Posts Tagged 'Durkin'

Top 10 – the Best Ten Films of 2012

Hurray! An end-of-the-year list with good movies! Rejoice!*

10 The Descendants

A lovely portrait of middle-age. The rough edges and the cynicism that characterized director Alexander Payne’s earlier films are smoothed over – to a very satisfying effect. George Clooney delivers a career-high performance. Extra kudos for the gorgeous images of everyday Hawaii.

 

9 The Hunger Games

The big surprise of the year. I, for one, would never have thought that anything that seems knock-off Twilight on the surface could make this good a film. Jennifer Lawrence proves herself to be a true leading lady, one like Hollywood has not seen in years.

 

8 Moonrise Kingdom

A film that much resembles The Descendants, in that it is the softest, cuddliest film in the corpus of its director. Many people are annoyed by Wes Anderson’s blend of depressed Bill Murrays and high concept stylization, but this is a film with a warm and true heart. Excellent performance all around, especially by the kids, and the best soundtrack of the year.

 

7 Cloud Atlas

Arguably the greatest filmmaking achievement of the year. A film project that seemed most likely to be made fun off, or at least provoke some raised eyebrows. But Tykwer and the Wachowski’s adapt an apparently unadaptable book and deliver a movie with a point as well as six climaxes. That it never feels too long is a credit to the excellent editing.

 

6 The Dark Knight Rises

Especially upon repeated viewing it becomes clear that Nolan’s final Batman film is not as good as the two films preceding it. There is some shoddy editing, and the lack of substantial politics disappointed me. But one cannot deny that this is still really good stuff. A mature superhero film on an unprecedented scale.

 

5 End of Watch

An incredibly tense police film with fantastic performances by Jake Gyllenhaal and Michael Pena. The original cinematography – a blend of found footage and first-person shooter games – is its characterizing feature, but there is much substance to all this surface. There is no space for nuance here – the bad guys are very bad indeed – but what the hell? Who cares?

 

4 Anna Karenina

Its first half hour is the best half hour of cinema I’ve seen this year. No film can look like this and still tell a good story about interesting characters, so it is good that after that half hour Anna Karenina slows down to focus on its drama. Joe Wright’s second big achievement with this film is that Tolstoy’s outdated ethics actually do seem quite sensible.

 

3 Martha Marcy May Marlene

Already in 2011 this was the darling of the Sundance festival. We had to wait for a long time to get to see it here in The Netherlands, but boy, was it worth the wait! An outstanding debut for both director Sean Durkin and leading lady Elizabeth Olsen, who has more than twice the talent of her two older siblings combined.

 

2 The Muppets

A surprise choice perhaps. Not the choice made by any esteemed critic with proper taste. But hell, The Muppets made me happier than any other film this year. I laughed, I cried, and back at home I was still singing along with the lyrics.

 

1 Bir Zamanlar Anadolu’da

Aka Once Upon a Time in Anatolia. Completely overwhelming drama about modern-day Turkey and the burdens it carries from its history. The tracking shot of a half-eaten apple rolling down a hill and into a little stream is an example of filmmaking machismo by one of the art’s masters; Nuri Bilge Ceylan. But more crucial is the shot of the doctor, seeing the wife and son of the murder victim walking home. It left me breathless.

 

* Circumstance prevented me from seeing Ang Lee’s The Life of Pi before the close of the year. So it will be a 2013 contender.

Half year report: Film in 2012

Top 5:

1 Bir Zamanlar Anadolu’da (Nuri Bilge Ceylan)

2 The Muppets (James Bobin)

3 Martha Marcy May Marlene (Sean Durkin)

4 Moonrise Kingdom (Wes Anderson)

5 The Hunger Games (Gary Ross)

Flop 5:

5 Dark Shadows (Tim Burton)

4 On the Road (Walter Salles

3 Rock of Ages (Adam Shankman)

2 War Horse (Steven Spielberg)

1 John Carter (Andrew Stanton)

Review: Martha Marcy May Marlene

It has taken a while, but the favourite film of Sundance 2011 finally made it to Dutch cinemas last april. And finally I have been able to see it too. Sundance favourites are an odd bunch of movies. The famous festival of independent American cinema has been the breakthrough for filmmakers as different as Quentin Tarantino and Kimberley Peirce. Sundance films are not a genre. They share nothing but success at one specific time and place. You never know what you’re gonna get.

So what do we get with the impossibly titled Martha Marcy May Marlene? First of all it is director Sean Durkin’s first film. And for a debut it is incredibly confident. A fragmented narrative and essentially unreliable narration make sure that the audience is never certain what to believe. The extremely confrontational nature of the events shown, furtermore, lead you to never be at ease with the film.

This is one of those films of which you do not want to read too much about the plot in advance. So a quick set-up. Early in the morning a young woman (Elizabeth Olsen) leaves a farm full of people. A little later she calls her sister. Her sister picks her up and lets the young woman stay with her and her husband. The young woman, Martha, never quite settles in, haunted by memories of things that may or may not have happened in that particular farm, under the guidance of the creepy Patrick (John Hawke).

Three elements in this film stand out. The first is, quite obviously, the acting work done by Elizabeth Olsen. The younger sister of the (in)famous twins is a really talented performer, who gives an incredible tense and unsettling performance in this film. It is really her breakthrough, like Winter’s Bone (a Sundance favourite in 2010) was the breakthrough of Jennifer Lawrence. However, unlike Lawrence, who made herself a proper movie star with films such as X-Men: First Class and The Hunger Games, Olsen seems to be more comfortable in independent cinema. Of her upcoming films a Therese Raquin adaptation seems the biggest title, besides a small supporting role in Rodrigo Cortes’ (Buried) new thriller Red Lights.

The second outstanding element in Martha Marcy May Marlene is the cinematography. Durkin has turned Martha’s memories of the farm into an ambiguous shadow or parrallel reality, by triggering them through visual echoes and impossible continuities. The first few of these are unsettling and can be experienced as frustrating, but when you choose to accept them and go with them, they are an incredibly effective narrative tool.

A final thing worth paying attention to is the excellent soundtrack. With little music and many strange and estranging sound effects the soundtrack is an equal partner to the images in this film. If the soundtrack is the guiding element in the narrative rather than the visuals, Martha Marcy May Marlene is almost a horror film.

Why would I say almost? Martha Marcy May Marlene is a horror film. And a really good one.



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