December 2009

Free Screenings at Bloor Cinema sponsored by Japan Foundation

Thanks to the Japan Foundation, the Bloor Cinema will be hosting free screen­ings of recent Japanese films this week. Here’s the lineup:

  • Wednesday, December 9, 7:00 pm — The Stars Converge (2003)
  • Thursday, December 10, 7:00 pm — Women in the Mirror (2002)
  • Saturday, December 12, 7:00 pm — The Milk Woman (2005)
  • Sunday, December 13, 4:30 pm — Dog in a Sidecar (2007)

All screen­ings are FREE and no RSVP is required. I recom­mend showing up at least 30 minutes early, though, in order to get a seat.

More inform­a­tion about each of the films

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L.A. Without A Map

by James McNally on December 3, 2009

in DVD

L.A. Without A Map
Disclosure: This film was recently released on DVD in Canada by Project X Distribution and Kinosmith, my employer. You can pur­chase it from the Kinosmith online store.

L.A. Without A Map (Director: Mika Kaurismäki): I was looking for­ward to seeing this 1998 cult hit for sev­eral reasons. I love the Kaurismäkis (both Aki and Mika) and if anyone can tell a “fish-out-of-water” story about Los Angeles, cer­tainly a Finnish dir­ector can. The pres­ences of Vincent Gallo, Julie Delpy, and yes, Johnny Depp in a film this modestly-budgeted also made me curious.

The cha­ris­matic David Tennant plays Richard, a young Scottish under­taker who falls for a free-spirited American tourist (Vinessa Shaw) and impuls­ively fol­lows her back to Los Angeles. Barbara is an aspiring act­ress trying to break into the movies, and Richard has ambi­tions of his own, to become a screen­writer, so things should work out per­fectly. He’s des­perate to leave his dreary life behind and follow his dreams, and for the first hour of the film, things mostly fall into place. Despite the fact that Barbara already has a boy­friend, an insuf­fer­able boor who also hap­pens to be a film dir­ector, Richard pur­sues her patiently. He even rents an apart­ment, and des­pite the fact that it’s in a bad neigh­bour­hood, finds a best friend imme­di­ately. Moss (Vincent Gallo in a hil­arious turn) is a sort of hippie yang to Richard’s uptight British ying, and before long he’s hooked up with Barbara’s friend Julie (Julie Delpy). If it all sounds a bit too neat, well, it is, but it’s also quite funny and charming.

But as soon as Richard and Barbara impuls­ively get mar­ried on a jaunt to Vegas, the film takes a turn toward the sour. Barbara’s ambi­tion and the con­tinuing atten­tion of her ex-boyfriend lead Richard to bouts of extreme jeal­ousy, and the romance drains out of their lives pretty quickly. The second half of the film attempts to lam­poon the film industry but it’s pretty broad and without their idealism, the char­ac­ters just aren’t that inter­esting any­more. The turn toward drama also exposes the lim­it­a­tions of Vinessa Shaw’s abil­ities, and at times she just seems shrill. It doesn’t help that her char­acter is under­written, leaving Richard and the audi­ence guessing as to what she really wants out of her life. The ending is pre­dict­able but at least it lifts the film from its mean-spirited middle.

There was lots to enjoy in the film non­ethe­less. The pres­ence of the Leningrad Cowboys, for one. This “East meets West” rocka­billy band even had its own film (Leningrad Cowboys Go America) which was prob­ably the first Kaurismaki film I ever saw. Johnny Depp appears as both a fantasy figure (Richard’s poster of Jim Jarmusch’s film Dead Man keeps coming to life with Depp nod­ding and ges­turing word­lessly) and later as him­self. And Tennant is a joy to watch, espe­cially in the early L.A. scenes where he’s clearly “without a map.”

Overall, though, this sendup of the movie busi­ness is just a movie itself. We never really see exactly what Richard sees in Barbara except for a pretty face. L.A. seems like a hor­rible place and the movie busi­ness a cess­pool. If this is a fish-out-of-water story, we realize in the end why fish gen­er­ally stay in the water.

7/10(7/10)

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