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Monthly Archives: October 2015

A CHILDHOOD (FRENCH:ENGLISH SUBTITLES) BEST FILM, CHICAGO INTERNATIONAL FILM FESTIVAL

Selected by a distinguished international jury, “A Childhood” resonates with greatness on a myriad of levels;  the travails of thirteen-year-old “Jimmy”, whose home- life stagnates in punitive purgatory, a drug-addicted mother and her malicious, miserly, moral-less mate; he cooks, cleans and takes immaculate care of his younger brother; ashamed of his daily existence and its detriments, he refuses to sink …

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51ST CHICAGO INTERNATIONAL FILM FESTIVAL: FINAL FLICKS

As an exhaustive euphoria informs the concluding days of the festival, contemplating the vastness of the visual, emotional indulgences, one must recognize and applaud those who selected the filmic fare: Michael Kutza, President and Founder; Mimi Plauche, Programming Director; Anthony Kaufman, Programmer; Camille Lugan, Programmer; Sam Flancher, Programmer. Countless viewing hours, resulted in a festival worthy of a disparate, multi-faceted …

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ROOM

Director Lenny Abrahamson’s “Room” (based on Emma Donoghue’s  novel) is a triumph due primarily to phenomenal acting by Brie Larson and Jacob Tremblay; highlighting a mother and her five-year-old son confined to a 10-by-10 “room”; exhibiting a normalcy totally anathema to their circumstances; prodigious directing eliminates claustrophobia. “Ma” (Larson), abducted at seventeen, has spent seven years, closeted, perpetually violated by …

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CHICAGO INTERNATIONAL FILM FESTIVAL CONTINUES TO ASTOUND

“Motley’s Law” (Denmark). Kimberly Motley is a contemporary, tough, captivating symbol of a woman who earns her badge of courage every waking moment, as the solitary American permitted to practice law in Afghanistan. Director Nicole Horanyi follows Kimberly through her courageous, terrifying days, gifting audiences a penetrating, inspirational portrait of an individual whose mission knows no fears, no bounds. “Tag” …

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MORE TIPS FROM THE FEST: CHICAGO INTERNATIONAL FILM FESTIVAL

“Sparrows” (Iceland, Denmark). Beautiful portrait of a young, gifted teenager, ripped from his comfort zone, adjusting to a life with his alcoholic father; poignant, gritty and provocative. “Tikkun” (Israel). At this point in the festival, “Tikkun” is the most problematic, traumatic; filmed sensationally in black and white, focusing on a Yeshiva boy, saved from death’s clutches by his stringent, intransigent …

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CHICAGO INTERNATIONAL FILM FESTIVAL: FLICKS TO PICK OR SKIP

Seeing three or four films a day, bouncing from one country to another is thrilling, entertaining and challenging; after four days here is a “taste” of the places I’ve savored so far: “Mia Madre” (Italy, France); Nanni Moretti (director/actor) semi- autobiographical scenario revolving around the  vicissitudes of balancing one’s daily life/profession while dealing with the imminent passing of a beloved …

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STEVE JOBS

Doubt if this is the final film/documentary on the Merlin who changed the universe; a complicated,  conflicted man whose genius has invaded, conquered our cognizant existence. Based on Walter Isaacson’s biography (approved by Jobs), screenwriter Aaron Sorkin, director Danny Boyle and the inimitable Michael Fassbender as the forceful, vindictive visionary, “Steve Jobs”, is visually extraordinary, stunningly written, directed and performed; …

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LABYRINTH OF LIES (GERMAN: ENGLISH SUBTITLES)

Imagine the perfect, idyllic childhood: all your needs and whims met by adoring parents; parents you strove to emulate, please, desiring only to meet or surpass their expectations; then as an adult discovering that they were complicit in the most horrific, catastrophic crime visited on humanity since its birth. This moral dilemma is addressed succinctly, passionately, without platitudes or obfuscations  …

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THE WALK (A MUST IN 3-D)

Watching this stunningly sensational film, directed by Robert Zemeckis (“Forest Gump”) and starring Joseph Gordon-Levitt as funambulist, Philippe Petit, who on August 6th, 1974 floated between the rooftops of New York City’s World Trade Center aka the “Twin Towers”, I was overwhelmed by a powerful, wrenching sense of nostalgia, not just for the loss of lives and the erasure of …

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EVEREST (A MUST IN 3-D)

On April 14, 2009 a friend and I flew in a twelve-seater airplane around Mt. Everest, the world’s tallest mountain at 29,029 feet; a daunting experience being in the presence of one of nature’s most intimidating, unfriendly, hostile behemoths. The frigid colossus lacked man’s interference that day. Director Baltasar Kormakur’s magnificent, prescient “Everest” focuses on the catastrophic events of May, …

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