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Post by Deleted on Oct 13, 2017 15:08:51 GMT
Seeing my only film of the LFF this year tomorrow - Shiraz at the Barbican with live score by Anoushka Shankar
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Post by kathryn on Oct 13, 2017 17:59:52 GMT
Yesterday was good - loved Film Stars Don't Die in Liverpool and 6 Days, and Sweet Country is a very impressive film (though I'm afraid I can't say I 'enjoyed it' as such).
Seeing The Shape of Water tonight. On the train back into town now having managed all of 18 hours at home!
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Post by n1david on Oct 14, 2017 0:04:13 GMT
David - please do let us know whether your screenings at OLS are impacted by the noise of industrial drilling outside - the final hour of Killing of a Sacred Deer this morning was ruined by the sound of huge drills. I know there isn't much BFI can do about this but it was very annoying. Thankfully, they were not. First film started at 2.30 and I was in rear stalls, front stalls for the other two and didn’t hear any disturbance from outside. Disturbed in the inside though by Happy End, the new Haneke film. Although, to be fair, it’s a bit more human than some of his earlier work, even if it remains darkly black. My second Huppert of the week - I never feel it’s a proper LFF unless I have at least two Hupperts. The big picture about little people, Downsizing, was amiable enough with a pleasingly paunchy Matt Damon. Essentially a long liberal dream (and I write as a Guardian subscriber), it was enjoyable without being spectacular. Lost it’s way towards the end. And then The Florida Project. Can’t quite remember why I picked this as I have a serious aversion to cute little kids and there are a bunch of them in this movie, running around, being noisy and generally little kid like. I wasn’t as beguiled by them as most of the audience, but there’s a tough story here and that may be what it needs to get the message over. Willem Dafoe is strong.
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Post by foxa on Oct 14, 2017 19:56:17 GMT
Saw my last film festival show today, so to sum up: 'Good Time' - thriller/crime caper with Robert Pattinson - very stylish, excellent performances, recommend. 'The Venerable W' - documentary by Barbet Schroeder about anti-Muslim Buddhist monk - Schroeder is very skillful and this is beautifully filmed. I learned a lot. 'Thoroughbreds' - first feature of an American playwright - has echoes of 'Rope' and 'Heavenly Creatures.' particularly notable for the final performance of Anton Yelchin who is excellent in this. 'The Shape of Water' - very beautiful film. 'Downsizing' - loved this - superb performances and design - I would expect a lot of Academy Award nominations for this.
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Post by Jon on Oct 14, 2017 23:25:29 GMT
Really enjoyed Battle of the Sexes, it's such a solid well made film with a great cast. Only niggle was that I think they could fleshed out Bobby Riggs a bit more but apart from that, I can't complain.
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Post by Deleted on Oct 14, 2017 23:31:56 GMT
Surprise film was Lady Bird, which I was hoping for!
Loved it.
Call Me By Your Name and Lady Bird are easily the best things I've seen at the festival and the best films I've seen all year.
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Post by kathryn on Oct 15, 2017 8:45:38 GMT
Loved The Shape of Water! Such a Del Toro film. Also really enjoyed Downsizing, which is so much funnier than so was expecting.
Saw the restored print of Scarface yesterday too, and have to admit I was struggling to stay awake through it. Something to do with comfy cinema seats, a darkened room, and a sugar crash, probably!
Then we had Journeyman in the evening - Paddy Considine's film. He and Jodie Whittaker give excellent performances and it's a compelling story but the structure isn't quite right - the film just sort of fizzles out towards the end, there's no third-act climax.
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Post by kathryn on Oct 15, 2017 20:11:37 GMT
So, last day of the festival for us meant The Killing of a Sacred Deer and A Matter of Life and Death.
The former is one of the weirdest films I've seen, not just at the LFF but, well, ever! It's stranger than The Lobster because that was so clearly satire whereas this kind of feels like realism to start with - only there's something just slightly off about the characters. I enjoyed it, but have no idea how they're going to sell it to a mainstream audience.
A Matter of Life and Death was just lovely - a really enjoyable way to close out the festival.
On my way home now. I think maybe I'll take a few days off from film and read a book or something.
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Post by n1david on Oct 15, 2017 23:19:13 GMT
I did really enjoy Three Billboards - dark as you might expect from Martin McDonagh but moves at a healthy pace and a great central performance from Frances McDormand. On Chesil Beach was effective in giving the tone of the book although that doesn't necessarily make it a compelling film - and there's a change to the book plot which I think weakens it considerably. Abracadabra is a fantastic Spanish film (in the literal sense) which may well have been the most fun I had at this festival. The Boy Downstairs was pretty rubbish and struggling to see what it was in this festival. Like kathryn time to step outside the cinema although I'm keen to see Death of Stalin and The Party before they exit cinemas. But back to live theatre for a bit...
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Post by Marwood on Oct 15, 2017 23:55:55 GMT
I liked Three Billboards but still not sure about that ending (not going to spoil a film most people in this country won't get to see for a few months, yes I get the whole'anger begets anger' message but that ending was just a bit too abstract for my liking, rather like the end of Inception (and I'll leave it at that for now)) - as well as Frances McDormand's performance, I was highly impressed with Sam Rockwell, I hope he gets some better lead roles after this (and hopefully,just hopefully, we finally get to see A Behanding In Spokane in London).
I would say I'll also be laying off the films for a bit, but I have Fight Club, Blade Runner 2049, Death Of Stalin and Alice In The Cities all lined up next week (the fact that most cinemas are still cheaper than the majority of London theatres is/was a deciding factor)
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Post by callum on Oct 16, 2017 2:21:10 GMT
Saw 15 films this year and thought it was a solid year. Nothing totally knocked my socks off, but I saw about five 9 out of 10 films for me, which is definitely good going. Anyway, thoughts:
Lady Bird: just delightful and extremely heartfelt. It spoke so much truth. Loved the film and also Greta and Saoirse in the Q&A. Laurie Metcalf gives best performance I've seen on screen AND on stage this year with A Doll's House Part 2!
Downsizing: I seem to be on the same page as everyone else in that the first 45 minutes were absolutely cracking outstanding stuff, but after that it kind of loses its way and meanders a lot. Nice concept though, and v ambitious.
But I have real problems with The Florida Project. It received a rapturous reaction but I need someone who really liked the film to explain if I was supposed to sympathise with these characters. I think the children were supposed to be adorable little rascals but I found them quite bratty and rude to be honest. Ditto the mother character - whom I genuinely thought was one of the nastiest and most spiteful bitter characters I've seen for some time. Was I supposed to be on their side?! Is their economic situation an excuse for being vile to people? I think I totally misunderstood the film. I didn't get a lot out of it. But Willem was the heart and soul of the movie and he was terrific.
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Post by Deleted on Oct 16, 2017 3:01:44 GMT
But I have real problems with The Florida Project. It received a rapturous reaction but I need someone who really liked the film to explain if I was supposed to sympathise with these characters. I think the children were supposed to be adorable little rascals but I found them quite bratty and rude to be honest. Ditto the mother character - whom I genuinely thought was one of the nastiest and most spiteful bitter characters I've seen for some time. Was I supposed to be on their side?! Is their economic situation an excuse for being vile to people? I think I totally misunderstood the film. I didn't get a lot out of it. But Willem was the heart and soul of the movie and he was terrific. I'm probably not the person to answer this as I didn't love it either. I guess we're meant to feel for the kids as they're a product of their circumstance and likely wouldn't be bratty and rude if they'd been brought up in a different way. And I do think Brooklynn Prince, the little girl, made her character as charming as she possibly could be whilst spitting on people's cars and twerking. As for the mother, I don't know how much sympathy it would be possible to have. It's clear that she has a degree of care and feeling for her daughter but nowhere near enough to try and pull her life together. I guess we're meant to be more in Moonee's shoes as the ending takes us with her as she escapes. For me the film was just too loosely structured, I need more of a narrative. Beautiful to look at, great performances from Prince and Dafoe but I really just felt like I was seeing the same things happen over and over up until the last twenty minutes. My final rankings: 1. Call Me By Your Name (5*) 2. Lady Bird (4.5*) 3. The Shape of Water (4*) 4. Battle of the Sexes (3.5*) 5. The Florida Project (3*)
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Post by n1david on Oct 16, 2017 8:51:24 GMT
I share some of the concerns about The Florida Project as I really struggled in the first half hour or so as I found the kids insufferable and didn't want to spend time in their presence. However as the story opened out I started to engage with it more. I too thought the mother was a difficult person to love but I think you have to see her as a product of her circumstances without any support around her - too young to have that responsibility but equally with no-one to help her learn how to be a better mother. Interesting article in the Guardian about the real people in these circumstances: www.theguardian.com/us-news/2017/oct/15/in-the-shadow-of-disney-living-life-on-the-marginsRegarding the ending of Three Billboards - not quite sure what to make of it either but in later consideration I think it fits with the chaos of the movie - will be interesting to see what others think when it opens widely.
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Post by Marwood on Oct 16, 2017 10:38:39 GMT
I liked Three Billboards but still not sure about that ending (not going to spoil a film most people in this country won't get to see for a few months, yes I get the whole'anger begets anger' message but that ending was just a bit too abstract for my liking, rather like the end of Inception (and I'll leave it at that for now)) - as well as Frances McDormand's performance, I was highly impressed with Sam Rockwell, I hope he gets some better lead roles after this (and hopefully,just hopefully, we finally get to see A Behanding In Spokane in London). I would say I'll also be laying off the films for a bit, but I have Fight Club, Blade Runner 2049, Death Of Stalin and Alice In The Cities all lined up next week (the fact that most cinemas are still cheaper than the majority of London theatres is/was a deciding factor) Of, and if anyone spots me on the red carpet behind Woody Harrelson and/or Martin McDonagh in any Youtube clips -lets keep it our little secret, eh?
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Post by callum on Oct 16, 2017 11:25:26 GMT
Thanks for your replies @snutte and @n1david. Yes, moonee's rudeness softened up once we started to spend more time with her mother! I had an extremely low tolerance for excusing her being so spiteful because she's in poverty - I know her best friend had a job but she was still in a similar situation to Hayley and she was nowhere near as nasty! The way Hayley behaved towards her friend and to Willem (a certain sanitary product) was just inexcusable imho and I was, to be honest, fairly pleased the film ended the way it did. Sorry to keep going on about it, but I'm really flummoxed why I've reacted in this way to a film that seems to be getting a lot of attention over here and in the US.
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Post by Deleted on Oct 17, 2017 15:00:04 GMT
'Call Me By Your Name' is sensational. An awards magnet if there's any justice in the world. No matter what James Woods says.
Don't be surprised if you see Saoirse Ronan's name on one of those gold statuettes either for 'Lady Bird'.
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Post by Deleted on Apr 4, 2018 9:53:45 GMT
Just finished planning my own timetable. Will hopefully be seeing (depending on ticket availability): 120 Beats Per Minute Battle of the Sexes Call Me By Your Name Downsizing Film Stars Don't Die in Liverpool The Florida Project Last Flag Flying On Chesil Beach The Shape of Water And the surprise film. Most anticipating Call Me By Your Name as the book is gorgeous, the trailer is gorgeous and it's the best reviewed film of the year thus far. Also can't wait for The Shape of Water which also has a gorgeous trailer and great reviews. I am curious to know if you got to see On Chesil Beach. If so, what did you think of it? Do you know if it has been on general release?
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Post by ellie1981 on Apr 4, 2018 20:39:53 GMT
Just finished planning my own timetable. Will hopefully be seeing (depending on ticket availability): 120 Beats Per Minute Battle of the Sexes Call Me By Your Name Downsizing Film Stars Don't Die in Liverpool The Florida Project Last Flag Flying On Chesil Beach The Shape of Water And the surprise film. Most anticipating Call Me By Your Name as the book is gorgeous, the trailer is gorgeous and it's the best reviewed film of the year thus far. Also can't wait for The Shape of Water which also has a gorgeous trailer and great reviews. I am curious to know if you got to see On Chesil Beach. If so, what did you think of it? Do you know if it has been on general release? I saw On Chesil Beach. It was rather underwhelming to be honest. Well performed, but the constant flashbacks became very disjointed and it felt like it was being padded out. It would have been far better as a short film at a 30-40 minute running time and wouldn’t have lost anything in the cut.
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