Friday, June 15, 2018

In the Fade (2017)

This is a three-part story. Part I is a tragedy. Part II is a legal drama. And Part III is a tense thriller. Diane Kruger is excellent, portraying three distinct stages of grief. It was interesting watching this movie after The Insult, watching another civil law legal proceeding. The questions come without order from all sides. There is bizarre hand-raising in the courtroom. The legal drama is not particularly as interesting to me because it seems almost fake, though I can't really say how a real German courtroom works. That ending though is powerful.

Thursday, June 14, 2018

Loveless (2017)

This was super depressing for a plane ride. Andrey Zyangintsev is the master of doom and gloom. It is supremely bleak and uniquely Russian. A couple is going through a nasty divorce and neither parent wants to care for their twelve-year-old son, who runs away after overhearing their dispute over him. Adults are really the worst. Everyone is so bitter and awful. But it just gets more and more heartbreaking. They don't notice he's gone for two days. And I don't want to spoil the end, but I can assure you it's not a happy ending. Despite being a downer, it is really well done. It says so much about modern Russia without saying it out loud. As they search for their son, they come across these other cases of missing persons that are not even their son. What does that say about society?

The Insult (2017)

The Insult is a Lebanese courtroom drama that I found really interesting. Civil law legal systems are totally different from the common law system I'm used to. So it's unclear to me how over-dramatized the courtroom action was. For example, in an inquisitorial system, as opposed to an adversarial system, the judge can ask questions. It makes for lots of extra drama and less order, if you ask me. This whole court is out of order.  But what is really interesting is the political dynamics, which factor into the law, despite not being strictly legal. Religious cleavages are very challenging. Palestine and Lebanon and Israel have a complicated relationship that plays out. It all starts with a minor plumbing incident. And it just escalates and escalates and becomes more tense. There are some cliche twists but I can overlook it. I enjoyed it very much. 

A Fantastic Woman (La Mujer Fantastica) (2017)

I saw this fabulous movie on a plane. I like to watch foreign movies on planes because otherwise foreign films are sometimes hard to find with subtitles. Daniela Vega is absolutely phenomenal. The story is a heartbreaking tale of a trans woman in Chile not being permitted to grieve the greatest loss of her life. But she is fierce and does not give up in the face of insults, humiliation, and physical assault. And there is this brilliant, surreal dance interlude in the middle.

Deadpool 2 (2018)

I don't even really remember anymore what I wanted to say about it. I saw it nearly a month ago. But I remember that I wasn't impressed. And I did not really like the ending.