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In Reel Time

3.20.2006

Joyeux Noël- ****

France’s pick for the 2005 Best Foreign Film Oscar was Joyeux Noël, a film about the Christmas Truce of 1914. While the actual event took place on a 27-mile stretch of the western front, writer/Director Christian Carion only focuses on one small area of the trenches. This is where the French, the Scots, and the Germans have holed up outside a small farm, and are waiting for the other one to make a movie.

The movie works best when it dips into slight satire, as the opening scenes of school children reciting mantra of killing the enemy at all costs. The single best scene in the film is near the end, when a Christopher Lee-ish bishop gives a speech about how all Scots must kill the Germans in the name of Christ. Carion takes the Joseph Heller tack of making those in command look like evil buffoons, leaving the war to the men who would rather not be in the trenches.

But Carion’s movie isn’t as concerned with the anti-war satire as he is with anti-war sentiment. He even professed to leaving one true scene out, a cat being shot for treason after Germans use it to deliver a message to the French, because it seemed a little too ridiculous. I will admit that his replacement scene in the film struck me as a bit ridiculous, and I was surprised to find the truth was even more inane. It’s a story that could’ve been used to great effect, but Carion is more concerned with are the men in the trenches, who look past the war and find that their enemies aren’t so inhuman after all. This sounds really cheesy, and it even is at times, but the sentiment is handled very well. While I would’ve rather seen a more satiric look at the Christmas Truce, what we get is nothing to be scoffed at.

The film opens at the beginning of the war, and we see the characters we will follow. A German couple, both opera stars, who are split by the war, two Scottish brothers and their parish priest, and a reluctant French Lieutenant who has had no news of his wife or their child. After a disastrous attempt at taking the German trench, the armies have hunkered down and are tensely awaiting the next move. But on Christmas Eve, when a Scottish song is answered by singing from the Germans. Soon they are singing together, leaving the trenches, and fraternizing with the enemy. They return to their trenches at the end of the night, but the next day find themselves reluctant to start killing each other again.

This is an interesting idea I wish Carion would have explored more- the need to keep the enemy faceless. Carion is more concerned with giving a face to each of his main characters, even if he doesn’t give them much else. Giving us two or three main characters from each army renders the movie unable to go too deeply into any one person, but the performances are good enough to overcome this. Even Diane Kruger, who proves that she’s a much better actress in her native tongue (we don’t get any of the flat readings like her character in Troy, but the dialogue isn’t as bad as Troy either). The performances manage to deepen the characters in a way that the script can’t. So even at its most tear-jerky, we buy it.

This makes the movie overcome many of its problems. Okay, so maybe they are the nicest trenches anyone has ever seen. Maybe the film does ignore the fact that the French were more reluctant to participate in the truce (since it was their country being ravaged and occupied). Maybe it is a little silly that a beautiful woman is not only able to get to a trench, but is then only looked at with polite awe instead of malicious intent. There are scores of complaints to be made about the film, but in the end it all works. Thanks to some great performances and an earnestly heartwarming script (as opposed to the usual American beating-over-the-head-with-the-CRY-NOW-hammer), Joyeux Noël manages to rise above its faults. It may not be the most realistic movie, but it’s a great introduction to a rather quiet, interesting episode of a very brutal time.

3.11.2006

Transamerica ***1/2

Transamerica is a film with an interesting, if not fully realized story with an amazing performance by Felicity Huffman. Don’t get me wrong, Reese Witherspoon is great and all, but when you see Transamerica all you’ll be thinking is how Felicity Huffman was robbed of the Oscar. Robbed. The film is an amazing character study, a family drama, and a coming of age story, all at once.

The film begins by introducing us to Huffman’s Bree, a male transsexual preparing for his sex change surgery. Bree is an odd mix of the church lady and your local Mary Kay agent, and somehow Huffman manages to make this all normal while still giving you glimpses Bree’s struggles with her own insecurities. You’re immediately drawn into this character’s life.

Before Bree can go through with her surgery she finds out that she may have fathered a son and her therapist refuses to sing the psychological evaluation for the surgery until she meets him. Bree’s supposed son, Toby (Kevin Zegers), is a stereotypical troubled youth with all of the baggage and issues typical of a character from Boogie Nights. One of the more interesting dynamics of the relationship between Bree and Toby is that Bree never passes judgment on Toby, but merely tries to help him. And although Bree starts this journey with her own interests influencing her benevolence, that quickly changes as this quirky duo begin to bond.

On the road from New York back to LA they run into some trouble and end up having to ask Bree’s parents for help. This sets up some interesting climactic and humorous moments as they struggle to find acceptance in this dysfunctional family. In the end, none of the characters become who they thought they would at the beginning of the journey.

Some of the plot points in the story were overly contrived and you could see them a mile away. Especially troubling were some of the more stereotypical aspects of Toby – the stripper with a heart of gold archetype. Although, Kevin Zegers still managed to make Toby a convincing character, you’re still don’t really like him that much. The reason this movie works at all is because Huffman mesmerizes you. Watching the film, you forget that this is actually a beautiful woman and not a man struggling to pass as a woman. She also managed to bypass all the stereotypes and give you a glimpse into the mind of this complex person trying to escape from them self – in order to find them self.

3.01.2006

Oscars - Our Picks - Actual Winners

Some big surprises Oscar night, the winners are bolded

Here are the Oscar picks. Brandon's are higlighted in blue, my picks are highlighted in red, purple where we agree.


PERFORMANCE BY AN ACTOR IN A LEADING ROLE
Philip Seymour Hoffman - CAPOTE
Terrence Howard - HUSTLE & FLOW
Heath Ledger - BROKEBACK MOUNTAIN
Joaquin Phoenix - WALK THE LINE
David Strathairn - GOOD NIGHT, AND GOOD LUCK.

PERFORMANCE BY AN ACTOR IN A SUPPORTING ROLE
George Clooney - SYRIANA
Matt Dillon - CRASH
Paul Giamatti - CINDERELLA MAN
Jake Gyllenhaal - BROKEBACK MOUNTAIN
William Hurt - A HISTORY OF VIOLENCE

PERFORMANCE BY AN ACTRESS IN A LEADING ROLE
Judi Dench - MRS. HENDERSON PRESENTS
Felicity Huffman - TRANSAMERICA
Keira Knightley - PRIDE & PREJUDICE
Charlize Theron - NORTH COUNTRY
Reese Witherspoon - WALK THE LINE

PERFORMANCE BY AN ACTRESS IN A SUPPORTING ROLE
Amy Adams - JUNEBUG
Catherine Keener - CAPOTE
Frances McDormand - NORTH COUNTRY
Rachel Weisz - THE CONSTANT GARDENER
Michelle Williams - BROKEBACK MOUNTAIN

BEST ANIMATED FEATURE FILM OF THE YEAR
HOWL'S MOVING CASTLE
TIM BURTON'S CORPSE BRIDE
WALLACE & GROMIT IN THE CURSE OF THE WERE-RABBIT

ACHIEVEMENT IN ART DIRECTION
GOOD NIGHT, AND GOOD LUCK.
HARRY POTTER AND THE GOBLET OF FIRE
KING KONG
MEMOIRS OF A GEISHA
PRIDE & PREJUDICE

ACHIEVEMENT IN CINEMATOGRAPHY
BATMAN BEGINS
BROKEBACK MOUNTAIN
GOOD NIGHT, AND GOOD LUCK.
MEMOIRS OF A GEISHA
THE NEW WORLD

ACHIEVEMENT IN COSTUME DESIGN
CHARLIE AND THE CHOCOLATE FACTORY
MEMOIRS OF A GEISHA
MRS. HENDERSON PRESENTS
PRIDE & PREJUDICE
WALK THE LINE

ACHIEVEMENT IN DIRECTING
BROKEBACK MOUNTAIN
CAPOTE
CRASH
GOOD NIGHT, AND GOOD LUCK.
MUNICH

BEST DOCUMENTARY FEATURE
DARWIN'S NIGHTMARE
ENRON: THE SMARTEST GUYS IN THE ROOM
MARCH OF THE PENGUINS
MURDERBALL
STREET FIGHT

BEST DOCUMENTARY SHORT SUBJECT
THE DEATH OF KEVIN CARTER: CASUALTY OF THE BANG BANG CLUB
GOD SLEEPS IN RWANDA
THE MUSHROOM CLUB
A NOTE OF TRIUMPH: THE GOLDEN AGE OF NORMAN CORWIN

ACHIEVEMENT IN FILM EDITING
CINDERELLA MAN
THE CONSTANT GARDENER
CRASH
MUNICH
WALK THE LINE

BEST FOREIGN LANGUAGE FILM OF THE YEAR
DON'T TELL
JOYEUX NOèL
PARADISE NOW
SOPHIE SCHOLL - THE FINAL DAYS
TSOTSI

ACHIEVEMENT IN MAKEUP
THE CHRONICLES OF NARNIA: THE LION, THE WITCH AND THE WARDROBE
CINDERELLA MAN
STAR WARS: EPISODE III REVENGE OF THE SITH

ACHIEVEMENT IN MUSIC WRITTEN FOR MOTION PICTURES
(ORIGINAL SCORE)
BROKEBACK MOUNTAIN
THE CONSTANT GARDENER
MEMOIRS OF A GEISHA
MUNICH
PRIDE & PREJUDICE

ACHIEVEMENT IN MUSIC WRITTEN FOR MOTION PICTURES
(ORIGINAL SONG)
"In the Deep" - CRASH
"It's Hard Out Here for a Pimp" - HUSTLE & FLOW
"Travelin' Thru" - TRANSAMERICA

BEST MOTION PICTURE OF THE YEAR
BROKEBACK MOUNTAIN
CAPOTE
CRASH
GOOD NIGHT, AND GOOD LUCK.
MUNICH

ACHIEVEMENT IN SOUND EDITING
KING KONG
MEMOIRS OF A GEISHA
WAR OF THE WORLDS

ACHIEVEMENT IN SOUND MIXING
THE CHRONICLES OF NARNIA: THE LION, THE WITCH AND THE WARDROBE
KING KONG
MEMOIRS OF A GEISHA
WALK THE LINE
WAR OF THE WORLDS

ACHIEVEMENT IN VISUAL EFFECTS
THE CHRONICLES OF NARNIA: THE LION, THE WITCH AND THE WARDROBE
KING KONG
WAR OF THE WORLDS

ADAPTED SCREENPLAY
BROKEBACK MOUNTAIN
CAPOTE
THE CONSTANT GARDENER
A HISTORY OF VIOLENCE
MUNICH

ORIGINAL SCREENPLAY
CRASH
GOOD NIGHT, AND GOOD LUCK.
MATCH POINT
THE SQUID AND THE WHALE
SYRIANA