molly captures Molly’s beguiling mix of sophistication and deep naivety and Marisa Tomei makes a telling contribution as a slick and conniving reporter.

Clooney’s direction is assured and the film is both insightful and entertaining. He also does something rare in movies these days – he employs Alexandre Desplat’s adept score to carry a scene. More than once, Clooney brings back the camera and eschews dialogue in favour of Desplat’s piano or guitar cues, and it works so well because his script makes it perfectly clear what is taking place.

Production designer Sharon Seymour gives verisimilitude to everything from the campaign bus to television studios, temporary offices, back rooms and seedy hotel rooms and cinematographer Phedon Papamichael frames it all vividly.

Venue: Toronto International Film Festival. US release Oct. 7 Columbia Pictures, UK release Oct. 28 eOne Films; Cast: Ryan Gosling, George Clooney, Philip Seymour Hoffman, Paul Giamati, Marisa Tomei, Jeffrey Wright, Evan Rachel Wood. Director: George Clooney; Writers: George Clooney & Grant Heslov, Beau Willimon, based on the play ‘Farragut North’ by Beau Willimon; Producers: Grant Heslov, George Clooney, Brian Oliver; Director of photography: Phedon Papamichael; Production designer: Sharon Seymour; Music: Alexandre Desplat; Editor, Stephen Mirrione; Costume designer: Louise Frogley; Executive producers: Nigel Sinclair, Guy East, Stephen Pevner, Leonardo DiCaprio, Jennifer Killoran, Todd Thompson, Nina Wolarsky, Barbara A. Hall; Production: Columbia Pictures and Cross Creek Pictures Present in Association with Exclusive Media Group and Crystal City Entertainment, a Smokehouse and Appian Way Production. US rating: R; runs 98 mins.

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WSA Discovery of the Year nominees announced

The World Soundtrack Awards have named the five nominees for their Discovery of the Year Award for 2011, to be presented during the 11th annual celebration and concert to be held at the end of the Ghent Film Festival in Belgium on Oct. 22.

The WSA presents the award each year to reward young talented composers and encourage them to develop further. The nominees are Alex Heffes for “The First Grader” and “The Rite”; the Chemical Brothers for “Hanna”; iZLER for “Hamill” and “Natural Selection”; Henry Jackman for “Gulliver’s Travels” and “X-Men: First Class”; and Christopher Paul Leonard-Morgan for “Limitless”.

Here’s what the WSA had to say about the nominees.

Alex Heffes wrote the music for, among others, the films “One Day in September” and “The Last King of Scotland”, both of which were Oscar winners. He has collaborated with Simon Boswell on more than 20 films and also counts Elton John and the boys from Blur among his colleagues. Heffes is competing here with his work for “The First Grader” and “The Rite”.

The Chemical Brothers need no introduction. This British dance group made its breakthrough in the noughties with a striking sound which is a mix of house and other styles. They also spent weeks at the top of the Belgian charts with hits such as “Galvanize”, “Do it Again” and “Hey Boy, Hey Girl”. At the WSA, they will compete for the Discovery of the Year Award with their soundtrack for “Hanna”.

iZLER is a Czech composer who grew up in England. He has collaborated with a range of composers including Marco Beltrami, and he has written music for several films and TV shows such as ER. iZLER has worked with several global stars including Robbie Williams, Ryan Adams and Kylie Minogue to mention just a few. He will compete in Ghent with “Hamill” and “Natural Selection”.

There is a very good chance that you have already heard music by Henry Jackman. He collaborated with his mentor, Hans Zimmer, on the music for “The Da Vinci Code”, “The Dark Knight”, “Kung Fu Panda” and various other films. Jackman has been composing alone since 2009, primarily for major Hollywood productions. With the music for “Gulliver’s Travels” and “X-Men: First Class”, Jackman also has a chance to scoop the Discovery of the Year Award.

Finally there is the Scot Christopher Paul Leonard-Morgan, who composes film music and also writes music for television programmes. He won a BAFTA award with his composition for “Pineapple”. In 2008, he was selected by the United States Olympic Committee to compose their Olympic song. He is the fifth contender for the Discovery of the Year Award with the music he composed for “Limitless”.

The winner of this award will get the opportunity to perform at the 12th WSA. At this year’s event, the Brussels Philharmonic – Flemish Radio Orchestra conducted by Dirk Brossé will perform music by Hans Zimmer, Howard Shore and Elliot Goldenthal. There also will be a few award-winning scores from disco king disco Giorgio Moroder as well as work by Abel Korzeniowski, winner of the Discovery and Public Choice Awards in 2010 (“A Single Man”).

The World Soundtrack Awards, which take place for the 11th time this year, are an annual celebration for everyone who loves film music. In addition to the Discovery of the Year Award, there also is an award for the best composer and the best composition (best song and best soundtrack).

These prizes are awarded by the World Soundtrack Academy, which is made up of 313 members from the international world of film music. There is also the Public Choice Award, which is elected through the website.

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Titles set for 16 days of movies at London Film Festival

The BFI London Film Festival announced the full schedule for its 55th edition to run Oct. 12-27 with a total of 204 fiction and documentary features, including 13 World Premieres, 18 International Premieres and 22 European Premieres.

There also will be screenings of 110 live action and animated shorts. Directors, cast members and crew will be on hand to talk about many of the films, the BFI said, and some  will take part in career interviews, master classes, and other special events.

Tickets go for the festival go on sale Sept. 26 and there will be tickets available on the day. Here is the festival’s announcement: Continue reading

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FILM REVIEW: ‘Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy’

Gary Oldman as George Smiley in the film version of ‘Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy’

By Ray Bennett

LONDON – The pleasures of a John le Carré novel on top of the sublime writing come less from plot than from atmosphere and character and that is why his best spy novels make splendid miniseries, not movies. “Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy” finally gets a film treatment but it is a choppy and unconvincing shadow of the celebrated 1979 BBC series.

The tale of a master spy brought out of retirement to find a traitor in the British secret service depends entirely on the affectations and misdirection of its key players, but while Swedish director Tomas Alfredson composes impressive images, he fails to grasp the subtleties of English as it is spoken by the silky and clubbable but sly and callous men who trade in espionage.

The script by Bridget O’Connor and Peter Straughan attempts to jam in every key move in an extremely complicated chess match while Alfredson relies on a large cast of blithe and assured British actors to fill in the blanks, not all of them with great success.

Gary Oldman would make a terrific spy due to his uncanny ability to disappear into the background. Sadly, that is not the best attribute for the lead character in a movie and his depiction of Smiley pales in comparison to earlier portrayals.

Unlike predecessors Alec Guinness, James Mason and Denholm Elliott, who each employed a tone of voice and nuanced expression that could speak volumes, Oldman plays the spymaster without a shred of intonation or insinuation. His face is utterly bland and his voice is the chipped ice of English gentry. That might work if the script gave him arch observations and poisoned darts to deliver, but it doesn’t.

Smiley embarks on the search for a traitor in 1970s British intelligence with the aplomb of an upper class British civil servant who has mislaid his pipe. We suspect that he knows far more than he lets on and he must have the cunning to gull the cleverest opposition or his boss, Control, played with exactly the right mix of bombast and guile by John Hurt, wouldn’t have assigned him the task. But Oldman reveals none of it.

Le Carré’s style is to linger at the edges of his story and let details accumulate as he drives toward the point. The film has no time to do that and so while Control starts the movie already dead, he shows up so often in flashbacks that he appears to be the one running the show. It’s especially confusing in an incongruous flashback party scene, not from the novel, in which his team of spies drunkenly flirt and sing Russian songs in mockery of their Cold War enemies.

Mark Strong plays Jim Prideaux, the agent whose betrayal and shooting in Budapest kick off the hunt for a Russian mole in Britain’s spy headquarters known as the Circus. His secret placement as a schoolteacher at a rural school resonates in the novel but just seems odd in the film, and while Strong sketches the character’s depth and intelligent, he has no time to develop that.

Neither do the others. Benedict Cumberbatch catches the idealistic naivety of Smiley’s young assistant, Peter Guillam, and Tom Hardy makes field agent Ricki Tarr brash and street-smart. But the suspects are all grey middle-aged men who don’t get to say much as the director relies on their recognisable faces to do the work. It’s never entirely clear, however, what they are doing, or why.

They include Colin Firth as Bill Haydon, Toby Jones as Percy Alleline, Ciaran Hinds as Roy Bland, Simon McBurney as Oliver Lacon, and David Dencik as Toby Esterhase, and you don’t need to have read the book to figure out which among them is the villain.

Production designer Maria Djurkovic gets the claustrophobic setting just right with everything slightly faded and seedy, while cinematographer Hoyte Van Hoytema makes the duplicitous world appear suitably murky. Alberto Iglesias provides an agile score that at times seems to give an appropriate and pleasing nod to the 1960s film music of John Dankworth.

World Premiere at the Venice International Film Festival, Sept. 5; Opens UK Sept. 16, US Dec. 9; Cast: Gary Oldman, Kathy Burke, Benedict Cumberbatch, David Dencik, Colin Firth, Stephen Graham, Tom Hardy, Ciarán Hinds, John Hurt, Toby Jones, Svetlana Khodchenkova, Simon McBurney, Mark Strong. Director: Tomas Alfredson; Producers: Executive Producers: Screenwriters: Bridget O’Connor & Peter Straughan, based on the novel by John le Carré; Director of photography: Hoyte Van Hoytema; Production designer: Maria Djurkovic; Music: Alberto Iglesias; Editor: Dino Jonsater; Costume designer: Jacqueline Durran; Producers: Tim Bevan, Eric Fellner, Robyn Slovo; Executive producers: Debra Hayward, Liza Chasin, Olivier Courson, Ron Halpern, John le Carré, Peter Morgan, Douglas Urbanski. Production: Working Title, Karla Films, Paradis Films, Kinowelt Filmproduktion; Distributors: Studiocanal (Optimum Releasing) (UK), Focus Features (US). UK rating: 15; US: R, running time 127 mins.

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Davies’s ‘Deep Blue Sea’ to close London Film Festival

Rachel Weisz stars in Terence Rattigan’s ‘The Deep Blue’ directed by Terence Davies

By Ray Bennett

Rachel Weisz will open and close the 55th BFI London Film Festival as she stars in “The Deep Blue Sea”, Terence Davies’ film of the Terence Rattigan play, which will screen on the final night on Oct. 27. The film will have its World Premiere at the Toronto International Film Festival on Sept. 11.

The festival already announced that “360”, in which Weisz stars with Jude Law and Anthony Hopkins, will open proceedings on Oct. 12.

Set in 1950s England, “The Deep Blue Sea” tells of a well-to-do wife (Weisz) of a prominent judge (Simon Russell Beale) who creates a scandal when she falls in love and runs off with a young air force pilot (Tom Hiddleston).

Davies, whose most recent feature film was “The House of Mirth” (2000), said that to get into the festival at all was “bliss” but to have the closing night spot was “sheer heaven!”

Festival Artistic Director Sandra Hebron called the film an “exquisite new feature from one of our most cherished directors”. She said, “Terence Davies is a filmmaker who the BFI has supported from the very beginnings of his career, and in Terence Rattigan’s centenary year, this beautifully directed and acted film is the perfect closing night film.”

Here’s more about the 55th BFI London Film Festival

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