‘Blank’
اضافة اعلان
A successful novelist paralyzed by writer’s block, Claire
(Rachel Shelley) decides to spend a month at a luxury countryside retreat so
she can focus on her work without distractions.
Her only company there consists of Henry (Wayne Brady), a
holographic concierge, and Rita (Heida Reed), a collected android assistant who
looks as if she has stepped out of the 1950s.
One night, Henry tells Claire that malware has been detected
and the operating system must be rebooted.
As anybody who has ever had to update a computer or even a
phone knows, technology has a way of going awry.
While Henry merely flickers in and out, Rita goes into a
spin, locks all the doors, and informs Claire — who is plagued by nightmares of
a little girl and a terrifying mother — that she must complete her manuscript
if she ever wants to leave.
The movie, directed by Natalie Kennedy, makes the most of
its premise, with amusing references to “The Shining” and a final reveal that
would not have been out of place in an M. Night Shyamalan film
Think hard next time you want to blow a deadline.
(Rent or buy on most major platforms.)
‘Tiny Cinema’
The movie “Butt Boy” was fairly divisive when it came out a
couple of years ago, but the least you can say is that director Tyler Cornack
fully committed to the story of a man who becomes obsessed with — let’s just
say the title was pretty descriptive.
Now Cornack is confirming the warped singularity of his
vision with “Tiny Cinema,” an anthology of six stand-alone shorts that straddle
the line between sci-fi, horror and comedy.
(The movie derived from the Tiny Cinema videos Cornack has
been posting online.) What links the chapters, as they are called, is the sense
that the characters are stuck in nightmares that have their own comically
horrific — or horrifically comic — absurdist logic.
A common setup is to take a word or an expression literally
and see what happens, as in “Game Night,” where Bert (Austin Lewis) becomes
obsessed with the sentence “That’s what she said,” and the chapter with an
unprintable title referring to a common insult.
Few movies have described some single people’s desperation
to find their soul mate as economically as “Edna,” in which the title character
(Olivia Herman) starts dating a corpse she found floating in a river.
Despite its tight duration, “Edna” even manages a hilarious
second act.
Cornack balances storytelling economy with an expansive
approach — a rare feat.
(Rent or buy on most major platforms.)
‘Control’
Another movie with a satisfying plot twist is James Mark’s
“Control,” which effectively combines two major contemporary film tropes:
amnesia and the small, locked environment
Eileen (Sara Mitich) wakes up in a padded cell, not knowing
who she is or how she ended up there
She is given tasks by a disembodied voice (Karen LeBlanc)
and is told that if she cannot execute them, her daughter, Eve (Evie Loiselle),
will die
The scenes in the mysterious room are interspersed with
others showing Eileen and Eve frolicking on a beach, though it is unclear
whether these are flashbacks or visions
Mark keeps adding layers to that fairly simple starting
point as Eileen learns a huge thing about herself, and both she and the viewer
try to figure out why she is kept captive, what the experiments are leading to
and who is orchestrating the sadistic scheme
Unlike many puzzle movies that rely on self-important
obfuscation because, let us be honest, it is easier than coming up with an
explanation, “Control” does tell us what is going on — not entirely, but enough
to both satisfy and give the ending a sense of gravitas that feels earned.
(Rent or buy on most major platforms.)
‘Flashback’
When it comes to cinematic time travel, it is usually men
who have fun hopping around the decades or centuries while women are stuck in
place, waiting for the guys to change history
Not so in this comedy, in which a lawyer named Charlie
(Caroline Vigneaux, who also directed and co-wrote the movie) finds herself
hopscotching from one major event of French history to another
After she got a client acquitted from a rape charge by
cynically arguing that the victim had been wearing a thong and thus was
consenting, Charlie meets a cabdriver (Issa Doumbia) who points out that she
has a few things to learn about women’s rights
Voilà: She is sent back in time, where she meets a series of
influential figures, including Joan of Arc (Emy Ltr) and the revolutionary
Olympe de Gouges (Sylvie Testud)
Charlie even turns up at the 1972 trial, in Bobigny, that
played a big part in the decriminalization of abortion in France, and lets us
hear a fiery speech by real-life firebrand lawyer Gisèle Halimi (Sophia Aram)
Vigneaux, a practicing lawyer before becoming a comedian,
has cooked up an unabashedly, surprisingly pointed feminist story wrapped in
good-natured, broad humor
And it bears repeating: How refreshing to finally watch a
woman move forward by turning back the clock.
(Stream it on Amazon Prime Video.)
‘Maika: The Girl From Another Galaxy’
Officially, this delightful Vietnamese family movie was
inspired by a 1978 Czech children’s TV series
Unofficially, you can see the fingerprints of “E.T.” all
over Ham Tran’s caper
Life is getting complicated for a boy named Hung (Phu Truong
Lai): His mom has recently died from cancer, his dad (Ngoc Tuong) is struggling
to keep a small repair shop afloat, and a pair of goons are trying to buy
people’s apartments on behalf of a developer
So when a weird little girl (Diep Anh Chu) drops out of the
sky, Hung is more than ready to welcome a new friend
Since she does not have a name, he calls her Maika, after
the home world she longs to return to
Do not let the presence of subtitles deter your kids from
enjoying a movie so clearly made for them — then again, many got over that
hurdle to watch “Lupin,” so where there’s a will … Despite running a little too
long, “Maika” has enough high jinks, cartoonishly goofy characters, and
spirited cheer to translate to a wide audience
And besides, fart jokes are part of the intergalactic
language of comedy.
(Rent or buy on most major platforms.)
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