Spring
Breakers: ****/*****, or 7/10
Harmony
Korine's provocative take on the death of the American Dream – or
the exact opposite, its ultimate realization – follows a quartet of
young college girls (including Harmony's wife Rachel) who will stop
at nothing to celebrate Spring Break in Florida just to engage in
endless mindless, decadent sex and drug use. Being penniless proves a
bit of an obstacle at first, but their solution is as shocking as it
is effective: just rob a restaurant, get in a car and don't look
back. It's only the beginning of a nightmarish thrill ride into the
mind of America's hedonistic youngsters who, despite beind educated
and full of opportunity, prefer to opt for the easy way out in order
to live a careless/carefree life, even if only for a short while.
Just when they're living their fantasy to the fullest, the police
intervene and haul their asses to jail for abuse of illicit
substances. Fortunately, a rapper/gangster/parasite called Alien
(James Franco being quite the chameleon, to say the least!) bails
them out and introduces them to his world of everything. Thanks to
his wild and violent life style leeching off the American way of
life, he has loads of guns, loads of dope and loads of sex to offer,
which the girls accept all too eagerly. Except for the devout
Christian of course, who decides to return home: quite the hypocrit,
considering her religious values ought to have kept her from coming
along for this ride in the first place, knowing full well what she
got herself into but opting to look the other way for her own
pleasure. The other girls have the time of their life for a while,
until the situation turns dark when a rival mobster threatens Alien's
turf. Soon however, it appears Alien got more than he bargained for
when the remaining teens prove quite resilient in helping him deal
with the aggressor in a surprisingly violent manner.
Casting several
former Disney Channel stars like Selena Gomez (Wizards of Waverly
Place) and Vanessa Hudgens (High School Musical) was a
brave and perfect choice, both underscoring the point Korine tries to
make and allowing these girls to break completely with their 'sweet &
innocent' stigma. People who expect lots of booze and boobs in an
overly simplistic story get exactly what they expected, just handed
in a different way than they would probably have liked, since Spring
Breakers is not a simple exploitation flick, but a mesmerizing
descent into madness rife with wildly divergent visual gimmicks and
hallucinatory effects, making the audience less of a viewer and more
of a participant. Korine's rebellious denial to uphold to cinematic
conventions made distributors rather uneasy, since the expectations
of mainstream teen drama mixed with evocative artsy display caused
them, in their limited money driven line of thinking, to be unable to
successfully classify this film. As a result, Spring Breakers
witnessed a release in both multiplexes and arthouse theaters, but
failed to fully win over both audiences due to its rough, offbeat
style and confronting thematic contents. Mission accomplished,
Korine!
Thérèse
Desqueyroux: **/*****, or 5/10
Dull
French period drama, set in the 1920s, about the daughter of a
wealthy land owner who is forced to marry an older man just so her
family can improve its social status by getting its hands on his
lands as well and thus becoming a major player in the pinery
business. Thérèse (played by Audrey Tautou) soon finds that her
loveless marriage revolves all around her child her husband sired
with her, while she herself matters little anymore. She's as much a
commodity as the pine trees her family trades in, and she receives as
little affection. Yet she is expected to help convince a female
relative, who's deeply in love with a boy of low status, to also
marry for money. The continuing lack of care and interest in what she
wants soon drive Thérèse to take outrageous, increasingly dark
measures to get noticed again, including setting fires in the
plantation and poisoning her husband. When her disturbing deeds come
to light, her family threatens to take her child from her and gives
her house arrest to avoid the scandal from becoming public knowledge.
Though Tautou gives a convincing performance of a cold and
calculating woman who sees her freedom and personal space deteriorate
more and more, it's hard to feel much for her, since she and those
around here are all despicable people who base their lives on
increasing the family fortune and their social status instead of
aiming to live a happy family life. Interesting parallels can be
drawn between this French film and the TV-show Game of Thrones,
which have much in common from a plot perspective. However, the
latter does succeed much more in squeezing compelling drama out of
nasty people out to strengthen their family and riches by marriage
and procreation. Thérèse Desqueyroux has to make do with
annoying people dancing around each other for two hours. At least the
period setting of provincial France in the Twenties offers some
diversion from the otherwise tedious story progression of this film.
Song
for Marion: ***/*****, or 6/10
Cheerful
feel-good movie that is bound to make anyone smile. Grumpy old Arthur
(Terence Stamp) is married to the ever optimistic Marion (Vanessa
Redgrave), whose favorite passtime is singing in a local choir with
other old folks under the tutelage of the beautiful younger woman
Elizabeth (Gemma Arterton, a joy to behold as always). Arthur thinks
little of her hobby, thinking she'll make a fool of herself, but when
she passes away from cancer he feels he must honour her passion and
join up with the choir which has entered a singing contest. Arthur
does so despite suffering from stage fright and general lack of
interest in basically everything, including his estranged son (Who?
Christopher Eccleston!) and his granddaughter. The utterly
sympathetic and optimistic old performers in Elizabeth's choir, quite
a colorful band of singers with their various funny idiosyncrasies,
prove to be the most charming and uplifting element of the film (especially when they cheekily start singing about sex), but
the emotional core revolves around Arthur and Marion. Though it is
rather puzzling to find a spirited woman like her marrying a cynical
old fart like him, their devotion towards one another is pulled off
convincingly enough to make you believe Arthur would bother with
putting up with her hobby, going so far as to save the day in the
choir competition where Elizabeth's merry band of singing enthusiasts
is as out of place between all the professional top choirs as Arthur
is in Marion's choir itself. Of course father and son also become
closer to one another due to all the merriment the songs deliver.
This movie is utterly devoid of narrative surprises but proves just
as pleasing all the same for all ages. An overly simplistic and
predictable story does not stand in the way of strong, touching
performances throughout and an overall 'don't worry be happy'
attitude that nobody can resist. The song may be for Marion, but the
movie is for everybody who expects nothing but 90 minutes of cheerful
delight.
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