Windsor Detroit Film
Monday, January 5, 2026
Chase's everyman a comic delight, and hi-def's loss of mystique
Friday, December 12, 2025
Another Knives Out: is there something I'm missing?
I may not be the sharpest pencil in the pack but every once in a while, a movie comes along that utterly befuddles me. A few come to mind: The Maltese Falcon (John Huston 1941), Gosford Park (Robert Altman 2001) and the Knives Out series of movies, all directed and written by Rian Johnson, the latest being Wake Up Dead Man (after a two-week theatrical release it's on Netflix beginning today). I caught it last week in London UK in a very pleasant Curzon chain theatre, where they serve food and beverages at your seat. Since I never fully got the plot of the only other Knives Out film I’ve seen, 2022’s Glass Onion (the second in the series), I didn’t have high expectations for this. Who knows – all this might just be above my brain level. And I was right - I didn’t get it. Or, I kind of did. But, come on, another convoluted and almost ridiculous plot just like Glass Onion? Maybe I’m just not a murder mystery buff but at least in Agatha Christie or Alfred Hitchcock you can follow the plot. Of course, I won’t go into detail here. But I also notice in the four or five reviews I’ve read of the movie - all by reviewers who loved it – no once delves into the plot either, and I don’t think it’s because they want to give it away. Sure, we like twists and turns. But with Johnson we have twists, turns, dead ends, cul de sacs and both one- and two-way streets. Again, maybe I’m just not bright enough. Or maybe I was just bored and turned off. But why can’t a movie be a whodunnit without all the minutiae of details? Here’s the basic outline. The story takes place in a Catholic church. There are several generations of priests. There is a valuable inheritance. Of course, the plot pivots around a mistaken perpetrator, par for the murder mystery course. Forget the convolutions, the story itself isn’t interesting, and why all this effort to solve an exceedingly unreal scenario? Daniel Craig, as always, is southern detective Benoit Blanc, and he does a good job (so funny watching his transition from James Bond). Josh O’Connor, the central character, is Rev. Jud Duplenticy (duplicitous?). It was also nice seeing an (appropriately) aged Glenn Close as Martha, the priests’ assistant. Jeremy Renner takes a turn as the good doctor Nat Sharp. Josh Brolin has a central role as a vulgar priest. The other question I have about this film is its context: the Catholic church. The film doesn’t exactly assault Roman Catholicism but uses its symbols (the crucifix, the confessional, a corrupt clergyman) as props. Popular culture has long derided the church, from Tom Lehrer’s The Vatican Rag, to Pope on a Rope to even calling the pope’s vehicle the Popemobile. I was brought up Catholic and I guess I’m not offended. But what other religion have you seen so mocked?And congrats to the Windsor International Film Festival (WIFF) for breaking another attendance record this fall, more than 50,000 tickets sold. The festival indeed is on track not only to become one of the country's premier regional festivals but a distinct destination-oriented festival for cinephiles far and wide, similar, say, to Sundance. And its gravitas grows as it draw film professionals from across the country and abroad. In its now 20th year it's more than the little festival that could, screening 231 features, 141 films from leading world film fests, more than 60 francophone films and 25 local ones. It's a genuine Windsor success story, and increasingly a Canadian one as well.
Sunday, November 30, 2025
You want a good film? I give you Truffaut's The Soft Skin
Monday, November 17, 2025
Cleanup in aisle five, and more
Monday, November 3, 2025
At WIFF - when an audience doesn't get a film
I also caught famed director (Z, The Confession, Missing) Costa-Gavras’s Last Breath. I had been expecting a straight up philosophical discussion among characters about the subject of death, something rarely addressed in popular media, reminiscent of a film like My Dinner with Andre (Louis Malle 1981). In fact, this is a drama about a philosopher, Fabrice Toussaint (Denis Podalydès) and a palliative care doctor (Kad Merad) and his team caring for patients literally on their death beds. Toussaint follows the doctor on his rounds gathering material for a book but leading him to confront his own future. I won’t say the film was scintillating but it competently depicted a slice of life - or end of life – that is rarely shown, especially as all of us are aging.
I was interested in watching Kristin Scott Thomas’s My Mother’s Wedding if only because I’ve been a big fan of KST and wanted to see what she could do behind the camera in her directorial debut. In fact, she’s also the “mother” in the film. Other appealing cast were Scarlett Johansson, Sienna Miller and Emily Beecham. But the story is less about the mother than the daughters – one in particular – and wasn’t much different from umpteen “chick flicks” about mother-daughter relationships replete with laughter, whimsy and drama, albeit set in the beautiful English countryside. The audience was 90 per cent women.
Monday, October 27, 2025
At WIFF: Amherstburg radio doc a standout
Thursday, October 23, 2025
Richard Linklater's masterpieces
Richard Linklater has come a long way from Slacker (1990) and Dazed and Confused (1993) – films admittedly that caught the zeitgeist of a certain youth subculture of a certain era but, direction-wise, unrecognizable from his latest two films, Blue Moon and Nouvelle Vague (the latter showing at this year’s WIFF). I caught both back-to-back last weekend at Montreal’s Festival du Nouveau Cinema, and they blew me away. Linklater has been “maturing” since those so-Nineties subculture entries in the Before trilogy (with Ethan Hawke and Julie Delpy) and Waking Life (2001). But none of these can prepare someone for Blue Moon and Nouvelle Vague. First, Blue Moon. This “portrait” of American Songbook classic lyricist Lorenz Hart is astonishing, mostly due to Hawke himself, though you’d never know it was him. I kept asking myself throughout: who is this performer? The makeup is so astounding Hawke’s entire body structure, beginning with his (balding) head, has been transformed to replicate Hart. Moreover, this is ultimately a one man show, an almost continuing monologue (writer Robert Kaplow) of 100 minutes as the musical icon at turns philosophies, critiques,
ruminates, tells stories and jokes about the Broadway stage, after walking out of former co-songwriter Richard Rodger’s opening night Oklahoma! Lorenz lambastes it as a crass middlebrow production symbolized by an exclamation mark! Is he bitter? Yes, but also reflective and still high-spirited, as he regales bartender Eddie (Bobby Cannavale) at the famed showbiz bar Sardi’s in March 1943, just months before his death in an alcopholic stupor…..Next up was Linklater’s Nouvelle Vague. Hold on to your hats at this exquisite re-creation of Paris’s New Wave circa 1960. Seemingly a documentary and filmed in grainy black and white so reminiscent of the era, the movie depicts those seminal figures that transformed not just French cinema but world filmmaking – Francois Truffaut, Claude Chabrol, Eric Rohmer, Jacques Rivette, Agnès Varda, etc. – but most of all Jean-Luc Godard - and the making of his first and breakthrough film – a classic and one of the most transformative films in cinematic history, Breathless. Seldom do even the best filmmakers get historical accuracy completely right – there’s always something off about the clothes, hair styles, mannerisms or background street scenes – but Linklater seems to have perfected it…..Two glorious films that I’d say are masterpieces.










