Looking for something new to watch? Here are four options:
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‘Cette Maison’The debut feature by Haitian Canadian director Miryam
Charles opens with a series of flickering tropical images — a bright orange
house nestled among verdant green hills; a chair in a living room, streaked by
a golden sun — that dissolve into rain-streaked glimpses of the streets of New
England. On the soundtrack, a hushed voice whispers in French about the
possibility of a “fluid journey through time and space,” inducting us into what
some might consider a séance, and others, a movie.
The specter haunting the dreamlike “Cette Maison” is the
mysterious death of Charles’ 14-year-old cousin, Tessa, in Connecticut in 2008.
She was found hanged in her room, and an autopsy revealed signs of violent
assault, but the case was never solved. Around that open wound, Charles builds
a speculative fable that weaves between Haiti, Connecticut, and Quebec, where
the filmmaker grew up. In staged, theatrical tableaux, actors enact the
circumstances of Tessa’s death and its aftermath; the gaps in the story are
filled in by imagined scenes of the life Tessa could have lived, in Haiti or
the US. This play with memory and longing opens into broader, poetic
reflections on immigrant life. As Charles dramatizes the night of Quebec’s 1995
referendum on whether or not to separate from Canada, in which a yes vote might
have caused her family to move to Connecticut, “Cette Maison” considers the
predicament of being born in one home and dying in another; of leaving in
search of new futures only to have them cut brutally short.
Stream it on the Criterion Channel.
‘On the Fringe’A towering Penélope Cruz stars in this Spanish drama,
directed by Juan Diego Botto, about how states fail their most vulnerable
citizens — and how people have to pick up the slack by binding together. Three
distinct narratives braid together as the movie unfolds at breakneck speed.
Rafa (Luis Tosar), a lawyer, is trying to balance obligations to his pregnant
wife, his stepson, and an Arab woman whose daughter has been taken in by social
services. Azucena (Cruz) is a young mother desperately fighting an eviction order
with the help of a grassroots activist group. And Germán (Font Garcia), a
daily-wage laborer, struggles to make ends meet while his estranged mother
faces a foreclosure order.
Weaving through these strands in a frenetic, hand-held
style, “On the Fringe” evokes the precarity of the lives of the poor: One wrong
move or one missed bill could land them on the streets, in jail, or separated
from their families. The film rushes forth like a thriller, but each scene,
each conversation, is freighted with ethical dilemmas. Can one be a good family
man and a good activist? Is it worth it to fight losing battles as a matter of
principle? The film has no easy answers, no happy endings, but its stirring
visions of solidarity attest to a simple truth: At the end of the day, all we
have is each other.
Stream it on Netflix.
‘Death of Nintendo’Raya Martin’s charming teen comedy is a candy-coated blast from
the Philippines’ past — a movie decked out in period references and misted with
’90s nostalgia. History frames the misadventures of the kids at the heart of
“Death of Nintendo,” which is set in the months leading up to the eruption of
Mount Pinatubo in 1991, then the second-largest volcanic eruption of the 20th
century. Throughout the film, the characters practice duck-and-cover drills,
bemoan quake-induced blackouts and marvel at ash showers. But the rumblings of
history are no match for the petty little struggles of adolescence.
Paolo (Noel Comia Jr.), the smothered son of a wealthy,
Catholic single mother, has all the fancy new video games and brand-name
sneakers but little freedom. His working-class friend Kachi (John Vincent
Servilla) has no money but has enough swagger to make up the difference. And
the middle-class Gilligan (Jigger Sementilla) and his sister, Mimaw (Kim
Oquendo), try to figure out their identities while caring for a mother recently
spurned by a cheating father. The answer to all their problems, the guys decide
(with Mimaw exasperatedly following along), is to get circumcised by a village
doctor. As they build up to this quest, Martin sprinkles the film with ’90s
references — songs, comic books, toys, myths — that conjure a specific cultural
moment, though his portrait of the travails of growing up feels endearingly
universal.
Stream it on Mubi.
‘Days of the Whale’Roving through the graffiti-flecked streets of Medellín,
Colombia, Catalina Arroyave Restrepo’s feature is a vibrant portrait of both
the malaise and the endless imagination of youth. The film follows two punk
artists, the well-to-do Cristina (Laura Tobón) and the working-class Simon
(David Escallón), who belong to a local collective aiming to provoke social
change through street art. As their friendship blossoms into love, their
milieu, and their differences in circumstance, start to encroach on their
relationship.
A piece of graffiti triggers a rivalry with a local gang
that Simon is embroiled with; Cristina, meanwhile, clashes with her father and
his young wife, and longs for her mother, an investigative journalist who had
to flee to Spain to escape retribution from gangs. “Days of the Whale” ebbs and
flows like a river, capturing the sense of stalled time that afflicts young
people in Colombia, and also the beauty they are capable of creating amid
violence. A sudden glimpse of the titular animal — which is supposed to have
mysteriously appeared in Medellín’s canals — stuns in the midst of a gray city;
it becomes the inspiration for the protagonists’ art, which seeks magic and
possibility in a grim everyday.
Stream it on HBO Max.
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