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Review: Che: Special Roadshow Edition

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Steven Soderbergh’s attitude toward his biography of the two most significant passages in the life of Che Guevara as an Argentine doctor transformed into guerilla fighter—Cuba, Bolivia—is that a movie on such a freighted, fraught subject that did not offend one set of bystanders or another wouldn’t be very good at all. What he’s done is create two distinctly different movies (which were once, post-Cannes, pre-Toronto, two movies called “The Argentine” and “Guerilla”) with a fierce central performance (by Benicio del Toro), which deal with the process of social transformation, one successful in its moment, the other a failure and fatal. At one point in the years it took this approach to make it to the screen, Terence Malick was slated to direct. Soderbergh compares the poetic, jungle-mad version Malick might have crafted to his own style, with the two films we have now as “a blunt instrument.” Shot with a prototype digital video camera that was in his hands for only hours before going to South America, Soderbergh as director, cinematographer and camera operator does amazing things: the textures of the visual style derive from documentary but have their own fresh way with surface; the intimacy of the camerawork is tactile even in the moments of disenchantment, and his decision to keep Che within groupings in the frame—in a social context, within the struggle, within the battles, let’s say—rather than isolated as a singular protagonist, as a “hero” on his personal “journey,” which would be the fashion in a conventional American film biography, is canny and key. Too much cannot be said about Alberto Iglesias’ remarkable, beautiful score, which provides emotional undercurrent and patches of mood to sometimes-austere passages. The politics? Viewers will bring their own. “Che”‘s takeaway? Process works until it doesn’t. Transformative intelligence persists. The rest of us die or are killed. And Del Toro? Si. Si. Si. (Ray Pride)

“Che: Special Roadshow Edition” opens Friday at Landmark Century, commercial- and trailer-free, with souvenir booklet and a thirty-minute intermission. Soderbergh and I talk about the use of the prototype RED camera here.

 


Newcity’s Top 5 of Everything 2008: Film

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Top 5 Domestic Filmsslumdog-1

“The Dark Knight,” Christopher Nolan

“Che,” Steven Soderbergh

“Paranoid Park,” Gus Van Sant

“Rachel Getting Married,” Jonathan Demme

“Ballast,” Lance Hammer

—Ray Pride

Top 5 Foreign Films

“Man on Wire,” James Marsh

“Reprise,” Joachim Trier

“Happy-Go-Lucky,” Mike Leigh

“Slumdog Millionaire,” Danny Boyle

“A Christmas Tale,” Arnaud Desplechin

—Ray Pride

Top 5 Films

“Slumdog Millionaire,” Danny Boyle

“Ballast,” Lance Hammer

“Hunger,” Steve McQueen

“The Dark Knight,” Christopher Nolan

“In The City of Sylvia,” Jose Luis Guerin

—Bill Stamets

Top 5 Films

“Milk,” Gus Vant Sant

“The Dark Knight,” Christopher Nolan

“Man on Wire,” James Marsh

“Let the Right One In,” Tomas Alfredson

“Rachel Getting Married,” Jonathan Demme

—Tom Lynch

Top 5 Performances – Female

Sally Hawkins, “Happy-Go-Lucky”

Melissa Leo, “Frozen River”

Kristin Scott Thomas, “I’ve Loved You So Long”

Kate Winslet, “Revolutionary Road”

Kat Dennings, “Nick and Norah’s Infinite Playlist”

—Ray Pride

Top 5 Performances – Male

Benicio Del Toro, “Che”

Sean Penn, “Milk”

Mathieu Amalric, “A Christmas Tale”

Michel Blanc, “The Witnesses”

Ben Kingsley, “Elegy”

—Ray Pride

Top 5 Supporting Performances – Female

Ann Savage, “My Winnipeg”

Nurgul Yesilcay, “The Edge of Heaven”

Viola Davis, “Doubt”

Penelope Cruz, “Vicky Cristina Barcelona”

Zoe Kazan, “Revolutionary Road”

—Ray Pride

Top 5 Supporting Performances – Male

Michael Shannon, “Revolutionary Road,” “Shotgun Stories”

Danny McBride, “Pineapple Express”

Richard Dreyfuss, “W.”

Toby Jones, “W.”

Anil Kapoor, “Slumdog Millionaire”

—Ray Pride

Top 5 Directors

Mike Leigh, “Happy-Go-Lucky”

Joachim Trier, “Reprise”

Danny Boyle, “Slumdog Millionaire”

Tomas Alfredson, “Let the Right One In”

James Marsh, “Man on Wire”

—Ray Pride

Top 5 Screenplays

Fatih Akin, “The Edge Of Heaven”

Joachim Trier and Eskil Vogt, “Reprise”

Simon Beaufoy, “Slumdog Millionaire”

Charlie Kaufman, “Synecdoche, New York”

Martin McDonagh, “In Bruges”

—Ray Pride

Top 5 Domestic Documentaries

“Encounters at the End of the World,” Werner Herzog

“The Order of Myths,” Margaret Brown

“At The Death House Door,” Steve James, Peter Gilbert

“The Unforeseen,” Laura Dunn

“Dear Zachary: A Letter to a Son About His Father,” Kurt Kuenne

—Ray Pride

Top 5 Foreign Documentaries

“Man On Wire,” James Marsh

“Of Time and the City,” Terence Davies

“Waltz With Bashir,” Ari Folman

“Up the Yangtze,” Yung Chang

“Young@Heart,” Stephen Walker

—Ray Pride

Top 5 Follies

“Speed Racer,” The Wachowski brothers

“The Fall,” Tarsem

“Adam Resurrected,” Paul Schrader

“Australia,” Baz Luhrmann

“My Blueberry Nights,” Wong Kar-wai

—Ray Pride

Top 5 Films You Can’t See Yet

“24 City,” Jia Zhang-Ke

“35 Shots Of Rum,” Claire Denis

“The English Surgeon,” Geoffrey Smith

“Liverpool,” Lisandro Alonso

“Voy a Explotar (I’m Going to Explode),” Gerardo Naranjo

—Ray Pride

 

Review: Take

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The comeback of Minnie Driver! (Who knew she’d ever been here?) Life used to be a cabaret, but now it’s an intersection, my friend. In the atrocious, oppressive slab of unearned miserablism written and directed by Charles Oliver, “Take,” Driver’s Ana, a single mother of a developmentally disabled boy, crosses paths with a loser, Saul (Jeremy Renner, “28 Weeks Later,” “The Assassination of Jesse James by The Coward Robert Ford”) and they live their lives in parallel tracks of redemption and crime. Working in a visual style devolved from both Soderbergh and Gonzalez Inarritu, Oliver’s confused editing is matched by his confounding apparent empathy for both murderers and the amply deluded. Even more than what’s stashed and moldering in Ana’s trunk, the ending is horseshit. 99m. Widescreen. (Ray Pride)