Friday, August 22, 2025

Holiday ro-OOOO-oooo-ooo ... um, uh, OOOO ... ooooooo ... oooooad.

Yes, my European vacation is about to begin.

If you noticed a few extra O's in the word "road" above -- though really, the jury is still out on the correct way to reproduce the elongated vowel sound from Lindsey Buckingham's "Holiday Road" -- it's because we are embarking on the longest trip I've ever taken. It's six weeks. 

My wife has taken longer. But I have not. And obviously my kids have not.

Want to hear the stops? You must forgive me for referring to some places by a city name and some by a country name. Although the journalist in me screams out for consistency, this is how we talk about the various stops on the trip, consistency be damned.

1) Dubai.

2) UK. (Includes both England and Scotland)

3) Paris.

4) Toulouse. (South of France.)

5) Barcelona. 

6) Venice.

7) Rome.

8) Egypt. 

9) Athens.

10) Crete. 

And yet all we could do was curse the number of places we're not going. 

If we wanted to make it a pure, unadulterated Europe trip, leaving out the stops in Asia and Africa, maybe we could have fit in a Germany, a Prague (there's that inconsistency again), a Netherlands. My older son requested Switzerland for some reason. 

But when you're pretty far away from this part of the world and haven't actually been here in 20 years -- 20 years and two months, actually -- you have to make the tough decisions, and the adults get to decide the must-do's and the unfortunately cannot do's. 

I'll have a tablet with me and I do hope to keep up with some blogging. We'll have to see how well that works out. And I am curious indeed what form my European movie viewing will take.

I've said I might not watch very many movies in those six weeks. But who am I kidding. I'll probably curl up with some crap on Netflix at least every third night. And hope to hit at least two movies in the theater, though where this will occur is one of the many unknowns.

It feels daunting, these unknowns. I've been away from the comforts of home for three weeks, maybe even three-and-a-half. But never this long. What if I forget something?

I'll be fine. They have stores in Europe.

I don't know when my next post will be up ... it might be ten days from now, or I might have WiFi on the plane and write something straight away. In either case, you now have this programming note to explain my absence, however long it may last. 

Thursday, August 21, 2025

Paying $20 for multiple Eddington gains

Eddington opens in Australian cinemas today. I leave for Europe tomorrow.

You already know where my mind goes on a thing like that. 

But if I thought better of squeezing in Superman the night before our trip to America last month -- yes, that's two international trips in two months if you're counting -- there were reasons we had to do it this way -- then you better bet I didn't even get to the point of needing to think better of seeing Ari Aster's latest on Europe Departure Eve, when we're going away for six weeks rather than one.

So I saw it last night instead.

How did that happen, you ask? Well I rented it through U.S. iTunes, of course, since it's already been out for a couple months in the U.S.

Of course, that meant the steep $19.99 rental fee that I try to avoid paying, and usually only pay at the very end of the year when trying to catch movies I won't otherwise be able to see before my list closes. That's compared to the free admission I would have gotten if I'd gone to my local cinema. 

But seeing Eddington now helped in two important ways as I ready for my trip:

1) It gave me a new release still in the chamber that I can review sometime next week and still have it post in a timely way on the website. Coverage while I'm gone is going to be tricky, as my other writers are not always reliable -- no shade on them, but they're both lawyers and one has a baby who is under two. Anything I can prep myself for later posting is a boon to the continued appearance of normalcy on the site while I'm gone.

2) I can finally listen to the next episode of Filmspotting. I like to listen to my podcasts in sequence if possible, and since I knew my viewing of Eddington was roughly soon, and that episode was the next one up, I haven't listened to an episode of this podcast in about six weeks. I don't like to fall behind on any of my podcasts, and though I can't always see the films they discuss before I listen to the episode, I decided an Aster film, with all its potential surprises, was one where I should. (They don't spoil, but it can be difficult to avoid spoilers entirely.)

And since I do plan to have a review up early next week, I won't give you my extended Eddington thoughts now, especially as I am still trying to sort through them.

To be honest, I'm posting this mostly so you don't have to look at the poster for Winnie the Pooh: Blood and Honey at the top of my site any longer!

Sunday, August 17, 2025

Not pooh-poohing Pooh

I was a Winnie the Pooh kid growing up. 

Or at least my parents thought it was a good thing to get me into. 

It was one of the earliest favorite things that I dropped, probably even before I was eight years old. But there were Winnie the Pooh stories around my house and I believe between us, my sister and I had a stuffed Pooh and a stuffed Piglet, I think her the latter and me the former. I don't remember now the character's incarnations on TV and the movies at the time, and now that I think about it, I don't think I have any movies featuring Winnie the Pooh from this era entered into my big movie list. But I remember very well the voice actor who played Pooh, and the exact tone he would use when he said "Oh bother!"

Well I haven't seen Winnie the Pooh, the 2011 Disney animated movie.

I haven't seen Goodbye Christopher Robin, the 2017 film directed by Simon Curtis, in which the characters of Hundred Acre Wood appear. 

I haven't seen Christopher Robin, the Ewan McGregor starrer that came out a year later, that also features Christopher, Pooh, and Pooh's other animal friends.

And yet I have now seen the 2023 film where Winnie the Pooh is a demented backwoods killer in the mode of Leatherface from the Texas Chain Saw Massacre

I noticed Winnie the Pooh: Blood and Honey show up on Kanopy a little while back, in the past couple months, and added it to my watchlist pretty much straight away. But I couldn't make any progress toward an actual viewing. There was just something too horrible about it.

In case you aren't up on how this came to be, in 2022, A.A. Milne's classic characters came into the public domain after the 95-year copyright on the material expired. That meant that anyone could use Winnie the Pooh in any way they saw fit, without the need for permission or without providing any recompense. 

So of course someone made a horror movie. I'm not sure if this is even the only horror movie someone made. In fact, it's definitely not as there was a sequel a year later, which would have been last year.

On Friday night, I took the plunge.

And did not hate it.

A writer-director with the greatest name I've heard in some time -- Rhys Frake-Waterfield -- actually has some skill. This movie might have been made for hackish, prurient, opportunistic and distasteful reasons, but it is not made without skill. 

In fact, I was somewhat taken with the explanation for why Pooh and Piglet go bad. After Christopher Robin "abandons" them -- in other words, grows up -- they have a tough winter in which there's no food, and go feral, killing and eating Eeyore. After this, they vow never to speak again and to kill any humans who cross their path, specifically Christopher Robin. This is told in the sort of simple, merely suggestive drawings you might see in a children's book like the ones A.A. Milne actually wrote, with narration from a sufficiently intellectual sounding Brit.

Nothing that happens after this is merely suggestive.

No explanation for what happened to Owl, Kanga, Rabbit, Roo and Tigger -- yes I had to look these names up, all but the last -- but Pooh and Piglet are still living in Hundred Acre Wood, a bit like the Leatherface family would have lived if they'd lived there instead of Texas. When Christopher Robin returns with his wife? fiancee? to try to find them -- having no idea what happened to them after he last saw them -- it's not going to turn out well for them, or for a bunch of girls staying in a nearby cabin.

Blood and Honey has the courage of its grotesque convictions. And they are pretty grotesque.

There's the physical grotesquery. Pooh and Piglet kill people in a variety of gross ways. They have no weapon of choice. Sledgehammers, car tires, knives, chains, and even just pure blunt trauma, unrelated to sledgehammers, all factor in. And these scenes don't hold back. 

You could say that gore is cheap, but people who have watched a lot of gore know that some gore is silly and forgettable, and other gore you carry with you. I'm not going to go so far as to say that Blood and Honey will haunt me, but there are at least two kills in here that I will remember every time I think back to this movie. As a person who has seen a lot of gore, I consider this a compliment.

But then there's the emotional grotesquery. You'd expect the makers of this movie to have some instinct toward reclaiming the innocence at the core of these characters, before they went feral, but nope, they don't have that. That public domain status for the intellectual property, which I guess is no longer defined as "property," freed them up from having to even make token gestures toward character redemption. And they do not make these token gestures. 

Then there's the part of me that is a little sickened by the idea of making a movie just because you can. I don't love the precedent here. I don't remember if there are other sacred characters who have fallen into the public domain recently, but I seem to remember there was another one beyond Winnie. Well, this movie and whatever success it had -- enough to make a sequel, not enough to break a 3 user rating on IMDB -- means that any other characters who slip into the public domain will, within one year, have similar movies in which they are raving maniacs who saw people's heads off.

Still, I found myself giving Winnie the Pooh: Blood and Honey a three-star rating on Letterboxd. There's some other technique used here that I didn't mention, for example, the forced perspective scene where Pooh is seen from below, towering over some rough hillbilly type who looks like a cowering child in the foreground, half of whose face he's about to take off with his paw. I credit the evident ability on display here, as well as the memorable gore, in being real with myself and admitting that I liked this movie, even if I didn't like the idea of the movie. 

Making a movie where the Winnie the Pooh is a killer doesn't change anything about the fact that I had a stuffed Winnie the Pooh when I was a kid and I loved it.

Saturday, August 16, 2025

MIFF: Dopey grins, and the last Redux of 2025

As I type this, MIFF still has nine days of the festival remaining.

I still have no days remaining. 

It's the earliest I've finished the festival when the remainder of the festival didn't present an actual scheduling conflict for me. I actually only have a direct conflict with the final three days, and could even see some movies next Friday afternoon if I weren't working. But Friday night? Well it's time I finally told you.

My family will be in Europe for six weeks, leaving next Friday night.

It's a trip we first started planning in Vietnam in April of 2023. (I know this sounds like we're world travellers. I guess we are, a bit. But not in an obnoxious way.) I sprung the idea on my wife in the big pool at our resort -- again, I know, this sounds shitty, but we had just lost a close family member from the older generation, which I won't get into right now, so hopefully that makes it sound less shitty, and more of a "remember to live life while we can" thing.

Anyway, we hash-tagged it #europe2025 so we would not lose sight of it, and indeed we're making it happen. There were various incarnations of this trip where it would already be over, as we had once thought of going in May and June, and April was even on the table. The late August-early October timeframe ultimately worked better -- fewer tourists, we hope, since many will be due back in school -- and Friday it finally starts.

I can share the itinerary with you as we go, as I hope I'll still be blogging with some regularity. The device I'll have with me remains to be seen, as I have a tablet I'm currently locked out of, one of the things on my growing to do list before we leave. 

I'm able to do this trip -- well, not really "able," our bank account will be recovering for years -- because of something in Australia called "long service leave." Once you've been working for the same job for seven years, you are entitled to an additional seven weeks of leave on top of your normal leave. I believe it happens again another seven years after that, though I'm only brushed up on the initial seven-year requirement. My seven years as permanent staff at my job, as opposed to the contractor role I fulfilled for four years before that, just came in March. I'm spending it quickly, and all in one place. (Actually, I technically have one other week available, which just gets banked.)

So because all of our attentions have been geared toward this for several months now, the final week before we leave is a period of intense finalising and general worrying. I correctly determined that it would be best for me not to be gallivanting around town seeing festival films for the final week before we left.

But I did a lot of "gallivanting" before that, if you are talking about total steps. I do a lot of walking on the days I see movies at MIFF, in addition to enjoying some of my favorite eateries around the central business district, and if you want to know my step counts on the four days I attended movies, here they are:

Friday 8/8 - 16,166
Sunday 8/10 - 13,740
Tuesday 8/12 - 15,618
Thursday 8/14 - 13,965

I've already told you about the movies of 8/8, 8/10 and 8/12, so it's finally time to finish with the movies of 8/14.

When I wrote my not-yet-published review of James Griffiths' The Ballad of Wallis Island, I called it a "dopey grin movie."

There as now, I then went on to explain that this is not an insult, but rather, an acknowledgement of the pleased trance the movie puts you in, such when you finally notice things like your own facial expression -- feeling it through your muscles rather than seeing yourself, of course -- you realize you've been wearing a dopey grin for, oh, 15 minutes? 30 minutes? You don't know for sure.

Indeed this was my experience of Ballad, which was also the only film I saw that I'd already heard of before the festival started. Without doing a thorough check now, I believe that every MIFF so far has included at least one film I was anticipating before the festival started. I suppose the exception to that could be 2022, the year we missed the festival proper and got back only in time for the streaming portion, but like I said, I'm not checking now.

Usually I like this film to be something I'd heard buzz about but wouldn't be available in theaters for some time -- the example I always think of for this, which is basically the example I use any time I need an example of something good about MIFF, is Toni Erdmann

Well, there's no scarcity when it comes to The Ballad of Wallis Island. It's been out since April in the U.S., meaning I can probably already rent it through my U.S. iTunes, and opens in Australian theaters on August 28th. Though as you now know, I'll be out of the country then. So, I guess, this was the only way for me to see it in the theater.

And I'm certainly glad I did, as it immediately became one of my favorite films of the year. Not the festival, where it's the favorite, just edging out 1001 Frames. The year. 

Because it involves two harmonizing singers and hails from the greater United Kingdom, TBOWI put me in mind of Once, which is a high compliment, as Once remains one of my favorite movies of the first decade of this century. I'm not sure whether it will go down as one of my favorites of the third decade, but let's just say it's not out of the realm of possibility. 

I won't give you a lot of plot right now. My review does that if you can wait a couple days for the link to go up. (This will be my last MIFF review in 2025, so I wanted to kick it forward to the second week, even though I'd written it in time to publish it yesterday. It actually makes an ideal MIFF review because it's playing at regional cinemas on the final weekend of the festival, meaning I'm not reviewing something that's already sold out for its final in-city sessions.)

But as a quick logline, the movie entails the unwitting reunion of an indie folk rock duo who were big around 2010, but had since disbanded, both personally and professionally. That's Tom Basden and Carey Mulligan. Their reunion comes on a small island off Britain, with a population of less than 100, and the show is actually for their biggest fan, played by Tim Key, who will be the only one in the audience, little do they know beforehand. 

Anyway, yeah, I had stars in my eyes for this one. Funny and sweet. 

I had one slight reservation about the movie that I didn't see fit to put in my review, but I'll include it here in this more informal setting, where I don't have the confusing double duty of sort of also promoting the festival. (They gave me free tickets, which does at least make me feel more inclined to choose to review my more positive experiences. Which didn't stop me from also reviewing Good Boy.) 

Mulligan's character is currently married to an American black guy, played by (I have to copy and paste this from IMDB) Akemnji Ndifornyen. Don't worry, there aren't any ugly stereotypes about his character -- he's a bird watcher and a confirmed intellectual. But he's immediately telegraphed as "the wrong love interest" and I'm not sure if the movie gives him a fair shake, in part because he demonstrates emotional cruelty on a couple occasions. And yes, you do notice it a little more because he's the only non-white person in the cast. However, to the movie's credit, the resolution of his character can't necessarily be predicted.

My MIFF finished one movie later on a less good note. It might have been nice if the time slots could have been flipped between these two, and the light current of air under my heels from Ballad could have carried me home. Instead, I had to finish with a mid revenge filler involving the multiverse.

The high concept did get me in the door for Redux Redux, which means that despite the things I'm about to say about it, I am still susceptible to multiverse ideas. It's just this one doesn't really work.

The film is directed by a pair of brothers, Kevin and Matthew McManus, who I thought I might be familiar with previously, but it turns out no. Just because brothers are directing a film doesn't mean that they've already directed another film you know, though it certainly feels like that with all the pairs of brothers directing films who are out there. 

The story involves a woman (Michaela McManus, so I guess this one is all in the family) who is trying to get revenge for her daughter, who was kidnapped and apparently murdered. She knows who the kidnapper and murderer is -- despite the body not having been found, so it's unclear how she knows her daughter is even dead -- and because she has a piece of machinery the size and shape of a coffin, she has the ability to keep killing him and killing him again and again. 

No, it's not a time machine, allowing her to relive the same day to feed her blood lust. It's a machine that allows her to switch between universes in a multiverse, hoping she'll still find one where her daughter is alive, and to kill this monster while she's there.

Good idea for a film, you'd think, but the execution here is so basic. The three McManuses (McMani?) don't give us any particularly clever demonstrations of multiverse logic, and they certainly don't give us anything in the way of subtle dialogue. This is pretty broad, containing all the standard fretting you'd get in a movie about a fridged daughter and the monster who fridged her, without any of the nuance or specific character details. It's all just very generic, even while it obviously feels it has something to say about monsters who kidnap and kill young women. (Like this is a topic that needs to be specifically championed.) 

One area where the film flirts with specificity is in the casting of indie filmmaker and actor Jim Cummings as a man the protagonist meets in every multiverse and with whom she has a tryst. Cummings might be known to you from such films as Thunder Road, The Wolf of Snow Hollow and The Beta Test, and his presence definitely signifies something with a distinct perspective. Unfortunately, he's used poorly here, almost arbitrarily, as he doesn't demonstrate his knack for confrontational black humor, isn't woven into the story in a meaningful way, and is basically forgotten. 

Okay that puts the wraps on another MIFF. We now return to another week of regular programming, followed by six weeks of travel programming, whose exact nature remains to be seen. 

Friday, August 15, 2025

Understanding Editing: The French Connection

This is the latest in my series considering 12 best editing winners at the Oscars, six that I've seen and six that I haven't seen, alternating monthly, to get a better sense of the craft on the whole, and what constitutes superlative examples of it.

I didn't much care for The French Connection the first time I saw it, and on my second viewing, I still don't much care for it.

Five of the six movies I'm rewatching in this series are movies I really liked, mostly even loved, on my first viewing. The French Connection is the exception to that. 

In fact, I'm so puzzled by its appeal that I had to remind myself as I was watching it that in addition to winning the best editing Oscar, it also won best picture.

What's my beef with this movie?

Let me start with a little background.

I frequently tell people that my favorite decade of filmmaking is the 1970s. I should probably be honest with myself and clarify that. The 1970s likely have the highest average quality of films, in that there were fewer concessions to studios being made than in any other decade, which allowed a host of new filmmakers -- some of those profiled in the book Easy Riders, Raging Bulls, which gets its title from two movies that aren't from the 1970s -- to really show us what they had. 

They fully honest answer to this question -- and I like to always be fully honest with you -- is that I prefer the 1980s, as this contains the most personal favorites that embedded themselves in my budding persona as a cinephile at just the right age to have the most enduring impact. However, there are a lot more shitty movies made in the 1980s than there were in the 1970s. 

The flip side to the freedom the 1970s filmmakers enjoyed is that they were also held to a lower standard of accessibility. The French Connection is a film I find fairly inaccessible. It doesn't contain many of the standard gestures we get toward orienting the viewer that we see in newer films, and older films. We don't feel like we're properly introduced to the characters and it's like we've started in with them mid-conversation. That can be good, and I hope I don't need things to be spoon fed to me. But in the case of The French Connection, it doesn't work for me.

Oh we do get character moments with Gene Hackman's Popeye Doyle. It isn't all procedural. There's the scene where he gets handcuffed to the bed, with his own handcuffs, by the woman with whom he's having a tryst. This guy is a mess and many of the other narrative beats will demonstrate that amply. 

But maybe I feel like I should like Popeye Doyle more than I do, even as he's making egregious errors of judgment, failures of empathy, and even dropping racial slurs. If made as a prestige TV show in the 21st century, The French Connection would have figured out a way in to Doyle, to ingratiating us to him. 

The actual French Connection does not do that. It just sends him through a series of plot-heavy foot chases, car chases, and often botched surveillances, which each have lesser and lesser impact the more of them there are. 

I do think, however, that the editing in the film is pretty great. And I suspect one of the reasons Gerald B. Greenberg won the Oscar for William Friedkin's film is that he was helping usher in the new era of post-Hays Code gritty filmmaking that would go on to define the 1970s.

(Let's pause for a moment to acknowledge Greenberg's accomplishments. He was also nominated for no less than Apocalypse Now and Kramer vs. Kramer -- which were actually both in the same damn year -- and he worked five times with Brian De Palma.)

The thing I noticed in The French Connection, that I maybe haven't noticed in other films so far in this series, is the tendency to cut the action short just a beat earlier than you would expect. It lends an undeniable kineticism to the proceedings, and also a sense that this is a rough cut of this rough story. If you are a good cinephile, you shouldn't need polish, so this approach rewards your sophisticated sensibilities as a viewer of challenging art.

You see it in the foot chases. You see it in the car chases. (Oh yeah, this film is known for having one of the most famous car chases of all time, where Doyle speeds underneath an elevated train to get to the next stop before the train does.) You see it in the auction for abandoned cars at the impound lot. You see it in a scene where a sniper tries to take out Doyle and his partner, played by Roy Scheider. (I can't actually remember who was in that scene, but let's assume it was Hackman and Scheider.) You see it simply in a scene of Doyle scanning the streets with that furrowed brow and watchful eye he always has.

But just liking this basic technique and being able to clap myself on the back for appreciating what it's doing is not really enough to get me through The French Connection with more that a distanced, academic appreciation of it. I don't like it. 

Would I like it better if they got the bad guys in the end? (They get some of them, but those ones all get off easy, and they don't get the Big Bad.) In other words, am I not as sophisticated as I think, and I need my protagonist to do more than create a ruckus wherever he goes, shooting wildly and indiscriminately, and one time killing an innocent person, a fact that doesn't seem to bother him very much? And once dropping the n-word?

(I don't like his hat, either. There, I said it.)

I don't know. Maybe?

I'll be back in September with my next previously unseen film, The Right Stuff

Thursday, August 14, 2025

Young horror prodigy doppelgangers?

While prepping the artwork for my review of Weapons, which you can find here, I came across this picture of someone directing Julia Garner on the set of the movie, and I thought, "Why do they have a picture of Oz Perkins explaining the scene to Garner, when the movie was directed by Zach Cregger?"

Oh but that is Cregger. They just look a lot alike.

Like, a lot.

How alike?

I'll let you be the judge.

Here's Cregger:


And here's Perkins:


The comparison might be even more striking when they're wearing glasses.

Cregger with glasses:


Perkins with glasses:


Having approximately the same amount of facial hair in these photos helps.

Okay so there isn't really anything profound to say about people just because they look like each other. 

So instead I'll ask: Who's the better director?

It's a good question.

My conclusion is that Perkins has higher highs and lower lows, and Cregger is more consistent, though that consistency finds me a bit more dispassionate on both of Cregger's projects than the average cinephile might be.

While I liked both Barbarian and Weapons, they both have things about them that give me pause, leading me to give them "only" 3.5 stars on Letterboxd. You can read that above linked review -- come on, you know you wanna -- if you want to get a better sense of my Weapons reservations, though also without spoilers.

By comparison, Perkins is a study in extremes.

I've seen five Perkins movies now to only the two for Cregger, so there's more data. But I can tell you that prior to this year, I had seen one five-star movie directed by Perkins (The Blackcoat's Daughter), one half-star movie directed by Perkins (Longlegs), and then two milquetoast three-star movies directed by Perkins (I Am the Pretty Thing That Lives in the House and Gretel & Hansel). I'm no math major but that should average out perfectly to three stars.

Which puts him below Cregger, who is firmly entrenched at 3.5 stars.

But that was prior to this year, and this year I saw my fifth Perkins movie, The Monkey, which was a four-star Letterboxd rating for me. So that puts them basically on equal footing. 

But I love things that I love more than I hate things that I hate, and Perkins will always have a bit of a special rosy glow for me because of The Blackcoat's Daughter. Cregger has yet to achieve that rosy glow for me in either of his projects, but I feel like he has the potential to do so -- and less potential to really fuck something up as Perkins did with Longlegs.

Since each of their most recent movies was at least 3.5 stars, I'm definitely looking forward to what each does next, I can tell you that. 

For the record, there's a bit of a flaw in the premise of this post as stated in its title.

Neither Cregger nor Perkins is actually "young" in most true senses of the word. Cregger was a sitcom actor and comedic troupe founder before he started directing, and he's now the ripe old age of 44. And Perkins? He's barely younger than I am, having turned 51 in February to my October.

But they're young in the sense that they have only come on the scene in the past five to ten years and are injecting fresh ideas into horror. And may they remain forever so. 

Wednesday, August 13, 2025

MIFF: ACMI-centric, or maybe not

My third night at MIFF was entirely comprised of films at ACMI.

And maybe this is a good time to mention a disappointment I have about MIFF 2025, which is not MIFF 2025's fault.

The films I selected are entirely in cinemas that I already visit for other reasons. 

My two favorite MIFF venues, The Capitol and The Forum, are both distinguished by their beautiful architecture, design, and old-world theatrical touches. I don't ever get to see movies in them if not for MIFF, so I try to hit both each year, and usually succeed. 

This year, when I'd made my big spreadsheet, lined up good times against my other weekly obligations, and let the algorithm spit out what I'd see, the films were all at ACMI, Hoyts Melbourne Central or Cinema Kino, the cinema that's downstairs from where I used to work. And though I do miss working upstairs from a movie theater, and have not seen nearly as many movies at Kino lately, I've probably seen 100 movies there overall, so there's no novelty.

Hoyts? It's just a multiplex. It was a surprise when it got involved with MIFF at all a couple years ago, but now it's a central venue. (No pun intended.)

ACMI is the one that's a little bit different, but still not great. ACMI is The Australian Centre for the Moving Image, which contains a free museum dedicated to lots of things related to, well, the moving image. Including a lot of movie stuff. It's a good public resource and it's great that it's free, but I liked it better before they reconfigured it about four years ago. 

Anyway.

They do have theaters upstairs, but the theaters have all the charm of two giant lecture halls. They are like multiplex theaters in some respects, but more ... academic. 

They are, however, a novelty within my current viewing habits, so I tried to embrace it.

I'd planned out a whole evening around ACMI. Between the very short 1001 Frames at 6 p.m. and the very short Death Does Not Exist at 9 p.m., I was going to have about 90 minutes to kill. I'd spend the first 45 or so reading. ACMI has these funky couches in the foyer that look pretty comfortable, and are raised up on landings, so you're kind of nestled up in there under the staircase above. A great place to make a dent in my book, which I hope to finish before my big trip next Friday. (I haven't told you about the big trip. I will.)

Then, although I certainly didn't need this long, I'd have 45 minutes at the festival hub, where the ads for Campari negronis I'd been watching before MIFF movies could finally get their outlet. I might even get to my seat early, rather than habitually almost-late as I have been doing. 

Well the couch area was closed off. I guess the ACMI foyer is extricable from the theater portion upstairs, and on a Tuesday night, they didn't need to be playing host to 51-year-old men who wanted to read a book for 45 minutes. So that was out. 

Then the festival hub was closed to a private party. This always happens with the festival hub. They tantalize you with its glamour and then they always close the velvet rope on you just when you really want to go. 

The place playing backup duty to the festival hub was a pop-up bar, still glamorous but slightly less so, run by Penfolds, the wine maker. I should know. I had a glass of wine there Friday night. But it was only wine, and I wanted that negroni.

But ... 

One of the MIFF staff suggested that he thought they did do cocktails there, but was easily dissuaded from his conviction when I insisted that they didn't. He was probably just being polite. Well of course he was right, as I noted walking by the place and seeing a guy with an empty negroni tumbler. Stupidly, I confirmed that he had indeed purchased it in the bar where he was sitting. He confirmed he had.

So I got my negroni. It was good.

And ... 

Before that I walked up to San Churro Chocolateria, needing more steps by this point like I needed a hole in the head, and had a hot chocolate to drink with a significantly smaller amount of book reading. On a rainy night, it paired nicely with the early ramen dinner I'd had at my favorite ramen bar before the first movie.

And ...

The first movie I saw was my new favorite of the festival.

Chosen specifically because it was foreign -- and I suppose, even more specifically because it was Iranian, and I love Iranian movies -- was 1001 Frames. I'll give you the premise.

We see a montage of about a dozen Iranian actresses, whose stories are woven together throughout the narrative and move forward at the same pace, auditioning for the role of Scheherazade in an upcoming film. They're all nervous because the director they're auditioning for -- the only person in the room they're auditioning for -- is famous, his work beloved, though not necessarily his behaviour. There's a wariness in them beyond their nervousness.

This wariness is warranted. In each audition, which involves very little actual auditioning, his words are becoming uncomfortable, crossing lines, giving lie to the notion that they might be here for an actual job. His comments become unmistakeably lascivious, suggesting quid pro quos, and he becomes too physically intimate with them. Some think it's a test to see what sort of reaction he can elicit in them, which might say something about their fitness for the role, but others see it as the last director unworried about getting #metoo'd. And then he becomes threatening.

Did I mention we don't actually see him? We only hear his voice from the other side of the camera?

I don't want to tell you any more. I'll just say that the really wonderful thing shared by much Iranian cinema is that it contains layers of meaning. No, that's too pedestrian. It contains layers of reality, layers upon which to interpret what we're seeing. 

I should tell you the director: Mehrnoush Alia. Never heard of him. But he shares an approach to cinema with such countrymen and cinematic luminaries Abbas Kiarostami and Jafar Panahi. And that is most certainly a good thing. 

I don't actually think it was shot in Iran. For one, it spends the entire time on a sound stage, which could be anywhere. For another, there were references to New York film commissions and the like in the credits. (I could look this up but I prefer the primary source evidence.) And I also happened to notice that Ramin Bahrani was thanked in the credits, and he's based purely in the U.S., to the extent that he's still making movies at all. (He made one in 2022 for Showtime. That's not that long ago. And I really liked The White Tiger in 2021.)

Anyway, the spirit of the unfortunately not yet dead Harvey Weinstein hangs over this thing big time, and you really feel for these poor, vulnerable women, who can be described as such even when they spit fire and defend themselves. Underneath we can see they are scared, and who wouldn't be. 

After the hot chocolate and the negroni -- a less good pairing than the hot chocolate and the ramen -- it was this year's entry into my unofficial MIFF "outsider animation" category. That's right, every MIFF I try to see an animated movie made outside the animation mainstream, and I think my streak in this case is unbroken. 

The movie is called Death Does Not Exist, and it's French. So that makes three of my five MIFF movies so far originating in other countries, which is not bad. 

I won't really try to describe the animation style, because if you want to know the truth, I'm on the bus riding home from the movie as I write this, and my creativity for the day is pretty much exhausted. (Yes, buses are replacing trains on my route. Buses are always replacing trains on my route at night.) You can get some sense of it from the poster above. 

The story is a fairly simple one, with room for a lot of dream logic and radical philosophizing in the middle. It's told from the perspective of Helene, a somewhat reluctant revolutionary who has signed up with five other friends to try to assassinate some corporate bigwig at his sylvan home. Their act is to be in the name of left-wing change, but at the crucial moment, of course some of them are overcome by the enormity of actually taking another person's life, to say nothing of the fact that they will then be on the run.

The attack of the compound is a total balls-up, and Helene flees. She then spends the rest of the movie wrestling with her conscience about whether she should have left them, even though by that point it was already hopeless. Her conscience takes the form of various figures who travel through the woods with her, some known and some unknown, and a contemplation of the Big Issues -- death among them -- comes to pass.

If the way I'm writing about Death Does Not Exist sounds a little dismissive, I did like the movie. But I also found my mind wandering at some points, and then increasingly more points. For a movie that was only 72 minutes long -- the same length as the dog horror movie I saw on Friday night, Good Boy, which also felt too long -- DDNE started trying my patience more than I wanted for a movie I knew I basically liked. So then that made me wonder how much I actually did like it. 

When we were coming out of the theater I heard someone say that it was very earnest, and I think that was the problem. There are a lot of platitudes presented quite earnestly in this film, and it hasn't much of a sense of humor at all. Not that every film needs a sense of humor; this one probably doesn't. But the point is, you do get weighed down eventually by a film that takes itself a little too seriously, and this may have prevented DDNE from being more of an unqualified success, majestic as it is in parts.

And I'm glad I got my negroni now, because that's it for ACMI in 2025. I might be able to squeeze in another one between the two movies that close out the festival for me on Thursday night, which are (sadly) at Hoyts and Cinema Kino. 

Even when you don't get to go to your favorite venues, though, it's still MIFF. And there's always the promise of excellent movies, two of which I've seen out of my five. 

Tuesday, August 12, 2025

MIFF: Further lust for inanimate objects

If you recall this post from six years ago -- and really, which among you doesn't?? -- you'll know I have a MIFF habit of seeing films in which characters have an unusual fixation on inanimate objects. And by "habit" I mean it happened twice, on the same night, six years ago, when both of the films I watched had to do with characters under the hypnotic sway of a particular garment in their wardrobe. 

We can now add a chair to this group.

By Design was the only MIFF movie I saw on Sunday night, the only of my four nights where I'm seeing only one movie. But so as not to waste a train ride into the city just for a single 90-minute chunk of weirdness, I followed it up with Zach Cregger's follow-up to Barbarian, called Weapons, which won't comprise any meaningful chunk of this post. In fact, its single mention has now passed, and you should not view that as any commentary on its worthiness for discussion or lack thereof.

By Design falls about halfway between Peter Strickland's In Fabric and Quentin Dupieux's Deerskin -- the two films in the above-linked post, if you didn't click on it (how dare you) -- in terms of my ability to connect with it, sharing a titular structure with Strickland's film and an absurd comedic sensibility with Dupieux's. 

In short, it's the story of a woman who wants to become a chair, and then succeeds in this goal. 

They actually swap bodies, in a playful skewering of the time-worn formula that currently has its latest example in movie theaters now with Freakier Friday

The woman, played by Juliette Lewis, does not initially want to become the chair, though she does see some of the inherent pleasures of that lifestyle. Initially she just wants to purchase it to add to the existing furniture in her house. But oh how strong wishes can be fulfilled in strange ways in the magic of the movies.

It's a fairly ordinary chair. I think you're supposed to think this from the start, just how the red dress is pretty ordinary in In Fabric and the deerskin jacket is pretty ordinary in Deerskin. Here, I'll give you a look at it:

Oh no wait, I can't. There has not yet been enough published online about this movie, which played Sundance but does not yet have a release date (or a distributor? maybe? it doesn't yet have a proper poster), for there to be a solo shot of the chair available for me to show you. But trust me, it's fairly ordinary. There's some grace to the looping of its wooden armrests, part of an entire wooden structure to comprises the entirety of the chair. But really, it's just a chair.

And yet any number of people in this film -- first Lewis' character, then the man (Mamoudou Athie) who is gifted the chair as a breakup present from his ex -- are absolutely besotted with it, losing all composure when matters of the chair come up. Affected to a far lesser extent by this are Lewis' two besties, who verge on frenemies, played by Robin Tunney and Samantha Mathis. (Side note: I dated Samantha Mathis' half sister nearly 25 years ago.) 

Even if Deerskin did not exist, Dupieux would make a solid comparison for what writer-director Amanda Kramer is doing here. The undercurrent of absurdity prompts bouts of surprised giggling with some frequency. For a while, I thought I might like By Design as much as my favorite Dupieux movies. (Rubber has the edge there over Deerskin.) Particularly funny are the scenes where other characters interact with Lewis -- motionless while inhabited by the soul of the chair -- as though she were actually present and not completely comatose. There's some light commentary in there about solipsism, our indifference to noticing whether others are present or not as we are so obsessed with our own personal concerns. You know, the kind of thing Weekend at Bernie's once poked fun at. Lewis' ability to stay as still as she does, with only a slightly rising and falling of her chest to show that she's breathing, is pretty impressive.

Where the movie lost me a little was in these discordant digressions -- I suppose you could say all digressions are discordant -- about side characters whose presence within the story didn't exactly make sense to me. Clifton Collins Jr. plays this stalker who is introduced fairly late in the story, and he gets this three- or four-minute soliloquy that isn't funny and that doesn't seem to have any place here, especially since it's primarily sad and not funny. That happened one too many times for me to give By Design a full-throated endorsement.

But it's definitely a thumbs up overall, and I really like the way it speaks to other films in my MIFF history -- even if they both happened on the same night six years ago.

Saturday, August 9, 2025

MIFF: Hearing impaired, bowel impaired

Something happened to me during the first few minutes of the first film of this year's Melbourne International Film Festival that hasn't happened to me in 24 years:

I had to leave the movie to go take a shit.

Sorry, I should have better prepared you for that, but you likely had some idea from the title of this post where I was about to go.

That's right, it was 2001 the last time I can remember having to do this -- which is also the only time I can remember having to do this. Considering that my stats show I've seen 1784 movies in the theater, that's crazy.

It likely would have been late October/early November, since that lines up with the release date of David Lynch's Mulholland Drive. A friend of mine and I went to see it after a Mexican lunch, though I can't remember if the specific food I ate had anything to do with it. Anyway, I joke that the reason I didn't understand Mulholland Drive was due to this unscheduled pit stop. As if any missed five-minute portion of that movie could unlock the whole movie.

The next time I got the uncontrollable urge to defecate while watching a movie, it was last night, in a movie called, humorously enough, Sex

It's funny enough alone to call a movie Sex, then funnier still that this is the movie that stimulated my bowels beyond my ability to delay. Oh I tried to delay for a while, maybe as long as five minutes, but this was at the very beginning of the movie, and I knew it was a losing battle. 

Sex is a Norwegian film written and directed by Dag Johan Haugerud, and it's the first of a trio of generically named films on similar themes, all of which have already been released. The other two are called Dreams and Love, and I'd really like to see them. (They're both also playing at this year's festival, but it wasn't something I had any idea I'd want to prioritize.)

But for a time, I thought my unexpected departure from Sex, about ten minutes into its running time, might be a fatal blow to seeing any of them, including the one I was currently seeing. 

I was standing in the wrong line at Cinema Kino, waiting for another session, apparently, that was starting later than my 6:15 session of Sex. I'd chosen that line only because I'd seen the woman ahead of me holding a MIFF brochure, but of course this cinema is doing double or triple duty on MIFF films, in addition to its usual slate, so it would have behoved me to actually check.

My session had already been let in, but all this really meant was that the pickings were slim for seats by the time I entered the theater. And I did still want to use the bathroom -- just #1 at this point -- before the movie started, so I had to carefully pick through all the other legs in my row, nearly falling into the row in front of me, to deposit my bag and jacket, then return from whence I came to use the bathroom before finally returning again.

And then, about ten minutes later, pick back through those same legs again. 

See I started to feel a little sweaty, started cramping in my gut in that way we're all familiar with. It means The Time Is Nigh.

"But wait," I thought. "This never happens to me. Maybe I can suppress it."

Fat chance.

I've often considered how cooperative the human body is when it comes to matters of holding it. One of the first times I noticed this happening was when I went away for the weekend for the first time with my new girlfriend, now my wife, in 2005. Literally ten seconds after I'd dropped her off at her house at the end of the weekend, my body said "Okay, you gotta get to a gas station pronto." Before that exact moment, I didn't even know I had to go.

My body knows movies are important enough to me that it also squelches the need to go in that situation -- at least I assume it must be doing this, since it's been nearly a quarter century since it's happened, and I'm certainly not consciously planning any method of avoiding it. But there are certain biological imperatives where mind over matter just doesn't work, and one of those is food poisoning.

Now, I don't know if I actually had food poisoning last night. I really hope not, as the Indian place I ate beforehand is one of my favorites, and very rarely visited, and it was especially yummy last night. But the symptoms were unmistakeable, starting with the sweating. And the main reason I thought the movie could be ruined is that if this was food poisoning, it was not going to end after a single session in the bathroom.

But there were twin social considerations here as well:

1) I had already pushed past these people's legs three times. I already got a mild sense that they thought it was inefficient of me to drop my bag and then go to the toilet, rather than taking care of that before I selected my seat.

2) I didn't want them to think I was a homophobe.

I'll have to explain that last one, which will get us into what Sex is about.

The film features two men who work inspecting chimneys to make sure they're up to to code. That leads to a lot of time atop roofs, which is what you're seeing in that poster. They are both -- as far as they know -- happily married. 

In their first conversation, in a film that is filled with stimulating conversations, the first thinks he's confessing something shocking when he reveals he's been having dreams where David Bowie is there, and Bowie looks at him with this beatific pure love, as he'd never been looked at before. In fact, it felt as though Bowie was looking at him as he would look at a woman.

Not to be outdone, the second confesses to the first that he just had sex with a man the day before, on a lark, for reasons he cannot figure out, when the opportunity presented itself.

It was just after the second confession that I could no longer deny what was happening inside my person.

But if I left right now, would the people I had pushed through, and almost tripped over, three different times, think that I was so offended by the subject matter that I had to leave?

If you can believe it, as I was eating two antacids and calculating the likelihood that I could succeed in a battle to delay the inevitable for another hour and 45 minutes, this was a real consideration for me.

Never mind the fact that I'd be leaving my backpack and jacket, meaning I was not storming out. (The other option, I suppose, was that I was so aroused by the subject matter that I was leaving to do a different thing. But that did not worry me as much.)

Anyway, I'm glad to say that it took only a single five-minute session in the toilet to pass whatever was ailing me, and I watched the rest of the movie in total biological comfort. And because I'd been there when the movie's key plot points were both introduced, and because this is a movie reliant on lots of long and interesting conversations, it was easy to pick back up with the story without having missed anything truly important. 

The movie reminded me of other Scandinavian movies I've seen, maybe most specifically Force Majeure, as both movies are essentially structured around one long conversation about an event that occurred. There's also maybe a bit of The Worst Person in the World and even my beloved Toni Erdmann, though I know Erdmann is not technically Scandinavian. 

And it struck me just how absorbing a movie can be when its plot is basically limited to the fallout from two different events that occur off-screen -- the other guy doesn't have an event as such, but seems to be questioning his gender identity -- and are comprised of just one conversation between a couple people after another. The movie is funny and poignant and kept me interested throughout.

The same cannot be said for Good Boy, a horror movie directed by Ben Leonberg, which has a delightful premise, but which I found very boring -- even though it's barely 70 minutes long.

Good Boy has a logline that immediately encapsulates what should be great about it: "A horror movie from the perspective of a dog." I don't even know if that's a proper logline, but it communicates what should be a unique approach to filmmaking and possibly a real hoot.

The thing is, Good Boy is not funny -- despite your expectations, it's not trying to be -- and it turns out, there's a reason horror movies are not made with dogs as their main characters.

But first, the thing I'm talking about in the subject of this post. 

After a pinot noir at the pop-up wine bar hosted by Penfolds, I reported to cinema 1 at ACMI (Australian Centre for the Moving Image) for my second movie, which started at 9:45.

And noticed something straight away that was portentous: the opening MIFF ads, which I get to know well during the festival and just saw for the first time at Sex, had closed captioning with them.

Had they had closed captioning in my previous film? I didn't think so. I would have remembered that.

And sure enough, when Good Boy started, the closed captioning continued.

I was vaguely aware that certain MIFF sessions are tailored to hearing impaired individuals, but I had never yet attended one. It was not something I'd thought I had to check, before now. 

And though I'd just watched a movie with text on its screen throughout the run time, it's not the same when the text is mandatory for you to understand the film. And it's quite detrimental when you're watching the sort of film that relies on its mood to scare you, yet is constantly breaking that mood by telling you that ominous music is currently playing. 

I tried to ignore the text. I really did. But you know your eye is constantly drawn down to it. Even though I should know a) I understand the words being spoken on screen, and b) if there are no words being spoken, it's just music or noises that I can hear perfectly well with my own ears, it's still difficult not to check that text with some regularity. (And I checked often enough to notice some sloppy typos, such as when the word "echoes" was written as "echose.")

Do I think this really impacted my enjoyment of the film? 

Not really. I think the film impacted my enjoyment of the film.

I should start, though, by saying the dog is awesome.

The golden retriever in this film may be one of the best dog actors I have ever seen. 

I understand, of course, that a dog cannot really give a performance, so I guess I'm saying that his trainers are amazing in what they are able to coax from him. This dog had a different facial expression for every moment. The amount of time he spent looking concerned in slightly different ways ... well I just hope they didn't have to really torment this poor dog, though I suppose there had to be some of that. You can't tell a dog to act stressed, so you actually have to stress him out, and let's just hope you do it responsibly.

But seriously. If this movie had relied only on the performance of the dog, it might have been great.

But the human actors -- whose faces you never see clearly -- are not good, and their dialogue is quite poor. Plus, this thing drags, big time. 

As soon as you realize this movie is not a joke -- or if so, a very subtle joke with almost nothing constructed as traditional humor -- it becomes a waiting game for you to start to be scared.

And you wait. And you wait. And you wait. 

I'm sorry, but as much as dogs are awesome, it must just not be possible to feel a large amount of fear for what's about to befall a dog. Maybe we can't relate to it enough, since feeling scared in a horror movie relies on a certain amount of empathy with the characters. Plus the fact that you know the dog is going to survive the movie, because of course he is. 

Because of the gimmick and because it is very difficult to have a dog carry a whole movie -- especially if it's not a talking dog -- the director feels he must move things along relatively slowly, just to get to something approaching feature length. (Maybe this should have been a short film.) But each scene meant to build tension just doesn't do it. Even with some okay horror imagery, we just don't get there, and I think it is actually a disappointment on our expectations to make a movie with this premise, and make it with a straight face. You are promising a horror comedy, and you are not delivering.

I'll be seeing a single MIFF movie on Sunday night, where I will be sure to eat a sensible meal beforehand. 

Friday, August 8, 2025

Gone MIFFing

That's a dozen MIFFs for me.

The Melbourne International Film Festival has existed in many forms for me over the years. There was the tentative first year in 2014, when I saw only four films. There was the late-teens peak when I saw as many as 13. There were the COVID years, when MIFF existed purely in streaming form. And there was the year in 2022 when I was out of the country for the entirety of the theatrical screenings, but got back in time for the streaming portion.

This year, I'm going out of the country again, but not until the last weekend. So the defining trait of this year's may be that I'm seeing all of my film's within the first week of the festival, jamming in seven films in seven days on four nights, spaced out a night apart from each other, beginning tonight.

In theory, I could keep seeing films right up until the night before we leave on August 22nd. But my wife would not like that.

That's no shade on her. We are going to Europe for six weeks, and the last week before we leave is a sacred time during which we must do nothing but fret about the enormity of the undertaking ahead of us.

Okay that sounds like I am throwing her under the bus again. But I get it. If I'm out on the town in the days leading up to our departure, she will inevitably have to do tasks herself that I should be helping with. 

As it turns out it doesn't matter, as there isn't all that much I want to see in this year's festival anyway, and nothing that I'm not able to see because of the time it's playing.

It's been a pattern with MIFF, or maybe just with me. Am I less in-the-know about new films coming out? Maybe a little. I'm less of a movie forward thinker than I used to be. 

But you've probably heard me wax nostalgic specifically about the year 2016, when two directors I loved (Asghar Farhadi and Cristian Mungiu) had new films playing, and I saw my favorite film of the year in Toni Erdmann. Perhaps especially important in my nostalgia is that these were all foreign language films, and in recent years, the "international" portion of the Melbourne International Film Festival has fallen off a bit, simply because I'm either not seeing these names to the same extent, or I'm seeing names but they don't mean anything to me.

I think there was a sweet spot in our larger cinematic landscape, about a decade ago, when foreign directors achieved a visibility such that we knew their names, and their films were also distributed with a prominence that made them a big part of the general discussion among cinephiles.

I'm just not seeing that to the same extent. I pride myself on the fact that I have periodically named a foreign language film my #1 of the year -- only five times overall, but still -- but it's now been since 2019, and I fret about the likelihood of it happening again any time soon, due to a combination of the relative paucity of these name directors and the likelihood of getting their films within the necessary year to rank them.

It's not my biggest gap without a foreign language film as my #1. There were 12 years between naming Run Lola Run my #1 of 1999 (despite a 1998 German release) and naming A Separation my #1 of 2011. In fact, coincidentally, you could pack my entire MIFF career, consisting of more than a hundred films (see this post), into that gap. 

But A Separation kicked off a period of prosperity with #1 foreign language films, as it happened again in 2013, in 2016 and in 2019. This also coincides with my time in Australia and my time going to MIFF, and MIFF once demonstrably contributed in that I wouldn't have seen Toni Erdmann in time if not for the festival. (MIFF gave me another #1, First Reformed, in 2018, but they only speak English in that one.)

I'm getting a little off track of the original point of the post.

Which is: Tonight it all starts, and I'm seeing seven films that are all slightly above shrug-worthy in my anticipation for seeing them. It is what it is.

However, I will say that three of them are foreign language films, if I remember correctly, starting with the first one tonight. I don't see a future #1 in any of them, but you never know.

I mean, that's why you watch the movies, right? 

Wednesday, August 6, 2025

Audient Zeitgeist: Zyzzyx Road

This is the latest in my 2025 bi-monthly series catching up with movies I hadn't seen that are in the zeitgeist for one reason or another.

If you haven't heard of Zyzzyx Road, and you're a cinephile, you might not be as in tune with the cinematic zeitgeist as you think you are.

Okay okay ... perhaps a true cinephile, in the snobbiest sense of that word, prefers to spend their energies thinking about Ingmar Bergman and only the very best of what deigns to be made after 1978. But that sort of cinephile doesn't interest me. I vibe better with the cinephile omnivores, who see the good and the bad, the well-known and the obscure, the big box office achievers and ... the Zyzzyx Roads.

Yes, John Penney's 2006 film is known to us for box office reasons, which I'll get into in just a moment. It also should well and truly fall into the "the bad" end of the above listed duality, but ... I kind of liked it actually. In the end I chickened out on a positive star rating and ended up at 2.5, but that's far, far better than I expected it would be, given the unique box office feat it achieved.

Zyzzyx Road has the distinction of being considered, by most metrics, the worst performer of all time at the U.S. box office. 

Due to the desire by star Leo Grillo (who?) to open the film in foreign markets before it was opened domestically, but also his need to fulfill a requirement by the Screen Actors Guild for U.S. releases of low-budget independent films, the film played for one week, every day at noon, at the Highland Park Village Theater in Dallas, Texas, straddling the end of February and beginning of March, 2006.

Where it made $30. 

The actual net gross was $20, because Grillo refunded two tickets purchased by the film's makeup artist and her friend. So only four disinterested audience members, if my math is correct, paid to see the film on its theatrical release. 

Maybe they're the true cinephiles.

This made Zyzzyx Road the lowest grossing film in U.S. history, with all sorts of asterisks that have subsequently cropped up that I don't want to get into here. (The 2011 movie The Worst Movie Ever Made also has some dubious claim to this title.)

Lest we shed a tear for Grillo, Penney, and the only two other actors in the film, the far better known Tom Sizemore and Katherine Heigl, the film ultimately made $368,000 by the end of 2006 on DVD releases in 23 other countries -- and some person with a wicked sense of humor saw it fit to make a collector's edition, whose poster I just had to include above.

It's a tight little setup for a movie, and the execution is not bad either.

We open on Grillo's Grant and Heigl's Marissa driving in a car out in the desert with a body in their trunk. At least they think it's merely a body. Grant believes he killed Marissa's abusive (ex?) boyfriend, Joey (Sizemore), when he knocked him over the head after Joey stormed into the motel room where they were having a tryst. But if this were just a movie about burying a body in the desert, that would probably not sustain the relatively brief 85-minute running time. (IMDB says it's 90, but I think this is just a case of hand-wavey rounding up -- the version on YouTube, which was the only place I could find it, is surely complete, and it was only 85 minutes.)

When they pull off onto obscure Zyzzyx Road -- a real road that serves as a landmark on the drive between Los Angeles and Las Vegas, which anyone who has done that drive knows about, making this a zeitgeist movie in a second way -- and open the trunk to start their business, a few minutes later they notice that Joey is no longer there. Thus begins a cat and mouse game in which Joey's lifelessness or lack thereof is not the only assumption we should question.

We should also make no mistake about the cinematic tools used to make Zyzzyx Road. "Low budget" is certainly an accurate way to describe this movie, as it looks skuzzy for reasons that don't just have to do with the quality of the copy I watched on YouTube. This was always a movie made for dirt cheap, requiring only a single patch of desert to film it (and mostly at night), and a crew that needn't have comprised more than a few people. The presence of Sizemore and Heigl, who were already established actors at this point (of course Sizemore was, but Heigl also had credits dating all the way back to 1992), indicates some sort of pull that Grillo or Penney must have had. (It doesn't say Grillo was also a producer on IMDB, but what else explains the fact that he had a say in its distribution?) 

But in starting to praise the movie a bit, the performances are all good, and I especially liked Grillo, who looks like just the everyman this story calls for. His normal-sizedness would not play in all roles -- and he is, in a way, the opposite of the man whose last name is literally Size More -- but here it is just the ticket. We do imagine that this is what we might be forced to do if we had a wife and kids but were just caught by a jealous boyfriend having sex with a woman who might actually just be a teenaged girl.

The writing is all fine, no lines of dialogue stand out for being amateurish, and the logical moments that would occur in a scenario like this are all reasonably explored and played out as they might actually occur. Then there are some illogical moments, narrative flights of fancy, just to mix things up. Let's just say that there are moments when Penney defies his small budget with a few techniques that you wouldn't see coming. It starts not to be possible to take what's happening purely at face value, and that actually happens more than once in this relatively brief narrative. Instead of playing as gimmicky misfires, these play as interesting choices. Maybe not super interesting, but interesting.

I think the thing is, when you watch a movie renowned for its complete failure at the box office -- albeit in conditions that were stacked against it from the start -- you expect it to be far, far worse than Zyzzyx Road. And to be sure, movies with a much higher box office, but which comprises a much lower percentage of their budget, are much bigger failures in a proper consideration of that term.

Really, Zyzzyx Road is just a movie that always probably should have been straight to video, in which case it would have been a perfectly fine way to spend an evening, especially if you were sick or something.

Because it reached the zeitgeist in the way it did, though, it has ultimately been seen by a lot more people, who saw it for the same reasons I just saw it. And that is a far better -- and more deserving, as it turns out -- fate for it in the end. 

One final thought about Zyzzyx Road, which makes it of particular significance to a list maker like me. There is now almost no possibility -- short of a ZZ Top biopic -- that I will ever see a movie with a title that can be alphabetized after this one. For almost 15 years, Cy Endfield's Zulu has been the last movie on my big movie list, but now it's Zyzzyx Road -- and will likely continue be so, forever and ever amen. 

I'll be back in October with the penultimate one of these. 

Monday, August 4, 2025

A poor man's Sean Baker movie

Although director Gia Coppola comes from a family lineage of a very different sort of filmmaking -- several different sorts of filmmaking within one family, I should say, this one probably most resembling her aunt Sofia -- the person most responsible for the look and feel of The Last Showgirl may be the man who just won all the Oscars this past year. (When The Last Showgirl also might have been up for an Oscar, if the campaign to get Pamela Anderson nominated had had legs.)

That's right, I'm not sure if we would have The Last Showgirl without Sean Baker.

As you would know if you've followed Baker's career -- or read this post -- Baker loves him some movies about sex workers. I don't know if you would actually call what Anderson's Shelly does for her career "sex work," but she's a Vegas showgirl whose breasts are bared during her Rockettes-like act. She's selling sex if not actually giving it, and it becomes clear that any equivalent replacement career she'd have, if her show were to be shut down (which it is in the course of this narrative), would be selling sex a lot more.

Then there's the fact that reference is made to the fact that she could be (but isn't) one of those showgirls who hustles on the side -- in other words, is available for "bonus activities" for a particular sort of fan who waits at the stage door after the show. She actually does have a possible interest in one such fan, never seen on screen, which is why the subject comes up at all.

It might feel even more like a Baker film -- particularly Baker's last film, the one that won all the Oscars -- because Anora also spends time in Las Vegas, the setting for Coppola's film. Of course, since the movies were released within only a few months of each other, that's just a coincidence, because of course it is.

Though the thing that really cemented the Baker connection for me, after I'd already made the initial connection with the sex work theme, was the way it's shot. I was reminded a bit of Baker's The Florida Project, which has a lot of external shots of characters in an around hotels and establishments on busy commercial or industrial thoroughfares. They share a dreamy indie sensibility that Baker did not pioneer, but may have helped bring to greater prominence. 

If we are taking about The Last Showgirl relative to Anora specifically, I have a comparison between the two films that might surprise you. I definitely think Anora is the superior film, but not by the margin you might expect. And it all comes down to how Baker and Coppola have chosen to develop, or not develop, their main character.

Whether he meant to or not, I feel like Baker left his titular character as a bit of a cypher. We spend a lot of time with Anora -- she's in practically every scene -- but all that time has not allowed us to get to know her any better. I kind of think that was an intentional choice by Baker, not an oversight, but that doesn't mean it worked any better for me. The distance I felt from Anora prevented me from getting on board with the movie to the same extent other people did.

With Shelly, screenwriter Kate Gersten has done a much better job of rounding out her history, and has not had to hit us over the head to do it. That also means that Gersten and Coppola's film is more conventional in some ways, since it really is Screenwriting 101 to give your main character a back story, past traumas that come back to haunt her, an estranged daughter, that sort of thing. We get all that for Shelly, and Anderson's performance -- which I initially wasn't sure about -- really helps sell it. 

If it makes me a basic bitch for preferring this approach to Baker's intentional deviation from it, well then, a basic bitch I am.