
Chekhov novella adapted by Dover Koshashvili
with screenwriter Mary Bing.
Intensely dramatic battle between science & art played out in a Black Sea resort in Imperial Russia sometime around 1890. Von Koren (Tobias Menzies) sees Laevsky (Andrew Scott) as the epitome of aristocratic decadence, & the intensity of this hatred mystifies both of them. Intellectually astute with sumptuous production values in the best Merchant/Ivory tradition. Click HERE for FF2 haiku.

Photos reposted from Rotten Tomatoes.
*****
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Don’t judge a book by its cover or a film by its poster! What appears to be a “period romance,” is actually a ferocious battle of wills dressed up in gorgeous costumes. On the one hand, we have Von Koren: aescetic & unforgiving. On the other hand, we have Laevsky: spoiled & petulant. Watching Laevsky with his beautiful mistress Nadya (Fiona Glascott), Von Koren becomes obsessed with the thought that they might soon “breed,” further despoiling the human gene pool. To Von Koren, these idle aristocrats represent nothing less than the ruination of the species.
Andrew Scott perfectly embodies Laevsky–this handsome man who was clearly once a pretty boy. We know from the self-important way he carries himself that he’s always been the light of his mother’s life, never disciplined as a child or told he could do wrong. His character is now shallow & mean, & watching his despicable behavior (especially the hateful way he treats Nadya both in private & in public), I wanted to kill him myself. But when Von Koren takes up his pistol & begins to aim…
Von Koren is a man who thinks he has all the answers, & that arrogance sets us against him, making us root for Laevsky even knowing all his faults. Seeing the film first (as I almost always do), my heart was pounding at the end. I really didn’t know what would happen, & that’s a rare treat for a film lover in today’s mind-numbingly predictable multiplex. Then, going back & reading Chekhov’s original novella, I was further dazzled. The speeches he writes for Von Koren capture the essence of Nazi ideology; we will soon hear these arguments again from those who stood at gates of Auschwitz, deciding who went left & who went right.
30.Aug.10
Reviews: A
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Click HERE to download pdf of full review.

Teeenage girl (Mulligan) receives instruction from a graduate of “the University of Life” (Sarsgaard), but gets boost from a caring teacher (Williams) just in the nick of time. Fascinating measure of what has changed for women (& what hasn’t) since the early ’60s. Click HERE for full review on WomenArts. Click HERE for FF2 Haiku. Click HERE to read my chat with director Lone Scherfig & see pix of Chicago WITASWAN Reception for Lone during the 45th annual Chicago International Film Festival.
23.Oct.09
Reviews: A
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Easy to like but impossible to love, this is a surprisingly conventional BioPic about a very unconventional woman: aviatrix Amelia Earhart (Swank). She has some poetic flight scenes & you can feel the world getting smaller as her planes grow ever more sophisticated, but on the ground everyone’s just going thru the motions. Click HERE for FF2 Haiku.
23.Oct.09
Reviews: A
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Rich hated this RomCom about a successful businesswoman (Fey) who hires a surrogate (Poehler) when she’s unable to conceive, but Jan enjoyed the multidimensional world created for the Fey character, & thought the relationship between the two lead characters worked fine. Click HERE for FF2 haiku.
16.Oct.09
Reviews: A
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Burstein undoubtedly got remarkable footage of a year in the life of Warsaw [
Indiana] High School, but alas, she lost her way sometime in the editing room. Did marketing play too a big role here — the obsessive need to create archetypes in order to hook audiences by recreating THE BREAKFAST CLUB poster??? Click
HERE for FF2 haiku.
16.Oct.09
Reviews: A
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We agree that UNIVERSE is an operatic, ebulliently effective look at 60s icons; we disagree about heft. Rich thinks it perfectly captures its moment, whereas Jan also finds compelling anti-Bush, anti-Iraq War agenda. Excellent performances from mostly-novice cast. Soundtrack proves genius of Beatles simpliciter as well as this specific incarnation. Click HERE for FF2 haiku.
16.Oct.09
Reviews: A
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I really wanted to like this film written by husband/wife team Dave Eggers & Vendela Vida, but alas. Road trips are always choppy but this one is totally sliced & diced. Were filmmakers so bored by back story clichés that they couldn’t bother constructing any personal histories? If we don’t believe any of these characters really know each other, then what’s the point? On the plus side, I liked the quirky music by Alexi Murdoch & stylish cinematography by Ellen Kuras.
For more details, follow link to our FF2 haiku.
28.May.09
Reviews: A
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Adaptation based on Jane Smiley’s Pulitzer Prize-winning meditation on KING LEAR. This searing film rages against residents of an Iowa town for averting their eyes while a power-mad tyrant (Robards) abused his daughters. Pfeiffer’s ferocious as the middle daughter. Cast totally against type, it’s the best performance of her career. More on A THOUSAND ACRES.
07.Jan.08
Reviews: A
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Julie Christie plays a character fighting against & ultimately succumbimg to Alzheimer’s disease. She’s luminous but the film really belongs to Gordon Pinsent playing her memory-wracked husband. Once she’s admitted to a residence, actors Crewson & Thomson come into their own as experienced care-givers, & Olympia Dukakis is perfect as the rueful wife of another patient. More on AWAY FROM HER.
10.Oct.07
Reviews: A
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