Tag: 2011

  • Inconstant Reader: 11/22/63

    Inconstant Reader: 11/22/63

    Welcome back to Inconstant Reader, the inconstant feature column that explores Stephen King’s books in the order they were published — sort of! Warning: the past is obdurate and will throw out some major SPOILERS.

    11/22/63 cover

    What would you do if you could travel through time? Would you want to skip to the end and see how it all turns out? Or do the old chestnut of going back in time to kill Baby Hitler?

    Stephen King plays with the latter concept in 11/22/63, pondering whether or not foreknowledge of the future makes it any easier to kill a person. King, alternate histories, and time travel. This book hits so many of my wheelhouses that it practically steers its own ship.

    First published in 2011, 11/22/63 is King’s 60th book (if you count all the anthologies and Richard Bachman books as well). Like his previous release Under the Dome, the origins of this novel goes back to the 1970s — as a 14 page draft called Split Track — but was put aside when the writer realised just how much research it would involve.

    The title, of course, refers to the day that JFK was shot in Dallas. As such, one might expect that an alternate history tale brushes against some conspiracy theories or similar. (By coincidence, I read this back to back with The Illuminatus Trilogy, so I certainly had my chance to get a fill of them). Instead, King concentrates on writing a thoroughly researched period piece, with a thriller element that drives the back half. After all, save for two special effect scenes, Back to the Future is entirely a period comedy. 

    Like King’s It, a book heavily referenced in this one, King’s 11/22/63 takes place in two different time periods. Yet it’s fair to say that he’s not attempted anything quite like this thriller before. This story begins in the present day, where recently divorced high school teacher Jake Epping is summoned by diner owner and friend Al Templeton. Jake is surprised to see that Al, who was healthy the night before, is dying of late stage cancer. This is because Al has discovered a place in the back of his diner that takes him back to 1958, a thin spot in time and space if you will.

    11/22/63 (TV series)
    James Franco and Sarah Gadon on the 11.22.63 series for Hulu (2016)

    Al had a plan to stop the Kennedy assassination, although his sickness means that can no longer survive the five years between 1958 and 1963. So, Jake agrees to go back instead, living his life as George Amberson. In his first test run, George attempts to save a young family from an abusive and violent father. Here he learns his first lesson about the obdurate past: it does not want to be changed, and will do everything it can to stop you.

    After this first attempt, Jake returns to 1958. In King’s particular mechanics of time travel, this resets everything in his previous try. So, Jake restarts his new/old life, first in the town of Derry, Maine and eventually making his way to Texas. There Jake/George exists in two worlds, one where he is a teacher who falls in love with fellow school employee Sadie Dunhill, and another who spies on Lee Harvey Oswald and makes murderous plans. 

    Indeed, there’s almost a point that you forget Jake/George is plotting to kill a man. King creates such a rich world in the 1950s, that you just enjoy spending time there. Speaking with The Wall Street Journal at the time of release, King commented: “Instead of people who read horror stories, people who read The Help or People of the Book might like this book, if they can get the message.”

    King knows the power of this comfort, and much of the book is spent creating a holistic view of a life lived. So, as the clock ticks closer to the titular date, our allegiances become split. Part of us wants us to see Jake/George remain happy in the past. If we’re being honest, there’s another part of us that wants to see Oswald stopped before he has a chance to shoot Kennedy. Indeed, King writes about Oswald’s domestic life with a level of intimacy that brings us closer to his wife Marina, and the physical and verbal abuse of her adds to Jake/George’s motivation.

    Suffice it to say, the climactic moments eventuate in a heartbreaking denouement, one that brings the warring threads together. After the exciting action climax, one in which George/Jake stops the assassination but loses Sadie in the process, he returns to the present to find that he has changed history for the worse. He makes the sacrificial decision to go back and reset history, even though he knows it means he and Sadie will never meet and fall in love. The groundwork King has laid had me weeping into my Kindle during the wee hours of the morning. (I later found out there was an alternate ending, although it would not have had the same impact).

    For Constant Readers, there’s also plenty of intertextual references. Apart from the appearance of ‘19s’ in various places, and a specific nod to 19 June 1999 (the day King had his near-fatal accident), Jake witnesses a Takuro Spirit at one point, the Japanese car that lets us know this is not the Keystone Earth. More prominently, during his time in Derry – the setting for It, Insomnia, Dreamcatcher and more – Jake can’t quite place his finger on the darkness that runs through the town. He also meets several kids who seem a little more resilient to the horrors than the rest of the town. Beep-beep, Richie.

    After mastering so many genres over the years, it’s unsurprising that King delivers a near perfect time travel joint. Asked by Wired in 2011 if he’s ever likely to attempt time travel stories again, he seemed certain he would not. “No, this is it. Absolutely not. No, that’s done. “It’s like Apollo Creed says, “Ain’t gonna be no rematch.” If there’s any time travelling Constant Readers out there, please let us know if he ever changed his mind.

    When Constant Reader returns, we take a turn through the hard boiled streets and carnival tunnels of Dark City when it takes a ride into Joyland.

  • DVD Review: Geek Charming

    DVD Review: Geek Charming

    A charming retro throwback of a teen rom-com that is bolstered by the talents of its young stars.

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    Geek Charming DVD Cover

    DirectorJeffrey Hornaday

    Writer(s)Elizabeth HackettHilary Galanoy

    Runtime:  93 minutes

    StarringSarah HylandMatt ProkopSasha PieterseJordan Nichols

    CountryUS

    Video: 1.78:1 (16:9)/PAL

    Audio: Dolby Digital 5.1 English and Various

    Subtitles: Various

    Extras: Episode of Shake It Up

    DistributorDisney

    Rating: Better Than Average Bear (★★★½) (?)

    More info

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    The Disney Channel Original Movies have been running in one form or another since 1983, but thanks to a little phenomenon called High School Musical (2006), they have gained even more attention over the last half-decade. Flagships for the eponymous cable network, they are showcases for both current and rising Disney stars, many of whom have gone on to become major celebs in their own right. Based on the novel by Robin Palmer, Geek Charming is a throwback to the heyday of class-based teen romances of the 1980s. It’s a modern twist on a fairy tale told through the lens of the greatest people on Earth: geeks.

    Dylan Schoenfield (Modern Family‘s Sarah Hyland) is a stuck-up princess who is determined to win Blossom Queen at the upscale Woodlands Academy. Josh Rosen (Matt Prokop) is a self-confessed film geek who also wants to win a local documentary competition. After a chance encounter with Dylan, he decides to make his film about modern popularity and in particular Dylan. Despite his crush on Amy (Sasha Pieterse), the alternative band chick who used to be friends with Dylan, he soon finds that his perception of his subject changes as he spends more time with her.

    They are from different worlds, their friends don’t approve and there’s a prom at the end. Wherever John Hughes is now, his legacy is going strong. Indeed, Geek Charming is one of the most natural successors to the 80s teen romances in the last few decades, as it isn’t consciously trying to satirise or be meta about the whole thing. Rather, it embodies the spirit of those simple love stories and provides us with a fairly straightforward tale of star-crossed lovers. Even the cultural references are firmly from the 1980s, including a trip to the cinema to see a revival of the 1986 Disney sci-fi film Flight of the Navigator. We aren’t sure whether kids are still watching these great flicks, but its good to know the writers are, and using them wisely no less.

    Despite a heavy Mean Girls (2004) vibe in the early half of the film, coupled with some direct-to-camera documentary style pieces, Hyland and Prokop have an easy on-screen chemistry that carries this into heartwarming territory. Their coupling is a foregone conclusion, but that doesn’t stop some fun being had with the familiar tropes along the way. The ‘Populars’ are only a few shades away from the Plastics, and the ‘film geek’ conversations rely on familiar stereotypes as well. Yet it is difficult to deny that film geeks are pedants, and most of the depictions in this film pale in comparison to your average web forum. That said, Prokop may be one of the better looking geeks of the species, but we’ll allow Disney this one indulgence for the sake of romance.

    Taking a break from their run of musical pieces that have included Camp Rock 2 and Lemonade Mouth, last year’s Geek Charming is a welcome return to teen rom-coms. With nary a song to drag us out of the moment, its predictability never hinders its charms thanks to a terrific cast a genuine affection for the genre it is trying to imitate. Whether this connects with modern tweens is debatable, but any fan of films from the 1980s will do just fine with this fun piece of modern nostalgia.

    The Disc:

    Disney Channel content seems to be the one area where Disney hasn’t fully committed to Blu-ray. Presented in 1.78:1 (16:9), Geek Charming looks like the best possible SD copy you can find, although it would have been nice to see this in hi-def. Despite a series of ‘making of’ featurettes originally screening before the premiere of the film, none of these can be found here. In fact, the only bonus feature we get is two-part episode of the fun Disney Channel sitcom Shake It Up (“Shake It Up, Up and Away). On the US equivalent, there are no less than 10 episodes over a 2-Disc set. Given that Disney have been notorious unwilling to package their Disney Channel series as season sets, this is a good way for fans to grab a whole bunch of episodes at once. However, if you are just interested in the movie, go local. A real charmer for sure.

    Geek Charming is released on DVD in Australia on 3 October 2012 from Disney.

  • Reel Anime 2012 Review: Children Who Chase Lost Voices from Deep Below

    Reel Anime 2012 Review: Children Who Chase Lost Voices from Deep Below

    One of the leading voices in modern Japanese animation cracks another winner out of the park with this curious blend of science fiction and musing on the nature of loss.

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    Reel Anime 2012 Banner

    Children Who Chase Lost Voices From Deep Below - Poster

    DirectorMakoto Shinkai

    WritersMakoto Shinkai

    Runtime: 116 minutes

    StarringHisako KanemotoKazuhiko InoueMiyu Irino

    Distributor: Media Factory, Madman (AU)

    FestivalReel Anime 2012

    CountryJapan

    Rating (?): Highly Recommended (★★★★)

    More info

    [/stextbox]

    Like Mamoru Hosada, who also appears at Reel Anime this year with Wolf Children, filmmaker and graphic designer Makoto Shinkai is another person burdened with the heavy label of “The New Hayao Miyazaki”. Shinkai made a splash on the scene with his Voices of a Distant Star (2002), a film he had infamously written, directed and produced on his Power Mac G4. Yet it was with his follow-up 5 Centimeters Per Second that Shinkai sent good vibes around the world, putting aside sci-fi elements for an intimate portrayal of the relationship between two people over a number of years. With his most recent film, Children Who Chase Lost Voices from Deep Below (abbreviated in the West as simply Children Who Chase Lost Voices), the filmmakers retains his emotional viewpoint against an epic backdrop as a young girls sets out on an epic quest to say goodbye.

    Pre-teen Asuna (voiced by Hisako Kanemoto) has been forced to deal with the loss of her father, while her mother works long shifts as a nurse and is mostly unavailable. She takes herself off into the hills where she picks up radio signals and intriguing music on a home-made radio using a crystal she discovered. Her fate changes when she encounters the enigmatic Shun (Miyu Irino), who says he is from the faraway land of Agartha, and saves her from an unnaturally large beast that patrols the bridge. He’s wounded in the process, and Asuna learns from her mother that the body of Shun was found in the river. Refusing to believe it is her Shun, she is intrigued by a story her substitute teacher Mr. Morisaki (Kazuhiko Inoue) tells of an underworld, where people can quest to retrieve their loved ones from the land of the dead. Soon Asuna is off on an epic adventure to Agartha, pursued by the militaristic Arch Angels who want to plunder the land for its untapped wealth.

    The fascinating thing about Children Who Chase Lost Voices from Deep Below is how it deals with abstract concepts of ‘life’ and ‘death’ and the very notion of saying farewell within the context of a larger story. Shinkai poses a question within this tale, whether it is better to let people and things that have left us go or to forever chase the echo of their voices. Framing this within the traditional motifs of a hero’s journey, Shinkai physically represents the distances between the living and the dead. Leaving us totems along the way, from grotesque creatures that serve as guardians to the world or airships that sail overhead as a representation of heaven, there is a fundamentally pagan approach to the notion of the cycle of living and dying. Rather than simply creating a single monotheistic entity that sits above the Earth, the passages to the afterlife are varied, and they are different for each person. Similarly, it is heavily implied that it is up to the individual to make their own decisions concerning their perception of death, tying the film into the notion that we are all part of a broader consciousness experiencing itself in a subjective fashion.

    The visuals in the film are stunning, or more precisely the backdrops are also jaw-drops. With his much bigger group of animations and designers, every frame is filled with an astonishing level of detail that captures the grandeur of the world Shinkai has created. Much of the love has been poured into these vistas, and the characters in the foreground look comparatively simple. Yet this is wholly appropriate, given that the abstractions dwarf any of the characters seen in the film. More of an issue is Shinkai’s struggle in the first act to adequately give the audience a foothold in this new territory, perhaps because he is also forging new ground for himself. This is rapidly forgotten, however, as the film approaches its second half, and Shinkai excels in his comfort zone.

    Children Who Chase Lost Voices

    The Japanese animation industry, like any other, has gone through a number of phases over the last decades, but it is comforting to know that there is still room for intimate storytelling within the blockbuster mentality. Indeed, that the two sit so comfortably alongside each other is a testament to Shinkai’s craftsmanship, bringing us a story that could have very easily emerged from Studio Ghibli and leaving his own personal stamp on it.

    Wolf Children was released in Japan on 21 July 2011. It screened in Australia in September 2012 as part of Reel Anime.

  • Reel Anime 2012 Review: From Up on Poppy Hill

    Reel Anime 2012 Review: From Up on Poppy Hill

    Miyazaki junior’s second feature is gentle Ghibli, and instead of taking us to a magic faraway place, it simply draws us into the past.

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    Reel Anime 2012 Banner

    Kokurikozaka kara film poster

    DirectorGorō Miyazaki

    WritersHayao MiyazakiKeiko Niwa

    Runtime: 91 minutes

    StarringMasami NagasawaJun’ichi Okada

    DistributorToho

    Festival: Reel Anime 2012

    CountryJapan

    Rating (?)Better Than Average Bear (★★★½)

    More info

    [/stextbox]

    Goro Miyazaki, the son of Studio Ghibli founder Hayao Miyazaki, was a reluctant filmmaker.  A landscape designer by trade, his debut film Tales from Earthsea awarded him Japan’s Bunshun Raspberry Award for “Worst Director”, with the film itself receiving the award for “Worst Movie” in 2006. That film also caused friction between father and son, with Hayao believing that Goro did not have the experience for a feature film. However, only a few short years later, Goro has returned to the director’s chair with a script co-written by his father and Keiko Niwa.

    Based on the serialised Japanese comic of the same name, originally drawn by Chizuru Takahashi and written by Tetsurō Sayama, Goro’s latest comes to us by way of a 2012 Japan Academy Prize for Best Animation of the Year. How times change. In fact, change is one of the themes of From Up on Poppy Hill (コクリコ坂から Kokuriko-zaka kara, literally “From Coquelicot Hill”), and although it is a period piece, it comes with strong parallels with the events of the last year.

    Set in Yokohama in 1963, the year before the Olympics came to Tokyo, 16 year-old girl Umi (Masami Nagasawa) lives on a house on the top of Kokuriko hill. Every morning, she raises a flag to the ocean that means “I pray for safe voyages”. 17 year-old boy, Shun (Jun’ichi Okada) sees the flag every morning as he rides a tugboat to school. Against the backdrop of everybody wanting to tear down the old and replace it with the new, including the school Culture Club nicknamed Quartier Latin, the two are destined to meet and change their lives forever.

    Although the rolling blackouts following the 2011 Japanese Tōhoku earthquake and tsunami impacted the speed of production, From Up on Poppy Hill‘s nostalgic outlook is exactly what the country needed on the road to recovery. Like the feel-good Always: Sunset on Third Street 3, set just prior to the 1964 Tokyo Olympics, Miyazaki takes us back to a time when Japan was going through great economic and social change. The horrors of the Second World War were behind them, and rapid changes in society saw Japan on the cusp of becoming a truly global nation. Yet this is merely a backdrop for Miyazaki’s story, which is a very simple nostalgia piece that shares a stylistic and tonal vibe with Ghibli’s own Ocean Waves.

    There are no giant fantastical elements at play here, and the animation style is in keeping with this. The simple and pretty backgrounds and character animation serve the story well, although it is certainly not as dynamic as other recent Ghibli films, and the pacing is somewhat off in the first half of the film. Miyazaki has tackled a much smaller story for his second crack at the plate, and the landscaper in him occasionally likes to enjoy the scenery a little too much. The story gets pulled in two directions at one point, and there is a predictability to the ending, but this is neither here nor there. With From Up on Poppy Hill, the younger Miyazaki shows that he is finding his voice, and sometimes you have to look back to go forward.

    From Up on Poppy Hill

    From Up on Poppy Hill was released in Japan on 16 July 2011, and on DVD and Blu-ray on 20 June 2012. It screened in Australia in September 2012 as part of Reel Anime. It is planned for an US released in March 2013. Look out for a limited release at cinemas in Australia from Madman.

  • KOFFIA 2012 Review: Leafie, A Hen Into the Wild

    KOFFIA 2012 Review: Leafie, A Hen Into the Wild

    A charming piece of animation from South Korea has a broad appeal with its depiction of motherhood and respecting differences in others.

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    KOFFIA 2012

    Leafie, A Hen into the Wild poster

    DirectorOh Sung-yoon

    Writer(s): Na Hyun, Kim Eun-jung 

    Runtime: 93 minutes

    StarringMoon So-riYoo Seung-hoChoi Min-shik

    FestivalKorean Film Festival in Australia 2012

    CountrySouth Korea

    Rating (?): Better Than Average Bear (★★★½)

    More info

    [/stextbox]

    Leafie, A Hen Into the Wild was already a popular character in its native Korea before ever appearing on-screen, being based on the popular 2000 children’s book by Hwang Sun-mi. However, the fact that it had sold over 1 million copies domestically and had been translated into several languages was not a guarantee of box-office success. Indeed, despite many of the major US animation companies using small animation house in South Korea to work on their products, local animation has often struggled to find an audience within its own market, very rarely crossing one million audience members at the box-office. This changed with last year’s Leafie, A Hen Into the Wild, which became the biggest domestic animation success in Korea with an impressive 2.2 million viewers.

    Leafie (voiced by the award-winning Moon So-ri) is a cage hen who dreams of visiting the yard, and one day of laying eggs and raising some hatchlings of her own. Leafie manages to escape, and soon finds herself in the big wide world, chased by a vicious one-eyed weasel. Defended by a mallard duck she dubs Wanderer, Leafie is ultimately left to care for an egg until it hatches. Despite the child being a duck, it things she is his mother, and she cares for the baby duck she calls Greenie as though it was her own. As Greenie grows up, he and all the other animals begin to resent Leafie for being so different from the others, and Greenie is left out of activities by the pond because of it. However, when a flock of wild ducks arrives, Greenie must choose between the love of his adopted mother and his destiny.

    The tale of struggle behind the production of the film is almost as epic as Leafie’s own story arc. Debut director Oh Sung-yoon worked for 20 years as an animator despite the harsh swings and roundabouts of the Korean economy, and production company Myung Films spent six years in various stages of production to bring this labour of love to the screen. The care is immediately evident, with a visual style that stands apart from anything that its international competitors are offering. In stark contrast to the 3D computer generated animation of the Hollywood productions, Leafie, A Hen Into the Wild relies on a much simpler palette and animation style. The art team’s background was in painting, and as such the entire film has a beautiful watercolour look to it, mirroring the storybook quality of the source material. At other times, the skylines are stunning, belying the 3 billion won ($2.5 million) budget. The choice of voice talent is also quite clever, and aside from Moon So-ri in the lead role, the enigmatic Wanderer is the usually sinister screen presence of Choi Min-shik (Oldboy, I Saw the Devil).

    The central narrative of Leafie, A Hen Into the Wild is base don the same sense of simplistic morality as most children’s tales, although it goes to some very dark places at the very beginning and in the final scenes that take a turn for the unexpected. The sometimes repetitive nature of the tale will occasionally lessen the impact for older audiences, as the familiar bonding moments of mother and son eventually give way to chase sequences and face-offs with other animals. Yet at its heart, it is a simple story of motherhood, and tolerance to diversity, and one that almost everybody can relate to. Korean animation has been pushed out of the nest, and let’s hope it is a strong flyer from now on.

    Leafie, A Hen Into the Wild played at the Korean Film Festival in Australia in August/September 2012. Full disclosure: The Reel Bits is a media partner of KOFFIA, but opinions on films are unswayed by this relationship.

  • Review: Love

    Review: Love

    A contemplative throwback to a different kind of science fiction is the impressive debut feature from William Eubank and producers Angels & Airwaves, musing on the effects of complete isolation.

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    LOVE theatrical poster

    Director: William Eubank

    WriterWilliam Eubank

    Runtime: 86 minutes

    StarringGunner WrightBradley Horn

    DistributorRegency

    Country: US

    Rating (?): Highly Recommended (★★★★)

    More info

    [/stextbox]

    From the puzzle piece opening in the US Civil War opening to the stunning and thought-provoking conclusion, Love is a film that consciously pushes against the current trends of frenetic space-born storytelling. With his first feature, Eubank offers not just a missive on the implications of space travel and isolation on the human mind, but on the very nature of humanity itself. Drawing on his background as a cinematographer, his film is visually stunning, using an unspoken poetry in the same vein of Sunshine, Moon, 2001: A Space Odyssey and Solaris to convey the complex relationship between man, machine and the vacuum that surrounds them all.

    In a prologue that seems designed to immediately displace the viewer,  Lt. Lee Briggs (Bradley Horn) is chosen as a man of many lives to investigate a mysterious object that has been found in a nearby canyon. We don’t see what it is initially, but we can assume what it might be. Much later in Earth’s history, two centuries in fact, Lee Miller (Gunner Wright) is the first person the US has sent into space in over twenty years. While his mission is unclear, it appears to largely involve sending telemetry and figures back to Earth. As communication with base becomes unpredictable, he is eventually told that “something is going on here.” Miller’s isolation is complete, but that is only the beginning of his journey.

    The beauty of Love is that it can be examined from so many different perspectives. On the surface, it can be seen as a single character study of a man alone on a space station. Yet this is no mere rehash of the aforementioned Moon, as it never offers any easy answers, couching its story as a mystery wrapped in an enigma of a riddle. Splicing in footage of various people recounting their favourite things and ideas on love, along with tales from a diary that Miller finds on board, the meaning is open to any number of interpretations. The ambiguity of the narrative is almost irrelevant though, as this is designed to provoke the mind and to challenge traditional notions of linear storytelling. That we don’t know exactly how long Miller has been on the station only adds more importance to the other sensory inputs that float through his mind.

    Eubank is credited not only as director, but as cinematographer and production designer as well, and this goes a long way towards explaining the singular and holistic vibe that pervades Love. Drawing on a number of influences, one gets the sense that the accurately hand-made set is paradoxically a structure of happenstance and very deliberate placement. Produced and scored by Angels & Airwaves, a project of led by Blink-182 guitarist and vocalist Tom DeLonge, it’s also a massively ambitious artwork, exploring the fragility of life through the combination of music, memory, storytelling and visual triggers. Love may look like any number of its influential predecessors, but is not quite like any other film. It is nothing short of being a tribute to humanity.

    Love is released in Australia on 30 August 2012 from Regency. 

  • KOFFIA 2012 Review: Bleak Night

    KOFFIA 2012 Review: Bleak Night

    A sombre musing on teen suicide, told in a time-shifting narrative that aims to give a holistic view of the complexities of this far too common issue in Korea.

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    KOFFIA 2012

    Bleak Night poster

    DirectorYoon Sung-hyun

    Writer(s)Yoon Sung-hyun

    Runtime: 117 minutes

    StarringLee Je-hoon, Seo Jun-youngJo Sung-HaPark Jung-Min

    FestivalKorean Film Festival in Australia 2012

    CountrySouth Korea

    Rating (?)Highly Recommended
    (★★★★)

    More info

    [/stextbox]

    It may surprise many that South Korea has the highest rate of suicide in the thirty OECD countries, recently surpassing Japan’s notoriously high rate. Indeed, as recently as a 2010 report, it was said to be the leading cause of death for those under 40 in the country, with 13 out of every 100,000 people aged between 15 and 24 committed suicide in the cited year. This shockingly large number was stated to be attributable to the growing stresses in competitive education and in the workplace, which is why the structure of Bleak Night is so intriguing. Rather than simply taking teen suicide for granted, it positions itself as a mystery, one with more layers than may seem obvious on the surface.

    High school student Gi-Tae (Lee Je-hoon) has killed himself, and his largely estranged father (Jo Sung-Ha) feels a great sense of guilt as well as confusion over his son’s death. After finding a photo of Gi-Tae with his two best friends, Dong-Yoon (Seo Jun-young) and Hee-Joon (Park Jung-Min), the father is determined to find out what might have caused his son to take the actions that he did. However, with Hee-Joon transferring to another school and Dong-Yoon having dropped out of school completely, Gi-Tae’s dad begins to suspect that things are not as they seem. Taking a non-linear narrative, Bleak Night shifts back and forth between cause and effect to reveal a once inseparable group of friends, slowly torn apart by depression, misunderstanding and ultimately hatred and violence.

    The often clinical approach is reminiscent of the similarly themed Japanese film Confessions (2010), which also takes the time to go back and give each of the principal players time to ‘explain’ their motivations to the audience. In this way, the film becomes a puzzle, slowly giving individual pieces until it all finally clicks into place. Rising star Lee Je-Hoon, who also appears at this year’s KOFFIA as a morphine-addicted squad leader in big-budget war film The Front Line (2011), gives an absolutely haunting performance as the pack-leader Gi-Tae. Perpetually surrounded by a posse of hangers-on and flunky thugs, his indifferent attitude and contemptuous sneers are as frustrating as they are captivating. His initial control of all of those around him adds to the mystery of where it all went wrong for him, and watching this house of cards fall becomes all the more devastating.

    Having previously only participated in the If You Were Me 5 (2010) omnibus film on human rights issues, writer/director deservedly Yoon Sung-hyun won Best New Director at both the 2011 Daejong Film Awards and Blue Dragon Film Awards for what a number of people are already calling the best South Korean debut in years. While this claim may be a little premature, especially given the incredible strength of Korean film over the last decade, this is undoubtedly an important and unique examination of one of the most topic issues facing South Korean youth today.

    Bleak Night played at the Korean Film Festival in Australia in August/September 2012. Full disclosure: The Reel Bits is a media partner of KOFFIA, but opinions on films are unswayed by this relationship.

  • Review: Chinese Takeaway

    Review: Chinese Takeaway

    A lighthearted and lightweight comedy will charm you while you are watching it, then leave you hungry for more a few hours later.

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    Chinese Takeaway poster - Australia

    DirectorSebastián Borensztein

    WriterSebastián Borensztein

    Runtime: 93 minutes

    StarringRicardo DarinIgnacio HuangMuriel Santa Ana

    Distributor: Rialto Distribution

    Country: Argentina

    Rating (?): Better Than Average Bear (★★★½)

    More info

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    Winner of the Argentinean Academy Awards for Best Actor, Best Film and Best Supporting Actress, along with the Audience Award at the Rome International Film Festival, there is little doubt that Chinese Takeaway (Un Cuento Chino) is aimed at being the same kind of crowd-pleasing fable in the vein of Amelie. From writer director Sebastián Borensztein, whose previous film was Sin Memoria (2011), it is a charming film that literally crosses borders. While the central comedy often relies on the mutual incomprehension of the leads, there is a universality to the theme that makes this a tasty treat indeed.

    Irascible hardware store owner Roberto (Ricardo Darin) has systematically shut himself from the world around him, and short of a brief encounter with Mari (Muriel Santa Ana) some years before, he is more content to count nails and collect newspaper clippings of strange deaths from around the world. However, when he has a chance encounter with Jun (Ignacio Huang), a Chinese man who is looking for his only surviving relative in Argentina, Roberto relents and takes the hapless visitor in. Despite not sharing a single word in common, the walls of Roberto’s self-imposed isolation begin to erode and international boundaries are crossed.

    Like the similarly themed Le Havre, which inhabited a bubble of time that never really existed, Chinese Takeaway firmly places itself inside a world of fantasy and coincidence. The tone for the film is firmly established in a surreal opening sequence, in which a cow falls from the sky, filling one-half of a newly married couple. There is without a doubt a sense of the inevitable once Jun enters Roberto’s life, as the film is hardly breaking new cinematic ground. Yet there is a simply joy in watching Roberto’s resistance fade, especially given his sometimes racist and frustrated rants at Jun. As the latter often sits there in silent incomprehension, it makes Roberto’s bluster all the more amusing for its lack of reaction. The message is clear: racism and fear of the other comes from ignorance, and the antidote is taking the time to learn a culture.

    Darin is perfect in the lead role, the complete antithesis to his internationally recognised role in Juan José Campanella’s The Secret in Their Eyes, turning on a dime from a character we love to hate to one we love despite ourselves. Muriel Santa Ana, best known in the Spanish-speaking world as the lead in TV’s Ciega a citas, is a capable foil for Roberto, matching his acerbic tongue with overwhelming niceness. Yet it is Ignacio Huang that steals every scene he is in, often without speaking a single line of dialogue. Chinese Takeaway may not be a completely nutritious meal, but it is a simple pleasure, and sure to leave most viewers satisfied.

    Chinese Takeaway is released in Australia on 30 August 2012 from Rialto Distribution.

  • Review: Bully

    Review: Bully

    A frank discussion of bullying in schools, and what people can do about it, has a very optimistic view of the future. 

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    Bully poster

    Director: Lee Hirsch

    Writer: Cynthia Lowen

    Runtime: 90 minutes

    Starring: Alex Libby, Kelby Johnson, Ja’Meya Jackson

    Distributor: Roadshow Films

    CountryUS

    Rating (?)Worth A Look (★★★)

    More info

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    Debuting at the Tribeca Film Festival last year, Bully follows group of families across the US as they deal with the tragedies and consequences of bullying at school. The film has become part of a national, and indeed international campaign, called The Bully Project, and aims to be a self-sustaining movement to aid the voiceless in the fight against bullying in all walks of life. Prior to this, director Lee Hirsch was best known for his award-winning documentary Amandla!: A Revolution in Four-Part Harmony, which examined the struggles of black South Africans against Apartheid through music. As a self-confessed victim of bullying, Hirsch explores the effects of bullying on a group of students and their parents, along with some of the progress that has been made towards stamping it out.

    During the 2009-2010 school year, the documentary follows five sets of students and their families from high schools in Georgia, Iowa, Texas, Mississippi and Oklahoma. There’s Alex Libby, the central figure in the film in many ways, who tells us his bullies “punch me in the jaw, strangle me, take things out of my hand”. Kelby Johnson, and openly gay student in a small-minded town, who was picked on not only by other students but by the institution as well. Meanwhile, Ja’Meya Jackson was a nationally infamous case of a young girl who snapped after constant bullying and pulled a gun on a bus full of her fellow students, only to spend months in a Juvenile Delinquent Center. Also present are the parents of Tyler Long and Ty Smalley, victims of bullying who took their own lives as a result of that intimidation.

    It will come as little surprise to many that bullying is commonplace in America’s schools. Indeed, bullying is present in all walks of life, from the schoolyard to the workplace, but Bully‘s major focus is on the school system of principally bible belt states in the US. What Hirsch’s documentary offers us for the first time is a fly-on-the-wall account of what life is actually like for some of these kids, and also for the families who are living with the effects of bullying several years down the track. Watching some of the actions of these kids towards other kids is often chilling, and the alternative indifference and helplessness of the school authorities is worrying.

    As noble as the intentions are of Bully, one can’t help but wondering if the presence of Hirsch and his cameras exacerbated some of the behaviour of kids in this film. While decoy kids were used for the central subjects, in the case of Alex and Kelby, both kids ultimately wound up at different schools before things began to improve for them. The real emotional impact comes with the families of Tyler Long and Ty Smalley, who have suffered losses that no parent should have to as the result of institutionalised bullying. It is their campaigns to see the eradication of this behaviour in schools that forms much of the second half of the film.

    It may be overly optimistic to believe that a handful of students holding candlelight vigils will eradicate behaviour patterns that have been around as long as the notion of ‘survival of the fittest’. Yet it is a step in the right direction. What Bully does first and foremost is raise awareness of the issue, and keep it in the public eye. On that level, the film is a success and something for which the filmmakers should be commended.

    Bully was released in Australia on 23 August 2012 from Roadshow Films.

  • KOFFIA 2012 Review: The Day He Arrives

    KOFFIA 2012 Review: The Day He Arrives

    Hong Sang-soo’s twelfth film offers more drinks, smokes and women, along with a wonderfully playful approach that blends the unexpected into reality.

    [stextbox id=”grey” caption=”The Day He Arrives (2011)” float=”true” align=”right” width=”200″]

    KOFFIA 2012

    The Day He Arrives

    DirectorHong Sang-soo

    Writer(s): Hong Sang-soo

    Runtime: 79 minutes

    StarringYoo Jun-sangKim Bo-kyungKim Sang-joongSong Sun-mi

    Festival: Korean Film Festival in Australia 2012

    Country: South Korea

    Rating (?)Highly Recommended (★★★★)

    More info

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    The characters in a Hong Sang-soo film seem to be perpetually stuck in limbo of Hong’s own self-reflective construction. The Day He Arrives may have been one of the most acclaimed Korean films of 2011, playing Un Certain Regard at Cannes last year, making its Australian debut at the 60th Melbourne International Film Festival alongside Oki’s Movie, itself the closing film of the 67th Venice Film Festival. The love that the industry has for Hong comes from the filmmaker’s own love of cinema, something he paints into every one of the many productions he is behind. If his characters are not outright making films, then they are surrounded by people who do.

    The Day He Arrives falls into Hong’s broad category of films about filmmakers who are no longer able to make films. Former filmmaker Seong-jun (regular star Yoo Jun-sang), now an academic, arrives in Seoul to meet a friend. When his colleague is no longer able to meet at the arranged time, he begins to wander about, at first drinking with a group of students before turning up teary-eyed at the apartment of an ex-girlfriend (Kim Bo-kyung). Despite continually running into an actress he knows, he winds up with his friend at a bar called Novel, where the owner bears a striking similarity to his ex-girlfriend. This is, in fact, because she is also played by Kim Bo-kyung. Time becomes an abstract concept as the film moves forward, and despite Seong-jun’s constant movement, the amount of time he spends in Seoul seems increasingly elongated.

    Hong’s films have always held a certain fascination with all of the aspects of modern life, including the broader themes of isolation amongst a group urban characters. The Day He Arrives is no different, although here the motif of repetition is used to mirror the main character’s state of mind as well. Whether it is the actress from his past repeatedly running into Seong-jun on the street, the doppelgängers who form his love interests or the mere acts of smoking, drinking and talking, Seong-jun can’t seem to escape the past he seems determined to put behind him. Then again, he has deliberated placed himself in a situation where he will continually be confronted with those totems of the past, heightening his own frustration with the situation.

    It becomes unclear as to whether scenes are taking place on the same day or several days into the trip. Even Seong-jun confesses he isn’t sure how long he is staying. This ultimately brings the film’s central theme of facing the present sharply into focus for both the character and the audience. Hong’s The Day He Arrives is deceptively simple, the apparently freewheeling style belying the complexity of the human interactions on display. Blending humour and melancholy seamlessly, just as they are in reality, Hong once again proves that he is a master of human observation.

    The Day He Arrives played at the Korean Film Festival in Australia in August/September 2012. Full disclosure: The Reel Bits is a media partner of KOFFIA, but opinions on films are unswayed by this relationship.