Author: Louise McLeod Tabouis

  • The Cannes Film Festival In Two Days

    The Cannes Film Festival In Two Days

    For those who didn’t make it to the Cannes Film Festival this year, Cannes came to Paris for a weekend. Not much sun or heat, but most of the films in competition as well as a taste of ‘Un Certain Regard’, the alternate selection from little-known and less classic film makers. Strong women, amateur detectives, confessions, vulnerability and a lot of iPhone are what I recollect from the 15 hours of films I binged on. Here are a few films from the selection, which will hopefully be making their way to UK screens sometime soon.

    La Fille Inconnue (The Unknown Girl) is writer-director Luc & Jean-Pierre Dardenne’s 10th feature film, after making about 60 documentaries together. The Belgian brothers, also prolific producers (they have five films in competition this year including I, Daniel Blake) would apparently like us to forget their first few films, as they really hit their stride with Rosetta, winning the Palme d’Or at Cannes in 1999 and then again in 2005 for The Child.

    Dr Jenny Davin (Adèle Haenel) runs a walk-in community practice in the grimness of Seraing, half an hour from Liege. The soundtrack is passing traffic, and the view is a constant grey sky. While berating her intern about doctors not become emotionally involved with patients, she chooses not to answer an after-hours ring on the surgery door. Informed the next day that a young woman has died and with the CCTV camera at her door proving that the dead woman was the person who rang, Jenny’s quest to establish the girl’s identity is initially motivated by guilt. As she uncovers more of the town’s underbelly she shows an admirable relentless determination and fearlessness, as well as the life of an overworked doctor. One which is at times morally ambiguous, taking on the desperation of the patients as they confess their secrets with imposed confidentiality.

    The Dardenne’s signature look is one without artifice.  They are the Belgian version of Ken Loach, with less laughter and no background music. Strong stories, the grind of daily life and glimpses of compassion. Inspired by news items, they confront social realities, and constantly produce intriguing and morally complex films.

    Another film featuring a strong female protagonist was Aquarius from Brazilian director Kleber Mendonça Filho. His first feature film was O Som ao Redor (Neighbouring Sounds) released in 2013, receiving numerous awards.

    Facing the Brazilian beach of Recife, Clara (Sonia Braga) is the last remaining inhabitant of her apartment block, Aquarius. Seen as old by some and vintage by others, a developer has his eye on it and is waiting for Clara to move on. Spanning 30 years, the film depicts Clara’s life, home and her amazing hair. The underlying story is about the relationship we have with our family, the sometimes easier relationship we have with our extended family, and the people around us who we like to think of as family. Clara has embraced life, health and the struggles she has encountered along the way.  The Brazilians attending the screening were as fired up as Clara by the end, storming to the front of the cinema with placards in support of suspended Brazilian president Dilma Roussef.

    American Honey from British director Andrea Arnold, who for the third time has won the Jury Prize. It is the story of a teenager named Star (Sasha Lane) and her attempt to get out of her poverty-driven, dumpster-diving existence in which she has been forced. Choosing to join a mini-van of teenagers selling magazine subscriptions, she travels across the US for a summer, keeping an observant eye on everything and everyone. Arnold manages to constantly surprise in this almost three-hour road movie, as we experience the seediness and adventure through Star’s weary yet hopeful eyes.

    Cannes
    Cannes

    Olivier Assayas’ film Personal Shopper shared the award for direction. Maureen (Kristen Stuart) is a miserable young woman in Paris, waiting for a sign from her dead brother. Half the film is a close up of her iPhone texts and the other half is her whingeing and being unpleasant to most people she encounters. Sometimes there is a level of unhappiness that shouldn’t be shared with the world. It’s boring enough having a friend text while you’re with them, but this was worse – having to read the dull conversation as Maureen typed. And that was only half the problem.

    Iranian writer, director and producer Asghar Farhadi won two awards for his film Forushande, (The Salesman). You may remember  Forushande who received a Golden Globe Award and an Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film for his 2011 film A Separation. At Cannes, his film won two awards: Best screenplay and best actor for Shahab Hosseini.  Emad (Shahab Hosseini) and Rana (Taraneh Alidousti) have to urgently leave their Teheran apartment when the building starts collapsing. Their new apartment brings with it unexpected trouble, due to a dubious and mysterious ex-tenant. Emad becomes a compelling detective in order to get to the bottom of a horrible event that has disturbed their previously ordered and happy life. Juxtaposed with this are the scenes from the production of Arthur Miller’s ‘Death of a Salesman’, the play Emad and Rana are currently performing with their semi-professional company. Layered stories, complex characters, and an intriguing mystery keep this film interesting.

    And the winner of the Palme d’Or, the major prize at Cannes was I, Daniel Blake. Daniel Blake (Dave Johns) is the creation of writer-director Ken Loach and co-writer Paul Laverty and a film that is impossible to ignore.

    Cannes

    Following a heart attack, carpenter Daniel Blake is forced to take time off. In order to exist during this unpaid time off he signs on for sickness benefits, and enters the world of the Jobcentre, so illogical, inhumane and robot-like, that despite his authentic good cheer and willingness, he cannot accept what he is being asked to do – search for a job that he has been told not to do – and get through the red-tape. A man unwillingly involved in an unnecessarily complex system, so grinding and desperate that apparently people opt out – accepting homelessness and foodbanks – in order to save themselves.

    Katie (Hayley Squires) is defended and subsequently befriended by Daniel in the job centre. Accompanied by her two children, she has moved to Newcastle from London to try and keep her life together and provide space for her children. Stand-up comic Dave Johns is outstanding. The addition of his low-key, dry humour to this grim story makes the character of Daniel Blake so likeable and therefore more poignant.

  • Review: Chicken (UK, 2014, 86mins)

    Review: Chicken (UK, 2014, 86mins)

    Chicken (UK, 2014, 86 mins)

    Polly and his neurologically atypical younger brother Richard, share a sorrowful caravan on a hill in the country. Isolated and surviving despite lacking most of their basic needs – food, money, affection, connection, clean water – they manage to coexist until the day Annabel, their new neighbour, arrives. The breakthrough is glorious, desolate, honest, and worth waiting for.

    Based on the play of the same name that had a quick 5-day London run, with script by Chris New and additional writing by Freddie Machin, Chicken stars Yasmin Paige, Morgan Watkins and the excellent Scott Chambers.

    Despite being made on a smallish budget, a third of what director/producer Joe Stephenson had hoped to get, Chicken is a beautifully filmed (Eben Bolter DOP), aesthetically sensitive, tragically unnerving and tender story.

    Joe Stephenson made his debut with the short The Alchemistic Suitcase (2009). He then directed four episodes of the Sky Arts series In Love With… (2012). Chicken is his first completed feature film. He is in development on a biopic of Noel Coward.

    Chicken has screenings in various cinemas around the UK commencing on 20th May.

    ‘An impressive feature debut for young British director Joe Stephenson (who is now in pre- production on a much-hyped Noel Coward biopic set to star Ian McKellen and Vanessa Redgrave) about optimistic 15-year-old Richard – troubled with learning difficulties – and his restless and abusive older brother. When Richard falls for 17-year-old Annabel (Yasmin Paige, from Submarine) the relationship between the brothers is stretched to breaking point, family secrets are revealed and life for Richard starts to finally change direction.’

    Available to rent and buy from Friday 12th August with behind-the-scenes extras on www.wearecolony.com/chicken.

  • Short Film Review: INFINITE (2016)

    Short Film Review: INFINITE (2016)

    Lowkey Films, created two years ago by three filmmakers shooting short films in their back garden, has produced Infinite, a 15-minute film written and directed by Connor O’Hara. Using a simple and interesting premise, O’Hara has filmed an unusual subject.  A group of five long-term friends gather together to make their memories and experiences of each other symbolic and memorable.

    Cementing their friendship in the universe, if you like. Showing young men as vulnerable as well as capable of expressing affection is unfortunately rarely seen on screen. O’Hara has successfully done both, as well as integrating a conversation about the often avoided subject of death. Infinite managed to attract a great cast and crew, and the film reflects this.

    Have a look at Lowkey Films site for more of Connor O’Hara’s films. www.lowkeyfilms.co.uk

  • Review – Painting The Modern Garden: Monet To Matisse

    Review – Painting The Modern Garden: Monet To Matisse

    Monet to Matisse (2016)

    When I arrived in Paris as a 19 year old, one of the first things I did was go and visit Claude Monet’s house and garden situated at Giverny, 45 miles west of Paris. It was a hot day in July and despite the crowds it was possible to find a cool quiet corner and sit amongst the swaying blocks of vivid flowers, under a weeping willow listening to the bees while contemplating the lilies on the pond, and the paintings that Monet produced in response to the garden that he created.

    James Priest, head gardener at Giverny, speaks of Monet’s garden as one that shakes you up, the colours both contrast and combine to provide the opposite of the tasteful English garden. Monet, influenced by 19th century English garden designers and particularly William Robinson, experimented with exotic flowers and the wildness at Giverny is a sign of this, allowing plants to express themselves in a natural way, in contrast to the formal French style of gardening of the same period. Tom Coward, head gardener at William Robinson’s former home, Gravetye Manor, Sussex, evokes with warmth and enthusiasm the pleasure of a garden, the choice of shape and colour and the vision.  Interestingly, the creation of these beautiful gardens coincided with the availability of new hybrids, dahlias for example, as well as exotic seeds provided by travelling purveyors, which Monet used profusely, much to the consternation of some of his suspicious neighbours. As well as Monet’s garden, Bickerstaff’s film takes us on a tour of the magnificent gardens of other artists.

    The exhibition of the same name, which features throughout the film, has managed to gather an astounding collection of paintings from all over the world including work by Pissarro, Tissot, Renoir, Van Gogh, Liebermann, Klimt and Sorolla amongst many others.

    David Bickerstaff has created both a beautiful and engaging film with the lush images being the key. They perfectly capture the experience of visiting these gardens. The film is many things: an inspirational lesson in gardening, an introduction to the modernism in 19th century art as well as an excellent companion to the exhibition currently at the Royal Academy of Art.

    PAINTING THE MODERN GARDEN: Monet to Matisse opens in cinemas nationally, today.

    William Robinson’s house Gravetye Manor, is now a hotel and restaurant, with its magnificent garden restored by Tom Coward: http://www.gravetyemanor.co.uk/manor/garden

    The Hackney Picturehouse will be hosting a special screening of the film on April 18 at 18h15: https://www.picturehouses.com/cinema/Hackney_Picturehouse/film/exhibition-on-screen-painting-the-modern-garden

    You have until April 20 to see the exhibition at the Royal Academy: https://www.royalacademy.org.uk/exhibition/painting-modern-garden-monet-matisse

    www.exhibitiononscreen.com

  • Faithful: Review

    Faithful: Review

    Faithful has a psychic medium.

    Not too many films have been made which include a psychic medium. Some of the unforgettable ones feature in Poltergeist (1982, Tobe Hooper), The Sixth Sense (1999, M.Night Shyamalan) and The Changeling (1980 Peter Medak).

    Rory Alexander Stewart’s Daffy, the excellent Jenna O’Neill, does not disappoint. The mixture of her underlying creepiness mixed with the gentleness she displays in the well-chosen suburban church-hall, means her character remains enigmatic. An old friend she crosses paths with remains dubious. How do we know if she is telling the truth and does it really matter? Daffy sees herself as being helpful. With her crowd of eagerly awaiting onlookers, she delivers messages, occasional responses and resolution.

    Rory Alexander Stewart has created a well-scripted and tight 15-minute film. A student at The National Film and Television School, he has made other intriguing short films including Misery Guts, Good Girl and Wyld, working with a great group of actors – Jenna O’Neill, Ainslie Henderson and Julie Speers.

    His films have attracted a well-deserved array of awards.