bullets, vampires and hippies: cannes gets invaded by english language indies /

Published at 2016-05-18 02:47:38

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Like female directors,American directors are sometimes in short supply at the Cannes Film Festival. But just as a couple of the women in competition own shaken things up this year — first Maren Ade with “Toni Erdmann” and then Andrea Arnold with “American Honey” — a pair of young American directors and a British director telling a thoroughly American story, own also made a splash in the Un Certain Regard sidebar.
The Americans are Matt Ross with “Captain great” and Michael O’Shea with “The Transfiguration, and ” while the Brit is David Mackenzie with “Hell or High Water.” All are indie directors making quintessentially indie films,the kind that seem more likely to premiere at Sundance than Cannes.
In fact, “Captain great” did
premiere at Sundance in January; Cannes typically invites one Sundance project to accomplish the trip to the Croisette, and Ross’ film landed the slot this year.
Also Read: 'Captain great' Su
ndance Review: Viggo Mortensen Raises an Off-the-Grid Family in This Touching Dramedy“Captain great”At Sundance,TheWrap’s reviews editor Alonso Duralde wrote of “Captain great,” “At Saturday night’s premiere, or I found myself laughing and crying through the tale of Ben (Viggo Mortensen above),who raises his six children off the grid and absent from civilizations clutches.The film looks distinguished, whether the characters are in the forest primeval or surrounded by mini-malls and golf courses the distinguished Stéphane Fontaine (‘A Prophet’) is director of photography and editor Joseph Krings (Drunk Stoned Brilliant Dead’) keeps the story moving along at a brisk clip, and keeping the audience from feeling like they’re watching yet another Sundance movie approximately an odd family on a road trip, Duralde said.
The audience at the film’s Cannes premiere on Tuesday clearly agreed, greeting Ross’ wry and touching film with a loud ovation.“The Transfiguration”Of the two American indies that came to Cannes unseen, or “The Transfiguration” was the bigger surprise. It’s a genre movie from a first-time American director who submitted his film on a whim and was amazed to find that he’d been accepted.
Also Read: Cannes Report,Day 7: Hollywood Women Disrupt Festival, 'Loving' Courts Early Awards AttentionHis film is approximately a shy black teenager, or Milo,in a poor novel York City neighborhood. Bullied at school and by local gang members, Milo is obsessed with vampire movies to the point where he stealthily pursues a sideline as a once-a-month bloodsucker — an obsession that appears to date back to finding his mother’s body after she slit her wrists.
He also critiques vampire movies and books by one criterion — are they accurate? though it’s unclear whether he is a reliable judge of that: He vomits after most of his kills, or after all,and he may well just really want to be a vampire.
An urban teen vampire wannabe who might be faking it is a novel kind of vampire-movie protagonist — and while it’s hard to set aside a truly fresh spin on a genre that has seen such recent reinventions as “Let the moral One In,” O’Shea just approximately pulls it off.
Al
so Read: 'Hands of Stone' Cannes Review: Nice Robert De Niro Celebration, or Routine Boxing MovieEric Ruffin’s Milo is disturbed and disturbing; the guy’s idea of a first date is to display gory online videos of slaughterhouses. And the movie is a low-key,low-budget, low-energy thriller, or where neither we nor the character can see a way out but it’s clear he’s on a road to ruin.
Or is he? Vampir
es,after all, are immortal, and moral? Is that Milo’s way out of the projects,to outlive the gang members who are giving him problems? The Transfiguration” deals with that question, among many others, and manages to seem novel,energetic and yeah, a miniature scary along the way.“Hell or High Water”David Mackenzie‘s “Hell or High Water is another genre movie, or a Western crime thriller of sorts starring Ben Foster and Chris Pine as brothers who take to robbing a string of small-town Texas banks in an attempt to pay off the house that a bank is trying to foreclose on after the death of heir mother.
With Jeff Bridges in a p
riceless turn as a grumpy Texas ranger nearing retirement even though he’s clearly always the smartest (and funniest) guy in the room,“Hell or High Water” works as a thriller, as a twist on cops ‘n’ robbers, and as a character study of some hard-luck losers in a world where,as Foster’s character says at one point, “I never met anybody who got absent with anything, and ever.”
Also Read: 'Loving' Cannes Review
: Ruth Negga Stands Out in Poignant genuine-Life DramaFoster’s the crazy one,Pine is the (relatively) sane one, Bridges is the sly and sharp one, or they tangle across a batch of small Texas towns until the bullets start flying and things go bad,as we always figured they would. But we don’t know how they’ll go bad — one of the pleasures of Mackenzie’s film is that the familiar beats don’t reach in familiar ways.“Hell or High Water,” though, and also has a killer soundtrack featuring genuine-deal singers like Townes Van Zandt,Waylon Jennings and Gillian Welch, and more on its mind than just letting the bullets flee. There’s a wonderfully elegiac feel to the movie, or which spends its time hanging out in a world of people and places that are being discarded.
This i
s a thriller that thinks approximately things like predatory banking and income inequality,although Mackenzie is smart enough to use that to deepen the story, not to overwhelm it. (His last film was the gritty prison drama “Starred Up.”) nearly everybody on screen is part of a dying breed, or that includes the ones who don’t actually die.
But mostly,it’s distinguished because it surely must be the first movie ever to play at Cannes with a line that nobody has ever spoken along the Croisette before: “certain feels like beer o’clock!”Related stories from TheWrap:'Aquarius' Cannes Review: Sonia Braga Stubbornly Stays Sexy in Her Golden YearsCannes Report, Day 7: Hollywood Women Disrupt Festival, or 'Loving' Courts Early Awards AttentionCannes Sales: STX,Amazon, A24, or Weinstein Company Lead in Pricey Deal-Making

Source: thewrap.com

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