Meade's Ball
Well-known member
Day 2 at the festival and a trio of films viewed. I'll be brief. Or try to be.
Child's Pose: a Romanian film that has a satiristic take on the upper middle classes there. A spoilt son that looks in his early 30s commits a crime he ought to be jailed for against the ordinary, but his fur-coated mother continues to carry out her own investigation, slow using the money-desperate corruption that streams through most authority figures to buy his innocence. It had some good scenes certainly and some amusing parts in amongst the rather horrible tale of guilt being wiped clean, but i wasn't wholly gripped or thrilled by it. It was good at times though.
Borgman: er, what? A dutch film about this troop of strange travellers led by Camiel, a chap who has eerily persuasive powers and routines and surgical procedures, slowly taking control of the house of a generally well-to-do family. It's meant to be blackly comic, and it's odd beside that, or wants to be, but the metaphor being told wasn't too clear and the comedy died out quite early on to make it more dreary and flatly absurd as it went. Meh.
Gravity 3D: now that is a visual spectacle. Wowzer! A technical wondershow. Sandra Bullock as a green science-expert astronaut up there fixing some bugs on a satellite with the the delightfully charming and cheeky space-veteran George Clooney. There's no background story. Just them floating in space with the earth spectacular beneath them, when a machinegun shower of debris strikes and separates Bullock, her spinning into the pit of endless darkness that surrounds her. The first mission is to save her and then various catastrophes follow, but you accept them thanks to the constant glory of all seen. Such an amazing show for graphics and movement of camera and that awful feeling of being trapped and breathless, but in a spacescape so heavenly that you think it wouldn't be so bad a place to drift off and die. The action is constant and the suspense without end. The music at the close got on my wick a little, but overall a memorable spectacular far and away best for the big screen.
Child's Pose: a Romanian film that has a satiristic take on the upper middle classes there. A spoilt son that looks in his early 30s commits a crime he ought to be jailed for against the ordinary, but his fur-coated mother continues to carry out her own investigation, slow using the money-desperate corruption that streams through most authority figures to buy his innocence. It had some good scenes certainly and some amusing parts in amongst the rather horrible tale of guilt being wiped clean, but i wasn't wholly gripped or thrilled by it. It was good at times though.
Borgman: er, what? A dutch film about this troop of strange travellers led by Camiel, a chap who has eerily persuasive powers and routines and surgical procedures, slowly taking control of the house of a generally well-to-do family. It's meant to be blackly comic, and it's odd beside that, or wants to be, but the metaphor being told wasn't too clear and the comedy died out quite early on to make it more dreary and flatly absurd as it went. Meh.
Gravity 3D: now that is a visual spectacle. Wowzer! A technical wondershow. Sandra Bullock as a green science-expert astronaut up there fixing some bugs on a satellite with the the delightfully charming and cheeky space-veteran George Clooney. There's no background story. Just them floating in space with the earth spectacular beneath them, when a machinegun shower of debris strikes and separates Bullock, her spinning into the pit of endless darkness that surrounds her. The first mission is to save her and then various catastrophes follow, but you accept them thanks to the constant glory of all seen. Such an amazing show for graphics and movement of camera and that awful feeling of being trapped and breathless, but in a spacescape so heavenly that you think it wouldn't be so bad a place to drift off and die. The action is constant and the suspense without end. The music at the close got on my wick a little, but overall a memorable spectacular far and away best for the big screen.