Movie Review Fallen Leaves

Fallen Leaves (2023) 

Directed by Aki Kaurismaki 

Written by Aki Kaurismaki 

Starring Alma Poysti, Jussi Vatanan 

Release Date November 17th, 2023 

Published December 18th, 2023 

Continuing to catch up on movies of 2023, I've recently had the pleasure to enjoy Kelly Reichardt's Showing Up, and Justine Triet's engrossing, Anatomy of a Fall. I've still got a few titles to go but I'm making great progress toward my best of 2023 list. The hard part is going to be having so many great movies to decide between. It would honestly be easier this year to create a top 20 but nevertheless. Making my end of year list is a joy, even as I will have to wrestle with where to put Aki Kaurismaki's new movie Fallen Leaves on my list. Fallen Leaves is a lovely, sincere, slice of life drama set among the poor of modern Finland. 

Ansa (Alma Poysti) lives a solitary single life in a tiny apartment in Finland. She survives mostly on taking home out of date food from her job at a local grocery store. Sadly, she will soon lose that job. An over zealous security guard sees her letting another poor person take some out of date food that she was throwing in a dumpster. As she's leaving work, the security guard and an officious store manager make her empty her bag and inside they find a piece of expired food that was to be her dinner that night. She's fired on the spot and two of her co-workers choose to quit in solidarity. They too had been taking expired food to survive on. 

In a parallel story, Holappa (Jussie Vatanan) is working a menial job cleaning rust off of metal with a high powered hose. It's just him standing and spraying for endless job. It's mind numbing and to cope with the dreariness of the job, Holappa has developed a drinking problem. He hides a bottle near his work station and regularly grabs a swallow in between spraying pieces of metal. As you can imagine, this won't last. Eventually, Holappa will get caught drinking on the job and he will be fired. Before that happens however, Holappa meets Alma and in a world of dreary, lonely, desperation, the two find a bit of a spark. 

Holappa buys Ansa a cup of coffee and takes her to a movie, things she could not do on her own as she's still looking for a new job. His kindness is touching and their tentative flirtation is sweet. The film even gives them a romantic comedy complication as Alma promises to tell Holappa her name if they go on a second date. She gives him her number and he loses it, and that sets up the rest of their story together. It's a complication that would be just as at home in a Hollywood rom-com but it feels more meaningful and heartbreaking in the context that writer-director Aki Kaurismaki places it in. 

Two sad, lonely people struggling at the bottom of the economic ladder find each other and give each other comfort only to seemingly lose their one chance of finding comfort in a cold and uncaring world, that's poetry. Great art from great sadness. Kaurismaki doesn't inflate the importance of this moment, if anything, it's merely just an incident on our way to somewhere else in this story. The brilliance of Kaurismaki is using something as simple as a rom-com complication and using it to magnify the sadness and heartache of his characters in a way that feels honest. 

Find my full length review at Geeks.Media 



Movie Review La Chimera

La Chimera (2023) 

Directed by Alice Rohrwacher 

Written by Alice Rohrwacher 

Starring Josh O'Connor, Carol Duarte, Vincenzo Nemolato 

Release Date December 6th, 2023 

Published December 15th, 2023 

The great catch up continues with a film that made a splash at the Cannes Film Festival back in May of this year. La Chimera tells the story of an English Archaeologist who falls in with a group of grave robbers in a small Italian village. As we join the story, the archaeologist is fresh out of jail after having been arrested for robbing a grave and selling the stolen treasure. Arthur, the archaeologist, played by Josh O'Connor, wants to leave the life of a grave robber behind but finds himself drawn back into this criminal world out a lack of being able to do anything else. 

Arthur is disgraced, an ex-pat, the only people he knows are the grave robbers who recruited and befriended him years ago. Without them, his only tether to the world is the loving mother of his late, missing, ex-girlfriend Beniamina. Is Beniamina dead? Has she just wandered off on her own, as her mother hopes and believes, the movie will answer this question eventually. Meanwhile, as Arthur tries to find a way to avoid going back to jail, he finds himself drawn to Italia (Carole Duarte), a student of Beniamina's mother who also acts as a servant to the elderly woman and her gaggle of unforgiving daughters. 

Italia is carrying a secret. While staying in this decaying mansion as student and servant, she's also hiding her two children in one of the many, many rooms in this ancient home. She has a baby and a pre-teen and seems to pick up strays as the movie goes along. Arthur, being a bit of a stray himself, might have a place to land with Italia if he can give up his grave robbing. Arthur seems to want to quit but he's also drawn to the remarkable and incredible works of art that are buried with those who died in the Ancient Italian Etruscan era. Even while he was imprisoned, Arthur dreamed about the items he'd pulled out of the ground and kept for himself, his last connections to his time as a legitimate archaeologist. 

That Arthur returns to the life of a grave robber out of a sense of inertia. He desires change but his grief and his disconnection from the world as he hoped to have it, leads him to the path of least resistance, a life that welcomes him, favors him, a rare place in the world where he is respected. Arthur has a strange talent. He can locate a grave filled with treasure using dowsing. Dowsing is a mostly debunked form of locating things underground. For the purpose of the movie, whether Arthur is a bit of a con man or if he genuinely has a magical talent, he using a stick to point to a place in the ground where treasure is located. It just also happens to a place where death is located. 

Find my full length review at Geeks.Media



Classic Movie Review Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory

Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory (1971) 

Directed by Mel Stuart 

Written by Roald Dahl 

Starring Gene Wilder, Jack Albertson, Peter Ostrum, Roy Kinnear 

Release Date June 30th, 1971 

Published December 15th, 2023 

"We are the music makers and we are the dreamers of dreams" Gene Wilder as Willy Wonka in Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory. 

The wrong man named Gene won the Oscar for Best Actor at the 44th Academy Awards. Heck, the wrong man named Gene was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Actor. Gene Hackman was the wrong Gene, rewarded for his okay but not spectacular performance as Popeye Doyle in The French Connection. The right Gene was Gene Wilder, the star of Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory. Wilder didn't even merit a nomination and that itself is crime enough. No actor eligible for Best Actor at the 44th Academy Awards delivered the kind of nuanced, strange, and funny performance that Wilder did in Mel Stuart and Roald Dahl's visionary cautionary tale. 

Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory opens with loads of exposition. We meet Charlie Bucket (Peter Ostrum), a poor kid who can't partake in the ludicrous and excessive opening number dedicated to a candy man who appears to give away as much candy as he sells. As this candy retailer regales the kids with the wonders of one Willy Wonka, the greatest chocolatier in the world, Charlie Bucket watches from the outside looking in. He can't stick around or go in as he has to get to work, delivering newspapers and making just enough money to provide a loaf of bread for his family, including his hard-working mother, and his four layabout grandparents. I'm kidding, I'm sure that Grandpa Joe (Jack Albertson) and the rest of the grandparents laid up in a bed in the middle of the Bucket home are there for a good reason, being very very old. 

The plot of Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory kicks in when it's announced that the reclusive Willy Wonka has started up his factory again and will open the factory to a group of people who win a contest. The contest involves buying chocolate bars and finding the one that has a golden ticket inside. After an exhaustive introduction to four winners of the contest, four specifically spoiled rotten little kids who will, nevertheless, get a chance to win a lifetime supply of chocolate and a tour of the secretive Willy Wonka Chocolate Factory. The tour will be led by Willy Wonka himself, played by the brilliant and insouciant, Gene Wilder. 

Find my full length review at Geeks.Media 



Movie Review Showing Up

Showing Up (2023) 

Directed by Kelly Reichardt 

Written by Jon Raymond, Kelly Reichardt

Starring Michelle Williams, Hong Chau, John Magaro, Maryann Plunkett, Andre Benjamin, Judd Hirsch 

Release Date April 7th, 2023 

Published December 14th, 2023 

The Great Catch Up of 2023 continues with Kelly Reichardt's festival favorite, Showing Up. Teamed with her muse, Michelle Williams, Reichardt crafts a portrait of loneliness, disconnection, and art that feels a little like Reichardt's take on Chantal Akerman's Jeanne Dielmann, a languid, observant, sometimes bleak comedy about a disconnected woman longing to be seen and cared for while also nursing a mostly combative relationship with most other human beings. For Williams' Lizzy, other people are mostly a functional element of life that she must navigate while trying not to be bothered. 

Lizzy is an artist who crafts remarkable, fragile statues out of clay and fire and paint. Her work is abstract but painstaking. When she isn't making art in her garage, Lizzy also works as a secretary at an artist commune or art school, depending on how dismissive you want to be regarding art and artists. Lizzy got the job because her mother is in charge of the college and hired Lizzy as her top assistant. Lizzy does a good job while spending most of her time creating new ideas for her art. 

This would normally where I would launch into a thumbnail sketch of the plot, spoiler free, of course. However, Showing Up is not a movie that lends itself to such an easy boiling down. Kelly Reichardt's film is very much a slice of a relatively mundane life. Lizzy has few friends and a troubled family but she spends most of her time alone making art and feeding her cat. The biggest incident of any average day for Lizzy is badgering her fellow artist and landlord, Jo (Hong Chau) to repair her hot water heater which hasn't worked in weeks. 



Movie Review Sanctuary

Sanctuary (2023) 

Directed by Zachary Wigon

Written by Micah Bloomberg

Starring Christopher Abbott, Margaret Qualley 

Release Date May 19th, 2023 

Published 12-13-2023

Playing some late in the year catch up with movies I missed and what luck, Neon sent me a copy of Sanctuary. I've been looking forward to this movie since I saw YouTube Amanda the Jedi rave about this movie coming off of its festival run. Christopher Abbott and Margaret Qualley are two of the terrific young stars on the rise, with Abbott being among the most adventurous and courageous actors working today and Qualley only just starting to come into her own as an actress. Sanctuary is a single set drama about sex, kink, and power dynamics that is darkly comic and insightful. 

Hal (Christopher Abbott) is the heir to a hotel fortune who is about to ascend to the top of the family business. Hal's well respected and revered father has recently passed away and Hal is dealing with conflicting emotions about the idea of being a CEO and trying to live up to the impossible standard set by his father and the unrealistic expectations of his mother. Meanwhile, Hal is maintaining a secret that could endanger his chances of taking over the company. He likes to have a woman come to his various hotel room homes and dominate him. 

Rebecca (Qualley) enters the movie as someone who appears to be a lawyer. She's well coiffed, wearing an expensive suit, and she's here to ask Hal a series of questions that are seemingly coming from the perspective of people who operate his hotel empire. Soon however, the ruse is exposed as the questions become more and more intimate and finally, Hal breaks the the growing tension by accusing Rebecca of going off the script. It turns out, Rebecca is a dominatrix. Her job is to place Hal into humiliating or subservient situations that he gets off on. 



Movie Review Anatomy of a Fall

Anatomy of a Fall (2023) 

Directed by Justine Triet 

Written by Justine Triet, Arthur Harari 

Starring Sandra Huller, Swann Arlaud, Milo Machado Graner 

Release Date August 23rd, 2023 

Published December 11th, 2023 

A man is found dead in a pool of his own blood lying outside of his home. Tragically, the first person to find his body is his young son, a boy who was partially blinded in an accident several years earlier. He can see up close and it's not until he's up close to the body of his late father that the gravity of what he can see really hits him. Boy screams for his mother who comes running. The police are called and a grueling investigation is set to occur to determine how the man got from the attic of the home where he was installing insulation to being dead on the ground outside of his home. 

Suicide is the story that Sandra Voyter (Sandra Huller) is going with but there are questions about her account of what occurred. Sandra has lied about key details of what led to her husband's death. She lies about how close they were, she lies about having had a screaming argument with him. Caught in the midst of all of this is the boy, Daniel (Milo Machado-Graner) whose memory of that day will be the key to unlocking what happened that day. Did Sandra murder her husband after a particularly nasty argument? Did dad take his own life by throwing himself out of a third story window? That's the mystery that drives Anatomy of a Fall. 

Directed by Justine Triet, Anatomy of a Fall is a gripping courtroom thriller. Featuring an icy and fierce leading performance by Sandra Huller, Anatomy of a Fall separates itself from the legal drama genre by taking what is familiar and doing it better. It helps a great deal that we are in a French courtroom and not an American one. The French, according to this movie, my only reference point, follow a much more loose structure. Lawyers for the prosecution and defense are allowed to linger over theories and converse with people who are not currently on the witness stand. It's strange to watch if you've never seen a court room thriller in France and that raises the bar for this relatively creaky genre. 

I was captivated when the prosecuting attorney turned from the person who was testifying and began addressing Huller's Sandra directly to get her reaction in real time to what the witness had alleged. In an American courtroom this would be out of line and would like get a contempt citation. In France, this is normalized behavior and Sandra is forced to address the evidence presented as it is presented. The prosecutor can turn heel and speak to Sandra as if she were on the witness stand at all times. This does give Sandra a chance to respond to all of the evidence presented but it's also intentionally jarring as Sandra is given no chance to be ready when the spotlight falls on her. 

The court structure of Anatomy of a Fall is enough to create a gripping legal story but it takes a truly great lead performance to bring it all together and that is certainly what we get from Sandra Huller as author Sandra Voyter. Though she maintains her innocence throughout the movie, you can sense that she's holding things back, hiding things away, and that leads you to, at the very least, wonder whether or not she could have killed her husband. The film smartly lays out the case of how the murder could have happened while deftly avoided a deliberate recreation that might tip the hand of the movie. 

Triet doesn't want us to see Sandra as the killer, even in a dream scenario. Rather, she allows the court case to frame our feelings about Sandra and allows the room for Huller to reveal the character, her flaws, and the reasons that might make her appear guilty. The court scenes in Anatomy of a Fall are so well done that you need little more than hearing about what is happening, placing you in direct connection with Daniel, the only fully innocent character in the movie. Torn between believing his mother and hearing horrible things about his mother and how she has slept around during her marriage to his father, Daniel struggles with the adult task of deciding what is true and not true about his mother. 

Find my full length review at Geeks.Media 



Movie Review It's A Wonderful Knife

It's a Wonderful Knife (2023) 

Directed by Tyler McIntyre 

Written by Michael Kennedy

Starring Jane Widdop, Jess McLeod, Joel McHale, Justin Long, Katherine Isabelle 

Release Date November 10th, 2023 

Published December 5th, 2023 

Do you ever see a movie character, most often a side character, whom you adopt as your own? This happened to me as I watched the new holiday horror movie, It's A Wonderful Knife. The introduction of the character Bernie, played by Jess McLeod, won me over immediately. The adorable, shy, sad, outcast that McLeod plays is called Weirdo by everyone she meets but her actual name is Bernie and she's wonderful. My mantras became, as It's a Wonderful Knife played out, became "Protect Bernie at All Cost" and "If Bernie Dies, the Movie is Over." McLeod is just that good at being lovely, sweet, and sympathetic. My heart rose and fell with Bernie. 

That's not to take anything away from the star of It's a Wonderful Knife, Jane Widdop's Winnie, she's also terrific. It's just that I identified far more with Bernie's struggle than anyone else's. Outcasts stick together. Once you have seen It's a Wonderful Knife you can begin to understand why my adopting Bernie as my favorite character made the movie a rollercoaster of jump scares and cathartic surprises as Bernie's role grows in the 3rd act in the most unexpected and wonderful ways. Ways that actually use her as a way to honor the beloved holiday classic that lends its premise to this holiday horror flick. 

It's a Wonderful Knife stars Jane Widdop as Winnie, a teenager from a happy family with a great brother, Jimmy (Aiden Howard) and two loving parents, David (Joel McHale) and Judy (Erin Boyes). It's Christmas Eve and the family is supposed to be together but David is called to go to work. His boss, Henry Waters (Justin Long), is the richest man in town and feels no guilt about separating David from his family on Christmas, especially when a shady deal needs to get done. Henry needs to demolish one historic home to get his massive mall project up and running and he needs David to help lean on the elderly homeowner, something David doesn't want to do. 

That same night, Winnie decides to attend a party with her boyfriend Pete and her best friend, Cara (Hana Huggins). It's a fateful choice as a serial murderer is suddenly on the loose. He's dressed all in white and he's murdered the old man whose house was coveted by Henry Waters. The killer then tagets Cara who happens to be the granddaughter of the old man. Cara was to inherit the house that Waters wants and so she ends up brutally stabbed to death along with her boyfriend. Winnie's brother, Jimmy is nearly killed after confronting the killer and keeping him from killing Winnie. Jimmy survives because Winnie uses jumper cables to murder the serial killer. 

Find my full length review at Geeks.Media 



Movie Review Megalopolis

 Megalopolis  Directed by Francis Ford Coppola  Written by Francis Ford Coppola  Starring Adam Driver, Nathalie Emmanuel, Giancarlo Esposito...