Loose Cannons (Mine vaganti)

Loose Cannons (Mine vaganti)

Loose Cannons (Mine vaganti) (Director: Ferzan Ozpetek): Routinely making ensemble pieces with a homosexual component, Turkish director Ferzan Ozpetek again reiterates his auteur statement – suggesting that family is what you make for yourself rather than something dictated by blood – with Loose Cannons, a quirky comedy-drama about a young man’s thwarted efforts to come out of the closet to his exceedingly conservative Italian family. And while somewhat more accessible than Saturn in Opposition or Ignorant Fairies, Loose Cannons never really breaks new ground or works as the sum of its parts, having more potential than actual success.

Here, the familial drama starts when Tommaso’s (Riccardo Scarmarcio) plans to come out to his father Vincenzo (Ennio Fantastichini) are ruined when his brother – the co-owner of the family pasta business – Antonio (Alessandro Preziosi) unexpectedly announces his homosexuality first. When the news gives Vincenzo a heart attack, Tommaso decides to stay in the closet, leading to inevitable comic shenanigans when his flamboyantly gay group of friends shows up at the family estate for a weekend of awkwardly veiled sexual references.

Because Ozpetek’s direction is mostly stationary and functional, observing relationship dynamics with a competent but undiscerning eye, this story never moves far beyond its surface plot machinations, commenting on the nature of family through the source screenplay without a great deal of subtlety. Everyone states their disposition in point form, occasionally hiding it from each other, but always having some form of confidante, be it a grandparent, a mistress or a removed family friend and flirtation.

Also, since everything is framed with a slightly camp, hyperbolic eye, there’s never much opportunity to identify with any of the character plights, leaving only gauche stereotypes, such as a single sex-fueled vampy aunt and a bunch of gay clichés prancing around to dance music to fill the peripheral, non-expositional runtime.

It’s all assembled professionally enough, solidified by committed performances and lush cinematography while repeatedly preaching the importance of personal integrity, but it offers little beyond its overly colour saturated, sun-drenched veneer, acting only as a passing and mildly entertaining diversion.


oehttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=b11veRAh-bE
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Black Field (Mavro livadi)

Black Field (Mavro livadi)
Black Field plays as part of Inside Out on Saturday May 28 at 7:15pm at the TIFF Bell Lightbox.

Black Field (Mavro livadi) (Director: Vardis Marinakis): Continuing the recent trend in Greek cinema of presenting identity and sexuality as monstrosities resulting from a sheltered and abject upbringing, Black Field – similar to Dogtooth (review) and Attenberg – confronts its audience with inaccessible characterizations and a stark depiction of distorted ideals manifested in human form upon youthful sexual awakening. The main distinction here is that while the other titles take place in modern times, clearly commenting on a declining Greek economy after years of instant gratification without foresight, Black Field jumps back to the 17th century to isolate its vacuum paradigm, which unfolds in a rural cloister.

The story is simple enough, following an injured and unnamed Jannisary (Hristos Passalis) through the countryside to a cloister where he collapses under the weight of injuries into the care of a group of nuns, but it plays out in a somewhat unconventional and unexpected manner, despite a very sombre and deliberate tone and pace. Anthi (Sofia Georgovassili), a younger, socially isolated nun, takes to treating his wounds, retreating to her room to play out dirty sexual fantasies about the virile warrior in her head.

We learn early on that Anthi has a penis, which we see as he cuts his inner thighs to sate his understandable internal pain. It’s an appropriate choice that detracts from the possibility of a Crying Game shock, which helps further the didactic intentions, asking the audience to assess nature versus nurture and the psychological nature of repressing and sheltering someone from a world they’re bound to eventually confront.

Shot with all encompassing static composition and long takes of the landscape in relation to character, this distorted coming-of-age also works as an aesthetic treat, convincingly depicting the 17th century with its dampened stone nunnery and seemingly untouched snippets of natural environment. It heightens that sense of social isolation necessary to detail the specificities of the relationship that develops between the Turkish soldier and the transgendered nun.

Even if deliberately cold, never offering any sort of close-up emotional catharsis or humanizing reactionary perspectives, this Greek import never suffers from a lack of provocation and intrigue, offering a variety of topics for discussion. Plus, Anthi lifts up her habit at one point, flashing the entire nunnery, which leads to a suicide. Even if the academic and dramatic aspects of the film don’t appeal, this sequence alone can at least inspire a few inappropriate chuckles.

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Inside Lara Roxx

Inside Lara Roxx

Inside Lara Roxx (Director: Mia Donovan): Lara Roxx became semi-famous back in 2004, but not for the reason she had intended when she moved to L.A. from Montreal at the age of 21 to work in the adult film industry. Roxx was named as one of three female performers who had contracted HIV from male co-star Darren James, which resulted in a temporary shutdown of the porn industry that garnered international headlines. The virus is believed to have been transmitted during the filming of literally Roxx’s first movie scene, which involved double penetration. Inside Lara Roxx examines the aftermath of the physical and emotional carnage inflicted from the experience on its subject.

The film was shot over a five year period by first time director Mia Donovan, a photographer who used to work as a stripper in Montreal. Donovan follows Roxx as she makes her way back to L.A. to revisit some central figures from her brief foray in adult films, including the person who informed Roxx of her HIV status, former porn star Sharon Mitchell. Mitchell ran the Adult Industry Medical Health Care Foundation, which regularly tested performers (and, incidentally, just shut down a couple of weeks ago). Also interviewed are some dodgy characters like one of Roxx’s former managers and the creepy Bob Margold, a former performer also known as “Papa Bear,” who is now an advocate for the welfare of porn actors. Speaking of creepy, the ubiquitous (in porn circles anyway) Ron Jeremy also weighs in on her plight during an interview at an industry convention in Las Vegas, where Roxx makes an appearance to raise awareness of the dangers of unprotected sex in the business. That this is a subject still requiring education in 2011 is a fairly ridiculous notion, yet apparently justified, judging by the disturbing apathy and hollow sympathy to Roxx’s message and story elicited from the convention attendees. Unfortunately (but understandably), Darren James declined to be interviewed for the documentary. Clips from both Roxx’s films and her appearances on various US television shows after the scandal broke (including one ludicrous guest spot on the bottom-feeding Maury Povich Show) provide helpful context.

Additional interviews with Roxx’s family and counsellors from a juvenile detention centre where she stayed paint a picture of an extremely troubled young woman consumed by rebellion, which led to Roxx working as stripper and escort before her move into porn. Extensive interviews with Roxx herself reveal a mildly sympathetic character who is incredibly naïve and prone to making one bad decision after another (one of her boyfriends who appears briefly in the film, who is a crack addict like her, clearly has “trouble” written all over him). Her poor choices are further complicated by being afflicted with bipolar disorder.

Donovan developed a close friendship with Roxx during shooting, resulting in scenes that show the documentary’s subject at her most vulnerable and fragile. The movie opens with Roxx being interviewed while in treatment at a hospital psychiatric ward, and between her mental health issues and HIV-related health complications she looks like she’s barely hanging on. Donovan actually exercises admirable restraint in choosing not to belabour their exchange, opting to shut the cameras off until Roxx is healthier. A similar wiser judgement might have been used in excising one scene (or at least providing greater clarity) that occurs in Roxx’s apartment involving a fracas with a neighbour, which is jarringly confusing.

It’s because of the trust gained by Donovan that the end results of the film are so disappointing; despite the intimate access gained by the director, I was left with a curious and frustrating arm’s length feeling toward the film’s subject. There’s a compelling film somewhere involving this woman’s sad, tragic life, but Inside Lara Roxx is not it.

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Inside Out 2011

Toronto’s Inside Out returns from May 19-29th, celebrating LGBT cinema in all its forms. This 21st edition of the festival is bigger and broader in focus than ever before. Some of the featured sections this year include:

  • International Focus on the UK – 9 features and shorts from the United Kingdom, including Andrew Haigh’s Sundance breakout Weekend
  • 24 Hours in the Middle East – 3 features, a shorts program, and a master class with author and academic Samar Habib
  • The Outsiders – Inside Out’s home for experimental film, including animation and short films
  • Icon Documentary Series – a particularly strong selection of docs this year, with 7 features including portraits of figures as disparate as Yves Saint Laurent, Bruce LaBruce and pioneering transsexual athlete Renée Richards

A large number of films in the program look interesting, and I’m happy to report that Robert Bell will be returning to write reviews from the festival. Here are some of his recommendations.

80 Days

80 Days

Two middle-aged women meet while visiting comatose relatives in the hospital and discover they were childhood friends. Not only that, but they once shared a furtive kiss. A second chance at first love?

Black Field

Black Field

In 17th century Greece, an injured soldier is nursed back to health by two nuns. The younger one falls in love with him and they escape the cloister. Only then do we discover that young Anthi is not what she seems.

Four More Years

Four More Years

A political comedy from Sweden. Married David is the leader of a political party that has just been thrashed at the polls. Depressed and vulnerable, he falls head over heels for the suave Martin, who just happens to be the party secretary of the new ruling government. What’s the bigger shock, his feelings for another man or for someone whose politics he detests?

Loose Cannons

Loose Cannons

Tommaso is about to reveal his homosexuality to his family when his brother Antonio upstages him by revealing his own secret. His father collapses, Antonio is disowned, and it falls to Tommaso now to run his father’s factory in the countryside. Directed with a comedic touch by Ferzan Ozpetek, this Italian film will charm you as it uncovers family secrets that even Tommaso can’t guess at.

Visit the Inside Out site for details about the entire program, as well as schedules and ticket information.

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Little White Lies (Les petits mouchoirs)

Little White Lies (Les petits mouchoirs)
Little White Lies (Les petits mouchoirs) opens at the Varsity Cinema in Toronto on May 27th.

Little White Lies (Les petits mouchoirs) (Director: Guillaume Canet): Let’s get this out of the way first. Nobody does character-driven summer vacation dramas like the French. Whether it was Eric Rohmer in the 80s with films like Pauline at the Beach and Le rayon vert, or more recently, Olivier Assayas (Summer Hours) or his wife Mia Hansen-Love (The Father of My Children), nobody can surpass their ability to assemble a cast and create fleshed-out characters dealing with existential and relationship crises during what is supposed to be “free” time for relaxing with friends and family.

Which means I shouldn’t be surprised that Guillaume Canet’s film is so absorbing. And yet it’s that sense of (re)discovery that makes this such a pleasure to watch. It’s definitely because I don’t see enough films like this and in fact I’m probably in danger of overpraising Little White Lies, but when French directors like Canet can create this sort of grown-up and layered character piece and make it look so effortless, it’s hard not to be dazzled.

The film begins with another dazzling sequence, a long and technically difficult tracking shot that sets up the rest of the film. After establishing his bona fides as a director of complicated camera work, Canet quickly settles down to a less showy style in order to focus on his ensemble of characters and the relationships between them.

As their friend Ludo lies in hospital, seriously injured in a traffic accident, the rest of his friends debate whether to go on their scheduled month-long holiday without him. They decide to go for just two weeks, vowing to return immediately should anything happen to their friend.

It’s a motley crew, mostly in their 30s, except for Max, a successful hotelier in his 50s. We know nothing about how these friends came to know each other, only that they are very close, vacationing together year after year at Max’s summer house near Bordeaux. No one else is as financially successful as Max, and his ongoing generosity doesn’t come without a certain amount of tension.

There’s another kind of tension between him and Vincent. The young osteopath has recently confessed his love for the older man, despite the fact that both are married with children. Max’s generally stressed-out demeanour is cranked right up by this news and their previously close friendship is strained to the breaking point, which cannot go unnoticed by their wives and friends.

The slightly goofy Antoine is nursing a broken heart, and an obsession with his ex, who maddeningly keeps texting him. Eric the bad boy is taking his gorgeous girlfriend Lea for granted by sleeping around. Vincent’s wife Isabelle is unfulfilled (understandably, as it turns out) and sad when nobody is looking. Most enigmatic of all is Marie (the magnetic Marion Cotillard), Ludo’s ex-girlfriend who is unable to move on, even when her new lover, a handsome musician, turns up unannounced.

It’s all a bit overstuffed, actually, and the film runs a very long 154 minutes. But the actors are such a joy to watch. From the first frame, the characters and their relationships feel lived-in, and watching this group interact will make you forget you’re watching a film. There are moments of humour, often bordering on the slapstick, but by the end, the film turns sombre. Time passes, things change, relationships don’t last or they mutate, hidden things can’t stay hidden and people can’t keep lying to each other and to themselves. It’s heavy stuff, and that’s even without the emotional pummelling that the film’s final half-hour delivers. But what a joy to see professionals inhabiting their roles so completely.

Despite a few other reservations (the “wise rural type” character felt a bit shopworn, and I’d have liked a bit more of a window into Max and Vincent’s relationships with their wives), Little White Lies impressed, interested, and finally moved me. Comparisons have been made to The Big Chill and with its soundtrack of American music and similar themes, the comparison is fair. But I prefer the French seaside and this group of self-obsessed and yet sympathetic characters. They aren’t failed revolutionaries or idealists from the 1960s. They’re just flawed people muddling through life and all the changes that life throws at them. And it’s beautiful and heartbreaking to watch.


oehttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WyCtRXWz4Cs
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