Wednesday, May 28, 2014

Flick Picks 5/27/14: The Bridge season 1, Miss Fisher's Murder Mysteries season 2

New on DVD at the Library This Week
ENTERTAINMENT: Colin Firth recruits Cameron Diaz to help steal a valuable statue from Alan Rickman in this comedic remake of the 1966 crime flick Gambit. You may or may not be surprised to hear that it does not all proceed smoothly. The film is also a rarity in that it was scripted but not directed by the Coen Brothers. A coming-of-age film is viewed through a birder's binoculars in A Birder's Guide to Everything, in which a group of teenage friends hunt for a rare bird on the eve of one of their father's remarriage. Ben Kingsley shows up as their birder mentor. Former SNL'er Will Forte made a big impression in Nebraska and he's back in another semi-serious role in Run and Jump. Forte plays a neurologist who becomes involved with a family while studying the father's frustrating recovery from frontal lobe damage.

SERIES: The eagerly anticipated Danish series The Bridge finally arrives, following Danish and Swedish police who must work together to track a killer who has left a single corpse composed of two separate body halves. Another popular Scandinavian thriller arrives this week in the third season of Wallander (not the English language Kenneth Branagh version), which is composed of six episodes featuring Henning Mankell's veteran detective.

We also have imports from Australia in season 2 of the noirish Guy Pearce series Jack Irish and season 2 of the charming Jazz Age Miss Fisher's Murder Mysteries. The USA (both country and network) is also represented with season 4 of spy thriller Covert Affairs and season 3 of snappy lawyer show Suits.

SUBTITLED: An affluent Budapest architect will go to all lengths to keep her no good son out of prison in the naturalistic thriller Child's Pose.

You can find all of our new and upcoming DVD releases in Bibliocommons.

Talking Pictures
Mads Mikkelson gives a powerful performance as a teacher who is wrongfully accused in the Danish drama The Hunt. We will be screening this film, followed by a discussion, as part of our Monday, June 2nd Talking Pictures program. Talking Pictures is hosted by Susan Benjamin and screenings take place in the Hammond Room of the library. All of our film screenings are free and open to everyone.

Experience the Criterion Collection
If you're looking for quality films then the Criterion Collection is a good place to start! The Criterion Collection releases important historical and recent films with restored film transfers, multiple commentaries and myriad bonus materials and range from Oscar winners like the recent Italian import The Great Beauty to classic silent films such as The Passion of Joan of Arc. Most of our Criterion holdings can be found in the Subtitled and Classics sections. Here are some of the must-see Criterion releases:
  • Pina is director Wim Wenders' thrilling look at dance choreographer Pina Bausch, presenting some of her most notable works.
  • If you enjoy Lena Dunham's tv show Girls then you should definitely check out her early award-winning film Tiny Furniture.
  • Monsieur Verdoux is one of Charlie Chaplin's later works, and while it had been hard to see for many years, many people now consider it to be a dark masterpiece.
  • Director Jean-Pierre Melville's classic drama about the French Resistance, Army of Shadows, is a must-see.
  • Ingmar Bergman is well represented on Criterion, which released a 3-disc version of his Scenes From a Marriage that contains the complete version made for Swedish television.
  • The Italian The Leopard looks at a changing Italy and features a marvelous lead performance by Burt Lancaster.
  • There are many excellent early Hollywood comedies such as the Preston Sturges classic Unfaithfully Yours , starring Rex Harrison.

Tuesday, May 20, 2014

Flick Picks 5/20/14: Monuments Men, 3 Days to Kill, Pompeii

New this week on DVD at the library
ENTERTAINMENT: This week's Flick Picks stars George Clooney, Matt Damon, Bill Murray, Cate Blanchett and Jean Dujardin...and unbelievably all in the same movie! Monuments Men tells the true story of soldiers in World War II tasked with finding invaluable works of art and returning them to their rightful owners before they are destroyed. Clooney directed the film and we've got it on DVD and Blu-ray. Also this week, Kevin Costner is a spy trying to retire settle down to a quiet, normal family life when he is pulled into one last job in the tense thriller 3 Days to Kill. It was directed by action specialist McG (the Charlie's Angels movies) and produced by Luc Besson.

Thrills, destruction and romance are the name of the game in Pompeii, in which former slave and current gladiator Kit Harington (of Game of Thrones) must save his love before his town is smothered in lava. Grand Piano is a tense little thriller that received excellent reviews and features Elijah Wood as a stage fright-plagued pianist who is threatened by a sniper during his return to public performance. Elizabeth Olsen might be the hottest actress in film these days and in the adaptation of In Secret, an adaptation of Emile Zola's Therese Raquin, she plays a woman who escapes her dead end life by launching an affair, only to have it all end badly. Jessica Lange also helps fill the screen in this gothic romance.

SERIES: The BBC's post-war drama Call the Midwife returns for a third season.

SUBTITLED: The Jewish Cardinal tells the remarkable true story of Jean-Marie Lustiger who, despite converting to Catholicism at a young age, maintained his Jewish identity, eventually using both of his religious backgrounds when Carmelite nuns decide to build a convent at Auschwitz. Celebrated Iranian filmmaker Abbas Kiarostami's set-in-Tokyo Like Someone in Love tells about the interactions between a call girl, her boyfriend, and an elderly professor.

DOCUMENTARIES: After Tiller looks at the few remaining doctors who provide late-term abortions as well as some of the women pursuing these procedures. The history, politics and controversies behind the creation of the new World Trade Center are the focus of the fascinating 16 Acres.

You can find all of our new and upcoming releases in Bibliocommons.

Movies for Memorial Day
There are a number of great war films that recognize the sacrifice of the soldier as well as the futility of war. Memorial Day weekend is a great time to take out of these movies and recognize all that the members of our military have done for us.
  • Ben Foster and Woody Harrelson work for the Casualty Notification Office of the U.S. Army, and must handle the emotions of distraught spouses while trying to adjust to their own challenges in The Messenger.
  • Oliver Stone's Platoon is a look at the common soldier's experience in Vietnam and is based on Stone's own service.
  • Elite soldiers join a brutal battle in the streets of Mogadishu in the frantic Black Hawk Down.
  • Steven Spielberg tells the story of a group of World War II soldiers tasked with rescuing a sole remaining brother in Saving Private Ryan.
  • Beyond the cameo of Glencoe's Metra station, Clint Eastwood's Flags of Our Fathers is worth seeing for the story of the six men who raised the flag in the famous photo at The Battle of Iwo Jima.
  • Three World War II veterans return to their small towns only to discover that their whole world has changed in The Best Years of Our Lives.
  • The realities of the brutality of war in World War I for German soldiers is vividly captured in one of the most famous early anti-war films, All Quiet on the Western Front.
  • Stanley Kubrick brings us the of war in Paths of Glory, in which soldiers rebel when asked to participate in an impossible charge.

Tuesday, May 13, 2014

Flick Picks 5/13/14: Her, Orange is the New Black

New on DVD at the library this week
ENTERTAINMENT: There are many terms that people use to label director Spike Jonze's work in film: visionary, original and genius are a few. Most importantly for a moviegoer, Jonze's films like Being John Malkovich, Adaptation and Where the Wild Things Are can be called entertaining. His latest cinematic venture Her stars Joaquin Phoenix as a shy writer who falls in love with his operating system (voiced by Scarlett Johansson). Ultimately, once you get beyond its strange premise the film is a sweet love story. We've got it on DVD and Blu-ray.

SERIES: The made-for-Netflix series Orange is the New Black is loosely based on the women's prison memoir of the same name and has been hailed as one of the most entertaining series in recent years. Also this week we've got season 4 of the rude and crude Danny McBride series Eastbound and Down and season 2 of the adventures of Wyoming sheriff Longmire.

DOCUMENTARIES: Another visionary director, Michel Gondry (Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind), gives us Is the Man Who is Tall Happy?, an animated version of a series of conversations with Noam Chomsky. Animation allows Gondry to help explain some of Chomsky's more complex ideas about the emergence of language. Also this week, in 2009 Patrick Stewart and Ian McKellen co-starred in a hit West End production of Waiting for Godot. The candid Theatreland brings us the entire process of this play's creation, from planning to production.

You can find all of our new and upcoming DVDs in Bibliocommons.

Monday at the Movies
We will be screening Cutie and the Boxer on Monday, May 19 at 1:00 pm. Cutie and the Boxer is about an 80-year-old "boxing" painter Ushio Shinohara and his wife and de facto assistant, Noriko who seeks her own recognition through her "Cutie" illustrations, which depict their chaotic 40-year marriage. This film captures two lives united by a dedication to art-making for a touching meditation on the eternal themes of love and sacrifice. The movie is 82 minutes and is rated R. It will screen at the Glencoe Woman's Club at 325 Tudor Court and is free of cost and open to everybody.

Teacher Appreciation Week
Last week was Teacher Appreciation Week and while you've probably already shown your child's teacher how much you appreciate what they do you might want to take a look at one of our documentaries showing the challenges facing educational systems in America and elsewhere.
  • American Teacher follows four teachers and looks at the challenges that they face as they try to decide whether to continue in the profession.
  • The director of An Inconvenient Truth offers up another controversial film with Waiting for "Superman", which offers up challenges to teachers' unions and lauds charter schools.
  • The stresses that children must face in today's schools while facing standardized testing are the focus of Race to Nowhere.
  • The Lottery looks at four lower income New York families who have entered their children into a competitive lottery for admission to a charter school, the results of which could dramatically improve their lives.
  • The French To Be and to Have gives us a unique and touching look at a one-room schoolhouse in rural France.

Wednesday, May 7, 2014

Flick Picks 5/6/04: The Veronica Mars Movie, The Art of the Steal

New on DVD at the Library This Week
ENTERTAINMENT: The fans were begging for more Veronica Mars and now they've got it! Kristin Bell's modern-day Nancy Drew made the move from the TV to the big screen in 2014 thanks to a Kickstarter campaign that raised nearly $6 million from eager devotees. Fortunately, The Veronica Mars Movie also serves as an excellent introduction for new fans, as it returns young sleuth Veronica to her high school reunion where she must help her former boyfriend Logan to extract himself from a murder charge. If you feel the need to get caught up on the TV series on which the movie was based we also have it as part of our collection. Also this week, Kurt Russell, Matt Dillon and Terence Stamp team up in the fun and funny caper flick The Art of the Steal, in which Russell plays a motorcyclist/thief who is brought back in for one last job. Things go wrong.

SERIES: Republic of Doyle is a new lightweight crime show based in seaside Newfoundland that features a rule-breaking detective and his ex-cop father.

SUBTITLED: Simon and the Oaks is the moving drama about the relationship between two families - one working class and one wealthy and Jewish - in Germany during and after World War II. Also, originally screened as a German miniseries, Generation War brings together five young friends who are forced to deal with the consequences of Hitler's ascendance in different ways.

DOCUMENTARIES: British historian Simon Schama gives us the epic five episode Story of the Jews, originally shown on PBS. If you are looking for an adrenaline-filled but very real film, you should try Burn, which follows Detroit firefighters as they face their daily pressures in a city that is going through difficult times. It wasn't so long ago that our ancestors were swimming around with gills, and Your Inner Fish is a fascinating look at what we've inherited from our piscine progenitors. Finally, this week we've got an American Masters look at sculptor Alexander Calder.

You can find all of our new and upcoming films in our Bibliocommons catalog.

Mom in Movies
Mother's Day is coming up (you did remember, didn't you?) Here are some vivid portrayals of mothers in film, some of whom may not exactly win any "mother of the year" awards.
  • In Terminator 2 Sarah Connor must fight to keep her son alive, which is a good thing for all of us since he will eventually save humanity.
  • Next time you face difficulties with your child remember that you could be giving birth to the devil's progeny, as in Rosemary's Baby.
  • Mother-daughter relationships are explored as are race and class issues in the classic Douglas Sirk melodrama Imitation of Life.
  • Norman Bates is both the protected kid and the (spoiler alert!) overprotective mother in Alfred Hitchcock's Psycho.
  • Are there any more troubling childhood memories that seeing Bambi's mother die? Yeah, we didn't think so.
  • You'd need telekinetic powers to deal with a mother like Stephen King's Carrie's (here in its 2013 remake).
  • The Manchurian Candidate features perhaps the ultimate controlling mother-son relationship between Angela Lansbury and Frank Sinatra.
  • The powerful Korean import Mother brings us a mom who gives up everything to find out who framed her son for murder.