Spooky season is upon us, so it’s the perfect time to revisit the camp and comedy of ’80s cult classic The Monster Squad. Dracula believes the creatures of the night should rule the world, and he’s enlisted a cadre of creeps to aid the cause. Can a plucky pack of prepubescents stop the monsters before the clock strikes midnight? This special showing features a post-screening Q&A and autograph/photo session with cast members André Gower and Ryan Lambert. Definitely more fun than a kick to the nards.
The spread of COVID-19 across the globe has left no part of our lives untouched, not the least of which is our viewing habits. Streaming services have gone from content delivery platforms to public services as we discover that self-quarantining can result in lots of time to finally whittle down our watchlists.
Everyone’s viewing needs differ at a time like this. Some escape to sci-fi and fantasy, or the comfort of a romantic comedy. Others find catharsis by leaning in with films like Contagion, The Omega Man, or even 28 Days Later. Perhaps now is the time to binge those shows you keep hearing about but never committed to, like “Justified” or “Atlanta.”
Roger Ebert called films “machines that generate empathy,” and it’s in that capacity that we might find comfort in movies that depict hardship, or taken one step further, were created or exhibited during times of national distress. In viewing, we are not celebrating or finding entertainment value in suffering. If you’re feeling trapped, pessimistic, or paranoid, discovering a film that captures those negative emotions can be calming. These films can serve as reminders that even during the worst events in history, there were people who inherited the world left for them. Cinema is one of the greatest ways we have to pass our experiences to future generations and to connect with generations past.
It was less than a year after the end of World War II before Italian filmmakers tried to reconcile their experience with fascism. Though escapist cinema was initially popular, Roberto Rossini’s Rome, Open City set the stage for a new era of Italian filmmaking. It follows the lives of people in the dwindling days of the war, including a pregnant mother, a resistance fighter, a cabaret performer, and a bumbling but ultimately noble Catholic priest. Production began in 1945, months after the Germans withdrew from Italy, and it was released the same year. The nation’s infrastructure had not been rebuilt, and the film industry had yet to reestablish itself after a period of no money and no resources, yet the movie had the artistry of a film with 10 times its budget. The roughness in its production value only contributes to its beauty; there is always love, hope, and humanity in the world, even in the darkest of times. Other films that use the devastation from WWII as settings include Vittorio De Sica’s Bicycle Thieves, also set in Rome, and Carol Reed’s The Third Man, set in Austria.
Filmed in the middle of the Iraq War, the documentary Heavy Metal in Baghdad follows Iraqi heavy metal band Acrassicauda, as its members attempt to stay creative and stay alive amidst the destruction. Formed in 2000, during the regime of Saddam Hussein, Acrassicauda always faced an uphill battle to be heard and understood. The band was featured in Vice magazine, and in 2006, Vice returned to Baghdad to see how the band was faring following the ouster of Hussein. The situation was grim and only getting worse; the Iraqi insurgency became a civil war, and the band’s mission to gain an audience became a struggle to survive. The chaos of destruction and the risk of death lurks around every corner, as Acrassicauda rehearses in bombed-out spaces and gives interviews in front of collapsed buildings.
The film shows that the need to create is not optional. Art is not a luxury, it is a coping mechanism, and a crucial component of life. (Acrassicauda eventually fled to Syria, then settled in Richmond, Virginia, before relocating to Brooklyn. Its EP Only the Dead See the End of the War was produced by Alex Skolnick of Testament, and the band released its full-length album Gilgamesh in 2015.)
Stanley Kubrick’s Dr. Strangelove, or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb is known as a classic satire of the Cold War era. As a glimpse into another time, it is both a riotous comedy and an effective political thriller, with Peter Sellers at his best in each of his three roles. What modern audiences might not realize is just how tense the moment was in which it was produced.
The film began as an adaptation of Peter George’s Red Alert, originally titled Two Hours to Doom. George’s novel is serious in its treatment of the subject matter and does not feature the titular character. While working on the screenplay, Kubrick began to see the idea of mutually assured destruction as absurd, and referred to his adaptation as a “nightmare comedy.”
The first cut of the film ended in a pie fight (this scene is lost to history, but a few stills remain), and features the line “Gentlemen! Our gallant young president has been struck down in his prime!”—which would have been seen by the first test audience, if that screening were not scheduled for November 22, 1964, the day President John Kennedy was assassinated. The film is a masterpiece as it is, but it is worth remembering how necessary it was. The ballooning arms race needed popping, and who better than a clown to do it.
For many, direct confrontation of anxiety through art is the perfect cure for jittery nerves, like caffeine before a nap. But it’s just fine if this sort of film experience is not what you’re looking for right now—and don’t listen to anyone who tells you otherwise. Do what you need to do, enjoy what you like, and stay safe out there. When this is all over, we’ll see you at the movies.
In movies, as in life, it was quite a year of highs and lows. These are our favorite films of 2017.
Get Out
As social commentary, as a horror movie that connected with an incredible amount of people, as a directorial debut for Jordan Peele—any way you look at it, Get Out was a huge achievement for independent film and for intelligent, layered stories with societal messages. The world already loved Peele for his comedy; with Get Out, we discovered that we need him for his insight.
Colossal
This was a year of unlikely triumphs, of which Nacho Vigalondo’s Colossal is the most unexpected. A thoughtful, funny film about very serious psychological issues—alcoholism, depression, self-loathing, projecting one’s own failures onto anyone who happens to be nearby—framed in one of the most bizarre narratives of 2017 that plays the absurdity completely straight-faced. If you let this one slip by you, definitely check it out.
A Ghost Story
A Ghost Story made mocking headlines for an extended, unbroken shot in which Rooney Mara sits on the kitchen floor and eats an entire pie. There, we said it, yuck it up, now let’s talk about what a powerful meditation on life and its meaning (or lack of it) this is, and how phenomenal it is that writer-director David Lowery feels as at ease with a noncommercial passion project as he does with a big-budget Disney remake (Pete’s Dragon).
Menashe
By all accounts, Menashe shouldn’t exist. A Yiddish-language movie filmed in New York’s ultra Orthodox Jewish community featuring a cast of first-time actors, many of whom had never set foot in a movie theater until the premiere, combined with the fact that it’s this great, makes it even more stunning. Starring Menashe Lustig in a story partially inspired by his own life, Menashe follows its lead character as he works to prove his worthiness as a father to his son, a year after the death of his wife. Simple, elegant, heartwarming, and one of the year’s must-sees.
Lucky
The last film of the legendary Harry Dean Stanton would be notable no matter what, but the sort of astonishing match between actor and material on the level of Lucky is quite rare. Stanton stars as a man in a small desert town who lives day to day on almost exactly the same routine. As we get to know Lucky better and witness the events of the doom, we see how those patterns became so important to him as they begin to break, but never in a tragic way. A lovely film with one of the year’s best performances.
Dunkirk
Christopher Nolan delivers the most powerful film of his career with Dunkirk, the story of a military defeat by the British that resulted in an astonishing evacuation and in turn inspired a generation to persevere in the fight against fascism in the early days of World War II. The film is told as a triptych, three interlocking stories spanning different lengths that are stylistically and thematically linked. Dunkirk is a technically sophisticated film without an ounce of self-indulgent spectacle, dedicated to the bravery of the soldiers on that beach and those who risked their lives to rescue them.
First They Killed My Father
Angelina Jolie’s film about the rise of the Khmer Rouge in Cambodia is a fascinating, humanizing. look at totalitarianism and the human cost when squabbling superpowers use innocent nations as proxies. Told from the point of view of a young girl at the very beginning of the regime, she experiences all of the horrors of war—forced labor and being enlisted as a child soldier—while being subjected to empty propaganda day and night. Though it can be difficult to watch, the intent is to truly understand this moment in history from a philosophical and humanistic point of view, including its roots in the Cold War and America’s disastrous Southeast Asian foreign policy.
Lady Bird
In a year of strong directorial debuts, Greta Gerwig’s coming-of-age tale stands out as one of the best and most sophisticated of the bunch. The title character, played by Saoirse Ronan, is in her senior year of high school and is in a hurry to let go of everything that has defined her: friends, interests, academic life, her name and especially her mother, played by Laurie Metcalf. Funny, poignant, brutally honest and boasting a career-high performance by Metcalf, Lady Bird should sit at the top of your watchlist.
Wind River
The power of Wind River comes in its clarity of mission and total understanding of every inch of its subject matter. Though narratively a procedural about the pursuit of the men who raped and murdered a young woman on the Wind River Indian Reservation, it is also an examination of the continued legacy of American colonialism on all parties affected. A tracker (Jeremy Renner) and an FBI agent (Elizabeth Olsen) join Tribal Police (Graham Greene) in the hunt. Refreshingly, all are great at their job; Olsen’s character is new to the region but she is an excellent agent, Greene does the best he can with the limitations his department faces, and Renner feels connected to the land despite being a perpetual outsider. A remarkable work in an already exceptional year.
John Wick: Chapter 2
Good filmmaking is good filmmaking, okay? There are some deep sociopolitical statements on this list, but in the end, movies are all about how well you can tell a story with the resources you have. In the case of John Wick: Chapter 2, those resources are some of the best technicians in the industry and the most committed and disciplined American movie star possibly in history. Much has been made of Keanu Reeves’ stiffness as an actor, but there is no question that this man belongs on the screen delivering remarkable physical performances. The stakes are ramped up from the previous installment as is the craftsmanship, turning what was a fun action flick into a franchise that could bring the best of Hong Kong genre cinema stateside.
Playing this week
Alamo Drafthouse Cinema 377 Merchant Walk Sq., 326-5056
Ferdinand, The Greatest Showman, Pitch Perfect 3, The Shape of Water, Star Wars: The Last Jedi, The Violent Years
Regal Stonefield 14 and IMAX The Shops at Stonefield, 244-3213
All The Money In The World, Coco, Darkest Hour, Downsizing, Father Figures, Ferdinand, The Greatest Showman, Jumanji: Welcome to the Jungle, Pitch Perfect 3, Star Wars: The Last Jedi
Violet Crown Cinema 200 W. Main St., Downtown Mall, 529-3000
All The Money In The World,Darkest Hour, Downsizing, Father Figures, The Greatest Showman, Human Flow, Jumanji: Welcome to the Jungle, Pitch Perfect 3, The Shape of Water, Star Wars: The Last Jedi, Three Billboards Ouside Ebbing, Missouri
At first, the biggest surprise move made by Marvel was placing fan favorite (yet far-fetched) Thor on equal footing with the iconic Iron Man and Captain America in its Cinematic Universe. Now we accept the character’s presence as a given. Then the studio defied expectations by establishing phase two of its master plan with new-to-film properties such as Ant-Man, Doctor Strange and Guardians of the Galaxy, all of them smash hits at the box office and received well enough by critics. Then many began wondering when Marvel’s impossible winning streak would end (Iron Fist notwithstanding).
With Spider-Man: Homecoming, the MCU has pulled off its biggest surprise yet by not only bringing back one of its previously untouchable properties (Sony owns the film rights to the character), but delivering the best Spidey movie in more than a decade and bringing life to a story that risked exhausting its fanbase with excessive reboots. Homecoming is not only entertaining, funny and well-performed in its own right, but it will instantly win back the affections of fatigued fans with its exciting action, wry wit and genuine desire to do this story justice.
Spider-Man: Homecoming follows Peter Parker’s (Tom Holland) ordeals following his introduction in Captain America: Civil War. Initially recruited under Tony Stark’s tutelage, Parker spends his free time reporting to Stark about his daily activities; sometimes eventful, sometimes not. Mostly, he hops around New York City in a mechanized suit designed by Stark, attempting to do good by its residents and pining for the day he will be called to swing into battle. He refuses most social engagements or extracurricular activities, citing his mysterious internship. He does, after all, still need to navigate high school, and all the awkward crushes, social hierarchies and inherent tension of wanting to grow up as quickly as possible, no matter the cost.
Meanwhile, a contractor named Adrian Toomes (Michael Keaton), tasked with cleaning up the rubble left by the massive battle of 2012’s The Avengers, is irked by the newly formed U.S. Department of Damage Control pushing him out of the job before he or his employees have been fully paid. Before leaving the crash site, he accidentally makes off with alien technology that he learns to harness into powerful weaponry, leading him into a new life as an arms dealer with merchandise found nowhere else.
Both the hero and villain of Homecomingexist as a direct result of events in previous MCU movies, a first for a series that has so far relied on either preexisting yet concealed mythology or an individual rising to the task of history. As a result, Homecoming is as much about the characters’ roles in the world, not just their own individual arcs. Toomes has a working-class, stick-it-to-the-man vendetta. Parker, though recognized as the most brilliant mind in his class, tries not to disappoint those who believe in him, whether that person be Stark (Robert Downey Jr.), his aunt May (Marisa Tomei), his best friend, Ned (Jacob Balaton), or his all-time crush, Liz (Laura Harrier).
Holland brings a new level of teenage enthusiasm to the character (not to mention being the first actor to be believable in the age group). Keaton is fantastically bitter yet very human, and is not out to destroy the world so much as he is to get what he feels he is owed. The New York they inhabit is realistic, and director Jon Watts has a keen eye toward the diversity of modern-day Queens that feels both intentional and natural.
All of the cast, leading and supporting, is excellent. Each of the action sequences is unique and grows directly out of the events of the film itself. We feel the weight if Parker fails—and sometimes he does, or comes very close—and the shame and disappointment in these moments are perhaps the most dramatically significant of the MCU thus far. Spider-Man: Homecoming is far more than an obligatory restart, and if you are a newcomer to the series, it is a perfect place to start.
Historic and heartwarming (Loving). Family-friendly and inspiring (The Eagle Huntress). Searching and shocking (The Promise), romantic (La La Land) and jaw dropping (Liv Ullmann, Werner Herzog and Shirley . .. that’s right, MacLaine)—if it boasts more than 125 films, and way too many admiring modifiers to choose from, it’s the 2016 Virginia Film Festival, screening November 3-6 in Charlottesville.
First conceived of in 1999 as a vehicle to educate and engage audiences, encourage discussion, and support films and filmmakers in the Commonwealth, the Virginia Film Festival is an annual
feast of cinematic riches and related conversations, bookended by a couple of great parties. This year’s festival, says Jody Kielbasa, in the topics it covers, the cultures it celebrates, the film icons it brings to town, and the thoughtful discussion it is sure to stimulate, “is the best in my eight years as director. It is a very rich and compelling program that will engage our community in a significant dialogue, and be a lot of fun.”
Opening Night Film This year’s Opening Night presentation,Loving (7:00 p.m., Thursday, November 3 at The Paramount Theater) will be “very much a part of the Golden Globe and Oscar dialogues,” Kielbasa believes. The critically acclaimed film dramatizes the courageous story of Richard and Mildred Loving (Joel Edgerton and Ruth Negga), an interracial couple from a small Virginia town who were married in 1958, in defiance of state law. First jailed, then banished, the Lovings fought for their union all the way to the U.S. Supreme Court, which in a landmark 1967 case affirmed their right to marry. Directed by Jeff Nichols, Loving was nominated for the Palme d’Or at the 2016 Cannes International Film Festival. Nichols, Negga and Bernie Cohen, one of the original ACLU lawyers who argued the case, will discuss the film following the screening.
“Loving captures an important moment in the history of the Commonwealth,” says Governor Terry McAuliffe, “and tells a story that speaks to the triumph of love over division—a story that resonates in our world today. The film also shines a deserved spotlight on Virginia’s thriving film industry, which continues to be an important driver in our work to build a new Virginia economy.”
Centerpiece Film Long before the O.J. Simpson spectacle, the trial of UVA honor students Elizabeth Haysom and her German boyfriend Jens Soering riveted the nation on live TV. Charged with the gruesome double murder of Haysom’s parents in rural Bedford County, the convicted couple have now spent over three decades behind bars. Soering, however, still proclaims his innocence. New evidence presented in journalist Karin Steinberger and filmmaker Marcus Vetter’s investigative film The Promise has made headlines and may win him a new trial.Soering’s lawyer and several of the original investigators and journalists will discuss the film after its North American premiere, 7:30 p.m., Saturday, November 5 at The Paramount Theater.
Closing Night Film While the Opening Night and Centerpiece films tell true stories of love triumphant and love overcome by tragedy, Closing Night offers a romantic musical comedy-drama of two young strivers finding love in the big city. An audience favorite at the Telluride and Toronto film festivals, the wryly named La La Land (7:30 p.m., Sunday, November 6 at The Paramount Theater) pays tribute to a classic Hollywood genre, and to the city from which it takes its name. Starring Ryan Gosling as a dedicated jazz pianist and Emma Stone as an aspiring actress, this beautifully shot film is “a kind of a love letter to the traditional old Hollywood movie musicals,” Kielbasa says, with an “incredibly charming” leading couple. “It reminds me a little of a modern-day Singing in the Rain.”
A Conversation with Liv Ullmann Along with the chance to view so many classics and so many contenders in one short burst, another of the Festival’s great pleasures is the opportunity it affords to hear and to question the people who make them. One of the great actresses of her generation, Liv Ullmann won fame for her daring work with master filmmaker Ingmar Bergman in Persona, The Passion of Anna, Cries and Whispers, and other such explorations—12 in all—of the human psyche and the human predicament. Still active after seven decades, Ullmann has most recently directed for the stage and the screen, including a Broadway revival of Tennessee Williams’ A Streetcar Named Desire, and a film version of August Strindberg’s Miss Julie. Ullmann will be at UVA’s Culbreth Theatre at 4:15 p.m. on Thursday, November 3 for a moderated discussion led by Michael Barker, Co-President and Co-Founder of Sony Pictures Classics.
“There is an elegance about her career that is extraordinary, that you don’t often see today,” Kielbasa says. She is really a very, very intelligent actress. It’s an honor to bring her back and to have the conversation moderated by Michael Barker, whose films have been nominated for 159 Academy Awards. This is clearly a gentleman who knows his stuff.”
Ullmann will be on hand as well after the screening of Liv & Ingmar (1:00 p.m., Friday, November 4 at Vinegar Hill Theatre), a 2012 documentary about her 42-year relationship with Bergman. The director and the woman he called his “Stradivarius” fell in love when she was 25 and he was 46, each married to someone else. Told entirely from Ullmann’s own perspective and including films clips, love letters and behind the scenes footage, the film chronicles a great passion that became a deep friendship.
The World of Werner Herzog A pioneer of the postwar West German cinema movement and one of the world’s most innovative contemporary directors, Werner Herzog began his 45-year career at age 19 and has since produced, written and directed more than sixty feature and documentary films, including Aguirre, the Wrath of God (1972), Fitzcarraldo (1982) and Grisly Man (2005).
“Herzog’s nearly half century long career has taken him to the ends of the earth, the bottom of the sea, and down into deep forgotten caves,” says VFF Programmer and Operations Manager Wesley Harris. “He has dragged ships across the mountains. He’s one of the most iconic and strong-willed minds in the art world. I think this artists’ work helps an audience become better movie watchers.”
Harris will join the director at 2:00 p.m. on Saturday, November 5 at The Paramount Theater, in a program that will include Herzog reading from his writings as well as other texts, followed by an audience Q & A.
Herzog’s new documentary Into the Inferno, a survey of the world’s active volcanoes and the cultures and religions that have formed around them,“is a return to form, old-school Herzog,” Harris says. “He’s trekking around the world, going to places of physical and geographical extremes and violence, and having some fun exploring the odd characters that he comes across. If there is any through line thematically to his work it’s the violent indifference of nature towards man, and this film is that in a capsule. He’s a filmmaker of extremes, but he also manages to give nuances to these largest possible landscapes and characters that he comes across in his films.” Into the Inferno will be shown at 9:15 p.m. on Friday, November 4 at the Culbreth Theatre.
A Salute to Shirley MacLaine Richmond native and six-time Academy Award nominee Shirley MacLaine got her big break as an understudy on Broadway in 1954 when the leading lady broke her ankle. MacLaine’s performance in The Pajama Game so impressed a major film producer that he signed her to Paramount Pictures, where her film debut in Alfred Hitchcock’s The Trouble with Harry won the Golden Globe Award for New Star of the Year—Actress. Hot Spell and Around the World in Eighty Days followed, as did a total of in 72 films and 44 awards in 50 years, and even an amusing turn as a formidable mother-in-law on Downton Abbey.
“Just last night I was reviewing her career and kept being surprised at the number of films I had forgotten were part of her filmography,” Kielbasa says, marveling not only at “the length, scope, and breadth” of her career,“ but “at the fact that she is still working.” MacLaine will appear at the Paramount Theater at 7:00 p.m. on Friday, November 4 to discuss her career with Bob Gazzaleof the American Film Institute and even—her idea—take questions from the audience.
An Embarrassment of Riches Even for casual film fans, the embarrassment of riches that is the Virginia Film Festival each year rewards a close look at the line-up. Grown-up Disney lovers will be intrigued by an extraordinary screening of Beauty and the Beast (3:00 p.m. Saturday, November 5 at the Culbreth Theatre), the first feature-length animated film ever nominated for Best Picture, shown here in the same work-in-progress state in which it previewed (25 years ago at the New York Film Festival) with original pencil drawings alternating with completed animation. Paige O’Hara, the voice of Belle, and producer Don Hahn will discuss the process by which the film was made. Hahn will also screen and discuss his documentary Waking Sleeping Beauty,on the revitalization of Disney’s animation studios, at 1:00 p.m. on Sunday, November 6 at Vinegar Hill Theatre.
Fredericksburg native Danny McBride wrote and starred in the HBO comedy series Eastbound & Down, and now co-stars in the network’s hit comedy Vice Principals. Joe Hill is co-creator and director of both series. McBride and Hill will screen two episodes of Vice Principals plus clips from Danny’s career, anddiscuss their artistic process at 6:45 p.m., Friday, November 4 at Culbreth Theatre.
Filmed in the breathtakingly beautiful Mongolian steppe, The Eagle Huntress (6:45 p.m., Saturday, November 5 at St. Anne’s-Belfield) tells the story of a 13-year old girl training to be the first female eagle hunter in 12 generations of her family. “It’s a great story of female empowerment,” Harris says, “delving into a heritage amazingly removed from what many Western audiences would have any experience of.”
Just four days before the election, legendary filmmakers DA Pennebaker and Chris Hegedus will show their classic documentary The War Room(6:00 p.m., Saturday, November 5 at the Culbreth Theatre), a look behind scenes of Bill Clinton’s 1992 presidential campaign that introduced us to George Stephanopoulos, James Carville and Paul Begala. Begala will join the filmmakers for a discussion moderated by Larry Sabato of the Center for Politics.
Since 1996 the folks online atIndieWire have been a leading source for film and television news, reviews, interviews and festival coverage. Three of the site’s four founders and its current chief film critic, Eric Kohn, will be at Vinegar Hill Theatre at 4:30 p.m., Saturday, November 5 for a moderated discussion on film criticism and IndieWire’s 20-year legacy.
When a five-year-old Indian boy becomes separated from his older brother on a train platform in Lion (7:30 p.m. Sunday, November 6 at the Culbreth Theatre), he winds up nearly a thousand miles away in Calcutta, is adopted by an Australian family, and raised in Tasmania. Twenty-five years later, to find his original family, he turns to Google Earth.
Family Day on Saturday, November 5 at the Betsy and John Casteen Arts Grounds at the University of Virginia will feature award-winning short films from Disney Animation Studios, interactive arts workshops, a Musical Instrument Petting Zoo, and screenings of films made by the more than 600 local students taking part in the Festival’s Young Filmmakers Academy. The highlight of the day will be a 20th Anniversary screening of James and the Giant Peach, at 12:30 p.m. at the Culbreth Theatre.
At 9:30 Saturday evening the 13th Annual Adrenaline Film Project comes to the Culbreth to show what 10-12 teams of young filmmakers under the guidance of Charlottesville native Jeff Wadlow (Kick Ass 2, Bates Motel, Non-Stop) can write, produce, and edit in a mere 72 caffeine-fueled hours.
Throughout the Festival, the Digital Media Gallery in the Second Street Gallery will feature video installations by UVA cinematography students and young filmmakers from Lighthouse Studio, offering visitors a look at the latest in digital filmmaking technology.
From celebrated classics to cult favorites, from soon-to-be blockbusters to seat of the pants debuts, the 2016 Virginia Film Festival is a four-day dive into the world of cinema. We’re so lucky to have it. Silence your cellphones; and open your eyes.
Writer-director Sophia Takal’s psychological thriller Always Shine is a thoughtful exploration of the performative nature of all social interactions, whether between actor and director, business and customer, individual and society and even between supposed best friends. Beth (Caitlin FitzGerald) and Anna (Mackenzie Davis) are both actresses living in Los Angeles who have had very different levels of success, a fact that has never interfered with their friendship until the two escape for what was supposed to be a peaceful weekend getaway. Unspoken yet palpable tension between the two leads to hostility, the fear of impending violence and even rifts in the fabric of their individual identities. Surreal, stylish and utterly brilliant narratively and thematically, Always Shine is not to be missed.
Elle
After a spectacular reception at Cannes, Paul Verhoeven’s psychological thriller Elle looks to be the triumphant return of the controversial artist. His first film since 2006’s The Black Book, Elle promises to be a thoughtful examination of the long-term effects of rape and subsequent revenge, a subject that Verhoeven had perhaps been too callous about in his Hollywood days. With a critically acclaimed leading performance by French actress Isabelle Huppert, Elle looks to bridge the gap between Verhoeven’s American and European careers and is a return to form for one of the film world’s most unique artistic voices.
I Am Not Your Negro
Raoul Peck’s I Am Not Your Negro explores the subject of race in America from the writings of author and social critic James Baldwin and his views following the assassinations of Medgar Evers, Malcolm X and Martin Luther King Jr. While the documentary remains planted in Baldwin’s own era, connections to the modern day are unavoidable for the timelessness of his observations, narrated by Samuel L. Jackson. Baldwin’s examinations remain troublingly relevant as he dives deep into the ways in which race and racism are tightly woven into the fabric of our nation at all levels.
Into the Inferno
Roger Ebert once said Werner Herzog “has never created a single film that is compromised, shameful, made for pragmatic reasons or uninteresting. Even his failures are spectacular.” There certainly is no compromise in his latest documentary, Into the Inferno, the legendary filmmaker’s look at active volcanoes in Indonesia, Iceland, North Korea and Ethiopia, with all of the dispassion and poetry that is his wont. The filmmaker comes frighteningly close to his subject-—literally, at the edge of the volcanoes, peering down on real pools of lava just waiting to burst.
Ran
Akira Kurosawa helped to revolutionize world cinema with the intellect of a scholar, the inquisitive mind of a philosopher and the steady hand of a master craftsman. Though he would certainly be hugely influential even if he were only a master of style and pacing, the philosophical, and often political, undertones of his films are universal enough to be understood by any audience in any context. He both influenced and was influenced by the West, an interchange seen beautifully in his 1985 epic, Ran, which drew on both the legend of Mori Motonari as well as Shakespeare’s King Lear. If you have yet to experience Kurosawa, Ran is an excellent place to start.
The Love Witch
Anna Biller is exactly the visionary that edgy and exploitation cinema needs right now. With a joyful, sardonic yet sincere tone, her bright Technicolor sexpot extravaganzas combine the pulpy silliness of Doris Wishman with the visual intrigue of Alfred Hitchcock. Her latest film, The Love Witch—shot, lit and acted exactly in the style of a 1960s melodrama—is a throwback with a modern understanding of sexual politics. The film is deeply feminist and embraces camp as a means to carry deeper theoretical messages, and uses sexual magic as a metaphor for male anxiety and female empowerment.
Fred Ott, a magnificently mustachioed employee at Thomas Edison’s lab in Menlo Park, was known among his colleagues for his comedic sneezes. On January 7, 1894, Ott sneezed in Edison’s Black Maria studio in West Orange, New Jersey, in front of a camera operated by William Heise.
Two days later, on January 9, film director W.K.L. Dickson submitted a paper print—a frame-by-frame photographic print of the film—of Edison Kinetoscopic Record of a Sneeze for copyright deposit at the Library of Congress. It remains the earliest surviving copyrighted motion picture in the U.S., and it can be streamed online from the library’s website (or watched via YouTube).
The five-second black-and-white 35mm film is one of about 1.4 million moving-image items and 3.5 million sound recordings preserved and collected in Culpeper at the Packard Campus for Audio-Visual Conservation, a facility gifted to the Library of Congress in 2007 by philanthropist and film conservation enthusiast David Woodley Packard.
Previously, the building had been a Federal Reserve bunker that, at the height of the Cold War, held a few billion dollars in cash and coin that would be used to restart the U.S. economy east of the Mississippi River in case of a nuclear catastrophe. With approval from Congress, Packard bought the building from the government in 1997 and transformed it into the preservation hub that the library needed for its growing audio-visual collection.
“Everybody loves movies. But I don’t know that we’ve done enough to ensure the continued existence of these films from the past,” says Mike Mashon, head of the moving-image section at Packard. “In some ways, we’ve embraced the history, glamour and storytelling splendor of movie-making while ignoring the reality that films are physical artifacts that can shrink and fade and disintegrate into dust in less than a lifetime. Our mission at the Packard Campus is to preserve as much of our nation’s audio-visual heritage as we can, as quickly as we can, because we want to make it accessible to people,” Mashon says, adding that in addition to screening hundreds of films and sound recordings each year, Packard annually loans about 400 films to theaters around the world.
“Movies are the people’s art form,” he says. “They tell us who we were, who we are. They tell us where we’re going.”
Moving-image section processing technician and Charlottesville resident Dave Gibson agrees. Gibson says it’s culturally, historically and socially important to preserve “the record of what things looked like, how we behaved, how we acted.” Watch a Buster Keaton movie from the 1920s and you’ll be surprised by how much has changed, but you may be more surprised by how much has stayed the same, Gibson says.
The Packard Campus is equipped with everything needed to preserve moving images and sound recordings and make them accessible to the public: various physical and digital formats, plus playback equipment, laboratories, temperature- and humidity-controlled storage, 100 miles of shelving (Culpeper is about 50 miles from Charlottesville) and a data center.
When an item comes in—say, a 35mm film, it’s copyrighted, cataloged and described; then the film goes to the moving-image division where a processing technician will rehouse the film reel in labeled archival cans and send those cans into the vaults. Sometimes films are digitized for streaming online, or for viewing from the Library of Congress reading room in Washington, D.C.
“The misconception is that moving-image archivists sit around watching movies and TV all day, and I wish that was the case,” Gibson says with a laugh. While processing Little Shop of Horrors, Beauty and the Beast and The Little Mermaid, lyricist Howard Ashman’s collection of production materials, Gibson watched some of the footage to better describe it for the library catalog. He says the collection contains different versions of the films, audition footage and even live-action footage of an actress mouthing The Little Mermaid dialogue to give animators an idea of how Ariel might move.
But the collection isn’t limited to feature films or motion pictures deemed important by critics and cultural historians. Gibson says there are plenty of home movies in the collection, and they can be just as valuable—the footage of President Kennedy’s assassination was a home movie that happened to capture a pivotal moment in American history. But even a reel of a 1956 family visit to Yellowstone National Park can tell us a lot: what the park was like in 1956 and how it’s changed; what people wore, drove, ate, bought or read.
Gibson says that in a single day at Packard, he might work on the Ashman collection in the morning, and then in the afternoon, work on a collection of Apple II video games (video games are a growing part of the library’s moving-image collection), and then discuss how to best preserve born-digital media like YouTube videos and even memes with the same care they’ve given a 35mm print of Michael Jackson’s “Thriller” music video and a three-quarter-inch tape of one of Spike Lee’s student films.
“It’s a constant cabinet of wonders around here,” Mashon says, with wonder palpable in his voice. “It’s probably a few times a week I run across something and say, ‘We have that? We have that?’”
The lead-off film at this year’s Virginia Film Festival (Nov. 3-6) is remarkable in its story and its timing. As
we look out from our fledgling blue state to the country’s contentious societal landscape, the nasty presidential campaign to be decided on Tuesday and the glaring Supreme Court vacancy, director Jeff Nichols syncs up history and heartache in a story with far-reaching political and emotional themes. Based and filmed in Virginia, Loving (right)is already slated for awards-season glory.
Governor Terry McAuliffe announced the film in September, saying, “Loving captures an important moment in the history of the commonwealth and tells a story that speaks to the triumph of love over division—a story that resonates in our world today. The film also shines a deserved spotlight on Virginia’s thriving film industry, which continues to be an important driver in our work to build a new Virginia economy.”
Loving, starring Joel Edgerton and Ruth Negga, shows Thursday at the Paramount Theater. —Tami Keaveny
Paul Begala does War Room retrospective
Twenty-four years ago, an unknown governor of Arkansas named Bill Clinton ran for president and, seemingly against all odds, won. Filmmakers Chris Hegedus and D. A. Pennebaker were there to capture the race that “changed the way campaigns were won,” according to The War Room’s trailer. Political consultant Paul Begala was there, too, traveling with Clinton around the country.
And Begala travels to the Virginia Film Festival in Charlottesville for what could be a surreal screening of the 1992 race, days before an election in which the wife of the guy he was stumping for seeks the presidency herself.
“Compared to today, it was a mutual admiration society,” says Begala of the election that unseated President George H.W. Bush, one of the most gracious men ever, who vents in the documentary, “I’m getting sick and tired of every single night hearing one of these carping little liberal Democrats jumping on my you-know-what.”
Today, Bush and Bill Clinton are best buds, and Barbara Bush calls Clinton her fifth son, Begala notes.
Begala’s interest in politics took hold at the University of Texas, where he was student government president. He worked on a campaign for a state senator seeking the U.S. Senate. His candidate lost, but he met Ragin’ Cajun James Carville, and the two started working together in the late ’80s.
And when he met Clinton, he’s said many times, it was political love at first sight.
Begala says he hasn’t watched The War Room with fresh eyes in a while, but notes the obvious: “Carville had [more] hair and I had a beard.” Besides period elements like the “brick cellular phones” and fax machines, the news cycle was every 24 hours (not a 24-hour cycle), a notion that now seems “so quaint,” he says.
The campaign pioneered the rapid response. A 24-hour team tracked the West Coast media all night, and “hit the ground running every morning,” says Begala. Also new: “The aggressive use of satellites to do media,” he says. “We could put Clinton and [George] Stephanopoulos on the air in local markets. We realized local media was seen as more credible than the national media. We could sit George in a studio in Little Rock” and he’d do an interview in Florida.
“Paul played a critical role in the 1992 presidential election,” says UVA pundit emeritus Larry Sabato, who will discuss the film with Begala, Pennebaker and Hegedus. “Without him—and James Carville and George Stephanopoulos—I doubt Bill Clinton could have been elected. Not only is Paul a superb strategist, he has a marvelous wit that can defuse a crisis or disagreement, as he displays frequently on CNN.”
Begala says he hasn’t had time to reflect on the lessons from the 2016 race, but he learned from Bill Clinton, “Elections are about the voters’ future, not the candidate’s past. It should be about their lives and their families and their future.”
He says, “Donald Trump has hijacked this election” with a campaign that is “vile and disgusting.” About the October 9 debate, Begala says, “I was really creeped out because Hillary has been my friend for 25 years. His manner—he was uncomfortably close.” When voters asked Clinton a question, she approached them, looked at them and answered the questions, he says, while Trump looked at the camera. “He’s a TV star,” Begala says.
For the Republican party, Trump “has a very real chance of fracturing the party and creating a civil war,” observes Begala.
And he compares political parties to churches. “The successful seek out converts,” he says. “The unsuccessful hunt down heretics. That’s a recipe for failure and disaster.”
Begala, who went on to serve as an adviser to Bill Clinton in the White House, and now does political commentary on CNN, runs a pro-Hillary super PAC and teaches at Georgetown University, admits that he sometimes misses working on a campaign.
“There’s something undeniably thrilling being in a campaign’s headquarters,” he says. “They draw passionate, idealistic young people,” as well as cold coffee and pizza. “It’s a younger person’s game,” he concedes.
“What a blessing to be in Charlottesville just before the election,” he says. “When Larry Sabato reached out to me, I jumped, and when anyone else asked, I said I was already booked.”—Lisa Provence
HBO darling Danny McBride shifts character in latest comedy
Bad news for fans of Kenny Powers, the cocksure protagonist of HBO’s critically acclaimed “Eastbound and Down.” Danny McBride, who co-created the blissfully ignorant star pitcher with a bad mouth and penchant for cocaine and women, says we’ve likely seen the last of his alter ego.
Good news for fans of McBride. He and writing partner Jody Hill created a new HBO show, “Vice Principals.” The decidedly darker half-hour comedy features McBride as Neal Gamby, a down-on-his-luck school administrator clawing his way to the top.
More good news: McBride and Hill will show two episodes of “Vice Principals” on November 4 at the Culbreth Theatre as part of the Virginia Film Festival. The duo will also field questions from the audience afterward. McBride offered C-VILLE a sneak peak of that convo late last month.
C-VILLE: So you grew up near Charlottesville?
DM: I did—I grew up in Fredericksburg and we went to Charlottesville all the time. That has always been a staple since I was a kid. It’s such a cool little town, such a beautiful area.
Does anyone from your hometown come out in your characters?
You know I think some of the characters are an amalgamation of different personalities I saw growing up. Everyone wasn’t like Kenny Powers and Neal Gamby, but there are definitely different male figures that are in there.
What sets Gamby apart from Powers?
The biggest thing is their heart and their egos. Kenny Powers is an egomaniac. He’s obsessed with his self-image, his celebrity and putting his mark on the wall. Gamby is a more principled man. He’s been mislabeled in a way, but in his heart he cares about things outside himself. He cares about the school.
Are there any similarities between them?
I guess the fact that I’m playing both of them and they swear a lot. Kenny’s unaware of how he comes off, but the tragedy of Neal Gamby is he is aware people are turned off by him.
I feel like both of them have an underlying anger.
Anyone can be angry. I guess these guys are weirdly both dreamers. How their life was supposed to be doesn’t stack up to what it is. When Kenny’s dreams don’t work out, he doubles down. When Gamby gets passed over, he puts unrealistic expectations on what things would have been like. He thinks a position in a high school would fix a lot that it probably wouldn’t.
“Vice Principals” is definitely not the over-the-top comedy “Eastbound” was.
I honestly don’t find a lot in common between the two shows. “Vice Principals” has kind of a fucked-up sensibility and as the show progresses and people see what’s up—they would be hard-pressed to say it was the same thing. When you’re a comedian people show up because you’re in something, but it’s that tightrope walk of giving people what they want to see but also reinventing the thing.
The show’s only running two seasons. Why did you guys do it that way?
It was just kind of what I am drawn to about television. I see shows that go on for season after season, and if you can nail that it can be very lucrative. But TV can also just be a chance to tell a story in a longer period than an hour and a half.
So there’s no bringing Kenny Powers back?
Jody and I had some of the best times of our lives making that show and working with that character. But I think that for both of us, we loved that ending and I don’t know what we would do to beat it.
What can people expect from the event at the film festival?
I think it’s going to be the last two episodes of the first season. Jody and I came up in the film festival circuit. The Foot Fist Way got picked up at Sundance, so we love this sort of interaction with the die-hard fans of film and television. You usually get some interesting questions.
What’s the working relationship between you and Jody like?
We met in film school in North Carolina, and there’s a just a mutual respect. One of us can say something is dumb and you don’t get your feelings hurt. There’s no set way we do it. We both respect each other’s opinions and taste and things fall off the truck naturally.
Who came up with the idea for “Vice Principals”?
After we went to Sundance the first time, Jody came to visit me in Fredericksburg and we locked up and wrote a feature-length version, like a whole draft. But there was something about it being an hour and a half. It turned into any old buddy comedy. It didn’t have room to explore, and it sat on a shelf. But we loved those characters, and after “Eastbound and Down” Jody wanted to direct another film and I was looking to dive into something. We got a writers’ room together, blew up the script and it turned into 18 episodes.
You’ve worked a lot with Will Ferrell so I have to ask: What’s he like?
Will is one of the funniest guys I have ever met and a nice guy as well. You are not disappointed when you meet him. He has that rare ability to not even open his mouth and make you laugh.
Wikipedia says you were offered a minor league baseball contract. That true?
It is true. But you know, just because I played a pitcher doesn’t mean I know how to throw a baseball.
“Anyone can be angry,” co-creator Danny McBride says. “I guess these guys [characters Kenny Powers and Neal Gamby] are weirdly both dreamers. How their life was supposed to be doesn’t stack up to what it is.”—Shea Gibbs
Farewell Ferris Wheel looks beyond the bright lights
Last time you rode a Ferris wheel, did you pause to think about the person who clipped you safely into the cart and ran the controls that afforded you an aerial view of the twinkly carnival lights? Did you think about the people who assembled the ride in its place, piece by piece? Or the family that owns the carnival?
Filmmaker Jamie Sisley says he hadn’t thought much about that either, until he learned, though a 2008 article in Texas’ Brownsville Herald that a growing number of companies in the American carnival industry rely on migrant workers who come to the United States mostly from Mexico and Central America on an H-2B temporary non-agricultural work visa, spending as much as eight months of the year away from their families to work the carnival circuit.
About 66,000 H-2B visas are granted each year; many of the visa recipients work in the carnival, timber, crabbing/seafood and landscaping industries here in the U.S. They’re needed, Sisley says, because Americans aren’t very interested in performing manual labor jobs.
Sisley, who was living in Charlottesville, working at Red Light Management and dreaming of film school at the time, thought this combination of stories—the migrant workers, the carnival owners and the recruiters who connect the two—would make a great film.
He brought the idea to Miguel “M.i.G.” Martinez, a music video director who, a few years prior, had called Sisley to ask why more Latin artists weren’t playing shows in town and what he—a WTJU DJ with a bilingual radio show—could do to help. Martinez had immigrated to the U.S. from Mexico in 1989 and says he was eager to “bring light to the Latin community” and put a mic on voices not often heard.
“Both of us thought the characters were compelling,” Sisley says about their decision to shoot Farewell Ferris Wheel as a documentary instead of a narrative film. “Sometimes the truth is more interesting than fiction, and in this case, it was.”
For eight years, Sisley and Martinez asked question after question, got to know their subjects and followed each individual’s story to see where it led. Despite their own opinions on immigration and labor, they wanted to make an objective film, one that would spark conversation between all sides of this multifaceted story.
Farewell Ferris Wheel follows four main story lines: two legal migrant workers from Mexico; one guest worker recruiter who connects workers with carnivals across the U.S.; and a Maryland-based carnival owner. The film also features two legal workers’ rights advocates, including Mary Bauer, executive director of Charlottesville-based Legal Aid Justice Center.
They shot footage at carnivals in Maryland, Virginia and Texas, and filmed migrant workers at their homes in Tlapacoyan, Veracuz, Mexico, about 14 hours south of the U.S./Mexico border. They filmed the carnival owner at home in Maryland.
The more Sisley and Martinez pulled the thread, the more the story unraveled and the more complex it became—the H-2B visa program is wrapped up in matters of politics, business, labor laws, human rights and each individual’s story. Sisley says that eventually, the issue became, “How do you weigh some of the issues with the opportunity? It’s a really tough subject” to present, to watch unfold before your eyes.
It was an especially tough subject for two green filmmakers to bite off for their first feature-length film, the co-directors say. At the outset, they were learning the simplest things: working the cameras, adjusting shutter speed, how to approach, light and interview their subjects. They had to find funding; they had to balance this project with many others. But those things pale in comparison to the emotional component of documentary filmmaking. When you follow subjects for years, “you do get attached to all these people you follow, and you do build these relationships, and it takes a toll on you, knowing all the problems they’re encountering,” Martinez says.
Sisley and Martinez say that Farewell Ferris Wheel is meant to inform viewers about the H-2B visa program—the legal migrant workers and the employers who rely on them—not persuade viewers to adopt a certain viewpoint. They didn’t want to turn anyone away from the subject with a biased documentary. After all, Sisley says, it’s hard to miss the fact that all of these people—whether they’re crunching numbers at a desk, recruiting workers or clipping delighted carnival-goers into Ferris wheel carts—are all just trying to survive. Nobody’s getting rich here, Sisley says. Not the workers, not the recruiters, not the carnival owners.
“Film gives you the opportunity to humanize certain subjects in a way other forms can’t,” Sisley says, and documentaries are particularly effective at provoking empathy and understanding in a viewer—from graying hair to wrinkles, viewers can see the subjects change before their very eyes. “Visuals give a different sense than the written word,” Martinez says. “When you read something, you can imagine. But when you’re actually seeing the visuals, [you know] that’s how it really is.”—Erin O’Hare
Dorie Barton finds her own answers in Girl Flu
The 1976 film adaptation of Stephen King’s novel Carrie marked the first graphic depiction of menstruation on-screen. To say it wasn’t pleasant would be an understatement. What begins as a young woman getting her first period in the shower at school becomes fodder for a cruel prank in which she is doused in pig’s blood in front of the entire student body at prom. Most subsequent on-screen portrayals of menstruation have followed suit, using the subject as the basis for a gag or to make characters uncomfortable. This shortsighted perspective was not lost on actress-turned-director Dorie Barton.
“There’s a tampon, every now and then,” says Barton. “It shows up here and there [in films]. But the thing is, it’s really only used in a couple of ways. The main way that it’s used is to be a disgusting joke to either gross out a boy or to humiliate the girl. And then the other way that it’s used is like in Carrie, where it’s the harbinger of pure evil and proof of original sin. Really, I mean if this is what we’re showing young women—that periods are either gross and humiliating or they’re evil—it’s time to have a whole film that’s not just a throwaway gross-out, you know, that actually looks at what that transition really feels like.”
With Girl Flu, Barton’s feature-film debut as a writer and director, she aims to bring an honest and meaningful representation of the feminine experience to the big screen. The charming, lighthearted story stars Jade Pettyjohn as 12-year-old Bird, whose sixth-grade year brings about a lot of change: Not only does she move from the San Fernando Valley to Echo Park, but she also gets her first period. Finding it hard to rely on her irresponsible mom (played by Katee Sackhoff), Bird toes the line between childhood and adulthood as she navigates the nuances of growing up. Barton drew on her own experience to craft a relatable narrative.
“I remember even in fifth grade where they would show the really stupid films that were probably made in like the ’60s about, ‘Now you’re becoming a woman and things are different for you.’ And I remember that phrase just being really confusing to me and kind of pissing me off because I did not feel like whatever I thought was a woman. I was like, ‘I’m 11! That’s bananas!’ Just because something is happening to my body that already pissed me off, you know, but it’s like that doesn’t mean you’re a woman,” she says. “That whole idea of becoming a woman was one of the ways that the story got developed. I started thinking about what that meant—becoming a woman.”
While Girl Flu is a coming-of-age tale about adolescence, the narrative also follows the parallel trajectory of Bird’s mom, Jenny, who has to face her own lessons about adulthood.
“The other part of the story that really is incredibly important to me is that I think that the fact that not all women fit into an easy mold of being mothers and that there’s all kinds of ways to be mothers,” Barton says. “There’s just so many different ways to be a woman. …If I can be part of showing more of that, I feel a personal responsibility to do that.”
After finding complex characters harder to come by in her own work as a television and film actress, Barton set her sights on writing and directing full-time.
“I worked really steadily through my 20s and 30s, but of course because I’m a female the parts just got less and less interesting and I just felt less and less motivated to keep pursuing acting,” she explains. “I had been writing some screenplays for a while. …But then I just realized that I really needed to invest in myself and that if I was going to have a happy, fulfilling career, then I needed to be the one creating content.”
Throughout her years on set, Barton gravitated toward directors and cinematographers, gathering all the information she could. Now, she’s using her time behind the camera to shed light on the complicated and multifaceted experience that is womanhood. She’ll be on hand to discuss the film November 4 at Newcomb Hall Theater.
“Becoming a woman—to me and in this film—is being true; finding your best, authentic self and learning to accept that,” Barton says. “That does mean that sometimes you have to make changes that you’re uncomfortable with and that’s not always something that’s by choice, but you do have a choice about how to deal with it. And you can either struggle or you can try to be graceful and thrive, whatever age you are.”
“There’s just so many different ways to be a woman,” director Dorie Barton says. “…If I can be part of showing more of that, I feel a personal responsibility to do that.”—Desiré Moses
Hot Air lifts off
When we last checked in on local filmmakers Derek Sieg and Jeremy Goldstein in 2012, they had written a script and were camped out on the Downtown Mall selling T-shirts, crowdsourcing and heavily promoting a “Get Nick” campaign in hopes of enticing Nick Nolte to star in their movie. More than four years later, Hot Air debuted on October 15 at the Austin Film Festival, where it won the jury prize for best comedy feature, and it premieres locally November 6 at the Virginia Film Festival.
Which seems appropriate to native son Sieg, whose first movie, the locally filmed Swedish Auto, starring Lukas Haas, pre-“Mad Men” fame January Jones and Mel’s Cafe, screened at the film fest in 2006.
“[Hot Air] was shot in Austin, but almost every other aspect took place here,” he says, listing fundraising, the soundtrack and post-production.
Another bit of local sourcing: Schuyler Fisk, offspring of Sissy Spacek and Jack Fisk, is the film’s love interest. “She’s awesome,” says Sieg. “I’ve known her a long time.”
But things didn’t quite work out with Nolte to play the lead character, an aging lothario, personal injury lawyer and hard-partying restaurateur who fakes his own death to avoid jail time.
“Finding the right lead—that was a long and winding road,” says Sieg. “We finally found Jere Burns, who was perfect for the part.” Burns has been in TV series such as “Dear John” in the ’80s, and more recently in FX’s “Justified.”
“He’s a character actor who hasn’t been a leading man,” says Sieg. “People recognize him but are not sure how.”
The movie was filmed in 2014 and has been in post-production for the past year and a half. After it screens here, Sieg and Goldstein will continue on the film festival circuit, ideally finding a distributor.
Their use of Kickstarter was early on in the crowdsourcing phenomenon, and they’re still working on some guerrilla marketing angles.
And Sieg is happy to report that there were no hot-air-balloon-meets-power-line incidents in the shooting. “Everything on the filming went beautifully except for the last day,” he says, when weather prevented a final balloon shoot. “We were able to move on without it.”—Lisa Provence
“Finding the right lead—that was a long and winding road,” says filmmaker Derek Sieg. “We finally found Jere Burns, who was perfect for the part.”
Check out these films with Virginia connections
Before the Fall
This reimagining of Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice is set in modern-day, rural Virginia and centers around the life of Ben (rather than Elizabeth) Bennet, an attorney who unknowingly insults Lee Darcy, a factory worker who has been wrongly charged with domestic abuse. They immediately dislike each other, which proves problematic when Ben falls in love with Lee. The film was shot in Washington, Smyth and Lee counties; director Byrum Geisler has lived in Virginia all his life. “I wanted to make a film that presented the complex people of this region in a more accurate way and captured the natural beauty here. Sexual preference is not love…love is love,” Geisler says.
November 4 at PVCC Dickinson Center
London Towns
London Town director Derrick Borte remembers the exact moment in 1980 when a friend handed him a cassette tape of The Clash’s debut album. When Borte hit play, he realized, “this was the music I was supposed to listen to.” He eventually wore out the cassette, but it was just the beginning of his relationship with the band’s music. There have been many Clash biopics, but London Town focuses on the band’s music and its continued influence on the industry. It’s “a glimpse into a brief moment in the life of one young boy, almost 40 years ago, set against the rise of punk, and a backdrop of social, political and racial unrest that is incredibly similar and relevant to what we see happening in the world today.” Borte, who attended Old Dominion University and currently lives in Virginia Beach, says he “made London Town to illuminate the power that music has to change your life.”
November 5 at Vinegar Hill Theatre
Macbeth Unhinged
Actor Angus Macfadyen, known for playing Robert the Bruce in Braveheart and Robert Rogers on AMC’s “Turn,” makes his directorial debut with Macbeth Unhinged, a retelling of Shakespeare’s gruesome tragedy. The film, shot in Richmond in black and white and edited with vintage techniques, is “about the corruption of power: a king and queen in a tinted stretch limousine going slowly insane as they accumulate death and then find their own release in it,” Macfadyen says. He says the story of Macbeth—a thane consumed by a prophecy that says one day he will be king—is “a Shakespearean impression of the Scottish soul, how it sold out and chose for one of its folkloric heroes a Scottish terrier called Greyfriars Bobby,” a dog that slept by its abusive master’s grave, “unwilling to grasp its freedom.”
November 5 at Violet Crown Cinema
Hunter Gatherer
Lynchburg native Josh Locy makes his writing and directorial debut with Hunter Gatherer, a film starring “The Wire”’s Andre Royo as a man who is released from prison and returns to his former neighborhood to win back his girlfriend, only to realize that she and her family have moved on. Locy says the film is based on his friend’s experience as a drug-addicted pimp in 1980s Philadelphia. “I was drawn to the world of his stories but became more emotionally invested in the characters when I was able to inform my experience with theirs, and vice versa,” Locy says. Among other things, he says, the film explores the human need for connection.
November 5 at Vinegar Hill Theatre
The Rebound
What began as a volunteer promotional video for nonprofit wheelchair basketball team Miami Heat Wheels evolved into a four-year documentary film project for Earlysville-based director and editor Shaina Allen and producer Michael Esposito. “Our eyes were opened to a world we didn’t know existed,” Allen says, “and we realized that Miami Heat Wheels were not isolated in the issues they faced.” Adaptive sports are often overlooked, despite how transformative they can be for the athletes and their communities. Ultimately, Allen says, The Rebound is “a story of unwavering resolve and a testament to mankind’s innate ability to overcome life’s toughest challenges, including those beyond what meets the eye. The story we decided to tell can positively influence the way audiences view people that mainstream society labels disabled.”
The ensuing oil spill following the explosion and sinking of semi-submersible Mobile Offshore Drilling Unit Deepwater Horizon in 2011 devastated states along the Gulf Coast for years to come. It was the worst natural disaster—and largest corporate settlement—in United States history. But before the constant media coverage, before the horrendously painful hearings in which BP CEO Tony Hayward complained, “I want my life back,” there was the incident itself, in which 11 workers lost their lives, 17 were injured and 94 were rescued in an accident that required quick thinking and heroism from ordinary people placed in an extraordinary situation.
Deepwater Horizon PG-13, 107 minutes
Violet Crown Cinema and Regal Stonefield 14 and IMAX
This is the focus of Peter Berg’s Deepwater Horizon, an appropriately straightforward disaster film that puts the focus on the people who did their best in impossible circumstances to contain the damage and save one another’s lives. The film follows engineer Mike Williams (Mark Wahlberg), head of safety Jimmy “Mr. Jimmy” Harrell (Kurt Russell) and navigation worker Andrea Fleytas (Gina Rodriguez). The crew, 43 days behind on their drill, arrives on the rig to find total disarray. Some key safety crew members have been sent home, shortcuts have been taken on vital security protocols, there are numerous structural and mechanical problems in need of immediate attention—even the phones are unreliable. Under pressure from executives at BP—led by an especially sleazy John Malkovich as Donald Vidrine—to begin drilling immediately, Mr. Jimmy is convinced by a strained yet plausible explanation for bad test results and leaves for his quarters to “wash the day away,” while the team proceeds in his absence.
It’s then that all hell breaks loose, simultaneously highlighting Deepwater Horizon’s best and worst attributes. The exact reasons why this accident occurred are often rushed and technical to the point of being incomprehensible, and in the ensuing melee, it’s often difficult to remember who is doing what and why. All we are left with for character development is “Mr. Jimmy good, Mr. Vidrine bad,” which turns out to be plenty, given the chief concern of the film on the moment-to-moment struggle to prevent a terrible accident from becoming a full-blown catastrophe. Berg certainly respects rig workers and paid detailed attention to the factual sequence of events, but anyone going into Deepwater Horizon with questions about what happened is unlikely to find clear answers.
On its own terms, Deepwater Horizon succeeds; it’s lean, it’s somehow exciting amid the confusion, it’s respectful of the victims and survivors, it does what it sets out to do while remaining steadfastly apolitical. It’s a satisfying depiction of real-world heroism and mankind’s capacity to rise to the occasion with no preparation or warning. The epilogue includes real footage of testimony from Williams, Harrell and Fleytas, which for a moment is as gripping as the film preceding it. If those moments are any indication, a documentary that clarifies some of the unresolved issues on a Blu-Ray release would be the ideal way to experience Deepwater Horizon.
Playing this week
Regal Stonefield 14 and IMAX
The Shops at Stonefield, 244-3213
Blair Witch, Bridget Jones’s Baby, Don’t Breathe, The Magnificent Seven, Masterminds, Miss Peregrine’s Home for Peculiar Children, Queen of Katwe, Snowden, Storks, Suicide Squad, Sully
Violet Crown Cinema
200 W. Main St., Downtown Mall, 529-3000
The Beatles: Eight Days a Week-— The Touring Years, Bridget Jones’s Baby, Eat That Question: Frank Zappa in His Own Words, Hell or High Water, The Magnificent Seven, Masterminds, Miss Peregrine’s Home for Peculiar Children, Snowden, Starving the Beast, Storks, Sully
On the surface, Disney’s Queen of Katwe is a feel-good, fact-based movie whose familiarity is part of its charm. Based on the life of Ugandan chess prodigy Phiona Mutesi, the film, directed by Mira Nair (Monsoon Wedding, Mississippi Masala), confidently navigates the Disney underdog formula, yet finds personal and occasionally political depth in its subject’s story. The movie’s impressive ensemble is made up of both world-famous talent (David Oyelowo, Lupita Nyong’o) and complete newcomers (led by Madina Nalwanga as Phiona). This year has been seriously lacking in upbeat films, and Queen of Katwe may be just the thing we need.
Queen of Katwe PG, 124 minutes
Violet Crown Cinema and Regal Stonefield 14 and IMAX
Beneath the surface, Nair has led what might be a quiet revolution against Hollywood convention despite Queen of Katwe’s conventional structure: The film takes place almost entirely in Uganda from the perspective of Ugandans. This might seem unremarkable when stated so plainly, but consider most Western films set in Africa and the tropes they lean on—war, famine, atrocity, always seen through the eyes of some white savior, perhaps a journalist or NGO worker. Those sorts of films may be rooted in good intentions, but they ultimately essentialize entire countries to fit the particular sympathies of Western liberal guilt, and reduce the totality of their existence to their suffering.
Queen of Katwe is told completely from the point of view of its protagonists—nearly every speaking role is a black actor—and though it does not whitewash the social problems of its setting, the film never treats its characters as objects of pity but as individuals attempting to do the best they can with what they have.
Based on the book by sports reporter Tim Crothers, Queen of Katwe follows Phiona as she develops her gift for chess, a talent discovered by Robert Katende (Oyelowo), whose ministry helps disenfranchised youth by feeding them and teaching them chess. Phiona and her siblings are unable to attend school because they have to work to make rent following the death of Phiona’s father. Her widowed mother, Nakku (Nyong’o), is fiercely protective of her children, aware of the dangers and temptations that await them (including some surprisingly blunt references to war and sex work for a Disney film). And while she understands that her daughter is special, she is wary of the uncertainty that comes from so much pressure being put on a young teenager.
Phiona’s gift is impressive, but Katende gradually comes to realize that she has the potential to be an international contender, yet growing up illiterate and poor in the village of Katwe puts her at an unfair disadvantage. In another skewering of convention, Queen of Katwe is a thoughtful coming-of-age tale that focuses not on dating but on coming to terms with one’s own talent and ambition; after her first tournament victory at an elite school in Uganda, she’s convinced the wealthy city boy allowed her to win. As her confidence grows, her dissatisfaction with her surroundings causes conflict between Phiona and her mother, which balloons into overconfidence before an emotional loss on the international stage.
The child actors are all watchable and occasionally hilarious, and their chemistry with Oyelowo and Nyong’o will make you forgive the surprisingly long runtime of 124 minutes. In the most superficial ways, Queen of Katwe is nothing new, but within it is the potential to forever alter the film industry as we know it.
Playing this week
Regal Stonefield 14 and IMAX The Shops at Stonefield, 244-3213 Blair Witch, Bridget Jones’s Baby, Don’t Breathe, The Magnificent Seven, Snowden, Storks, Suicide Squad, Sully, When the Bough Breaks, The Wild Life
Violet Crown Cinema
200 W. Main St., Downtown Mall, 529-3000 The Beatles: Eight Days a Week-The Touring Years, Bridget Jones’s Baby, Complete Unknown, Hell or High Water, The Hollars, Hunt for the Wilderpeople, The Magnificent Seven, Snowden, Storks, Sully