Windsor Detroit Film
Monday, December 30, 2024
Is my desire for movies fading?
Thursday, December 12, 2024
The Mousetrap, the longest running play in the world
Monday, November 25, 2024
The emphasis is on "pain." And what's with modern parents?
What is it about modern parents they don’t know how to bring up their kids? Two recent movies or TV series made me shake my head and scream at the doofuses who were portrayed as mothers and fathers. The first is Let Go (Josephine Bornebusch) on Netflix where the punk daughter constantly berates her parents including with obscenities like “You argue all the f---- time” and “What the f---were you thinking? The whole point of coming here is my f--- competition.” The dour compliant parents only talk softly and try to appease. Same with the new hit series A Man on the Inside (created by Michael Schur) with Ted Danson, and his grandkids being the utterly most desultory teens. I don’t believe in corporal punishment, but it just made me want to slap them - and the parents.
Sunday, November 3, 2024
That's a wrap: 20th edition of the Windsor International Film Festival
Friday, October 25, 2024
Happy 20th anniversary WIFF, and Opening Night
Notes on last night’s Opening: I hadn’t seen so many people dressed-up since I was at a wedding five years ago. I loved it! ..Vincent Georgie is certainly to be congratulated for how he took the festival to another level after its first years under a different leadership and he was the logical keynote speaker....Among Georgie’s remarks was a Land Acknowledgement, the de rigueur newish and political “woke” value signal which has permeated public arts – and other - institutions and which to my mind is vacuous and won’t do a thing to help Indigenous people.....I was puzzled by the choice of the opening film, Shepherds, by Sophie Deraspe of Quebec. A kind of bohemian back to the land tale of an ad man who eschews the corporate world – and Canada – for a lifestyle of rural shepherding in France, as it was cliched and lacking the oomph I would have liked from a gala.
My top picks for this festival: Maria (Pablo Larrain) - the Maria Callas story starring Angelina Jolie, Bonjour Tristesse, a remake of the 1958 film starring David Nevin and Deborah Kerr (based on the Françoise Sagan novel) this time starring Chloë Sevigny and directed by Durga Chew-Boss; A Different Man, Aaron Schimberg’s dark comedy starring The Apprentice’s Sebestian Stan (who played Donald Trump); Firebrand (Karim Aïnouz) - intrigue in the bloody court of Henry VIII; It’s Raining Men (Caroline Vignal) – the perfect vehicle for French star Laure Calamy; Anora, the current sensational hit by Sean Baker crossing a Brooklyn sex worker with a Russian oligarch; The Battle of St. Leonard ( Félix Rose), a documentary about a seminal event in Quebec’s language wars and as a native Quebecer I lived through it; and Conclave (closing film), Edward Berger’s acclaimed hit starring Ralph Fiennes, Stanley Tucci and John Lithgow.