Directorsâ Fortnight comes to L.A. for the first time, plus the weekâs best movies
Hello! Iâm Mark Olsen. Welcome to another edition of your regular field guide to a world of Only Good Movies.
This has somehow become a blockbuster week for new releases, with a number of films that likely will wind up on many year-end best-of lists all landing in theaters. While some of them also will be launching on streaming platforms soon, seeing any of these in a theater with an audience would make for an ideal experience.
Written and directed by Jesse Eisenberg, the tender dramedy âA Real Painâ follows a pair of cousins (played by Eisenberg and Kieran Culkin) who go on a tour of Holocaust-related sites in Poland.
When I spoke to Eisenberg and Culkin for our fall preview, they both mentioned the connection they felt while shooting together.
âWhen we started working, there was an immediate rapport â something worked right away,â said Culkin. âWe really got to know each other by being these characters and by wanting this thing to work.â
For me, among the yearâs biggest surprises has been Alonso Ruizpalaciosâ âLa Cocina,â starring RaĂşl Briones and Rooney Mara as staffers at a tourist restaurant in Manhattan. The film is a dazzling allegory on work, life and the world at large, and it announces Ruizpalacios as a filmmaker fully in command of his voice. As I said in my review of the film, âEven while what is depicted onscreen veers wildly out-of-control, there is a sense of surety to the filmmaking that makes this one of the freshest movies of the year.â
This is only Maraâs third screen role in the past six years. She responded to a letter from Ruizpalacios, the two having never met, and, as she said in an interview with Carlos Aguilar, âMy time is very precious now that I have kids. To me now, the experience is so important. Iâm like: Is this going to be a worthwhile experience? Is it something I can grow from? And everything about the way Alonso wanted to make the film to me was like, âYes, this is an experience Iâd like to have.â It seemed different than anything I had done thus far.â
Jacques Audiardâs âEmilia PĂŠrezâ has been one of the most buzzed-about films of the year since it premiered at Cannes. A Mexico-set narco-themed melodrama about a drug lord who transitions in secret, the movie is also a musical.
In a rare move, all four lead actresses in the film â Karla SofĂa GascĂłn, Zoe SaldaĂąa, Selena Gomez and Adriana Paz â shared the actress prize at Cannes. In an interview with Manuel Betancourt, SaldaĂąa said of working on the film, âIt was a mixture of an experiment and an experience. I liked the experimental side of it. And we only achieved that because Jacques was not possessive over his words, his lines. That was incredibly collaborative. But also very freeing.â
Mati Diopâs stirringly enigmatic documentary âDahomeyâ won the top prize at the Berlin Film Festival earlier this year and is Senegalâs entry for the international feature Oscar. The film explores the return of artifacts from France to the country of Benin, formerly known as Dahomey, from the point of view of the objects themselves.
Also in theaters this week is âBlitz,â Steve McQueenâs look at the German air raids of London during World War II, starring Saoirse Ronan and Elliott Heffernan. As McQueen said to Emily Zemler, âOften people think war is what happens in far distant places. I wanted to bring it home: This is what happened here. This movie has a real sense of urgency, unfortunately. I wanted it to be a roller-coaster ride through London during the war.â
Robert Abele reviewed Clint Eastwoodâs âJuror #2,â a courtroom thriller starring Nicholas Hoult, Toni Collette, Zoey Deutch, Chris Messina and Kiefer Sutherland that is getting a curiously cursory limited release.
As Abele wrote, âIf âJuror #2â is this all-time-great filmmakerâs last effort, it may come across like a quiet goodbye: measured conversations replacing his oeuvreâs well-known violence and death. But in its relaxed professionalism, itâs still a worthy closing argument for what Eastwood has always cared about most â how we live as much as how we die, and in the final count, what condemns us all.â
A part of Cannes comes to L.A.
Starting tonight and running through Sunday, Acropolis Cinema will be presenting âDirectorsâ Fortnight Extended,â spotlighting a selection of films from the Cannes sidebar Directorâs Fortnight, also known as Quinzaine des cinĂŠastes. Playing at the Culver Theater, this is the first time a program from the Fortnight has come to Los Angeles.
The series opens with Ryan J. Sloanâs neo-noir thriller âGazer,â starring Ariella Mastroianni. Other highlights of the program include Caroline Poggi and Jonathan Vinelâs French thriller âEat the Night,â set amid the world of online gaming; Chantal Akermanâs restored 1989 exploration of Jewish American identity, âHistoires dâAmĂŠrique: Food, Family and Philosophyâ; and the closing selection of Jonas Truebaâs Spanish-language relationship comedy âThe Other Way Around.â
The Fortnight began in 1969 as a response to the cultural and political upheaval at Cannes in 1968, and it has retained that rebellious spirit ever since, as a parallel event to the main selection of the festival.
âThe Fortnite is this Cannes sidebar that was designed to be a new space capable of welcoming filmmakers from all over the world, regardless of their mode of production,â said Julien Rejl, artistic director of Directorsâ Fortnight since 2023. âThe idea was to give the priority to new cinematic language. Any kind of cinema could be from very radical and edgy filmmakers, like genre cinema, great masters. The idea was to have equality in the treatment of these films and to give the filmmakers a possibility, an opportunity, to take time and meet an audience, talk about their film, talk about cinema and also to meet between themselves.â
On Saturday afternoon there will be a conversation with Rejl and filmmakers India Donaldson, who made âGood One,â and Tyler Taormina, the director of âChristmas Eve in Millerâs Point.â
Acropolis had previously been involved in bringing selections from the Locarno Film Festival to Los Angeles, and this new partnership with the Directorsâ Fortnight continues the mission of screening little-seen art-house films for Los Angeles audiences.
âThe idea behind Acropolis in general is to bring films that wouldnât otherwise show here,â said Jordan Cronk, founder of Acropolis Cinema. âSo that is a perfect marriage as far as just the idea behind it. A lot of these films, some of them are small enough that they would be hard for Acropolis to show even for just one night, but when you can put them in the context of something like the Quinzaine, weâre hoping it could generate enough interest so people can check out the smaller films.
âWhen you put the films in the context of a larger program from Cannes, Iâm hoping people will discover the films that weâre showing during the day, artisanal cinema,â added Cronk. âThat is definitely a goal, and itâs just a pleasure to try and introduce audiences out here to new and exciting cinema.â
GuadaLAjara Film Festival
This weekend also will see this yearâs edition of the GuadaLAjara Film Festival at a variety of venues around the city, with events at the United Theater on Broadway, Vidiots, Gloria Molina Grand Park, the Million Dollar Theater, Alamo Drafthouse and Milagros Cinema Norwalk.
The fest opens with Mexicoâs submission for the international feature Oscar, âSujo,â directed by Astrid Rondero and Fernanda Valadez. Acclaimed cinematographer Rodrigo Prietoâs feature directing debut, âPedro PĂĄramo,â will screen ahead of its release on Netflix later this month. The festival closes with the first two episodes of the upcoming Prime Video series âLa Liberacion,â created by Alejandra Marquez Abella.
Among the short films in the festival are âAll the Words but the One,â directed by and starring âBaby Reindeerâ star Nava Mau, and âDovecote,â produced by and starring Zoe SaldaĂąa. âLa Cocinaâ will screen as part of the festival as well.
Points of interest
30 years of Giant Robot
In honor of the magazine Giant Robot, founded by UCLA alumnus Eric Nakamura to celebrate alternative Asian and Asian American culture, the UCLA Film and Television Archive is launching âA Film Series for You: Celebrating Giant Robotâs 30th Anniversary.â The series launches Friday night with a 2022 episode of PBS SoCalâs series âArtboundâ that interviewed key players from the magazineâs history, along with a screening of Wong Kar-Waiâs 1994 âChungking Express,â which was reviewed in the magazineâs third issue. A Q&A will include Nakamura, magazine co-editor Martin Wong, filmmaker Dylan Robertson, actor Tamlyn Tomita and actor-filmmaker Daniel Wu.
Saturday night will see a double bill of Jon Moritsuguâs 1993 âTerminal USAâ and a 35mm screening of Gregg Arakiâs 2004 âMysterious Skin.â Other films in the series include Shunji Iwaiâs 2001 âAll About Lily Chou-Chou,â Michael Ariasâ 2006 âTekkonkinkrett,â Shusuke Kanekoâs 1995 âGamera: The Guardian of the Universeâ and Derek Yee Tung-Singâs 2004 âOne Nite in Mongkok.â
âBlonde Venusâ in nitrate 35mm
Screening at the Academy Museum on Saturday in a rare 35mm nitrate print is Josef von Sternbergâs 1932 âBlonde Venus.â Starring Marlene Dietrich and a then-little-known Cary Grant, the film is about a chanteuse turned housewife who returns to the stage to earn money to save her ailing husband. The film features the notorious âHot Voodooâ musical number that opens with Dietrich in a gorilla suit.
In other news
Teri Garr remembered
Actor Teri Garr died this week at age 79. She skillfully blended comedy and dramatic pathos in films such as âTootsie,â for which she was nominated for an Academy Award for supporting actress, as well as âClose Encounters of the Third Kind,â âMr. Mom,â âYoung Frankensteinâ and âAfter Hours.â Her appearances on both âThe Tonight Show With Johnny Carsonâ and âLate Night With David Lettermanâ remain iconic for their warmth, charm and disarming candor.
Reviewing âTootsie,â critic Pauline Kael called Garr âthe funniest neurotic dizzy dame on the screen.â Times critic Sheila Benson referred to Garrâs performance in âAfter Hoursâ as âtouchingly bizarre.â
Garr publicly revealed her multiple sclerosis diagnosis in 2002, and the illness was her cause of death.
She continued working after opening up about her health, saying, âActually, I thought, âWhatâs the difference â being handicapped in Hollywood or being a woman over 50?ââ
Malkovich on âMalkovichâ
As part of The Timesâ ongoing 1999 Project celebrating the popular culture of that pivotal year, I spoke to actor John Malkovich about his experiences making the movie âBeing John Malkovich.â The feature debut of director Spike Jonze and screenwriter Charlie Kaufman (both future Oscar winners), the film is about a down-on-his-luck puppeteer (John Cusack) who finds a portal to the inside of the head of Malkovich. The cast also includes Cameron Diaz, Catherine Keener, Charlie Sheen and, in a brief uncredited cameo as the national arts editor of the Los Angeles Times, filmmaker David Fincher.
As to how he prepared for the role of John Malkovich and whether it was different from any other part, Malkovich responded, âThatâs an interesting question. The thing is, there wasnât that much to search for, because the world is so specific that Charlie created. I remember one day when I did something and Spike Jonze said to me, âJohn Malkovich wouldnât do it that way.â And I kind of chuckled, but I said, âOh, OK. How would he do it?â And I really didnât think that much of it because anything I do isnât me. But John Malkovich isnât me either, any more or less than anything else isnât me. So if somebody says, âThatâs not the way John Malkovich would do it,â maybe they know better than I do.â
Only good movies
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