• Re: _Wheel of Fortune and Fantasy_; _Both Sides of the Blade_

    From septimus_millenicom@q.com@21:1/5 to All on Sun Jul 24 14:47:17 2022
    PS -- good to see Claire Denis' old collaborators Alice
    Houri (_Nenette and Boni_), Mati DIop (_35 Shots of Rum_),
    and Lola Creton (_The Bastards_) again! They seem to
    have mostly dropped out of acting.

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  • From septimus_millenicom@q.com@21:1/5 to All on Sun Jul 24 14:43:56 2022
    I have stayed away from the same director's _Drive
    My Car_ -- the critical darlings have been dismal
    in recent years -- but a contrarian critic really
    loves this one. And I agree; it is an amazing film.

    Even though I don't read Japanese, enough of the
    characters in the title are sufficiently familiar
    hat I know it is more accurately translated to
    "Chance Encounters and Wishful Thinking." But
    "Wheel of Fortune" is catchy in the U.S. "Fantasy"
    is fine, really; it adds a classical music touch
    to a very Rohmeresque film with three vignettes.
    9I hope I am not overly sexist for saying that
    director Hamaguchi is superb in eliciting
    exceptional work from young and very beautiful
    actresses, too!) The film features Schumann's
    Scenes from a Childhood" piano score, which is
    certainly a perfect fit for the last story, but
    it puts me in an receptive mood for the
    capricious first story, where the "player"
    (serial philanderer) fashion model capriciously
    manipulates her ex-lover, now on the verge of
    falling for her best friend. I like the second
    story; the innocence of the two main characters,
    and their careers, are undone by a regretful error.
    The male character (played a famous personality in
    Japan, supposedly) gives the female some really
    profound advice, as only a writer/mentor could,
    but the actor could have been more expressive.
    The third short story, which delves into older
    characters looking back at their younger self
    who might have been some of those characters we
    have seen earlier, is absolutely magical. I
    love it when characters have such imagination --
    Eric Rohmer has it, Wong Kar-Wai has it,and maybe
    I should check out Hamaguchi's earlier work after
    all. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

    I think the strength of French cinema is the ability
    to portray intellectual and emotional depths all at
    once. Claire Denis is one of the greatest directors
    around. Her style is very impressionist, with lots
    of close-ups, and the philosophical parts of her
    films are externalized -- located in a space ship
    or a tropical island or West Africa. When she does
    domestic dramas, the intellectual underpinnings of
    her films get short drift, and she tends to focus
    too much on the emotional. Her second collaboration
    with novelist/writer Christine Angot is better than
    the first (_Let the Sunshine In_, enshrined too
    quickly by Criterion), but it is still problematic.

    The beginning of the film feels like Terrence Malick,
    with its depiction of bliss in the water. (_To the
    Wonder_, or perhaps _The Thin Red Line_.) Much of
    the score sounds like Malick too, a lot of brooding
    percussion, as does the whiplash pans. Vincent
    Lindon is an ex-con, ex-rugby player, who is estranged
    from his wife (now abroad) his son (failing school),
    and his mother 3 hours from Paris, whom he cannot
    bring himself to visit. He is living with Sara
    (Juliette Binoche), a French equivalence of a US NPR
    radio personality who engages with artists and
    intellectuals. Sara, in contrast, is all about now;
    there is hardly any information about her past
    given, other than her relationship with Francois
    (Gregoire Colin). Lindon's character hooks up
    with Francois to start up work with young rugby
    players. This gets sideways when Sara runs into
    Francois again through one of their agency parties.
    Colin looks and acts like Alain Delon as some big
    time crime boss, and Sara flocks to him like moth
    to a flame. Binoche is amazing (as she is always),
    as shatteringly vulnerable as her starring debut
    in _Rendezvous_, but the later part of the film
    becomes all about her physical desire for this
    ex-lover of hers. She has a career and a husband
    -- why exactly is she so vulnerable? She has
    an obsessed lover role in another film _Who You
    Think I Am_, but that film has a better structure to
    support her wonderful acting. This Denis film,
    also called _Fire_, also reminds me of the remake
    of _Scenes from a Marriage_, where Jessica Chastain
    is at least as good, but her backstory is far, far
    stronger.

    Still, it is Claire Denis, and much of this lack
    of focus must be deliberate. Maybe I should see it
    again.

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