MPAA (R) CNS/USCCB (A-III) Roger Ebert (2 1/2 Stars) Fr. Dennis (3 1/2 Stars)
IMDb listing
CNS/USCCB review
Roger Ebert's review
Anna Karenina [2012] (directed by Joe Wright, screenplay by Tom Stoppard, based on the novel [wikipd] by Leo Tolstoy [IMDb]) will probably irritate _some_ purists. But as has been the case of the wildly extravagant recent adaptations of the Sherlock Holmes [2009][2011] stories and especially the Three Musketeers [2011] (complete with added "Da Vinci style airships" and "in 3D" no less ... ;-) it's more or less obvious that "purists" are not the intended audience here. Instead the goal appears to be to re-capture _the original intended audiences_ of these once beloved stories, if not with fidelity to the "letter" of the originals then certainly to their spirit. So just like The Three Musketeers was originally intended to be a teen-oriented adventure story and so the 2011 film sought _really, really hard_ to re-capture that spirit of _over the top_ adventure, so too, Anna Karenina was originally a novel about young adulthood (both early and late...) set in a milieu every bit as vicious/dangerous as that existing perhaps in today's Gossip Girl [IMDb] ;-).
In the spirit then of the recent adaptations of Sherlock Holmes and The Three Musketeers [2011], the presentation of Anna Karenina here is _highly stylized_. Indeed, about half of the current film takes place "on stage." IMHO the metaphor is _appropriate_ because even as the still quite attractive, late 20-something/early 30-something, though already married with a 8-10 year-old son Anna Karenina [IMDb] (played IMHO superbly by Keira Knightley) (in today's parlance, Anna could have easily been one of the neighbors on Desperate Housewives [IMDb] or, even more to the point, be considered to be a 19th century equivalent of a "MILF" but we get ahead of ourselves...) and her eventual lover, the younger but supremely confident, mid 20s-something, "dashing" Russian cavalry officer Count Vronsky [IMDb] (played again superbly by Aaron Taylor-Johnson) go about their lives and later ... their affair, _it is_ as if parts of their lives become played out "on stage" before their circle of family/friends. So the stylization, that may irritate some older viewers actually _underlines_ the core of the story taking place. (So honestly, I thought it was _great_).
How then does the story unfold. The story begins as the novel with Anna traveling from the "more modern" St. Petersburg to the more traditional Moscow on something of a "rescue mission." Her brother Prince Stepan "Stiva" Oblonsky [IMDb] (played by a mustached Matthew MacFedyen) had been "caught with the governess" of his children and, needless to say, his wife, the sweet if still from an aristocratic family (though presumable of a somewhat lower rank) Dolly [IMDb] (played by Kelly MacDonald) was upset. (Apparently the Oblonskys did have something of a predisposition to ... "stray"). Anna came over to reprimand, in as much as she could, her largely incouragable brother and to try to smooth over things with Dolly. "You have to forgive him." "But how?" "I know it won't be easy, but what else can you do...?"
While Anna is there in Moscow, Anna _also_ has the opportunity to attend the "coming out party" "debutante ball" of Dolly's 18-year old sister Kitty [IMDb] (played by Alicia Vikander and _again_ superbly cast). When we meet her, Kitty's bubbling with excitement. This is going to be her big night. Yet as the night plays out, two things go wrong. First, a bumbling if certainly utterly sincere (and also significantly older) admirer of Kitty named Levin [IMDb] (played by Domhnall Gleeson) comes over to her and _just before_ the ball is about to start _proposes to her_. "Oh why, why him and why now...?" ;-) Flustered and still trying to focus on what she believed was going to be _the beginning of her adult life_ she has to tell him "no" (crushing him of course) and then _refocus_ on the evening to come.
But the rest of the evening doesn't go well. Kitty has had a crush on the previously mentioned "dashing" young mid-20 something Count Vronsky [IMDb], who _is_ dutifully attending "the ball." Why? Because it's a "big social occasion." HOWEVER (and perhaps inevitably), for someone like Vronsky, Kitty's "too easy." Yes, maybe she's "entering into society" that evening and all ... But to him, she's still "just a kid." WHO he finds _far more attractive_ and _far more challenging_ is ... Anna, who's married, 30-something and really at the ball more or less _by accident_. But yes, in a somewhat younger "Mrs Robinson" [IMDb] like (if _accidental_) way she _is_ really, really attractive. So he comes over and asks her to dance ... and they dance ... and dance ... and pretty soon _everybody else_ (including Kitty ...) _stop dancing_ and just watch them (with increasing scandal...) ... dance. And all this then comes to be transported to the above mentioned _stage_.
Now Anna's husband, Karenin [IMDb] (played surprisingly but again perfectly for the role by Jude Law) is a _good_ if rigid/proper-to-a-fault man. (One woman tells Anna of him: "You're married to a Saint. And we all must cherish him ... for Russia's sake." What 30 year-old woman would want to hear her husband described (only) in such terms .... ;-). Throughout the whole of the tale, Karenin is _able_ to _forgive_ (why? because that's what good, proper men do in good society....). But his rigid propriety renders him increasingly lifeless. Anna, who didn't exactly search out Vronsky (or anyone else really) to have an affair with, once "involved" becomes increasingly so and comes to simply _hate_ the good if, yes, let's admit it, boring Karenin, her husband.
Those who know something about Sigmund Freud could perhaps appreciate the pre-Freud but now more or less _obvious_ split occurring between the Karenins. Karenin, the husband, has basically given his lot to the "superego" doing _everything_ that Society wishes him to do. Anna, instead chooses to follow her "id" choosing the pleasure of being with Vronsky over society's indeed _God's_ demand that, once married, she be with her husband Karenin. In Freud's model, there's the adult "ego" which seeks (if often not particularly successfully...) to balance the demands of what one _wants to do_ (follow one's "id") with the demands of society/authority demands that one do (follow the "superego") Here neither is willing to be a true adult here, and ...
So soon enough, "the lot" of the various characters is cast. Foregoing whatever else he might be thinking/feeling about all this, Karenin is willing to keep even his unfaithful wife under his wing while Anna increasingly just wants freedom. The rest of the story plays out from there...
What, indeed, a story! And for those who'd have any doubts about how it ends, remember that this story was written originally by Tolstoy, not a Hollywood hack. Tolstoy was an Orthodox Christian mystic at the end of his life. So God's will / judgement does _definitely_ play out here, if perhaps not in the knee-jerk hammer-over-the-head manner that sometimes we (believer or non) expect or even demand that God's will be expressed ...
Reviews of current films written by Fr. Dennis Zdenek Kriz, OSM of St. Philip Benizi Parish, Fullerton, CA
Saturday, November 17, 2012
Anna Karenina [2012]
Labels:
aaron taylor-johnson,
adapted screenplay,
drama,
joe wright,
jude law,
keira knightley,
love story,
movie review,
romance,
tolstoy,
tom stoppard,
tragedy
Friday, November 16, 2012
The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn Part 2 [2012]
MPAA (PG-13) CNS/USCCB (A-III) Roger Ebert (2 1/2 Stars) Fr. Dennis (3 1/2 Stars)
IMDb listing
CNS/USCCB review
Roger Ebert's review
The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn Part 2 (directed by Bill Condon, screenplay by Melissa Rosenberg based on the Twilight novels by Stephenie Meyer [IMDb]) closes this cinematic telling of the saga. How does it do? Well from the sound of the packed audience of viewers that I saw the film with on the night that it opened, it did quite well.
In terms of fireworks, I do think the close of the Harry Potter series (which also split the last book into two films) was certainly more dramatic. But then it would seem to me that The Twilight Saga was _always_ about a "different kind of drama" than the Harry Potter series was. Harry Potter was largely about a titanic struggle between good and evil taking place on a parallel supernatural plane where the lowly Harry Potter was going to have a key/dramatic role.
The Twilight Saga was always about a simple teenage girl growing-up/coming into her own/making friends/making her own community in the backwoods of often dreary and certainly rainy/snowy Washington State. Yes, she discovered a truly _fantastic_ richness (_both_ werewolves and vampires, and even entire cultures/histories supporting them, who would have guessed? ;-) in her seemingly "humble surroundings." But _none of the main characters_ -- from Bella Swan (played by Kristen Stewart) who starts off as an awkward/klutzy teenager from a small town in the middle of, if not nowhere, than utter "nondescript average-ville" (yes, in the "backwoods" of Washington), to Edward (played by Robert Pattinson) the equally socially awkward vampire from the "Cullen clan" who she falls in love with, to the more jockish Jacob Black (played by Taylor Lautner) descendant of a "shape shifting" Indian tribe that's "always lived in those woods" but again is ultimately nothing to brag about (he's destined to "howl at the moon" like his ancestors always did, knowing the same rocks, same woods, same lakes, same streams as they did as well) -- none of these people was in any world/history altering way "special." Yes they all had (or came to have) "gifts" / special abilities. But none of them were known outside their group, and indeed, for various reasons their "gifts" / "special abilities" _had to be hidden_ from the larger world/society. If Harry Potter was about magic on a _grand scale_, the Twilight Saga was about finding "magic' / "specialness" on a small scale, in those "backwoods" of every day, otherwise _nothing to brag about_, "life."
So the ending episode, which is largely about Renesmee (played by Mackenzie Foy), Bella and Edward's child (hence "half-human / half-vampire"), while "dramatic" remains so _only_ within Bella / Edward's circle of family and friends. The humans in the area, including Bella's father, the small town cop, Charlie Swan (played by Billy Burke), don't even know that Renesmee is "half human / half vampire," and the Edward's vampire millieu (that has had to live in the shadows for centuries) comes to understand that this new child _isn't_ going to cause them problems after all. The story ends up having (arguably / thankfully) _less drama_ than the 1967 film Guess Who's Coming to Dinner where for the first time in a Hollywood film a young white woman (played by Katherine Houghton) brings a young black man (played by Sidney Poitier) home to meet her parents (played by Spencer Tracy and Katherine Hepburn). It would seem, (I hope) that we've made a good deal of progress in this area (even in "the backwoods") since that time.
So honestly my hat off to writer Stephanie Meyer and then the cast and crew of the Twilight series. You've created and presented a story that's both "Great" and at times "dramatic" and yet whose characters always remain (like most of us) "small."
<< NOTE - Do you like what you've been reading here? If you do then consider giving a small donation to this Blog (sugg. $6 _non-recurring_) _every so often_ to continue/further its operation. To donate just CLICK HERE. Thank you ;-) >>
IMDb listing
CNS/USCCB review
Roger Ebert's review
The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn Part 2 (directed by Bill Condon, screenplay by Melissa Rosenberg based on the Twilight novels by Stephenie Meyer [IMDb]) closes this cinematic telling of the saga. How does it do? Well from the sound of the packed audience of viewers that I saw the film with on the night that it opened, it did quite well.
In terms of fireworks, I do think the close of the Harry Potter series (which also split the last book into two films) was certainly more dramatic. But then it would seem to me that The Twilight Saga was _always_ about a "different kind of drama" than the Harry Potter series was. Harry Potter was largely about a titanic struggle between good and evil taking place on a parallel supernatural plane where the lowly Harry Potter was going to have a key/dramatic role.
The Twilight Saga was always about a simple teenage girl growing-up/coming into her own/making friends/making her own community in the backwoods of often dreary and certainly rainy/snowy Washington State. Yes, she discovered a truly _fantastic_ richness (_both_ werewolves and vampires, and even entire cultures/histories supporting them, who would have guessed? ;-) in her seemingly "humble surroundings." But _none of the main characters_ -- from Bella Swan (played by Kristen Stewart) who starts off as an awkward/klutzy teenager from a small town in the middle of, if not nowhere, than utter "nondescript average-ville" (yes, in the "backwoods" of Washington), to Edward (played by Robert Pattinson) the equally socially awkward vampire from the "Cullen clan" who she falls in love with, to the more jockish Jacob Black (played by Taylor Lautner) descendant of a "shape shifting" Indian tribe that's "always lived in those woods" but again is ultimately nothing to brag about (he's destined to "howl at the moon" like his ancestors always did, knowing the same rocks, same woods, same lakes, same streams as they did as well) -- none of these people was in any world/history altering way "special." Yes they all had (or came to have) "gifts" / special abilities. But none of them were known outside their group, and indeed, for various reasons their "gifts" / "special abilities" _had to be hidden_ from the larger world/society. If Harry Potter was about magic on a _grand scale_, the Twilight Saga was about finding "magic' / "specialness" on a small scale, in those "backwoods" of every day, otherwise _nothing to brag about_, "life."
So the ending episode, which is largely about Renesmee (played by Mackenzie Foy), Bella and Edward's child (hence "half-human / half-vampire"), while "dramatic" remains so _only_ within Bella / Edward's circle of family and friends. The humans in the area, including Bella's father, the small town cop, Charlie Swan (played by Billy Burke), don't even know that Renesmee is "half human / half vampire," and the Edward's vampire millieu (that has had to live in the shadows for centuries) comes to understand that this new child _isn't_ going to cause them problems after all. The story ends up having (arguably / thankfully) _less drama_ than the 1967 film Guess Who's Coming to Dinner where for the first time in a Hollywood film a young white woman (played by Katherine Houghton) brings a young black man (played by Sidney Poitier) home to meet her parents (played by Spencer Tracy and Katherine Hepburn). It would seem, (I hope) that we've made a good deal of progress in this area (even in "the backwoods") since that time.
So honestly my hat off to writer Stephanie Meyer and then the cast and crew of the Twilight series. You've created and presented a story that's both "Great" and at times "dramatic" and yet whose characters always remain (like most of us) "small."
<< NOTE - Do you like what you've been reading here? If you do then consider giving a small donation to this Blog (sugg. $6 _non-recurring_) _every so often_ to continue/further its operation. To donate just CLICK HERE. Thank you ;-) >>
Thursday, November 15, 2012
Father, Son and Holy Cow (orig. Święta Krowa) [2011]
MPAA (UR would be PG-13) Fr. Dennis (3 Stars)
IMDb listing
Filmweb.pl* listing
Father, Son and Holy Cow (orig. Święta Krowa) (2011) [IMDb] [FW.pl]* (directed and cowritten by Radek Węgrzyn [IMDb] [FW.pl]* along with Cezary Iber [IMDb] [FW.pl]* and Rogerto Gagnor [IMDb][FW.pl]*) is a film that one would probably expect to play at a festival like the 24th Polish Film Festival in America/Chicago. At the surface, it's basically a comedy that takes place in the Polish countryside. However, as is often the case with seemingly "simple films" like this, there's more going on in the film than may initially meet the eye.
The story is about a late 50-something / early 60-something widower named Bognan (played by Zbigniew Zamachowski [IMDb] [FW.pl]*) who returns to his mother (played by Elżbieta Karkoszka [IMDb] [FW.pl]*) still living in his home town, a small village by the Baltic coast, soon after the death of his wife, Izabela (played by Lucyna Malec [IMDb] [FW.pl]*) presumably of cancer. Bognan and Izabela had grown-up together in that small town before leaving it for the fame and fortune of the outside world. Izabela had become an accomplished classical singer, Bognan was her accompanist on the piano. They had spent much of their adult lives living in Berlin, GERMANY and traveling around Western Europe. The two had daughter named Anna (played by Agata Buzek [IMDb] [FW.pl]*), who appeared in her late 20s/early 30s, who was following in her parents' footsteps and had become an accomplished classical singer with a (married) lover in Berlin as well.
It's clear that the link to their country past (dare one say "buran" past) was tenuous. Near the beginning of the film, Bognan arrives in his home town with an urn with his wife's ashes and _disperses_ them, alone, on the beach where the two had spent a good part of their youth, dreaming of getting the heck out of there and on to adventures in the larger world. So as we watch Bognan disperse his wife's ashes, it's clear that when the two had left their village they didn't merely leave it behind but also largely their faith and the other aspects of their "non-avantguard" past. But now Izabela had died, and Bognan, not knowing what exactly to do, comes home for a while to reorient himself.
Well mom was ready for him ... with some chores ... ;-). Among them were fixing the roof on the barn and taking care of the cows. During the course of his new routine, he comes across a young Paweł (played by Antoni Pawlicki [IMDb] [FW.pl]*) a late-20 something / early 30-something young man (unmarried) who runs the local grocery store and spends his mornings running around the nearby farms collecting the produce for the day (milk, eggs...) that he sells then at his store. On one hand a happy-go-lucky guy, on the other he seems like a "lost soul" / "walking anachronism" even if he is always full of ideas trying to make his still rather traditional existence more modern and in with the times: On his van he writes "Pawłowski & Sons" even though there are _no sons_ to speak of, explaining that "it's a marketing ploy" giving people the impression that his business has a future. Also talking to Bognan, and finding out that he's a musician he tells him that he read somewhere that playing music to cows makes them produce more milk.
Buran thinks Paweł's off his rocker, but depressed himself, he sets up a gramophone and plays Mozart into the the countryside one afternoon. And low and behold, he finds that his cows _do_ produce more milk, and in particular _one_ cow that he recently bought for his mother produces far and away more than the others. Paweł comes by the next morning and sees all the milk that Bognan's cows, including the "miracle cow," had produced. Asks Bognan, what he played. He answers "Mozart" and thus begins a new marketing gimmick for Paweł as he begins to sell "Mozart's Milk" to the people of the town. Beyond being a lot of it, the milk is also really, really good!
But the cow begins to mean more to Bognan than just a cow that produces exceptional quantities of exceptionally good milk. The cow seems kinda temperamental and one afternoon escapes through a hole in the fence (that Bognan hasn't gotten around to fixing...) and so Bognan finds himself chasing said cow, Klara, all over the countryside until ... she leads him to the place where he had dispersed his wife's ashes. At this point, Bognan becomes convinced that ... this cow ... who he only purchased for his mother after his wife's death is somehow his wife "in another form" (her reincarnation I suppose). So he starts to treat her well, as if she was his significant other / girlfriend. And wants, in fact, to hold a "coming out party" with "his cow" for his family and friends.
Well, of course, both traditionalist (and very Catholic) mom and eyes-rolling, very secularist daughter, Anna, with "other issues going on" are appalled. Bognan's mother tries to get the local priest (played by Andrzej Mastalerz [IMDb] [FW.pl]*) to "do something" about this new found threat that she calls "zoophilia." To the film's credit, the priest looks like he'd really not like to get involved _but_ his parish _depends_ on "old ladies" like Bognan's mom. So he trots out there and tries to "do something" even as he knows the situation is absurd and he probably figures that he won't move Bognan anyway. Indeed, Bognan tells him and other detractors: "There are more things in heaven and on earth than can fit in your (or any) philosophy." And continues with his project. For her part, Bognan's daughter, Anna, finding herself pregnant by the married (to another woman) lover that she has, thinks her father has gone nuts, but eyes-rolling, decides to drive-out (from Berlin...) essentially to "assess the damage."
Much then plays out ... Among the things that play out is that the cow becomes much more like (though far differently than Bognan first understood it) to his wife than he had initially thought. It becomes clear that the cow produced all that milk, surprisingly/uniquely _delicious milk_ and was also so temperamental because ... she was ill. It turns out that Klara the cow (like Iza his wife who had died) had cancer. And so Bognan then has to confront the reality of his wife's death in the slide toward death of this cow...
[There is actually a fairly strong hint in the film here that Anna had actually assisted in helping to speed Iza's death much along the line of what the vet was telling Bognan to now do with the cow. YES assisted suicide is _against_ Catholic teaching ... but then it was also obvious that Bognan, Iza and their daughter Anna had not exactly concerned themselves much with Catholic teaching ... though Bognan's mother certainly did. The juxtaposition of Klara the cow and Iza, Bognan's wife, becomes an interesting and _not_ altogether straightforward comparison: When Anna assisted in prematurely bringing about the death of her mother (even at her request) did she treat her mother "with kindness/compassion" or simply "like an animal"...?]
Finally, there's the inevitable encounter between the simple but happy but also desperately trying not to be obsolete/useless unmarried 20-30 something country bumpkin Pawel, and the eyes-rolling sophisticated 20-30 something unmarried Anna who had gotten pregnant by an already married man who _won't_ marry her. What's gonna happen there?
Much still ensues ... and without spoiling much, the characters do find a way in the end to patch together the conflicting strands of tradition and modernity. Yes, it would appear that "There is more under heaven and earth that can fit under [_any_ one] philosophy ..."
* At the time of the writing of this review, machine translation of the text on filmweb.pl links given above appears to work best using the Chrome browser rather than Firefox or MS Explorer.
<< NOTE - Do you like what you've been reading here? If you do then consider giving a small donation to this Blog (sugg. $6 _non-recurring_) _every so often_ to continue/further its operation. To donate just CLICK HERE. Thank you ;-) >>
IMDb listing
Filmweb.pl* listing
Father, Son and Holy Cow (orig. Święta Krowa) (2011) [IMDb] [FW.pl]* (directed and cowritten by Radek Węgrzyn [IMDb] [FW.pl]* along with Cezary Iber [IMDb] [FW.pl]* and Rogerto Gagnor [IMDb][FW.pl]*) is a film that one would probably expect to play at a festival like the 24th Polish Film Festival in America/Chicago. At the surface, it's basically a comedy that takes place in the Polish countryside. However, as is often the case with seemingly "simple films" like this, there's more going on in the film than may initially meet the eye.
The story is about a late 50-something / early 60-something widower named Bognan (played by Zbigniew Zamachowski [IMDb] [FW.pl]*) who returns to his mother (played by Elżbieta Karkoszka [IMDb] [FW.pl]*) still living in his home town, a small village by the Baltic coast, soon after the death of his wife, Izabela (played by Lucyna Malec [IMDb] [FW.pl]*) presumably of cancer. Bognan and Izabela had grown-up together in that small town before leaving it for the fame and fortune of the outside world. Izabela had become an accomplished classical singer, Bognan was her accompanist on the piano. They had spent much of their adult lives living in Berlin, GERMANY and traveling around Western Europe. The two had daughter named Anna (played by Agata Buzek [IMDb] [FW.pl]*), who appeared in her late 20s/early 30s, who was following in her parents' footsteps and had become an accomplished classical singer with a (married) lover in Berlin as well.
It's clear that the link to their country past (dare one say "buran" past) was tenuous. Near the beginning of the film, Bognan arrives in his home town with an urn with his wife's ashes and _disperses_ them, alone, on the beach where the two had spent a good part of their youth, dreaming of getting the heck out of there and on to adventures in the larger world. So as we watch Bognan disperse his wife's ashes, it's clear that when the two had left their village they didn't merely leave it behind but also largely their faith and the other aspects of their "non-avantguard" past. But now Izabela had died, and Bognan, not knowing what exactly to do, comes home for a while to reorient himself.
Well mom was ready for him ... with some chores ... ;-). Among them were fixing the roof on the barn and taking care of the cows. During the course of his new routine, he comes across a young Paweł (played by Antoni Pawlicki [IMDb] [FW.pl]*) a late-20 something / early 30-something young man (unmarried) who runs the local grocery store and spends his mornings running around the nearby farms collecting the produce for the day (milk, eggs...) that he sells then at his store. On one hand a happy-go-lucky guy, on the other he seems like a "lost soul" / "walking anachronism" even if he is always full of ideas trying to make his still rather traditional existence more modern and in with the times: On his van he writes "Pawłowski & Sons" even though there are _no sons_ to speak of, explaining that "it's a marketing ploy" giving people the impression that his business has a future. Also talking to Bognan, and finding out that he's a musician he tells him that he read somewhere that playing music to cows makes them produce more milk.
Buran thinks Paweł's off his rocker, but depressed himself, he sets up a gramophone and plays Mozart into the the countryside one afternoon. And low and behold, he finds that his cows _do_ produce more milk, and in particular _one_ cow that he recently bought for his mother produces far and away more than the others. Paweł comes by the next morning and sees all the milk that Bognan's cows, including the "miracle cow," had produced. Asks Bognan, what he played. He answers "Mozart" and thus begins a new marketing gimmick for Paweł as he begins to sell "Mozart's Milk" to the people of the town. Beyond being a lot of it, the milk is also really, really good!
But the cow begins to mean more to Bognan than just a cow that produces exceptional quantities of exceptionally good milk. The cow seems kinda temperamental and one afternoon escapes through a hole in the fence (that Bognan hasn't gotten around to fixing...) and so Bognan finds himself chasing said cow, Klara, all over the countryside until ... she leads him to the place where he had dispersed his wife's ashes. At this point, Bognan becomes convinced that ... this cow ... who he only purchased for his mother after his wife's death is somehow his wife "in another form" (her reincarnation I suppose). So he starts to treat her well, as if she was his significant other / girlfriend. And wants, in fact, to hold a "coming out party" with "his cow" for his family and friends.
Well, of course, both traditionalist (and very Catholic) mom and eyes-rolling, very secularist daughter, Anna, with "other issues going on" are appalled. Bognan's mother tries to get the local priest (played by Andrzej Mastalerz [IMDb] [FW.pl]*) to "do something" about this new found threat that she calls "zoophilia." To the film's credit, the priest looks like he'd really not like to get involved _but_ his parish _depends_ on "old ladies" like Bognan's mom. So he trots out there and tries to "do something" even as he knows the situation is absurd and he probably figures that he won't move Bognan anyway. Indeed, Bognan tells him and other detractors: "There are more things in heaven and on earth than can fit in your (or any) philosophy." And continues with his project. For her part, Bognan's daughter, Anna, finding herself pregnant by the married (to another woman) lover that she has, thinks her father has gone nuts, but eyes-rolling, decides to drive-out (from Berlin...) essentially to "assess the damage."
Much then plays out ... Among the things that play out is that the cow becomes much more like (though far differently than Bognan first understood it) to his wife than he had initially thought. It becomes clear that the cow produced all that milk, surprisingly/uniquely _delicious milk_ and was also so temperamental because ... she was ill. It turns out that Klara the cow (like Iza his wife who had died) had cancer. And so Bognan then has to confront the reality of his wife's death in the slide toward death of this cow...
[There is actually a fairly strong hint in the film here that Anna had actually assisted in helping to speed Iza's death much along the line of what the vet was telling Bognan to now do with the cow. YES assisted suicide is _against_ Catholic teaching ... but then it was also obvious that Bognan, Iza and their daughter Anna had not exactly concerned themselves much with Catholic teaching ... though Bognan's mother certainly did. The juxtaposition of Klara the cow and Iza, Bognan's wife, becomes an interesting and _not_ altogether straightforward comparison: When Anna assisted in prematurely bringing about the death of her mother (even at her request) did she treat her mother "with kindness/compassion" or simply "like an animal"...?]
Finally, there's the inevitable encounter between the simple but happy but also desperately trying not to be obsolete/useless unmarried 20-30 something country bumpkin Pawel, and the eyes-rolling sophisticated 20-30 something unmarried Anna who had gotten pregnant by an already married man who _won't_ marry her. What's gonna happen there?
Much still ensues ... and without spoiling much, the characters do find a way in the end to patch together the conflicting strands of tradition and modernity. Yes, it would appear that "There is more under heaven and earth that can fit under [_any_ one] philosophy ..."
* At the time of the writing of this review, machine translation of the text on filmweb.pl links given above appears to work best using the Chrome browser rather than Firefox or MS Explorer.
<< NOTE - Do you like what you've been reading here? If you do then consider giving a small donation to this Blog (sugg. $6 _non-recurring_) _every so often_ to continue/further its operation. To donate just CLICK HERE. Thank you ;-) >>
Labels:
agata buzek,
cezary iber,
comedy,
drama,
elzbieta karkoszka,
festival,
foreign,
lucyna malec,
polish,
raded wegrzyn,
roderto gagnor,
zdigniew zamochowski
Tuesday, November 13, 2012
Lincoln [2012]
MPAA (R) CNS/USCCB (A-III) Roger Ebert (4 Stars) Fr. Dennis (4 Stars)
IMDb listing
CNS/USCCB review
Roger Ebert's review
Lincoln (directed by Steven Spielberg screenplay by Tony Kushner based in part on the book Team of Rivals: The Political Genius of Abraham Lincoln by Doris Kearns Goodwin) is one of the best American films of the year and will earn a whole host of Oscar nominations including best film, best adapted screenplay (Kushner), best director (Spielberg) and best actor in a leading role (Daniel Day Lewis who plays President Abraham Lincoln [IMDb] in the film) as well as nominations for various other artistic/technical aspects of the film including best makeup, costume design and art direction.
Despite being a historical "biopic" about the towering figure of Abraham Lincoln, the film is IMHO remarkably timely because it's also largely about the "nuts and bolts" of the political process in a democracy. That is, the film's about the Lincoln Administration's effort in the closing months of the American Civil War (and right after his reelection in 1864) to collect the requisite 2/3 of the votes in the House to pass what became the 13th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, which after being ratified by 3/4 of the States came to outlaw slavery in the United States. And collecting the votes was _not_ an easy task.
Though the Republican Party of the time was abolitionist (indeed largely founded to promote the cause of slavery's abolition) the Democratic Party of the time was "the party of compromise." Indeed the American Civil War was precipitated by the election of Abraham Lincoln as President of the United States (the first Republican ever to be elected to the office). And though the Southern States seceded from the Union as a result, Democrats in the still unionist North remained substantially represented in the Congress and they always counseled moderation to end hostilities between the unionist North and the secessionist South and _perhaps_ restore the union afterwards through some sort of a compromise regarding "States' Rights" / Slavery.
With the fortunes of the war (after 3 grinding years) turning decidedly in the North's favor by late 1864, Lincoln won re-election in November 1864 and the balance of power in the U.S. Congress shifted decidedly in the Republicans' favor. HOWEVER, since there was a fear that the American Civil War may actually end before the inauguration of the new Congress (in February-March 1965) it was decided by the Lincoln Administration to push through the 13th Amendment through Congress _before_ the inauguration of the new Congress. This meant cutting deals with the Democrats who had in the outgoing Congress enough votes to block the measure.
Thus the Lincoln Administration faced a very similar "vote counting" (and arguably "arm twisting" / "vote buying" ...) challenge that has characterized getting anything done in Congress in the United States over the last 20 or so years. (Indeed a year ago, I reviewed a fascinating documentary called How Democracy Works Now on the contemporary political process in the United States where the overwhelming lesson was that of counting (and more to the point, getting) the votes: "to get anything done in the U.S. Congress today, one has to get 60 votes (out of 100) in the Senate.") In Lincoln's time, the challenge was getting 2/3 of the votes in the House.
How would one do that? How would one get members of the opposing party to vote with you? Well Jesus himself told his disciples: "I am sending you like sheep in the midst of wolves; so be shrewd as serpents and simple as doves" (Mt 10:16). And in the film, Lincoln himself admonished an abolitionist purist (played by Tommy Lee Jones) appalled by his Administration's "vote buying" tactics telling the purist: "A compass is certainly valuable in navigation, but it can only tell one which direction is north. It can not tell one anything of the mountains, swamps, rivers and gorges that may separate one from one's goal. So what good is it to head purely in one direction if we only end up in a swamp?" So basically the film advocates a "whatever it takes" approach (hopefully within reason) to get a noble goal accomplished. (And yes, the opponents of a noble cause can also employ similar tactics to block the effort).
In any case, one gets the sense that resolving even something as unambiguously clear (today) as the question of abolishing slavery was difficult to push through Congress (even _after_ hundreds of thousands of deaths on the battle field in service of resolving the question). Can we therefore be surprised that our times may be difficult and "full of noise" as well?
Finally, does this film deserve an "R" rating? To be honest except for a few bad words and a couple of relatively short battle scenes (the story took place in the context of the American Civil War after all) I honestly don't understand why this film got an "R" rating rather than being rated "PG-13." On the other hand, the dialogue itself is rather complex and I don't think that children younger than 7th or 8th grade would really understand it. Still, sometimes the rating system doesn't make sense. So parents, if you have a child who's in junior high or high who's interested in seeing this movie, then please don't hesitate to take him/her to it. The film is excellent and certainly one of the best of the year.
<< NOTE - Do you like what you've been reading here? If you do then consider giving a small donation to this Blog (sugg. $6 _non-recurring_) _every so often_ to continue/further its operation. To donate just CLICK HERE. Thank you! :-) >>
IMDb listing
CNS/USCCB review
Roger Ebert's review
Lincoln (directed by Steven Spielberg screenplay by Tony Kushner based in part on the book Team of Rivals: The Political Genius of Abraham Lincoln by Doris Kearns Goodwin) is one of the best American films of the year and will earn a whole host of Oscar nominations including best film, best adapted screenplay (Kushner), best director (Spielberg) and best actor in a leading role (Daniel Day Lewis who plays President Abraham Lincoln [IMDb] in the film) as well as nominations for various other artistic/technical aspects of the film including best makeup, costume design and art direction.
Despite being a historical "biopic" about the towering figure of Abraham Lincoln, the film is IMHO remarkably timely because it's also largely about the "nuts and bolts" of the political process in a democracy. That is, the film's about the Lincoln Administration's effort in the closing months of the American Civil War (and right after his reelection in 1864) to collect the requisite 2/3 of the votes in the House to pass what became the 13th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, which after being ratified by 3/4 of the States came to outlaw slavery in the United States. And collecting the votes was _not_ an easy task.
Though the Republican Party of the time was abolitionist (indeed largely founded to promote the cause of slavery's abolition) the Democratic Party of the time was "the party of compromise." Indeed the American Civil War was precipitated by the election of Abraham Lincoln as President of the United States (the first Republican ever to be elected to the office). And though the Southern States seceded from the Union as a result, Democrats in the still unionist North remained substantially represented in the Congress and they always counseled moderation to end hostilities between the unionist North and the secessionist South and _perhaps_ restore the union afterwards through some sort of a compromise regarding "States' Rights" / Slavery.
With the fortunes of the war (after 3 grinding years) turning decidedly in the North's favor by late 1864, Lincoln won re-election in November 1864 and the balance of power in the U.S. Congress shifted decidedly in the Republicans' favor. HOWEVER, since there was a fear that the American Civil War may actually end before the inauguration of the new Congress (in February-March 1965) it was decided by the Lincoln Administration to push through the 13th Amendment through Congress _before_ the inauguration of the new Congress. This meant cutting deals with the Democrats who had in the outgoing Congress enough votes to block the measure.
Thus the Lincoln Administration faced a very similar "vote counting" (and arguably "arm twisting" / "vote buying" ...) challenge that has characterized getting anything done in Congress in the United States over the last 20 or so years. (Indeed a year ago, I reviewed a fascinating documentary called How Democracy Works Now on the contemporary political process in the United States where the overwhelming lesson was that of counting (and more to the point, getting) the votes: "to get anything done in the U.S. Congress today, one has to get 60 votes (out of 100) in the Senate.") In Lincoln's time, the challenge was getting 2/3 of the votes in the House.
How would one do that? How would one get members of the opposing party to vote with you? Well Jesus himself told his disciples: "I am sending you like sheep in the midst of wolves; so be shrewd as serpents and simple as doves" (Mt 10:16). And in the film, Lincoln himself admonished an abolitionist purist (played by Tommy Lee Jones) appalled by his Administration's "vote buying" tactics telling the purist: "A compass is certainly valuable in navigation, but it can only tell one which direction is north. It can not tell one anything of the mountains, swamps, rivers and gorges that may separate one from one's goal. So what good is it to head purely in one direction if we only end up in a swamp?" So basically the film advocates a "whatever it takes" approach (hopefully within reason) to get a noble goal accomplished. (And yes, the opponents of a noble cause can also employ similar tactics to block the effort).
In any case, one gets the sense that resolving even something as unambiguously clear (today) as the question of abolishing slavery was difficult to push through Congress (even _after_ hundreds of thousands of deaths on the battle field in service of resolving the question). Can we therefore be surprised that our times may be difficult and "full of noise" as well?
Finally, does this film deserve an "R" rating? To be honest except for a few bad words and a couple of relatively short battle scenes (the story took place in the context of the American Civil War after all) I honestly don't understand why this film got an "R" rating rather than being rated "PG-13." On the other hand, the dialogue itself is rather complex and I don't think that children younger than 7th or 8th grade would really understand it. Still, sometimes the rating system doesn't make sense. So parents, if you have a child who's in junior high or high who's interested in seeing this movie, then please don't hesitate to take him/her to it. The film is excellent and certainly one of the best of the year.
<< NOTE - Do you like what you've been reading here? If you do then consider giving a small donation to this Blog (sugg. $6 _non-recurring_) _every so often_ to continue/further its operation. To donate just CLICK HERE. Thank you! :-) >>
Labels:
adapted,
daniel day lewis,
drama,
historical,
lincoln,
racism,
slavery,
steven spielberg,
tony kushner
Monday, November 12, 2012
The Totentanz. Scenes from the Warsaw Uprising (orig. Taniec śmierci. Sceny z powstania warszawskiego)[2012]
MPAA (UR would be R) Fr. Dennis 4 Stars
Filmweb.pl listing *
The Totentanz. Scenes from the Warsaw Uprising (orig. Taniec śmierci. Sceny z powstania warszawskiego) [FW.pl]* [2012] is an excellent historical film that writer/director Leszek Wosiewicz [IMDb] [FW.pl]*) has been taking to various international festivals over the past several years and the writer/director is still tweaking. He came to the 24th Polish Film Festival in America/Chicago with two versions. The version that I saw was the one that he took to the 16th Annual Shanghai International Film Festival, which he told us was more technique driven. A second more character driven version was to be shown here later in the week.
Growing up, I always associated Polish cinema with basically the war, the war being World War II. And since it took until the fall of Communism in 1989 to begin telling the stories of the war period (and of the subsequent Communist era) in freedom, it was perhaps inevitable that the stories of the past would finally have to come out and explode onscreen in the years following.
So even today it's almost impossible for me to imagine a festival like the 24th Polish Film Festival in America/Chicago to arrive here without a substantial number of films shown still dealing with various aspects of World War II or the subsequent Communist era. This would seem to me to be simply inevitable, cathartic and over time redemptive. Life across Eastern Europe (and then Poland in a special way) was simply awful (approaching the very border of "unbearable") from onset of World War II in 1939 (which began with the Nazi _and_ Soviet invasion of Poland) to the fall of Communist totalitarianism fifty years later.
Then among the various massacres, betrayals and tragedies that occurred over the course of those years, the Warsaw Uprising of 1944 led by the non-Communist/British leaning Polish "Home Army" of partisans and the subsequent Nazi leveling of the city to cruelly beat down the Poles _one last time_ while the British/Americans found that they could do next to nothing and the Soviet army resting (after a major offensive) on the other side of Vistula River from Warsaw (and thus could have done something) _chose_ to do next to nothing, was a tragedy of almost unimaginable proportions.
It is in the truly Apocalypse in the making rubble strewn streets and gutted buildings of Warsaw during the uprising that Leszek Wosiewicz [IMDb] [FW.pl]* tells his story. And he doesn't pull any punches. The overwhelming message of this film would seem to be that in wartime "moral clarity" is for simpletons and idiots. The story is told entirely from the perspectives of the terrified and often pragmatic/scheming civilians hunkering down in the tunnels and basements of Warsaw while the uprising that _they_ didn't call for (but was now being viciously put down) took place all around them.
At the beginning of the film, the 30-something mother of one of the film's principal protagonists declares to the others hiding around her in some basement somewhere in Warsaw that "raped or not raped" she's going to flee the city. And put the exclamation point on her declaration: "And if you think I'm going to resist (being raped) no I'm not. For what? Just to get a bullet in my head?" Yet, there's her 14-15 year old son Marek (played by Rafał Fudalej [FW.pl]*). What to do with him?
She tries to dress him as a woman but realizes that this will be hopeless. The two part with Marek deciding that he's going to try to find his dad who's something of a "big shot" among the resistance leaders somewhere in the center of town. Trying to reach him is something of a suicide mission, but Marek's mother (played by Małgorzata Sadowska [FW.pl]*) knows that _she can't save him_. Perhaps (if he can get to him) his father can. So he and another adolescent boy Tomek, a boy scout (scouts like Tomek had been used by the resistance leaders as message couriers during the uprising) set out to reach the resistance headquarters in the center of town, while Marek's mom sets out to flee the city.
In the course of their journey through mountains of rubble and crushed / gutted buildings with occasional German Stukas bombing overhead, they come across a young woman named Irena (played by Magdalena Cielecka [FW.pl]*) who's about to be hung by a group of terrified Polish civilians who are convinced that she's a German spy. "Wherever you arrive, the bombs arrive soon afterwards," an angry/terrified middle aged woman in a torn, mud-covered frock accuses her. The others already have a noose aaround her neck when Marek steps forward and declares that he knows her and that she's innocent. Actually, he didn't know her at all, but even in the chaos he apparently couldn't bear to watch a small mob of terrified civilians put a young woman to death.
And it turns out that Irena isn't all that innocent. A lifelong resident of Warsaw, she's nevertheless ethnic German. But she's looking for her 10 year old half-Polish/half-German son, who apparently is running around as a courier for the resistance as well. This is because his step-father, lifelong Warsawite and ETHNIC GERMAN AS WELL who Irena had married "to make her son 100% German" ACTUALLY CHOSE TO SIDE WITH THE POLES in the war and as a (now underground) officer in the Polish Army was again a significant member of the resistance. (Who would have imagined...?)
So she is walking among the rubble-strewn streets and gutted basements of Warsaw looking for her son _playing everybody_ trying to find him and then hoping also to get out of the city (in her case presumably with the German army to whom she feels closer). It is her "playing" (or "dancing with") everybody (saying what she has to say, doing what she has to do) gives the film its name "Totentanz" / "Taniec śmierty" ("Death Dance").
Much obviously ensues. How does it turn out? Well ... guess.
I found the film both jarring and brave and then a reminder that "from a distance" on a nice neat map somewhere war perhaps can make sense. However from the level at which this film was made, from the perspectives of the civilians trapped in the horror, it honestly made no sense at all.
* At the time of the writing of this review, machine translation of the text on filmweb.pl links given above appears to work best using the Chrome browser rather than Firefox or MS Explorer.
<< NOTE - Do you like what you've been reading here? If you do then consider giving a small donation to this Blog (sugg. $6 _non-recurring_) _every so often_ to continue/further its operation. To donate just CLICK HERE. Thank you ;-) >>
Filmweb.pl listing *
The Totentanz. Scenes from the Warsaw Uprising (orig. Taniec śmierci. Sceny z powstania warszawskiego) [FW.pl]* [2012] is an excellent historical film that writer/director Leszek Wosiewicz [IMDb] [FW.pl]*) has been taking to various international festivals over the past several years and the writer/director is still tweaking. He came to the 24th Polish Film Festival in America/Chicago with two versions. The version that I saw was the one that he took to the 16th Annual Shanghai International Film Festival, which he told us was more technique driven. A second more character driven version was to be shown here later in the week.
Growing up, I always associated Polish cinema with basically the war, the war being World War II. And since it took until the fall of Communism in 1989 to begin telling the stories of the war period (and of the subsequent Communist era) in freedom, it was perhaps inevitable that the stories of the past would finally have to come out and explode onscreen in the years following.
So even today it's almost impossible for me to imagine a festival like the 24th Polish Film Festival in America/Chicago to arrive here without a substantial number of films shown still dealing with various aspects of World War II or the subsequent Communist era. This would seem to me to be simply inevitable, cathartic and over time redemptive. Life across Eastern Europe (and then Poland in a special way) was simply awful (approaching the very border of "unbearable") from onset of World War II in 1939 (which began with the Nazi _and_ Soviet invasion of Poland) to the fall of Communist totalitarianism fifty years later.
Then among the various massacres, betrayals and tragedies that occurred over the course of those years, the Warsaw Uprising of 1944 led by the non-Communist/British leaning Polish "Home Army" of partisans and the subsequent Nazi leveling of the city to cruelly beat down the Poles _one last time_ while the British/Americans found that they could do next to nothing and the Soviet army resting (after a major offensive) on the other side of Vistula River from Warsaw (and thus could have done something) _chose_ to do next to nothing, was a tragedy of almost unimaginable proportions.
It is in the truly Apocalypse in the making rubble strewn streets and gutted buildings of Warsaw during the uprising that Leszek Wosiewicz [IMDb] [FW.pl]* tells his story. And he doesn't pull any punches. The overwhelming message of this film would seem to be that in wartime "moral clarity" is for simpletons and idiots. The story is told entirely from the perspectives of the terrified and often pragmatic/scheming civilians hunkering down in the tunnels and basements of Warsaw while the uprising that _they_ didn't call for (but was now being viciously put down) took place all around them.
At the beginning of the film, the 30-something mother of one of the film's principal protagonists declares to the others hiding around her in some basement somewhere in Warsaw that "raped or not raped" she's going to flee the city. And put the exclamation point on her declaration: "And if you think I'm going to resist (being raped) no I'm not. For what? Just to get a bullet in my head?" Yet, there's her 14-15 year old son Marek (played by Rafał Fudalej [FW.pl]*). What to do with him?
She tries to dress him as a woman but realizes that this will be hopeless. The two part with Marek deciding that he's going to try to find his dad who's something of a "big shot" among the resistance leaders somewhere in the center of town. Trying to reach him is something of a suicide mission, but Marek's mother (played by Małgorzata Sadowska [FW.pl]*) knows that _she can't save him_. Perhaps (if he can get to him) his father can. So he and another adolescent boy Tomek, a boy scout (scouts like Tomek had been used by the resistance leaders as message couriers during the uprising) set out to reach the resistance headquarters in the center of town, while Marek's mom sets out to flee the city.
In the course of their journey through mountains of rubble and crushed / gutted buildings with occasional German Stukas bombing overhead, they come across a young woman named Irena (played by Magdalena Cielecka [FW.pl]*) who's about to be hung by a group of terrified Polish civilians who are convinced that she's a German spy. "Wherever you arrive, the bombs arrive soon afterwards," an angry/terrified middle aged woman in a torn, mud-covered frock accuses her. The others already have a noose aaround her neck when Marek steps forward and declares that he knows her and that she's innocent. Actually, he didn't know her at all, but even in the chaos he apparently couldn't bear to watch a small mob of terrified civilians put a young woman to death.
And it turns out that Irena isn't all that innocent. A lifelong resident of Warsaw, she's nevertheless ethnic German. But she's looking for her 10 year old half-Polish/half-German son, who apparently is running around as a courier for the resistance as well. This is because his step-father, lifelong Warsawite and ETHNIC GERMAN AS WELL who Irena had married "to make her son 100% German" ACTUALLY CHOSE TO SIDE WITH THE POLES in the war and as a (now underground) officer in the Polish Army was again a significant member of the resistance. (Who would have imagined...?)
So she is walking among the rubble-strewn streets and gutted basements of Warsaw looking for her son _playing everybody_ trying to find him and then hoping also to get out of the city (in her case presumably with the German army to whom she feels closer). It is her "playing" (or "dancing with") everybody (saying what she has to say, doing what she has to do) gives the film its name "Totentanz" / "Taniec śmierty" ("Death Dance").
Much obviously ensues. How does it turn out? Well ... guess.
I found the film both jarring and brave and then a reminder that "from a distance" on a nice neat map somewhere war perhaps can make sense. However from the level at which this film was made, from the perspectives of the civilians trapped in the horror, it honestly made no sense at all.
* At the time of the writing of this review, machine translation of the text on filmweb.pl links given above appears to work best using the Chrome browser rather than Firefox or MS Explorer.
<< NOTE - Do you like what you've been reading here? If you do then consider giving a small donation to this Blog (sugg. $6 _non-recurring_) _every so often_ to continue/further its operation. To donate just CLICK HERE. Thank you ;-) >>
Labels:
drama,
festival,
foreign,
historical,
leszek wosiewicz,
magdalena cielecka,
polish
Saturday, November 10, 2012
Lose to Win (orig. Nad Życie) [2012]
MPAA (UR would be R) Fr. Dennis (4 Stars)
IMDb listing
Filmweb.pl listing*
Lose to Win (orig. Nad Życie) [IMDb] [FW.pl]*(2012) directed by Anna Plutecka-Mesjasz [IMDb][FW.pl]* written by Patrycja Nowak [IMDb] [FW.pl]* and Michał Zasowski [IMDb] [FW.pl]* is a truly remarkable/compelling _pro-Life_ biopic (subtitled) about the life and death in 2008 of Polish volleyball star Agata Mróz-Olszewska [PL-orig] [Eng-Trans] that played recently at the the 24th Polish Film Festival in America/Chicago (Nov 2-16, 2012).
Agata Mróz [PL-orig] [Eng-Trans] (played in the film by Olga Bołądź [IMDb] [FW.pl]*) had played on the Polish national women's volleyball team which won the European championships in 2003 and 2004. She also played professionally (not shown in the film) in both Poland (from 2004-2006) and in Spain (2007) participating on championship teams in both countries. In 2007, she was forced to quit volleyball due to illness (leukemia). Shortly afterward, she married her sweetheart Jacek Olszewski (played in the film by Michał Żebrowski [IMDb] [FW.pl]*) back in Poland. Six months later, while awaiting a donor match for a bone-marrow transplant, the couple announced that they were pregnant. Here Agata decided to suspend treatment for her leukemia (including the search for a bone marrow transplant) while she sought to bring her child term. The child, Liliana, was born healthy if prematurely 4 months later. Immediately afterwards, Agata underwent the requisite chemotheraphy and died a few months later of an infection, despite being in prescribed isolation, while her immune system was recovering from the chemotherapy.
The question that Agata faced when she first found out that she was pregnant was, of course, whether or not to have an abortion. She was gravely ill, most of the medical team treating her cancer counseled against her suspending treatment to try to bring the child to term. (And even from the perspective of Catholic teaching, most moralists would take the position that she would have the right to pursue treatment for her cancer even if this would result in the death of the unborn child).
Postponing treatment did put her in significantly greater risk of dieing of leukemia before the child was born. She died after having given birth to her (healthy if premature) child. However, she didn't really die as a result of her pregnancy or of her postponing of her cancer treatment. Instead, she died as a result of an infection that she would have been susceptible to _in any case_ as a result of cancer treatment. That is, she could have aborted her child and then died of the cancer/infection caused by the treatment _anyway_. Her legacy now is her child that she did bring to birth, and in their child, Jacek has some lasting remembrance of his/Agata's love.
Agata's case _does_ give us much to think about: If one is staring at death anyway, why not take the chance of leaving something that would survive us after we're gone. I do think that I understand why she made the brave choice (for the life of her child) that she did.
* At the time of the writing of this review, machine translation of the text on filmweb.pl links given above appears to work best using the Chrome browser rather than Firefox or MS Explorer.
<< NOTE - Do you like what you've been reading here? If you do then consider giving a small donation to this Blog (sugg. $6 _non-recurring_) _every so often_ to continue/further its operation. To donate just CLICK HERE. Thank you ;-) >>
IMDb listing
Filmweb.pl listing*
Lose to Win (orig. Nad Życie) [IMDb] [FW.pl]*(2012) directed by Anna Plutecka-Mesjasz [IMDb][FW.pl]* written by Patrycja Nowak [IMDb] [FW.pl]* and Michał Zasowski [IMDb] [FW.pl]* is a truly remarkable/compelling _pro-Life_ biopic (subtitled) about the life and death in 2008 of Polish volleyball star Agata Mróz-Olszewska [PL-orig] [Eng-Trans] that played recently at the the 24th Polish Film Festival in America/Chicago (Nov 2-16, 2012).
Agata Mróz [PL-orig] [Eng-Trans] (played in the film by Olga Bołądź [IMDb] [FW.pl]*) had played on the Polish national women's volleyball team which won the European championships in 2003 and 2004. She also played professionally (not shown in the film) in both Poland (from 2004-2006) and in Spain (2007) participating on championship teams in both countries. In 2007, she was forced to quit volleyball due to illness (leukemia). Shortly afterward, she married her sweetheart Jacek Olszewski (played in the film by Michał Żebrowski [IMDb] [FW.pl]*) back in Poland. Six months later, while awaiting a donor match for a bone-marrow transplant, the couple announced that they were pregnant. Here Agata decided to suspend treatment for her leukemia (including the search for a bone marrow transplant) while she sought to bring her child term. The child, Liliana, was born healthy if prematurely 4 months later. Immediately afterwards, Agata underwent the requisite chemotheraphy and died a few months later of an infection, despite being in prescribed isolation, while her immune system was recovering from the chemotherapy.
The question that Agata faced when she first found out that she was pregnant was, of course, whether or not to have an abortion. She was gravely ill, most of the medical team treating her cancer counseled against her suspending treatment to try to bring the child to term. (And even from the perspective of Catholic teaching, most moralists would take the position that she would have the right to pursue treatment for her cancer even if this would result in the death of the unborn child).
Postponing treatment did put her in significantly greater risk of dieing of leukemia before the child was born. She died after having given birth to her (healthy if premature) child. However, she didn't really die as a result of her pregnancy or of her postponing of her cancer treatment. Instead, she died as a result of an infection that she would have been susceptible to _in any case_ as a result of cancer treatment. That is, she could have aborted her child and then died of the cancer/infection caused by the treatment _anyway_. Her legacy now is her child that she did bring to birth, and in their child, Jacek has some lasting remembrance of his/Agata's love.
Agata's case _does_ give us much to think about: If one is staring at death anyway, why not take the chance of leaving something that would survive us after we're gone. I do think that I understand why she made the brave choice (for the life of her child) that she did.
* At the time of the writing of this review, machine translation of the text on filmweb.pl links given above appears to work best using the Chrome browser rather than Firefox or MS Explorer.
<< NOTE - Do you like what you've been reading here? If you do then consider giving a small donation to this Blog (sugg. $6 _non-recurring_) _every so often_ to continue/further its operation. To donate just CLICK HERE. Thank you ;-) >>
Labels:
agata mroz,
agata mroz-olszewska,
anna plutecka-mesjasz,
biography,
biopic,
drama,
festival,
foreign,
michal zasowski,
michal zebrowski,
olga boladz,
patrycja nowak,
polish,
pro-life,
romance
Friday, November 9, 2012
Skyfall [2012]
MPAA (PG-13) CNS/USCCB (A-III) Roger Ebert (4 Stars) Fr. Dennis (3 1/2 Stars)
IMDb listing
CNS/USCCB review
Roger Ebert's review
Skyfall (directed by Sam Mendes, written by Neal Purvis, Robert Wade and John Logan, characters based, of course, on the James Bond series of books by Ian Flemming [IMDb]) had much to live up to. After all, this film comes out on the 50th anniversary year of the release of first James Bond [IMDb] movie, Dr. No [1962].
Over those five decades, the character, played by numerous actors [IMDb]-- Sean Connery (1962-1967, 1971, 1983), George Lazenby (1969), Roger Moore (1973-1985), Timothy Dalton (1987-89), Pierce Brosnan (1997-2002 ), and most recently Daniel Craig (2006-2012) -- has inspired the imagination of action film lovers the world over (heck even the CNS/USCCB routinely gives this certainly violent (he has a "license to kill" after all ...) and legendarily promiscuous character's films A-III ratings rather than the L's or O's that it would certainly give "lesser characters" ...), and endured several crises. In the later Roger Moore years, the question was raised whether a womanizing James Bond could really work in a post-Feminist world of gender equality. Part of what makes the current film, Skyfall, as good as it is, is that it confronts head-on another threat to James Bond's continued "relevance": In a world of computer hacking / cyber terrorism and "signals intelligence" is there really a need for a British secret agent "out in the field" "with an exploding pen?" ;-). This question is directly asked in the film by the film's new "Q" (played by Ben Whishaw as a "fresh out of college, computer whiz" ;-) who clearly still "kinda likes" James Bond but also appears to find him "a bit of a dinasaur" and certainly "a distraction" to following "the bad-guys" through computer hacks in the cyber shadows of the internet.
Indeed, the chief "bad guy" in this film, IMHO the _best_ in years, is an exotically accented, creepily bleached blond computer hacker named Silva (played by Javier Bardem) out to wreak personal revenge on "M" (played in fascinatingly "motherly" fashion over the past several James Bond films by Judy Dench). Bardem's "Silva" obviously evokes the bleach blond, exotically accented wiki-leaks founder Julian Assange who the American comedy show Saturday Night Live has pegged _for years_ as a villain cut from a James Bond story but existing in real life ;-).
The film therefore begins with James Bond and a young protege' whose first name is Eve (played by Naomie Harris) involved in a spectacular chase scene on the streets and rooftops of Istanbul (It must have been rather chaotic in Istanbul in recent years as a similar chase scene was recently featured in Liam Neeson's Taken 2 ;-), with the two chasing (with real-time coordination with "M" and her advisers back at MI6 HQ in London) a man with a stolen hard-drive containing the names of all of British Intelligence's "embedded agents" across the Middle East. The sequence ends with Eve on direction from "M" taking a shot that hits James Bond instead of the man with the hard drive and the villain gets away. So how cut out is Eve for "field work" when she ends up shooting her partner instead of the bad guy? That becomes one of the subplots that runs through the rest of the film ... ;-)
However, the main thread deals with following the hard drive (and its contents) to the villain who contracted it, and ... with some justification the story then treks to some stock/updated "James Bond worthy" exotic locations centered in China including Shanghai, Macao, Hong Kong. China is of course notorious for its computer hacking and (by reputation) the home of all kinds of potentially murky criminal organizations that again would be worthy of a James Bond plot. Then all three cities -- Shanghai, Macao and Hong Kong -- have enough ties to a not exactly savory colonialist past to offer plenty of fodder for conspiracies that are truly global in proportion. (Remember SPECTRE of the Ian Flemming's original James Bond books which was made up of creepy cat-petting "industrialists" hatching their dasterdly plots from spectacularly exotic, cliff-side chalets perched high in the Swiss Alps ;-). The same exotic cat-petting creepiness could now be replicated in the upper tiers of some of the spectacularly tall and exotically shaped skyscrapers dotting the skylines of cities across all of East Asia).
So of course, much ensues ... including a subplot involving James Bond and an exotic South Asian looking woman (Is she supposed to be Chinese, Indian, Malay, Franco-Vietnamese...? played by Bérénice Marlohe) who comes to make for a new interesting / poignant take on the series' "Bond Girl" phenomenon).
After a devastating cyber attack on MI6 itself, "M" finds herself under ever greater Parliamentary scrutiny led by "a civilian overseer" named interestingly "Garth Mallory" (played by Robert Finnes) who plays an increasing role as a the film progresses...
Finally in this film, released for the 50th anniversary of the anniversary of the release of the first James Bond movie, Dr. No [1962], we're treated to some of James Bond's "back story" during the course of the film. Where did he come from? What was some of his childhood like? To be honest, I found this part of the film weak and rather unnecessary (and for this reason give the film 3 1/2 stars rather than the 4 that most critics do). Still with Judy Dench playing the "M" character in a somewhat "motherly" fashion (NO she's _not_ his real mother ...) I suppose an exploration of James Bond's "early years" become fair (if IMHO unnecessary) game...
All in all, this is a very good James Bond film, that both excites and leaves one with a good deal to think about. I would have played with the last 20 or so minutes of the film differently. But that's just one person's opinion and I thought that the rest of the film was truly excellent and in any case _most worthy_ of the franchise's 50th anniversary!
<< NOTE - Do you like what you've been reading here? If you do then consider giving a small donation to this Blog (sugg. $6 _non-recurring_) _every so often_ to continue/further its operation. To donate just CLICK HERE. Thank you ;-) >>
IMDb listing
CNS/USCCB review
Roger Ebert's review
Skyfall (directed by Sam Mendes, written by Neal Purvis, Robert Wade and John Logan, characters based, of course, on the James Bond series of books by Ian Flemming [IMDb]) had much to live up to. After all, this film comes out on the 50th anniversary year of the release of first James Bond [IMDb] movie, Dr. No [1962].
Over those five decades, the character, played by numerous actors [IMDb]-- Sean Connery (1962-1967, 1971, 1983), George Lazenby (1969), Roger Moore (1973-1985), Timothy Dalton (1987-89), Pierce Brosnan (1997-2002 ), and most recently Daniel Craig (2006-2012) -- has inspired the imagination of action film lovers the world over (heck even the CNS/USCCB routinely gives this certainly violent (he has a "license to kill" after all ...) and legendarily promiscuous character's films A-III ratings rather than the L's or O's that it would certainly give "lesser characters" ...), and endured several crises. In the later Roger Moore years, the question was raised whether a womanizing James Bond could really work in a post-Feminist world of gender equality. Part of what makes the current film, Skyfall, as good as it is, is that it confronts head-on another threat to James Bond's continued "relevance": In a world of computer hacking / cyber terrorism and "signals intelligence" is there really a need for a British secret agent "out in the field" "with an exploding pen?" ;-). This question is directly asked in the film by the film's new "Q" (played by Ben Whishaw as a "fresh out of college, computer whiz" ;-) who clearly still "kinda likes" James Bond but also appears to find him "a bit of a dinasaur" and certainly "a distraction" to following "the bad-guys" through computer hacks in the cyber shadows of the internet.
Indeed, the chief "bad guy" in this film, IMHO the _best_ in years, is an exotically accented, creepily bleached blond computer hacker named Silva (played by Javier Bardem) out to wreak personal revenge on "M" (played in fascinatingly "motherly" fashion over the past several James Bond films by Judy Dench). Bardem's "Silva" obviously evokes the bleach blond, exotically accented wiki-leaks founder Julian Assange who the American comedy show Saturday Night Live has pegged _for years_ as a villain cut from a James Bond story but existing in real life ;-).
The film therefore begins with James Bond and a young protege' whose first name is Eve (played by Naomie Harris) involved in a spectacular chase scene on the streets and rooftops of Istanbul (It must have been rather chaotic in Istanbul in recent years as a similar chase scene was recently featured in Liam Neeson's Taken 2 ;-), with the two chasing (with real-time coordination with "M" and her advisers back at MI6 HQ in London) a man with a stolen hard-drive containing the names of all of British Intelligence's "embedded agents" across the Middle East. The sequence ends with Eve on direction from "M" taking a shot that hits James Bond instead of the man with the hard drive and the villain gets away. So how cut out is Eve for "field work" when she ends up shooting her partner instead of the bad guy? That becomes one of the subplots that runs through the rest of the film ... ;-)
However, the main thread deals with following the hard drive (and its contents) to the villain who contracted it, and ... with some justification the story then treks to some stock/updated "James Bond worthy" exotic locations centered in China including Shanghai, Macao, Hong Kong. China is of course notorious for its computer hacking and (by reputation) the home of all kinds of potentially murky criminal organizations that again would be worthy of a James Bond plot. Then all three cities -- Shanghai, Macao and Hong Kong -- have enough ties to a not exactly savory colonialist past to offer plenty of fodder for conspiracies that are truly global in proportion. (Remember SPECTRE of the Ian Flemming's original James Bond books which was made up of creepy cat-petting "industrialists" hatching their dasterdly plots from spectacularly exotic, cliff-side chalets perched high in the Swiss Alps ;-). The same exotic cat-petting creepiness could now be replicated in the upper tiers of some of the spectacularly tall and exotically shaped skyscrapers dotting the skylines of cities across all of East Asia).
So of course, much ensues ... including a subplot involving James Bond and an exotic South Asian looking woman (Is she supposed to be Chinese, Indian, Malay, Franco-Vietnamese...? played by Bérénice Marlohe) who comes to make for a new interesting / poignant take on the series' "Bond Girl" phenomenon).
After a devastating cyber attack on MI6 itself, "M" finds herself under ever greater Parliamentary scrutiny led by "a civilian overseer" named interestingly "Garth Mallory" (played by Robert Finnes) who plays an increasing role as a the film progresses...
Finally in this film, released for the 50th anniversary of the anniversary of the release of the first James Bond movie, Dr. No [1962], we're treated to some of James Bond's "back story" during the course of the film. Where did he come from? What was some of his childhood like? To be honest, I found this part of the film weak and rather unnecessary (and for this reason give the film 3 1/2 stars rather than the 4 that most critics do). Still with Judy Dench playing the "M" character in a somewhat "motherly" fashion (NO she's _not_ his real mother ...) I suppose an exploration of James Bond's "early years" become fair (if IMHO unnecessary) game...
All in all, this is a very good James Bond film, that both excites and leaves one with a good deal to think about. I would have played with the last 20 or so minutes of the film differently. But that's just one person's opinion and I thought that the rest of the film was truly excellent and in any case _most worthy_ of the franchise's 50th anniversary!
<< NOTE - Do you like what you've been reading here? If you do then consider giving a small donation to this Blog (sugg. $6 _non-recurring_) _every so often_ to continue/further its operation. To donate just CLICK HERE. Thank you ;-) >>
Labels:
007,
ben whishaw,
berenice marlohe,
daniel craig,
james bond,
javier bardem,
judy dench,
naomie harris,
neal purvis,
robert finnes,
robert wade,
sam mendez,
spy,
thriller
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)