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8/10
A Kind of Salinger/Lynch Sundae with the Cute Emile Hirsh as Lead
17 April 2007
Warning: Spoilers
As Salinger's "A Perfect Day for Bananafish" ends with the suicide of a prodigy, this movie opens with the death of the star high school swimmer legend, Matt, who shoots himself in the head with a revolver after in the opening scene. But the death of Matt Travis serves as a key to unlock the door of another prodigy, his brother, Tim who never in his life seriously bothered with the question, "What am I going to do?"

When he finds his brother dead, his head broken like a dropped watermelon, the Travis family starts vomiting out its secrets one by one. The film focuses on Tim. He is a victim of bullying, domestic abuse, family alienation, heartbreak, issues of sexuality and friendship.

Tim reveals his wounds by physical bruises, but these are not the only injuries to his person, as we slowly come to realize, as the script painfully unveils the origins and outcome of Tim scars. Everyone who loves him hurts him. Hirsch plays out the character quite well, revealing frame after frame in the visual expression of his body, a host of conflicting emotions inside the soul of a kid whom no one seems to listen to or know very well, unknowing and unaware of his depth of soul and prodigious talent.

Two siblings sharing a doobie, curled up on a red, spinnable playground saucer, Tim asks Penny, "What am I going to do with the rest of my life?" The scene is framed in a familiar, recurring image of the film: the comfortable playground where Tim obviously feels at home, filmed from a bird's eye view, because with every character Tim feels comfortable to share a part of himself, and we view these intimate moments he shares in the red, spinnable playground saucer, complete with childish graffiti carved in pencil, from above. After advising him curtly to pass the joint, Penny tells him, "Tim, well, the secret to the success of life is to find something you love. And you have to do that for the rest of your life … And you better hope to hell that you're good at it because if you're not then you'll probably fail." This simple line of advice from Penny serves as the movie's central theme, the responsibility of talent and the possibility of failure. Why does one person have a talent he cannot stand, like Matt, who hated the attention his swimming fame brought, but no one notices Tim's talent – no one – because no one bothers to ask him? Not even us. The film makes us aware that we ourselves do not know Tim as well as we thought we did when we first meet this handsome, sad, guy; in our intimate understanding of Tim, as it progresses, we are reminded that not everyone is as they seem to be. This is the other side of the film, the failure of those who should – parents, friends, teachers – whoever – to notice and see the gifts of the people they claim to love. Not even his mother Sandy, played by Sigourney Weaver, sees Tim's gift, despite her love for her son. Weaver does a deft job of a middle-aged woman grappling with her own inner demons as she haphazardly tries to play the roles of domesticity and support. When Tim is found to be bullied at school, she storms the boy's trailer, threatening his life, "You can tease, torture, punch, drive drunk with me, I can forgive you. Hell I can understand it, I'm a good Christian, you know, I can forgive and forget, but you mess with my kid and may God himself descend from heaven to protect you because as long as I live – and I will outlive you all – I will wake up and go to sleep at night just dreaming of ways to make your petty insignificant lives into hell on earth." After flicking a paper cup into the mother's face, she looks around the trailer, and looking at them both, the kid and his stunned mother, comments, "nice trailer" and leaves as quickly as she came. Weaver scores in her ability to match gusto with visceral wit that is acid and witty. And Tim's father, played by Jeff Daniels, is blind to who his son is, treating him like a stranger, not telling his family that he took time off from the office, spending his days in the city park, listless, a carved out soul, and sleeping in Matt's bed, tucked in with his high school letter jacket. Jeff Daniels does a superb job of making us believe that he can be both a bastard and lovable because, we grow to see that even an inept father can show his love for his son. In an emotional scene, Tim confronts his father. Just when you think his dad is going to hit him, he grabs for him to embrace him. Not letting him go, he tells Tim, "I am your father and you're are my son and I'm here okay but you've gotta talk to me. I don't know how to do this by myself". It is here at this moment in the film that a father tells his son, you have to tell me what's going on inside of you, you have to tell me who you are; I want to know who you are. It is in this scene that the film reaches a cathartic moment, the visual movement from Tim, angry and alone, to his father embracing him as he breaks downs and weeps, revealing the emotions hidden beneath his shell. Tim experiences this moment of cleansing with his dad as a catharsis, especially when you consider the mistreatment, manipulation, disregard, violence and betrayal he has been dealt in the long year the film encompasses. I recommend this film.
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Billy Elliot (2000)
10/10
A story of a boy.
26 January 2001
There is something about a boy's story as depicted in film. It evokes our own coming of age, a cathartic moment sometimes that brings us to tears -- to see on film the events that oftentimes have touched our own lives, though I am sure few of us have found ourselves in the same situation as Billy, he still touches us -- because many of us have lost a parent, lived in confining conditions and have had dreams. Many of us have had touching friendships and demanding, but loving teachers. That is the power of Billy Elliot -- the story of one boy can surface our own memories, bring a tear as well. Maybe that is why when I went to see the film me, and my friends were all crying by the closing credits! I fell in love with Billy and his story.

The innocence of a child with a vision was best seen by this reviewer in Cinema Paradiso (I during that film too!). In Billy Elliot, the power of a child with a passion, with electrical desire to dance despite his situation as a poor boy living in the mining town of Durham, England is wrenchingly powerful. Together with totally mesmerizing acting jobs and magical and an upbeat soundtrack the movie takes you away from wherever you are and places you right in the life of Billy Elliot. I laud Stephen Daltry, Lee Hall Jamie Bell and the whole crew for their superb job in film craftsmanship. It is a film to touch and soften the sourest and brittlest of hearts.
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Magnolia (1999)
10/10
change is a reality we must accept
31 May 2000
Magnolia is a movie about change. Philosophical studies on change range from the observation that all things change yet some things never change. The eight-year old "me" is radically different from the thirty-three year old. We all go through change and we must accept it as a reality. Everyone knows the song, "Everything Changes". Change happens when we wake up and change happens when we go to sleep. Scientists do experiments on change. Biologists study frogs and eighth graders dissect them. Some of the students pass out after dissecting frogs; this too is a change. Is it evolution or Genesis? Which is the best "change" indicator? Some questions leave us scratching our butts without a reason why. Magnolia is about change.
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8/10
Not as Good as Cinema Paradiso
28 December 1998
This film is definitely different in perspective on family life compared to "Cinema Paradiso". It is not as sentimental, but very real. The viewer is able to see everything in the father's eyes, played by Marcello Mastroianni. When he sees his children, he sees them how they once were -- not as adults. Mastroianni is always excellent. It is funny though to see him as a father and a grandfather when one is so used to seeing him as a bachelor, like in "La Dolce Vita". I was able to feel the love he had for his children and also the hurt when the truth was brought out in front of him. We all want so much for our children and it is painful to see it otherwise. An excellent statement. Besides the message the film brought, it also gave the viewer a good dose of the Italian countryside, Roma, and Milano. The travel scenes were an added touch. Nothing can beat "Cinema Paradiso" in tenderness, but "Stanno tutti bene" is not too far off!
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10/10
I am attempting to capsulate the best film ever made.
1 October 1998
This film is the best film ever made, be it Swedish or American. It goes beyond the normal bounds of film making to bring a profound, often harrowing, message to the viewer. The philosophical implication of death and the existence of God is toyed with. The eerie portrayal of Death with a black cape has become a symbol within itself. When the crusader plays Chess with Death, in the hopes of prolonging his life, so he can do that one good thing--I was on the edge of my seat. The mesmorizing confessional scene is cinemagraphic genious. There are many gems, for movie makers, in this film. It is a great display of cinema art and philosophical "de profundis". The Seventh Seal crosses all boundaries. It is a film both endearing and frightening. I can watch it again and again, and be blown away by its magnitude.
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