Day 8: September 12
Sandler Mania at the Uptown - people
going NUTS for the boy. Go figure. PTA, meanwhile, saunters up Bloor street
unnoticed by the crowd. Who ever thought that the brightest star of this year's
fest would be Happy Gilmore himself?
Magdalene Sisters Directed by Peter
Mullan
Yet another fest film that in less capable hand would be
nothing short of trite and pedantic. Instead, Magdelene proves to be
touching, potent, and incredibly human in its emotional complexity. The tale of
"fallen" girls sent to a convent after toying with the evils of boys
(encounters that weren't always of their choosing), this is a strange mix of a
coming-of-age film and prison drama, a female Great Escape without the
banter (or motorcycle). A film I was very trepidations about that instead
proved to be a memorable film experience. Grade: B+

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Punch Drunk Love Directed by: Paul
Thomas Anderson
This film surprised me a lot.
Sure, the
casting alone is worthy of much copy, and, yeah, it's coming off two huge
critically successful films, but, hey, I just feared in my gut it wouldn't be
so good. Oh, it's good. And really, well, short.
PDL is a
90 minute PTA film, which is basically just warming up for his other pics.
Someone described it beautifully as a story thread from Magnolia that
probably would have taken up about 10 minutes of screen time in that epic
piece. Punch Drunk never feels stretched, however, and is a taut
meditation upon love and rage.
Watson is simply radiant with her goofy
and beautiful smile, while Sandler's psychotic nice-guy schtick makes for some
really great moments. The blue suit alone makes the film worth seeing, and
there are some really lovely bits of photography and music that makes this a
fine addition to the young boys filmmaking canon.
If I have one
complaint, it's the damn trailer - it spoils basically all "plot" from the film
in a concise three minute burst, removing many of the pleasant surprises. Avoid
the trailer, see the flick. Grade: A

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Dolls Directed by: Takeshi
Kitano
A tripy, fascinating film mixing puppeteering with live
action. Based on the traditional art of Japanese Bunraku theatre, this
tale of love and madness has incredible stark visuals, strange and distant
performances, and a kooky story. The constant switch between the artifice of
puppetry and the "realism" of cinema makes for a very compelling experience.
Kitano continues to march to his own beat, and, while missing the kinetic
action of his more visceral films that deal with Yakusa, this still makes for a
great viewing. Grade: A-/B+

Alive Directed by: Ryuhei
Kitamura
Sadly, Alive didn't keep me, well, awake. It's no doubt a
better film with a good night's sleep. It's far too "interior" of a film, with
sporadic action and much brooding, in order to be a great MM flick. Too bad,
can't wait for the next one that's as fun as Versus. Grade:
C-

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