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The Tracey Fragments

June 3rd 2008 22:33
Ellen Page in The Tracey Fragments sitting with her psychiatrist
Last year, famed Canadian director Bruce McDonald released "The Tracey Fragments", a movie about adolescent malaise starring Ellen Page, the Juno-darling.

Page plays Tracey Berkowitz, a distressed teenage girl, known in her school as 'the girl with no tits', distrusted by her parents, looked down upon by her psychiatrist and, like many adolescents, trying to find their way in the world, recklessly unstable.

McDonald recreates the splintered memory of painful teenage years by fashioning the movie with slick editing. Every scene in the movie is broken into 'fragments', small, divided screens that show repeated clips, or ancilliary footage. A.O. Scott wrote, in the New York Times,

"When split-screen techniques are used in films like the original version of "The Thomas Crown Affair", "Timecode" and "Conversations With Other Women", it is usually so that the audience can see the same action, simultaneously, from different angles. Mr. McDonald does some of this, but more often he shatters and scatters images to amplify their expressive power, and to induce a state of sensory and cognitive overload analogous to Tracey's troubled consciousness."

It's a bit of a gimmick, and my first instinct was to turn the movie off, as I'm not one to be drawn in by editing and indie-quirk. The film looked like it was aiming to sit on the pedestal with "Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind" and "Donny Darko", with enough odd, jumbled narration to give it status. "The Tracey Fragments" proved to be hard to turn away from, though... the beginning is dischordant and scattered, like the quickly fading strands of a bad dream.

Slowly, we're drawn into the story, piecing together the fragments like a detective in some old movie. Tracey is a loner, not by choice, but because she's an outcast and doesn't fit the mold. Her little brother goes missing one day, and she roams the Winnipeg night, riding buses.

She fantasizes about an imaginary relationship with the new boy in class, Billy Zero, who she imagines to be a wildly popular indie rocker, who protects her from the bullying of the full-breasted harridans that plague her.



"The Tracey Fragments" is based on a novel by Maureen Medved, but McDonald puts his stamp on the film, encasing it in fierce Canadian indie music, soundtracked by Broken Social Scene. Certain sequences in Tracey's imagination go beyond the film, capturing the sense of reborn Sex Pistols mania.

It's a bleak film, shot in the Manitoba winter, but there's enough dark humour, Canadian-style black Canadian humour to keep the movie fresh and alive. "The Tracey Fragments" is a mesmerizing, schizophrenic memory of what it felt like to be young and alone, with only music to offer you solace, and dreams of riding off into the night on the back of Billy Zero's motorcycle to keep you warm.

"The Tracey Fragments" is available in Australia from Siren Visual.

I say: An excellent modern feature from Bruce McDonald, whose punk rock touch is evident on this movie.

See it for: Page tries to play the scorned loser, but she's still too cute to pull it off. In one scene, she dresses up for school and almost looks stunning.

89
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Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull

It's been a long time since Steven Spielberg and George Lucas sat down together to give adoring fans another hit of Indiana Jones. "Raiders of the Lost Ark" came out in 1981, as a fun side-project for the two directors, but ended up being a massive hit, resonating with the legions of young boys and girls that crave adventure.

"Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull" extends the trilogy into a fourth entry, using the fact that Harrison Ford is getting old to its advantage. This Indiana Jones is older, stiffer and surlier; nonetheless, in between teaching classes at some remarkably beautiful university, he still has time to don his trademark hat and whip in search of mythical archaeological treasures.

One thing that Spielberg and Lucas bring to the show is the big budget, and Spielberg, in particular, seems obsessed with replicating the look of the era, 1950s America, when the Cold War was warming up its chilly tendrils and anti-Communist paranoia was whipping up into a frenzy. As a period piece, it's almost unmatched in scale, with the street filled with classic cars, and the buildings restored to their nostalgic glory. It's a pleasant departure from the typical Americans-vs-Nazis plot that filled the previous three movies, and there's even a little McCarthyism thrown in.

All of this is quickly discarded, though, as the story buckles down for the action. Soon, Indiana and his new sidekick, Mutt, played by rising star Shia LaBoeuf, are flying to Peru, where they hope to track down Mutt's missing mother and Indy's colleague.

Fortunately, Indiana Jones is apparently able to read ancient Mayan languages and decipher complex riddles with a snap of his fingers. This avoids the audience being forced to follow Indy to the library and attend conferences, which leaves more time for wisecracks and motorcycle chases.

The audience is yanked along a trail of clues and secrets until they find themselves deep in the Amazonian jungle, dragged along by a cohort of nasty Russians, led by Cate Blanchett. In tribute to previous Indy movies, there's a furious car chase in the jungle, with the same fist fight on a moving vehicle that we've come to associate with Indy. Fortunately, Harrison's age doesn't stop him from going toe-to-toe with a huge Russian soldier, nor does it slow him down when avoiding machine gun fire.



Spielberg has always had an eye for dramatic landscapes and he puts it to great use here, offering up incredible shots of the jungle. Much of it must be enhanced with CGI, though, as there are a few moments when it doesn't look quite real - or believable.

The touch of George Lucas is everywhere in this movie, even appearing as if he wrestled away the director's beret from Spielberg in the last quarter of the movie, taking over and punching it through with his own style, even going as far as quoting himself from Star Wars.

"Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull" attempts to serve up an epic summer blockbuster and goes all out, seeking to fill the frame with non-stop intrigue and action. It's evident that the filmmakers set out to make a movie to please fans of the trilogy and spared no expense to do so.

Elsewhere on the Orble network: Check out Salty Popcorn's review of the movie!


I say: Hmmm. If you've ever really wanted to see Indiana Jones mashed up with the Star Wars prequels, with the stamp of George Lucas all over it, this is the movie for you.

See it for: Incredible realization of the 50s in America. All the vehicles, the costumes and hairstyles, wonderfully recreated. There are a couple of attractive students in Dr. Jones' class, with their retro style lighting up the screen...


*this image is from IMDb
222
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Nightmare Alley

May 14th 2008 23:48
Nightmare Alley Tyrone Powers
This 1947 film noir is staged around the traveling carnival, using the temptations of wealth and trickery to bring the heavy hands of fate on the main character, Stan, played by Tyrone Power.

Stan starts off as a young apprentice to a mind reader named Zeena, who, it is rumoured, used to be in the 'big-time', before everything came crashing down. Towed along behind her is her alcoholic husband, Pete, who appears so downtrodden and wretched, that he has to beg for money from his wife for a drink


[ Click here to read more ]
91
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Iron Man

April 29th 2008 00:18
Iron Man flying in the sky
Black Sabbath's haunting song, "Ironman", was about a man, sent from the future, made out of iron, who tries to help mankind, but because of his ghastly figure, the public fears and hates him. It's a chilling warning of the risks of intervention and the cruel tricks of time travel.

The latest comic book to be adapted into a film is Jon Favreau's take on Ironman, a Marvel comic that started in the 60s and has been a popular figure since, though not on the level of Spidey, Bats or the X-Men


[ Click here to read more ]
148
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Kids in the Hall - Brain Candy

April 21st 2008 23:56
Kids in the Hall Brain Candy I'm Gay

On the heels of the announcement that legendary Canadian sketch comedy group The Kids in the Hall will be doing an American reunion tour, I thought it would be justified to review the only film that the Kids put together.

[ Click here to read more ]
62
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The Thing

April 14th 2008 21:41
Kurt Russell John Carpenter The Thing
"The Thing" is john Carpenter's 1982 of the original 1951 film "The Thing From Another World".

It recreates the premise of a group of scientists, stuck in the Antarctic, that find a hostile shapeshifting alien that has laid dormant for thousands of years in the Antarctic ice. As a shapeshifter, once it gets going, it learns to mimic the scientists that it murders, prompting wonderful scenes of confusion and paranoia


[ Click here to read more ]
128
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Juno

March 25th 2008 22:17
Juno Ellen Page

I've been waiting to see "Juno" for more than a year; after hearing the hype at Sundance in 2006, I was ready to pounce on this indie effort, devouring up that tasty rasberry soundtrack with crunchy nuggets of quirky screenplay.

[ Click here to read more ]
198
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Drillbit Taylor

March 13th 2008 22:27
Drillbit Taylor Owen Wilson
Fans of Owen Wilson will be happy to know that the twisted nosed actor has overcome depression and is back on his feet, bringing his laissez-faire surfer attitude to American comedies.

This time, he's starring in "Drillbit Taylor", a movie about nerdy freshmen, trying to survive at their new high school. Wilson plays a homeless army vet named Drillbit Taylor, who the young boys hire to protect them from the school bully, a psychopath named Filkins


[ Click here to read more ]
118
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The Eye (2008 American remake)

March 2nd 2008 22:26
The Eye Jessica Alba looking in the bathroom mirror
Based on the 2002 Hong Kong horror movie, "The Eye" stars Jessica Alba as the recipient of a cornea transplant that restores her sight, but with the added superpower of being able to see the dead spirits that walk the streets with us.

The original movie was relatively popular in Hong Kong, though it only got mediocre reviews when it came over to North America. I never saw it, so I'm not in a position to judge whether or not the remake succeeds in comparison


[ Click here to read more ]
88
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The Spiderwick Chronicles

February 26th 2008 23:18
The Spiderwick Chronicles

Based on a series of books by the same name, "The Spiderwick Chronicles" is a vibrant film adaptation that shows the world around us, filled with magical creatures.

[ Click here to read more ]
83
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In the Valley of Elah

February 21st 2008 22:02
Tommy Lee Jones Charlize Theron In the Valley of Elah
"In the Valley of Elah" is director/screenwriter Paul Haggis' adaptation of a Playboy article written by Mark Boal, about the death of Richard Davis, who was killed after returning home from Iraq. The movie finds a release at a profitable time, when its blatant anti-war message rings upon sympathetic ears across America.

Several years earlier, the film might have been denounced as 'un-American' but now, on the ramp of the Presidential election, the film seems to rally the spirit of war-weary Americans


[ Click here to read more ]
84
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American Gangster

January 28th 2008 22:45
American Gangster Denzel Washington
Ridley Scott's latest film is a highly praised, highly successful biopic about notorious Harlem drug lord, Frank Lucas. It's called "American Gangster" and it's been on the tip of Australian tongues for several weeks now.

Scott captures the look and feel of 60s Harlem perfectly, replicating the rundown Brownstone apartments, the hairstyles and fashions, and the cars. It's a wonderful effect, and resonated with me, though I've never been to Harlem in the 60s. I accidentally got off the subway in Harlem back in 2001, and it didn't look anything like this movie


[ Click here to read more ]
90
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I Am Legend

January 22nd 2008 22:07
I Am Legend Will Smith walking through an empty Manhattan
"I Am Legend" is the latest Hollywood success, showing that a music video director, Francis Lawrence, and a former hip hop comedian-turned-actor, Will Smith, still have the chops to pull in $250 million domestic and almost a half million USD internationally.

It's an old story, adapted from the novel of the same name, written by Richard Matheson; published in 1954, the novel would be remade twice before Will Smith took hjis turn - in the 60s as "The Last Man on Earth" and in the 70s as "The Omega Man


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120
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Grindhouse

January 20th 2008 23:25
Grindhouse Planet Terror Freddy Rodriguez with guns

"Grindhouse" is the double feature that brings Quentin Tarantino's "Death Proof" and Robert Rodriguez's "Planet Terror" together under one bill, complete with fake previews, fast food ads, missing frames and missing reels.

[ Click here to read more ]
87
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