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TCHAIKOVSKY (2007) (**1/2)

Part documentary, part drama, this earnest BBC production tries very hard to legitimize the genius of 19th century composer Pyotr Tchaikovsky, while painting a portrait of his personal life and how it influenced his music. Split into two-parts for TV — "The Creation of Genius" and "Fortune and Tragedy" — the reenactments of Tchaikovsky's life work better when they are freed of interruption from documentary host and composer Charles Hazlewood. Like its subject, the special seems to be looking for a voice.

Halzewood narrates the story of Tchaikovsky's life as he travels to Russia to show us the influence the artist had on Russian culture, music, ballet and opera. We get moments from Tchaikovsky's childhood when he is sent away to school and never recovers from the death of his mother when he was 14. Both Pyotr (Ed Stoppard, THE PIANIST) and his younger brother Modest (William Mannering, MASTER AND COMMANDER) were gay and frequented the homosexual underground in Russian and in the U.K. Tchaikovsky has an on-and-off affair with fellow music student Aleksey Apukhtin (Gyuri Sarossy, TV's EASTENDERS) for years. As his fame grew, he became more worried about his homosexuality creating a scandal and set out to marry. After receiving a letter from admirer Antonina Milyukova (Alice Glover), he meets with the woman and subsequently marries her. Around the same time, he also meets Nadezdha von Meck (Lucy Briers, TV's WIVES AND DAUGHTERS), a wealthy woman who would become his longtime benefactor and friend, even though she refused to meet him in person, always corresponding through letters. We follow Tchaikovsky's turbulent marriage, his years as composer for hire and his death from cholera.

Blogs

Rupert's Olympic Feet, Part 2

[kml_flashembed movie="http://www.youtube.com/v/bGtQ7mWgp04" width="425" height="350" wmode="transparent" /]

Here is a clip of Rupert's Olympic Feet produced in 1984.

This humble film was the beginning for bigger things...

It was the beginning of what became The Animation House, Inc. - a studio that at times, employed some 40 artists.

Animation on Rupert was by Bess Powell, Stuart Louder and yours truly. Stuart also painted all the backgrounds. This film was "ruff" spontaneous and full of passion. Unfortunately, a better copy is not available.

A mostly volunteer staff helped with the inking and painting on acetate cels. Folks would stay all night at our house and ink and paint. We would kick everyone out at 2:00 am when the Late Show with David Letterman was over. We even sent him an animation cel and told him he could "sponsor" our film. He never did pick up on it...wonder if he ever got the cel?

Blogs

SEVEN UP! (1964) (****)

Taken at face value one might not see the significance of this film. Put in context, as the start of a continuing series, it takes on the status of an epic undertaking that Roger Ebert once called "an inspired, even noble, use of the film medium." Directed by Paul Almond as part of the WORLD IN ACTION TV series, SEVEN UP! wasn't intended to be the first chapter in a series. Based on the Jesuit phrase, "give me a child until he is seven and I will give you the man," the half-hour program was supposed to be one-off look at a group of seven year olds from different economic and social backgrounds. Original researcher Michael Apted transformed the first film into what it has become, the chronicling of the same lives every seven years since.

Blogs

FORREST GUMP (1994) (****)

Since Oscar-winning best picture FORREST GUMP was released, Robert Zemeckis' film has easily moved into the pop culture consciousness. How many lines can you quote from this film? Who hasn't done one Forrest Gump impression in their lives? Some scenes now gain a humor that wasn't original there just because of the number of times they have been parodied. Having seen the film several times over the years and hearing varying impressions, I'm struck by how chameleon-like the themes are depending on the angle one wants to look at it. From destiny versus freewill to optimism versus pessimism to conforming versus rebellion, what does the film mean to you?

Forrest Gump (Tom Hanks, PHILADELPHIA) is a slow man, but he's never let that get in the way of life. His mother (Sally Field, NORMA RAE) always said, "Stupid is as stupid does." Ever since the first day of school, Forrest has been friends with Jenny (Robin Wright Penn, THE PRINCESS BRIDE). Their lives couldn't be more different. Forrest's mother is supportive and kind, while Jenny's father is an abusive drunk. Despite having a twisted spine as a child, Forrest grows up to be a lightning runner, which allows him to attend the University of Alabama on a football scholarship. During the course of his life, he will become a witness to school integration, a Vietnam War hero, a international ping-pong champion, a shrimp boat captain, a millionaire businessman, a gardener at his hometown high school, and an inspirational guru. Jenny's life course will traverse many of the more revolutionary and shady elements of the '60s, '70s and '80s.

Blogs

CUBE (1998) (***1/2)

After a limited release in theaters in 1998, this independent sci-fi film from Canada has garnered cult status since arriving on video. Using one set, director Vincenzo Natali creates both a claustrophobic mental torture chamber, as well as a mind-bending labyrinth. This sci-fi horror flick has gory bits for sure, but the mystery of the plot and what it means to the characters makes this film more exciting than all the slicing and dicing.

A man wakes up in a cube-shaped room with doors on all six surfaces. He moves to the next room and we learn quickly what happens when one ventures into the wrong room. Five other captives wake up in one of a series of interlocking cubes. Joan Leaven (Nicole de Boer, TV's THE DEAD ZONE) is a Math student, who will be called upon to try and decipher the numbers engraved on the many doorways. Helen Holloway (Nicky Guadagni, LARS AND THE REAL GIRL) is a doctor with a big conspiracy theory involving the military industrial complex. Quentin (Maurice Dean Wint, HEDWIG AND THE ANGRY INCH) is a cop with a superiority complex and a nasty temper. Rennes (Wayne Robson, AFFLICTION) is a fugitive escape artist who devises a way to check for booby-trapped rooms. David Worth (David Hewlett, TV's STARGATE: ATLANTIS) is a young cynical man who doesn't believe they'll ever get out of the cube. Later the group will encounter Kazan (Andrew Miller, TRAPPED IN PARADISE), a severely autistic man with a secret gift.

Blogs

This Weekend's Film Festival Memorializes The War Experience

With Memorial Day Weekend coming up, this week's lineup deals with the war experience on film, especially focusing on returning soldiers dealing with their lives after combat. Wars addressed include WWII, Vietnam and the current Iraq war. One documentary shows the recollections of a war planner. Others deal with family members' reactions to their returning husbands, sons and friends. While the films this week deal with different wars from different eras, many of the problems veterans face when rejoining civilian life are universal. On this holiday set aside to remember those that didn't return, it's also good to note the innocence that parishes in those that survive.

Additionally, this This Weekend's Film Festival marks the year anniversary of this column. Outside of a few weeks, I've been able to keep this a weekly event. While I never expected readers to watch all five weekly picks every week, I hope that this column provides insight and perspective into films you may have seen before or ones you have yet to discover. The more I do the column the more I learn about film, so I hope you're finding use in it as well. Here's to another year, and let's get this week's lineup rolling.

Blogs

Jonesin' for a fix...

Hey kids! Play the Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull Drinking Game!

It’s easy! It’s fun! You’ll get boozed out of your mind! Here’s how to play…

1) Every time someone refers to how old Indy looks, have a drink;

This alone will get you off to a smashing – and smashed – start. Shia LaBeouf delivers the best line here: “what are you, 80 or something?” Interestingly, Ford looks in pretty good shape in the action sequences, but noticeably older – wrinkled and white-haired – when he’s teaching his classes.

2) Every time Spielberg references a movie, have a drink;

Shia as Marlon Brando in The Wild Ones is a total gimme, The Atomic Café a bit harder to pick up on, but the bad guys’ car not quite outracing an A-bomb blast comes from an obscure favorite of mine: 1953’s Split Second, directed by Dick Powell.

3) Every time Spielberg references one of his own movies, have two drinks;

Blogs

INDIANA JONES AND THE KINGDOM OF THE CRYSTAL SKULL (2008) (***1/2)

The man in the Fedora hat is back. While the next installment in this franchise could be titled "Indiana Jones and the Search for Lightning in a Bottle," which is what the series has been trying to capture since RAIDERS OF THE LOST ARK, the first new installment in 19 years nicely bridges the gap in time, in both the real and fictional worlds, placing the action in the 1950s and crossing ancient and modern myths. The aging hero can still take a punch, but he comes off wiser. For all he's been through, he should have all the wisdom in the world already, but I'll get to that later.

Director Steven Spielberg, working from a screenplay by JURASSIC PARK scribe David Koepp, gets the story cooking right from the start. Indiana (Harrison Ford) and his partner Mac McHale (Ray Winstone, THE DEPARTED) have been kidnapped by Russians, lead by Soviet super-agent Irina Spalko (Cate Blanchett, I'M NOT THERE), with her stark black Louise Brooks hairstyle and mysterious psychic abilities. She's looking for the contents of a box in a government warehouse and needs Dr. Jones to find it. This incident kicks off an adventure that will lead our dashing hero to Peru in search of a highly magnetized (well, highly magnetized when the plot needs it to be) crystal skull, which could be the key to learning all the knowledge in the universe and beyond. So of course this would be of interest to the evil Commies, who want to get inside our brains and control our every thought. Along for the ride is greaser Mutt Williams (Shia LaBeouf, TRANSFORMERS), who informs Indy that his old friend Prof. Oxley (John Hurt, THE ELEPHANT MAN), who has dedicated his life to studying the legend of the crystal skull and it's connection to El Dorado, is in danger. And lets not forget Marion Ravenwood (Karen Allen), Indy's girl from the original film; she's back too.

Blogs

DIARY OF THE DEAD (2008) (***1/2)

Master of horror George Romero returns for the fifth time to the zombie genre in which he reinvented. Romero's observant eye hasn't formed any cataracts in 40 years. His zombie pictures capture the eras in which they were made very well. Though LAND OF THE DEAD was released in 2005, Romero planned to make the rich get richer and the poor get poorer parable in the '90s. So DIARY is truly his first statement on the first decade of the 21st century.

A group of film students are shooting a horror film in the forest. Jason Creed (Joshua Close, THE EXORCISM OF EMILY ROSE) is man behind the camera, the director. He wants to be a documentary filmmaker, but feels a horror film is an easier way to break into the industry. We are watching his story in retrospect as a documentary cut by his girlfriend Debra Moynihan (Michelle Morgan, TV's HEARTLAND). During their shoot, they watch an Internet clip of dead people coming back to life and attacking the living. Tony (Shawn Roberts, LAND OF THE DEAD), the cynical make-up man (cynical because he wants to direct) doesn't believe the news reports, believing its media and political fear mongering. But as the crew tries to get back to their homes, they learn more about what is really happening. And Jason is determined to film it all.

Blogs

COMING HOME (1978) (****)

Mixing the difficulties unique to Vietnam vets with the adjustment problems of all returning soldiers, Hal Ashby's touching drama contrasts the pro-war and the anti-war sentiments by presenting two soldiers connected by their love for the same woman. Ashby isn't a director that is common to the average filmgoer, but during the 1970s he made some of the decade's best, including this film, HAROLD AND MAUDE, THE LAST DETAIL, BOUND FOR GLORY and BEING THERE. Without flash, he patiently develops his core characters, allowing emotions to build and accumulate into poignant and powerful reactions. This is one of those films that goes along at a steady pace then reaches a moment where it grabs you by the throat and propels you to another level.

Blogs

THE CHRONICLES OF NARNIA: PRINCE CASPIAN (2008) (***)

Darker than the original NARNIA adventure, this new tale brings the original young foursome back to Narnia, a land that is now unrecognizable from the world they once ruled. Writer/director Andrew Adamson, along with fellow writers Christopher Markus and Stephen McFeely, stay faithful to C.S. Lewis' original text, giving fans a faithful screen adaptation just like THE LION, THE WITCH AND THE WARDROBE. With more battles, the epic scale is heightened, but this doesn't mean there are not any new internal battles for the original characters, which are the most intriguing parts of the second installment in the series.

Centuries after the Pevensie siblings left Narnia to return to England, the magic realm has been taken over by the Telmarines, who have forced the Narnians to live in secret in the woods. Prince Caspian the X (Ben Barnes, STARDUST) is the rightful heir to the throne, but his scheming uncle Miraz (Sergio Castellitto, ARTHUR AND THE INVISIBLES) has his eyes on ruling the kingdom. Caspian flees for his life into the forest, where a scuffle with Miraz's men results in dwarf Trumpkin (Peter Dinklage, THE STATION AGENT) being taken prisoner and Caspian taken in by dwarf Nikabrik (Warwick Davis, WILLOW) and talking badger Trufflehunter (Ken Scott, CHARLIE WILSON'S WAR). During the fight, Caspian uses an ancient horn, which summons former kings and queens Peter (William Moseley), Susan (Anna Popplewell), Edmund (Skandar Keynes) and Lucy (Georgie Henley) back to Narnia.

Blogs

This Weekend’s Film Festival Celebrates Musical Bio-Pics

Last week Todd Haynes' enigmatic biopic of Bob Dylan, I'M NOT THERE, arrived on DVD, giving inspiration for this week's lineup on musical biopics. Rock, soul and country are all represented, often crisscrossing. Two straight-laced performers, two troubled singers and one chameleon. One film mixes the artist's music with performances from the actors while the other four films are evenly divided between prerecorded tracks and live performances. This musical film festival is sure to get your toe tappin'.

I'M NOT THERE starts us off with a film that fictionalizes the seemingly different personalities of folk/rock legend Bob Dylan. Six different actors play a version of the singer who wore many masks over the course of his career. Receiving an Oscar nomination for her work, Cate Blanchett's pretentious folk singer that has turned his back on political messages and his fans is an unforgettable portrait of Dylan during the time of the classic rock doc DON'T LOOK BACK. Heath Ledger's version of Dylan is a misogynistic actor who rose to fame playing influential folk singer Jack Rollins, who is played by Christian Bale. Ledger's Dylan is married to an abstract artist who harks back to Dylan's real-life first wife Sara, brining a rare look into the heart of the man. Bale's Rollins is a folk icon that turns to Christianity. A trio of other Dylans include 11-year-old African-American Woody Guthrie played by Marcus Carl Franklin, 19-year-old poet Arthur Rimbaud played by Ben Whishaw, and middle-aged Billy the Kid played by Richard Gere. This thought-provoking experiment tries to understand the forces that drove the musical legend to invent and re-invent himself over and over again. What drove his social conscience songs and then his later rejection of them? How did the lure of fame twist his soul and later make him run and hide? I'M NOT THERE doesn't answer these questions, only presents possibilities for us to contemplate. As I said in my original review, "For someone who watches a great deal of films and looks for something different, this film delivers a passionate performance and excites with invention. It’s a fascinating portrait of a man who could be a completely different person on any given day and does justice to that complexity."

Blogs

fmx/08: Expanding the Global Animation & VFX Connection

By Dan Sarto | Wednesday, May 14, 2008 at 12:00am

Johannes Wolters dives into fmx/08, which this year offered an even greater number of stimulating discussions on the state of artistic and technological visual content.

Blogs

THE BEST YEARS OF OUR LIVES (1946) (****)

Winner of seven Oscars, William Wyler's touching and honest drama about returning soldiers is as relevant today as it was when it was released more than 60 years ago. While there are no stories of war objectors spitting on returning vets from WWII, the Great Generation's fighters didn't have it easy either. This intimate tale chronicles the adjustments three very different men have to make in their civilian lives because of their experiences at war. They cover the economic spectrum, which makes adjusting to their normal lives more difficult or easier in interesting and ironic ways depending on the situation. Brought to life by a first-rate cast, there is a reason this film placed #37 on the AFI's Top 100 American Films list twice; it's a timeless classic.

Blogs

TEETH (2008) (***1/2)

When I first saw the trailer for this film, I was shocked and amazed that someone went there. If it were played as a straight horror film, the movie, dealing with man-eating vaginas, seemed ridiculous. And the laughs that permeated the theater underlined the thoughts of misogyny and cheese that we all felt. However, this campy horror comedy is actually a modern twist on the vagina dentata lore, changing the male-centric fear of female sexuality into a female-centric empowerment tale.

Dawn (Jess Weixler, LITTLE MANHATTAN) is a very conservative high school student who is a leader in a teen abstinence organization called The Promise. She is ridiculed for her prudish ways at school, but stays true to her beliefs. However, she discovers something strange about her genitalia when her sexual feelings are first awakened by fellow Promise member Tobey (Hale Appleman, upcoming HOLY ROLLERS). So when Tobey's faith wavers, Dawn discovers just how deadly her mutation can be. Along the course of her sexual awakening, she will run across a stream of the worst of the male species including her rocker step-brother Brad (John Hensley, TV's NIP/TUCK), who has been harboring a secret ever since he was young.

Blogs

THE LAST PICTURE SHOW (1971) (****)

Peter Bogdanovich's THE LAST PICTURE SHOW is a quiet reflective film with flares of wonderful irony and humor. Its style is a dead-on throwback to the 1950s drama, but presents a 1970s freedom to its material. As a sad meditation on the crumbling American small tows, the story can be bleak, but it never loses all hope… or does it? Like great art, the film is open to interpretation.

Based on the Larry McMurtry novel, this coming of age tale is set in the tiny Texas town of Anarene. Sonny Crawford (Timothy Bottoms, THE PAPER CHASE) and Duane Jackson (Jeff Bridges, THE FABULOUS BAKER BOYS) are best friends. They play for their town's lousy high school football team, for which they constantly receive ridiculed for from the townsfolk. Sonny is jealous of Duane because his friend is dating Jacy Farrow (Cybill Shepherd, TV's MOONIGHTING), the prettiest girl in town, while he's stuck with the trashy tease Charlene (Sharon Taggart, TEXASVILLE). Jacy's mom Lois (Ellen Burstyn, REQUIEM FOR A DREAM) warns her that her roughneck boyfriend is a one-way ticket to getting stuck in their flat and boring town. Jacy professes her love for Duane, but isn't shy to play the field just to stir up some excitement in her life. Eventually, Sonny starts an affair of his own with 40-something Ruth (Cloris Leachman, SPANGLISH), the sad wife of his coach. The heart of the town is Sam the Lion (Ben Johnson, THE WILD BUNCH), a kind man who runs three key businesses— the pool hall, the café, and the picture house.

Blogs

SPEED RACER (2008) (***1/2)

I was expecting eye candy going into this film and that's what I was served, but by the time the final course was uncovered I had gobbled up Andy and Larry Wachowski's neon-glowing confection. No one who has ever seen the original series would confuse it with good animation. Nonetheless it had a charm that was undeniable. The Wachowskis capture that charm, frosting their entire production with it. They are not interested in "improving" the original material with an overdose of extra hip wink winks — the same ingredient that has destroyed so many other animation-to-live-action adaptations. They're interested in bringing the good flavors to the forefront and minimizing the cheesy aftertaste.

Blogs

LA BAMBA (1987) (***1/2)

As a child of the video age, there is a collection of films that have been ingrained in my memory for having watched them over and over again. LA BAMBA, the story of Ritchie Valens, is one of those films. Before I knew that I was watching something special, I responded to this musical biopic's portrayal of the supporting characters in the life of the central star. No other film that deals with the rise of famous people deals so honestly with how fame affects those in the star's life that stay anonymous folk.

Before Ritchie Valens rose to fame, he was migrant worker Ritchie Valenzuela (Lou Diamond Phillips, YOUNG GUNS). A young man obsessed with rock 'n roll, he never goes anywhere without his secondhand guitar. One day his leather jacket-wearing brother Bob (Esai Morales, FAST FOOD NATION) rides into camp on his motorcycle. He's made enough money to move his hardworking mother Connie (Rosanna DeSoto, STAND AND DELIVER) and his three younger siblings to Los Angeles. He's so cool he sweeps Ritchie's crush Rosie (Elizabeth Pena, LONE STAR) off her feet and onto the back of his bike on his way down the road too. In L.A., Ritchie joins a local band where he is relegated to the background, but moves himself to the front and center via his passion. Along the way, he charms the white daughter of a car dealer named Donna (Danielle von Zerneck, LIVING IN OBLIVION), a later inspiration for a song when her dad doesn't like her hanging with a homie. Ritchie also attracts the attention of smalltime record producer Bob Keene (Joe Pantoliano, THE MATRIX), who creates Ritchie Valens, a teenager who quickly has three hit singles and tours with rock icons like Buddy Holly.

Blogs

This Weekend’s Film Festival Celebrates Oscar-Nominated Animation

On Tuesday, three of the five Oscar-nominated short films were released on a DVD compilation from Magnolia, which sponsors the theatrical distribution of the Oscar-nominated animated and live-action short films each year. In celebration, this week's lineup highlights Oscar-nominated animation in general. All five animated shorts will open This Weekend's Film Festival. The two films sadly not featured on the DVD release are still available on iTunes. For Saturday and Sunday, we have two nominated and two winning animated features. Since adding the Best Animated Feature category in 2002, the Academy of Motion Pictures Arts and Sciences has given a higher profile to animated productions. With more and more animation being produced each year, the award allows films that might have been overlooked by the general public a chance to be seen by a wider audience. With the moniker of "just kids stuff" still present with some viewers in the U.S., the films featured in this week's lineup portray the wide variety of styles and content that make up the world of animated film.

Blogs

The story of RUPERT’S OLYMPIC FEET… part 1

The story of RUPERT’S OLYMPIC FEET… part 1

It was February 1st, 1984, Charles Samu from HBO was in town- and, since I was president of ASIFA Washington, we along with our wives enjoyed dinner. At one point, Charles looked at me and asked, “So, are you making a film for the Olympiad of Animation?”” Yes.” I replied.  “How is it progressing?” Charles responded. “I don’t know…” I quipped”…we begin it tomorrow!”

He just looked at me with a quizzical, partially horrified stare.

At that moment, I fully understood his emotions. Today was February 1st and the film had to be shipped by April 1st…that gave us just under 2 months to produce, direct and animate a film.

Blogs

I'M NOT THERE (2007) (***1/2)

Bob Dylan is an enigma, and that is exactly what one could call Todd Haynes' film that contemplates the seemingly contradictory sides of the famed singer's personality. Haynes has always been a filmmaker who takes risks from his unsettling SAFE to his pseudo-Bowie biopic VELVET GOLDMINE to his Douglas Sirk, 1950s melodrama-like FAR FROM HEAVEN. Now he contemplates the many aspects of Dylan, leaving the audience thinking (maybe even confused).

Six difference actors play six different Dylan-like characters. The various stories are woven together and a few even intersect. We begin with an 11-year-old African-American boy hitching a ride on a train calling himself Woody Guthrie (Marcus Carl Franklin, TV's LACKAWANNA BLUES). He's traveling the country playing '40s blues and acting like it isn't 1959, avoiding the social turmoil of the times. Next we meet 19-year-old poet Arthur Rimbaud (Ben Whishaw, PERFUME) cagily avoiding definition during an interview. In a documentary-like segment, we learn about the career of influential folk singer Jack Rollins (Christian Bale, BATMAN BEGINS), who hasn't done an interview in years since be converted to Christianity. Robbie Clark (Heath Ledger, BROKEBACK MOUNTAIN) is a womanizing actor who became famous playing Jack Rollins. We see him during two periods in his life — meeting abstract artist Claire (Charlotte Gainsbourg, THE SCIENCE OF SLEEP) and then watching as their marriage falls apart as Vietnam ends. Jude Quinn (Cate Blanchett, ELIZABETH) is an arrogant star that has turned his back on folk music and plugged in. During a tour in London with The Beatles, he challenges reporter Keenan Jones (Bruce Greenwood, CAPOTE) on his lack of caring about "finger-pointing" songs. Finally, in an almost dreamlike sequence, Billy the Kid (Richard Gere, CHICAGO) wonders the countryside trying to find freedom.

Blogs

LARS AND THE REAL GIRL (2007) (***)

Despite having a sex doll at the center of its story, LARS AND THE REAL GIRL is a charming tale about a young man who submerges himself in a fantasy world to escape from reality. Lars Lindstrom buys a sex doll and tells everyone that it is his new girlfriend Bianca from Brazil. Nancy Oliver's Oscar-nominated screenplay handles this premise with a great deal of tact. This isn't AMERICAN PIE, folks; it's more like apple pie and church and milk and cookies. And if you found some way to make any of that sexual than you're not Lars.

Lars (Ryan Gosling, THE NOTEBOOK) has become more and more reclusive, moving into the garage of the family home. His brother Gus (Paul Schneider, ALL THE REAL GIRLS), and especially his sister-in-law Karin (Emily Mortimer, LOVELY & AMAZING) worry about him. Then one night, he introduces them to Bianca like he'd introduce any Brazilian missionary he met on the Internet to them. The next day they take Lars and Bianca to see Dr. Dagmar (Patricia Clarkson, THE STATION AGENT), who tells them that Lars is having delusions and that if they want to keep him they will have to play along with the fantasy. Under the guise of treating Bianca's low blood pressure, Dr. Dagmar sets a weekly appointment to meet with Lars and his quiet girlfriend. Gus and Karin struggle with accepting Lars' condition, while trying to explain it to the community at large. With Bianca around, Lars is able to easily avoid his sweet co-worker Margo (Kelli Garner, BULLY).

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LE MOZART DES PICKPOCKETS (THE MOZART OF PICKPOCKETS) (2007) (***)

Philippe Pollet-Villard's THE MOZART OF PICKPOCKETS won the Best Live-Action Short Oscar this year, beating out more serious fare. Pollet-Villard stars as a pickpocket named Philippe who along with his partner Richard (Richard Morgieve) work with three other thieves robbing tourists and female shoppers. As the white guys in the gang, they always play the cops in the scam and only receive stolen passports as their cut. One day a deaf boy, who begs for change, follows them home. At first Philippe wants nothing to do with the child, but Richard is an old softy. To make it worth their time, they decide to teach the boy the pickpocket trade, but things don't turn out as expected and the little boy may have something to teach these hapless crooks.

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AT NIGHT (2007) (***1/2)

This Danish short film (if you consider 39 minutes short) received an Oscar nomination in 2007. The melodrama tackles the tragic issue of young people suffering from severe forms of cancer. Staying on the same ward, Stephanie (Julie Olgaard, AFTER THE WEDDING), Sara (Laura Christensen, THE KINGDOM) and Mette (Neel Ronholt, AFTER THE WEDDING) have developed a close bond. It's Christmas and the trio look forward to celebrating New Year's together. Stephanie is cynical and pessimistic, a deadly combination. She's having a hard time emotionally with her condition and gets defensive when asked about her parents. Mette is a Christian, which helps her cope. Bedridden, she desperately needs people around her at all times. She doesn't like taking her morphine pills so she has amassed a nice collection in her nightstand drawer. Sara is very close with her father, whose quiet sad eyes can't hide his emotions. Due to the tumor on her spine, Sara must have surgery on New Year's Eve.

Director/writer Christian E. Christiansen handles the bleak material with a bit of humor and a bit of heart. Though the material is melodramatic, Christiansen never pushes for effect. He honestly deals with the emotions of his characters without pandering to theatrics. His three lead actresses give natural and often moving performances. Christensen is especially good in the least flashy role as the middle ground between Mette's optimism and Stephanie's pessimism. Olgaard's emotional breakdown on night is filled with pain and longing. Toward the end, there are a few moments when the film feels like it's going to dive head first into sentimentality, but pulls up just in time to reveal its real message about death. It's not a revolutionary statement, but during the course of experiencing these young women's story we come to believe in its simple truth.

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