Monthly Archives: July 2011

In a Better World

“In a Better World” just came to my neck of the woods though it’s been out a year and received high accolades for winning both the 2011 Golden Globe and Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film. It beat out “Biutiful” with Javier Bardem twice among other strong nominees so that’s saying something.

I didn’t know much about “Better World” other than it was Danish, but it turned out to be quite a dramatic film, a bit more ominous considering the recent news out of Norway. It’s about two broken families who cross paths after their outcast sons become friends and get into trouble. In one family, the parents are on the verge of a divorce with the father spending long periods of time in Africa as a doctor in a refugee camp. Meanwhile their son is bullied and harassed at school. In the other family, the mother has just died, and the father and boy move to town, where the boy’s new to the school. Both of the boys going through turmoil become friends and start to act out in ways that pushes them to the edge of disaster.

The film switches between scenes in Africa, where the one father copes with the bloodshed in the camp (and his family separation), to scenes in Denmark, where the sad, troubled boys decide to make a bomb. It’s disturbing for sure, but fortunately these kids turn out to be not as sinister as the attackers in Columbine or Norway. The parents seem to hold sway and come together in the end.

The music at times seems a bit overwrought in “Better World,” but the cinematography and acting capture the isolation and angst. It’s quite sad for sure, more sad than disturbing than two movies out now (“Beautiful Boy” and “We Need to Talk About Kevin”) that deal with the aftermath of a teen’s mass killing spree. It’s just too eerie and horrifying to see either of those any time soon. Continue reading

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Incendiary

I must admit I have a bit of a crush on Chris Cleave; his novels seem so immediate and at times powerful. One can sense the humanity in them. I read “Little Bee” (2009) last summer and then his first novel “Incendiary” (2005) just recently. Both are dark, sad and disturbing tales, yet the characters and situations are quite a rush.

“Incendiary,” which is about a terrorist attack in London, came out right before London was hit by terrorist attacks in July 2005. Subsequently, the novel was pulled from some shelves and buried temporarily. Apparently Cleave had written it in response to the train bombings in Madrid in 2004 and the incidents at Abu Ghraib prison in Iraq. It was written six years before Osama bin Laden was found and killed, so reading it now is a bit like looking back.

“Incendiary” isn’t an easy novel to swallow (Michiko Kakutani of The New York Times thought it in poor taste); it’s narrated by a working-class mother writing to Osama bin Laden, as if conversationally: Osama this and Osama that, which might drive you a bit nuts. At times, it’s laced with biting humor: “I don’t know if you’ve ever walked with a crutch through the gangs of kids down Bethnal Green Road on your way from the tube … Osama. I should hope so. I mean we’re the kind of people you’re bombing so I would of hoped you’d chosen us personally.”

The mother is shattered after her husband and son are killed in a terrorist bombing, which she witnesses, to make things worse, on TV while messing around with another man. She becomes suicidal and barely functional, eventually finding solace in a police superintendent, that is, until he tells her something about the bombing, which is truly haunting and leads to her undoing.

Not to give it all way — I found myself caught up with the mother/protagonist and the dire circumstances after such a terrorist attack. “Incendiary” rings true about living in the aftermath with bomb scares and fear, curfews and grief, panic and pandemonium. The psychological effects of terrorism are raw and chilling in this very potent debut novel. Continue reading

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The Help

I had to find out what the fuss was about with this very popular novel and pleasantly wasn’t disappointed. “The Help” makes a great summer read, fast and easy to delve into. I wanted to read it too before the eagerly awaited movie of it releases on Aug. 10, which lists a pretty wide, star-studded cast.

Set in Jackson, Miss. in 1962, during the early days of the civil rights movement, “The Help” tells the story of an inspiring white journalist and author, Eugenia Skeeter Phelan, who secretly interviews a number of black women on what it’s like to work as maids in white households, where they’re deemed good enough to raise white children but not allowed to use the same facilities as whites.

The chapters switch narrators and are told through the eyes of Skeeter and two of the maids, Aibileen and Minny. All three narrators are equally interesting and bring the segregated times and white households vividly to life. Hilly Holbrook, president of the Junior League, is the main menace in town who makes life hell for the maids and those who don’t share her white, elitest views.

I found “The Help” quite hard to put down. Chalk it up to good pacing and to the suspense of what will happen to the black women and Skeeter whose lives are literally on the line. I found the author, Kathryn Stockett, especially brave to put herself in the shoes of the maids and her use of dialect. The novel took a lot of guts to write, but obviously paid off. I found it sugary in a few spots but still able to successfully navigate its way through a minefield on race relations to deliver a pretty heartfelt, vivid tale of the times and the injustices done to black women and of those who boldly resisted despite such grave consequences. Some of the trailers of the movie look more cute than the book comes off being, but I still plan to see it. Continue reading

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Midnight in Paris

Both my parents (who see a movie about once a year or less) and my mother-in-law saw “Midnight in Paris” before I did. It’s one of those little pleasers, perhaps especially to a certain generation, that gains steam through word of mouth-around-town kind of thing. Some folks tell their friends who tell others and they tell others who implore their adult kids to go and on it goes from there.

Woody Allen’s latest film is a clever, charming homage to the city of Paris and the golden age of the 1920s. It’s about an engaged American couple who visit Paris but start to drift apart when Gil, played by Owen Wilson, a struggling writer, falls for the city and wants to move there after marriage. Inez, played by Rachel McAdams, doesn’t share his romantic notions of the City of Lights, and plans instead for their life in Malibu. While Inez is out dancing with friends and tagging along with her parents, Gil opts to walk the city streets, magically falling into a kind of time portal at midnight that takes him back to Paris in the 1920s and all of the famous writers and artists of the day.

The film’s pretty funny from the start, poking fun at hopeless Americans in Paris, but gets a little zanier when Gil starts to meet his idols from the ’20s, including Hemingway, the Fitzgeralds, T.S. Eliot, Dali, Picasso and many others. To appreciate the full scoop, it helps if you recall these giants of the ’20s, or the artists who came and went at Gertrude Stein’s salon. By the way, where was Alice Toklas, Stein’s long-time partner in it? The Hemingway character is amusingly funny, spouting dialogue as if from one of his books about Truth and Courage, War and Love.

Along the way, Owen Wilson does a wonderful job carrying the film as the doe-eyed, dream-filled, amusable Gil. His performance reminded me a bit of Woody Allen himself when he played in “Hannah and Her Sisters” and “Annie Hall.” Owen was a hoot in “Wedding Crashers,” but he’s even better in this.

“Midnight in Paris” is perhaps Woody Allen at his least offensive. It’s a nostalgic, heartfelt romp with delightful shots of Paree, a bit safer perhaps than his film “Vicky Cristina Barcelona” and more clever than his recent “You Will Meet a Tall Dark Stranger,” which is also about a struggling writer. It shows that Allen still has it even when he’s far from his beloved New York. Continue reading

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