Friday, October 30, 2015

Flick Picks 10/30/2015: The Gift, Jurassic World, End of the Tour

Jurassic World was both literally and figuratively the prevailing monster(s) at the box office this past summer.  The dinosaurs and their human prey have arrived in DVD.  Somewhat lost in all that pounding excitement this summer were two of the better films of the year to date, The Gift and End of the Tour.  In addition to a mixed bag of feature films, we have a rich quartet of documentaries among our recent arrivals on DVD.  Not enough?  Perhaps you devote most of your viewing time to those addictive series?  Worry not - we have lots of new series DVDs for you as well.



Feature Films

THE GIFT

Jason Bateman and Rebecca Hall star in this psychological thriller about a seemingly perfect couple, Simon and Robyn, who relocate to the Los Angeles area from Chicago.  Soon after their arrival they encounter Gordon (writer/director Joel Edgerton), an awkward man who knew Simon during their school days.  Gordon shows up at the elegant mid-century home of the couple to offer them a welcome gift, but his visits continue.  As the relationship between the couple and the outsider grows more complicated, it's not clear where the greater darkness lies:  with Gordon or behind the impeccable veneer of Simon and Robyn's life.  All of the principals are quite good here, but Jason Bateman has never been better.




END OF THE TOUR

Based on David Lipsky's memoir, Although of Course You End Up Becoming YourselfEnd of the Tour features a brilliant performance by Jason Segel as writer David Foster Wallace.  Jesse Eisenberg plays Lipsky, then a Rolling Stone writer assigned to interview Wallace during the last days of his book tour for the colossal Infinite Jest.    



JURASSIC WORLD

Will we never learn that live dinosaur theme parks are a bad idea?  Apparently each generation must learn their lesson the hard way.  Thus, Jurassic World, as unstoppable at the past summer's box office as a rampaging, genetically-engineered velociraptor.  We have several copies of Jurassic World in regular DVD and Blu-ray.



WHAT WE DO IN THE SHADOWS

And now for something decidedly different.  Jemaine Clement (he of Flight of the Conchords fame) stars as one of a group of vampires who share a house in Wellington, New Zealand in this often droll, sometimes hilarious mockumentary.  In addition to the perils of daytime and it's potentially incendiary sunlight, it turns out that 21st-century vampires have more mundane problems, like dealing with messy housemates and wrangling modern technology.  There is also the scourge of vampire hunters and an annoying gang of werewolves.  Happy Halloween!






Set in "The Bottoms" neighborhood of Inglewood, California, Dope is something of an urban fairy tale.  Like classic fairy tales, Dope doesn't shy away from the harsher elements of its story - in this case, gangs, violence, drugs and the general difficulty of being a geek in this area of present-day Southern California.  But in fairy tale fashion Malcolm, Jib and Diggy magically navigate this vibrant, often forbidding world unscathed.  Dope is smart, sweet, satirical fun.      






Documentary



The Wolfpack is one of those stories that is a documentarians dream.  Director Crystal Moselle actually met the six boys featured in The Wolfpack by chance, walking down First Avenue in Manhanttan while she was still a graduate student.  She came to learn that the boys, along with one other sibling, had been homeschooled in a Lower East Side apartment and rarely allowed to leave their their home.  The children learned about the outside world by watching films, which they then reenacted.  Only when one of the boys, then a 15-year-old, dared to go out and walk around the city on his own, did life forever change for the Angulo brothers.



GLEN CAMPBELL:  I'LL BE ME

When the great Glen Campbell (timeless recordings of "Gentle On My Mind," "Wichita Lineman," "Rhinestone Cowboy" among many others) was diagnosed with Alzheimer's disease in 2011, he decided to make a farewell tour.  What was supposed to last only five weeks became a year and a half celebration of his life and music.  Glen Campbell:  I'll Be Me was nominated for Best Original Song at the 2015 Academy Awards for Campbell's final studio recording, "I'm Not Gonna Miss You."



ABOVE AND BEYOND

Above and Beyond is the story of American pilots who flew planes to help the new Israeli state during the 1948 Arab-Israeli War.



I KNEW IT WAS YOU:  REDISCOVERING JOHN CAZALE

Tantalizingly short as the life of its subject, "I Knew It Was You," recounts the all-too-brief career of character actor John Cazale, most famously known for his performance as the hapless brother Fredo in the first two Godfather films.  Cazale appeared in only five films, but all were nominated for Best Picture and won a slew of acting awards for those who worked with the inspiring actor.  A strong testament to the esteem in which Cazale is still held can be found in the number of major stars who take time to reminisce about their relationship and work with the actor's actor.  There are also revealing interviews with actors a generation or two removed who feel his influence, including another brilliant man who died far too young, Philip Seymour Hoffman.  Among Cazale's contemporaries, we hear from Al Pacino, Sidney Lumet, Robert De Niro and Gene Hackman.  There is also the love of John Cazale's life, Meryl Streep, who was at the his side when he succumbed to lung cancer in 1978 at the age of 42.  



Also new:  It's the true story behind the film Argo,  OUR MAN IN TEHRAN.



Series


INDIAN SUMMERS, SEASON ONE

This British drama - broadcast as part of PBS' Masterpiece series - is set among a group of English socialites who spend their summers in Simla, India, in the foothills of the Himalayas during the time of The Raj.




HOME FIRES

Meanwhile, back in Great Britain...it's World War II.  Home Fires takes place in rural Chesire, among the many women separated from family members at Women's Institute.




CHASING SHADOWS, SEASON ONE

Alex Kingston  and Reece Shearsmith star in this British miniseries which follows the work of a missing persons unit. In the grand tradition of mismatched partners, he's the socially inept genius and she's the empathetic analyst.  Expect a good bit of friction and suspense.




HAPPY VALLEY, SEASON ONE

We're not in  the Happy Valley that's home to the Penn State Nittany Lions.  Nor is this valley in West Yorkshire happy at all as experienced in this BBC series.  Sarah Lancashire plays a police sergeant trying to come to terms with her daughter's suicide, even as she encounters than man she believes responsible for the assault that drove her daughter to take her life.  The sergeant's pursuit of the man takes her into even murkier waters than she imagined.




THE LEFTOVERS, SEASON ONE

Based on the novel by Tom Perrotta, this HBO series is set in fictional Mapletown, New York three years after a global event called "The Sudden Departure," which involved the disappearance of two percent of the world's population (140 million people).  Justin Theroux stars as a police chief whose splintering family is enough to keep him worried, not to mention all the chaos in the world about him.


Also new in series DVDs:

AGENT CARTER, SEASON ONE

WODEHOUSE IN EXILE

THE CODE, SEASON ONE

FRESH OFF THE BOAT, SEASON ONE

MAD MEN, FINAL SEASON, PART 2

NURSE JACKIE, SEASON SEVEN

FOLLOWING, SEASON THREE




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Thursday, October 15, 2015

Flick Picks 10/15/2015: Tomorrowland, San Andreas, Varda a-go-go

We might not have something for everyone this week, but we come mighty close.  George Clooney, meet The Rock.  The Rock, meet legendary French filmmaker (and someone about half your size) Agnes Varda.  Now that would be an interesting dinner party.  Not to mention the entertainment that  Channing Tanning and his buff friends might provide....


Feature Films

TOMORROWLAND

Never one to miss a marketing tie-in, the people at Disney renamed the film that had a working title of 1952 to Tomorrowland, after the futuristic themed land found at Disney amusement parks.  George Clooney stars as a disillusioned inventor joined by a young science enthusiast in the titular world where their actions have a direct consequence not only on themselves, but the ambiguous world itself.



SAN ANDREAS

Fear not, California.  The Rock is here to save the day.  Well, even The Rock has his limits.  That very famous fault slips to the tune of 9.1 on the Richter Scale and a great deal of death and destruction follow.  Is there any hope for the future?  Is this perhaps a good time to buy real estate in San Francisco?  Watch and find out.    



ME AND EARL AND THE DYING GIRL

One of the audience favorites of 2015, Me and Earl and the Dying Girl is based on the young adult novel by Jesse Andrews.  Rachel, the dying girl in question, is befriended by filmmaking friends Greg and Earl.  She's amused by their film parodies and eventually the boys are convinced to make a film for Rachel as she begins a course of chemotherapy to fight her leukemia.  Me and Earl and the Dying Girl deftly parries  this tearjerker set-up with frequent humor and insight into adolescent bravado and coping.



MAGIC MIKE XXL

Well, you know.

It's nice to see a young man wearing a tie these days, isn't it?  


Also new:

3 WOMEN

Named by Roger Ebert the best film of 1977, 3 Women is a Robert Altman classic long unavailable on video.  Shelley Duvall and Sissy Spacek star as two Texas natives who become roommates in a remote California town.  Much strangeness ensues when the more shy of the pair (Spacek) becomes obsessed with the more charismatic woman (Duvall).  We have 3 Women in a new Criterion Collection edition.






Series

THE SLAP

Told from multiple points of view, The Slap unfolds after a man strikes the misbehaving son of a friend at a social gathering.  A thorny aftermath divides the attending families, as some consider the slap justified, while others consider it criminal.



BATES MOTEL, SEASON 3

The back story of Norman Bates continues as we find out what went so horribly wrong with the infamous mamma's boy.  Here, mother is actually quite alive and played by the appealing Vera Farmiga.




Also new:

AMERICAN HORROR STORY, SEASON FOUR

SILENT WITNESS, SEASON TWO

DCI BANKS, SEASON FOUR




Classics

MAN WITH THE GUN

We have recently acquired two classic films starring Robert Mitchum:  Foreign Intrigue and Man With the Gun.  In the latter, the question is what price law and order?  Mitchum plays Clint Tollinger, a gunfighter hired to save Sheridan City from a band of thugs ever threatening the peace of the town.  But will the cure be worse than the disease?





Foreign

LA POINTE COURTE
CLEO FROM 5 TO 7
LE BONHEUR
VAGABOND

French filmmaker Agnes Varda  is in the midst of a brief Chicago residency.  To celebrate this fact, we have acquired Criterion Collection editions of four classic Varda films.  Her first film, La Pointe Courte (1955), told with two interwoven narratives, serves as a kind of bridge between Italian neorealism and the French New Wave.  Cleo From 5 to 7 (1962) is basically a real-time account of a lovely French singer biding her time around Paris as she awaits the results of a medical test.  Several luminaries from French cinema make cameo appearances.  Le Bonheur (1965) and Vagabond (1985) arrived twenty years apart and couldn't be more different on their surface, the the former colorful and serene, the latter a rather more harsh affair.  But both deal with the reality lurking beneath their charactes and relationships.  Long a rare female voice among more celebrated male contemporaries, Agnes Varda is one of the greats of French cinema.

Cleo From 5 to 7
Le Bonheur


Agnes Varda at work









Documentary

BLACKOUT

1977 was a wild year in New York City.  Adding to the chaos of that particular summer in the city was a blackout that affected virtually the entire metropolitan area for two hot days in July.  A product of the PBS series The American Experience, Blackout sets the tumultuous context of New York in the 70's and offers first person accounts from those who lived through those strange days.



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Thursday, October 8, 2015

Flick Picks 10/7/2015: Avengers: Age of Ultron, Pitch Perfect 2, Spy, Furious 7


Summer is not over just yet, even if fall jackets have made an appearance this past week.  Several summer blockbusters have arrived in DVD, along with one overlooked independent film worth a look.


Feature Films


AVENGERS, AGE OF ULTRON


The Marvel gang is back to save the world.  Again.  As thundering summer fare goes, one can at least count on the Avengers films for relative intelligence and even the occasional moment of wit.  The cast of heavy hitters includes Robert Downey, Jr., Chris Hemsworth, Scarlett Johansson and Samuel Jackson.  We have Avengers:  Age of Ultron in both regular DVD and Blu-ray.


PITCH PERFECT 2


Also back, the equally (if not more) fierce singing competitors from Pitch Perfect.  Pitch Perfect 2 picks up three years after the original, when the a capella singing group The Bellas are trying to regain their lost glory.  Anna Kendrick, Rebel Wilson and Hailee Steinfeld head the large and very vocal cast.


SPY

It's not all martinis and formal wear:  Melissa McCarthy in Spy.
Melissa McCarthy plays a desk-bound CIA agent drawn into the world of international intrigue, burdened with aliases each more frowzy than the one before.  No, this is not exactly Shakespeare, but as with Avengers:  Age of Ultron, we have well-made entertainment.  Among the relatively all-star cast is Jason Statham, sending up all those serious tough guys he's played in films past,  Like the best of spoofs, McCarthy and everyone else play it admirably straight.  Unlike most such action films, serious or tongue in cheek, Spy is more than a testosterone fest.

FURIOUS 7

Do not try this at home...or on the road.  
Yes, we're up to number seven for those keeping score at home.  And did someone say testosterone? We've got your Vin Diesel, your Rock and yes, Mr. Statham.  Furious 7 is the latest entry in the Fast & Furious franchise, the last for the late and likable Paul Walker.  Gentlemen (and a couple of token ladies), start your engines.

RESULTS



Need an antidote to all that frenetic summer mayhem?  Andrew Bujalski is an independent filmmaker who has been flying well below the mainstream radar for years.  With his fifth, Results, he works for the first time with name actors, Guy Pearce and Cobie Smulders (How I Met Your Mother).  Fortunately, a bigger budget budget has done nothing to dull Mr. Bujalski's unique point of view.  Pearce and Smulders play fitness instructors and would-be romantic partners, brought together by an unlikely agent, an irreverent and decidedly out of shape man played by the wonderful Kevin Corrigan.  What looks like a lightweight romantic comedy is invested with considerable insight, wit and off-kilter style.



Series

JANE THE VIRGIN, SEASON ONE

Chicago's own Gina Rodriguez plays the title character in this popular and much-lauded series.






Foreign Film



BLIND CHANCE

The late Polish master Krzystof Kieslowski is best known for his "Three-Color" trilogy (Blue, White, Red), as well as The Double Life of Veronique and The Decalogue.  If you're familiar with any or all of those films, you'll recognize similar elements in Blind Chance:  a great lead performance; a gift for storytelling that plays out in three versions of a a story, each determined by whether a man does or does not catch a train for which he runs as it departs a station; the repetition of exact, seemingly innocuous actions from one story to the next (very much like "Three Colors").  As ever, Kieslowski considers not only the effects of chance, but the ramifications of the choices we make.  We have Blind Chance in a new Criterion Collection edition.


                             



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Friday, October 2, 2015

Flick Picks 10/1/2015: The Age of Adaline, Empire, Iris


After a summer hiatus, Flick Picks has returned.  To accompany the agreeable weather, autumn is usually a good time for filmgoers, as studios tend to release what they feel are some of their best films in advance of the award season.  We can also expect a very solid crop of DVD releases this fall - feature films, documentaries and series alike.  Not that the summer blockbusters were a complete waste of time.  Both Mad Max:  Fury Road and the latest Mission Impossible were refreshing oases in a typical summer desert of bombastic and forgettable fare.   Mission Impossible:  Rogue Nation is coming soon.  In the meantime, we have Mad Max:  Fury Road in both regular DVD and Blu-ray.



Feature Films

Romance is the order of the day, or the week, even if such things don't always end happily....


THE AGE OF ADALINE
When Adaline Bowman says she's turning 29 - AGAIN - she means it.  Actually, Adaline simply is 29, as she has been for almost eight decades.  Lucky her.  Of course, there is a price to be paid for anything.  The drawback of Adaline's perpetual 29-year-old existence is that she doesn't allow herself to grow close to anyone else...until she meets a charming (and, of course, handsome) philanthropist.  Blake Lively plays the ever-youthful Adaline, while Harrison Ford plays her father.




I'LL SEE YOU IN MY DREAMS

Welcome back, Blythe Danner.  If you haven't yet had the pleasure, remind yourself what a welcome presence is Ms. Danner on screen.  In the bittersweet I'll See You in My Dreams, Danner plays a long-time widow, tempted to emerge from the comfortable confines of her life through the friendship of a charming young pool man and a romantic interest in the form of Sam Elliot.  But start to finish, this is about the ageless appeal of Blythe Danner.





Also new:

A LITTLE CHAOS

This period romance is the second film directed by veteran English actor Alan Rickman.  Kate Winslet plays a landscape artist romantically entangled while building a garden at Louis XIV's Palace at Versailles.



MADAME BOVARY

Mia Wasikowska takes on another literary classic (after very much reviving the title heroine in Jane Eyre) in this handsome adaption of Gustave Flaubert's novel.



QUEEN AND COUNTRY

Twenty eight years after his appealing and autobiographical Hope and Glory, director John Boorman has given us the very entertaining sequel, Queen and Country.  Callum Turner plays Boorman' s alter ego, dealing with rigid superiors during his 1950's basic training and occasionally straying into the nearby town to pursue a young man's fancy.




Series

EMPIRE, SEASON ONE

Terence Howard and Taraji Henson star in this Fox series in which family members via for control of a hip hop and entertainment empire.




GOTHAM, SEASON ONE

Featuring characters from DC Comics Batman franchise, this Fox series focuses on the James (later commissioner) Gordon and Bruce Wayne.



AQUARIUS, SEASON ONE

David Duchovny stars in this period police drama.  As the title of the series would suggest, it's the Summer of Love.  But not all is peace and love in Los Angeles in the late 60's.  Duchovny's fictional LAPD detective is trying to track down a missing teenage girl, only to find that she is living with Charles Manson's "family."  The appearance of the notorious Manson is one example of the mix of real characters and fictional story lines in Aquarius.



Also new:

RED ROAD, SEASON TWO

MISS FISHER'S MURDER MYSTERIES, SEASON THREE

MODERN FAMILY, SEASON SIX

MIKE AND MOLLY, SEASON FIVE

GREY'S ANATOMY, SEASON ELEVEN



Documentary

IRIS

The great documentarian Albert Maysles died this past March.  The highlights of a long and venerable careeer include Salesman, Gimme Shelter and the original Grey Gardens (all made with his brother David, who died in 1987).  With the posthumously-released Iris, Albert Maysles goes fairly gently into that good night of documentary film with his portrait of 93-year-old fashion icon Iris Apfel.  A charming 80 minutes is pretty well guaranteed, whether you're a fashion maven or not.




MAGICIAN:  THE ASTONISHING LIFE AND WORK OF ORSON WELLES

2015 is the centenary of Orson Welles' birth (not so far north of us in Kenosha, Wisconsin). With Chuck Workman's documentary you can better familiarize yourself with the great director and his colorful life.


The Glencoe library has many films directed and/or starring Orson Welles, including...

THE STRANGER

















THE THIRD MAN






















THE LADY FROM SHANGHAI





















ME AND ORSON WELLES

We also have Richard Linklater's charming, generally fictional evocation of Welle's early career in the Mercury Theater, featuring an uncanny performance from English actor Christian McKay as Welles.





Foreign

THE FAREWELL PARTY

Nominated for Best Picture at the Orphir Awards (The Israeli Oscars), The Farewell Party is a sometimes sad, sometimes funny meditation on aging and death.  When a group of friends in a Jerusalem retirement home help a friend who's terminally ill, others begin to ask for their help.  "I can't recall any film ever making me laugh and cry in complete comic and dramatic balance like "The Farewell Party." -- Colin Covert, Minneapolis Star Tribune.





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