Showing posts with label Florian Henckel von Donnersmarck. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Florian Henckel von Donnersmarck. Show all posts

Friday, 28 June 2019

NEVER LOOK AWAY : Tuesday 25th June 2019.

'NEVER LOOK AWAY' which I saw this week is a 2018 German drama film Directed, Written and Co-Produced by Florian Henckel von Donnersmarck, whose previous works include the highly acclaimed 2006 Oscar and BAFTA winner 'The Lives of Others' and the three time Golden Globe nominated 2010 romantic thriller 'The Tourist' with Angelina Jolie and Johnny Depp. 'Never Look Away' was nominated for a Golden Lion at the 75th Venice International Film Festival where it saw its World Premier screening in September last year, and for a Golden Globe by the Hollywood Foreign Press Association. It was also nominated for two Academy Awards earlier this year in the Best Foreign Language Film and Best Cinematography categories amongst its total haul of four award wins and another thirteen nominations from around the festival and awards circuit. With a running time of just over three hours, the film has been lauded by audiences and Critics alike with some stating that it is the best movie they have ever seen! The film saw its Australian release just last week.

And so to the story, which is based only partially on the early life of famed German artist Gerhard Richter (and without his authority or approval apparently), here portrayed as Kurt Barnert (Tom Schilling as the adult Kurt) whom we are first introduced to at the tender age of six (with Cai Cohrs as the young Kurt). As a young lad in Nazi era Germany, Kurt visits the travelling exhibition titled 'Entartete Kunst' ('Degenerate Art') in Dresden with his attractive and at times eccentric young aunt Elisabeth (Saskia Rosendhal). During the guided tour of the exhibition Kurt is especially taken in by the sculpture 'Girl with Blue Hair', by Eugen Hoffmann. When they get home, Kurt sees Elisabeth playing the piano in the nude and tells the young boy to 'never look away' because 'everything that is true holds beauty in it'. This advice will resonate with him for the rest of his life, even when his aunt is 'euthanised' by the Nazis because she is suspected of being a low level schizophrenic, and therefore not worthy to exist when more needy healthier patients are in need of medical treatment and valuable hospital bed space.

The doctor who orders her forced sterilisation in the first instance and then promptly signs her death warrant to a concentration camp is gynaecology Professor Carl Seeband (Sebastian Koch), the Director of the Dresden Women's Clinic and considered the country's foremost expert in women's health, and also a high-ranking member of the SS medical corps. Following the war with Dresden almost completely bombed out, Seeband is arrested by the Russians and placed in a prison camp for his crimes in systematically wiping out so many innocents. While there, he volunteers to help a Russian officer's very distressed wife during a complicated birth and ultimately saves the child's life. The grateful Russian officer, Major Murawjow (Evgeniy Sidikhin) protects Seeband affording him a new set of clothes, his own personal sleeping quarters and effectively releases him under supervision, destroying the records of his crimes against humanity.

As the years progress, Kurt enrols at the Dresden Art School. There he meets and falls in love with a young fashion design student Elizabeth 'Ellie' Seeband (Paula Beer) who bears a not too dissimilar resemblance to his aunt and shares similar personality traits. In order to safeguard Ellie's reputation after sleeping with her for the first time, he escapes through her bedroom window when her mother and father return home unexpectedly late one evening. Kurt is caught stark naked clambering down a tree outside Ellie's bedroom by her mother Martha (Ina Weisse), who does not disclose their activity to her father knowing that he would disapprove in an instant. What Kurt does not know is that Ellie is the daughter of the same Nazi doctor who sanctioned his aunt's murder all those years ago.

Kurt continues with his art studies, but is forced to undertake paintings that depict socialist realism, a notion and field of his chosen art form that he cannot reconcile with. Even though he excels at it, he knows that he can never find his own true voice through this kind of art. Eventually, his growing relationship with Ellie means that Kurt must meet with her father. Carl Seeband has left his Nazi past behind him and now treads the socialist path of East Germany. Seeband does not approve of his daughter's relationship with Kurt, whom he regards as being genetically inferior and a no hope painter. He goes to great lengths in his attempts to destroy the relationship, to the point where he conducts an at home abortion on his daughter when she announces that she is three months pregnant with Kurt's child, and in the process sabotages her womb to keep her 'pure' and to prevent her from ever bearing children again. Despite her fathers best efforts, Kurt and Elizabeth's love grows ever stronger and eventually the two get married.

When the Russian KGB officer who protected him is transferred back to Moscow, Carl Seeband, fearing capture and prosecution, flees East Germany for West Germany with his wife Martha. Sometime thereafter, Kurt and Elizabeth also flee to West Germany with nothing but their clothes on their backs and what they can carry in their pockets. Still unsure of what kind of art he wants to make, he does know however, that socialist realism is not it.

Kurt by now is fast approaching his thirtieth birthday and as such he has to lie about his age to be admitted to the famous Dusseldorf Art Academy where the ceiling for admittance is 26. Here he can study and practice his art much more freely than in socialist East Germany. His teacher, Professor Antonius van Verten (Oliver Masucci) signs off on his admittance papers and grants Kurt his own studio within the Academy. He also recognises Kurt's deep personal life experiences, but also sees that he is struggling to find his own artistic voice, having been trained only in figurative painting, a medium considered outdated by the standards of the Academy and the more liberal and free thinking west.

One evening after a disjointed private dinner in a restaurant with Carl, Kurt comes across a newspaper article about a captured Nazi doctor, Werner Blaschke (Hinnerk Schonemann) Seeband's former SS boss. From this he come to realise his artistic awakening. He starts using his figurative painting skills to copy black-and-white photographs onto canvas, starting off with the newspaper photograph of Blaschke, adding a mysterious smoke like blur to achieve a more believable image. He also paints Seeband's passport photographs, and photographs of his aunt from his own family album.

Late one afternoon, Carl arrives unannounced at Kurt's studio and sees a collage painting of Kurt's aunt Elisabeth, the Nazi-doctor Blaschke and himself. He flees hurriedly, distraught, not being able to grasp how his despised son-in-law was able to discover his greatest secret. However, Kurt may not have understood what he was painting or the hidden significance in his art, at least not on a conscious level. He does realise however, that when you are true to your artistic talents, you can attain a truth that perhaps your intellect could never hope to reach.

After resigning themselves to the fact that they will never have children, Elisabeth falls pregnant and is beyond the three month danger zone. Kurt celebrates the moment she told him by painting her nude and getting her to pose for the camera on an internal staircase of the deserted Academy one Sunday. Kurt gets his first public art show where his photo realistic paintings impress the critics even though they misunderstand and misinterpret it. But, he has finally found his artistic voice, and that's what really counts.

Despite its three hours+ running time, 'Never Look Away' never drags, or skips a beat, instead captivating the interest and holding the attention for the duration. von Donnersmarck here has crafted a story spanning four decades of pre-WWII Germany, the bombing and near flattening of Dresden, the Nazi SS euthanasia campaign, the rise of Communism and the repression in East Germany, through to the free thinking and liberal lifestyle of West Germany in the 1960's, and all largely seen through the eyes of a struggling young artist trying to come to terms with the purpose behind his chosen art form. The performances especially from Tom Schilling and Sebastian Koch are top rate and when they occupy the screen either together or separately, the result is compelling. The cinematography is also top notch, the musical accompaniment isn't half bad either and the remainder of the cast also pull their weight to all add up to the complete package that is compulsive viewing for a film that intertwines war, love, loss, art, history, freedom and hope for new beginnings, and it doesn't disappoint on any of these fronts. Catch it on the big screen while you can - you'll be glad you did.

'Never Look Away' warrants four claps of the Odeon Online clapperboard, out of a possible five.
-Steve, at Odeon Online-

Wednesday, 19 June 2019

What's new in Odeon's this week : Thursday 20th June 2019.

The 66th annual Sydney Film Festival drew to a close on Sunday 16th June, marking an end to another hugely successful festival that showcased more than 300 award winning films, dramas, documentaries, thrillers, animations, comedies, cross-genre experiments and art house cinema from across the world. As reported last week, twelve films are selected for the Official Competition, which celebrates 'courageous, audacious and cutting-edge' cinema with a $60,000 cash prize.

The winner of this years Official Competition line up and the proud recipient of the AU$60K cash prize went to renowned South Korean Director Bong Joon-ho for his latest feature offering 'Parasite', which also picked up the Palme d'Or at Cannes last month. The film tells the story of the an all unemployed lower class family (the Kim's) that take a peculiar interest in a wealthy and glamorous family (the Park's) for their livelihood, until they get entangled in an unexpected incident that threatens to upend the Kim's newfound level of comfort. The film goes on general release in Australia on 27th June.

Indigenous Director Erica Glynn was awarded the Documentary Australia Foundation Award for Australian Documentary's AU$10K cash prize for 'She Who Must Be Obeyed Loved', a celebration of the life of her mother, the trailblazing Indigenous filmmaker Alfreda Glynn from the heart of the country. This prize acknowledges excellence in documentary production with up to ten films of any length being selected for the competition.

For the full wrap up of this years Sydney Film Festival, you can visit the official website at : https://www.sff.org.au/

This week there are six new feature films to entice you out to your local Odeon on a cool Winter's evening. We kick off with two animated feature films, both of which are sequels to hugely successful prior instalments - the first is the fourth in a franchise that had its beginnings almost 25 years ago now about the life and exploits of toys behind closed doors when kids and adults aren't watching, and the second is the second film in a newer franchise that is about the life of pets behind closed doors when kids and adults aren't watching. We then move to a case of a missing person and one guys dogged determination to get to the bottom of the disappearance that takes him down all sorts of rabbit holes. Next up is a reboot of a mildly successful but enduring slasher horror offering that first saw the light of day back in 1988, involving a possessed child's doll that has been updated to an out of control robot doll, that nonetheless has bloody murder and mayhem most foul reprogrammed in to its memory banks. We then close out the week with two acclaimed foreign language offerings - the first a German film spanning three generations that sees a budding painter who falls for a fellow artist whose father is the keeper of a very dark and damaging secret. The second is a French film about an elderly woman who wakes up one day and decides that it will be her last, and so sells all her worldly possessions on her front lawn much to the bewilderment of her daughter who come home for the first time in twenty years having caught wind of her mothers madness.

Whatever your taste in big screen film entertainment is this week - be it any of the six latest release new movies as Previewed below, or those doing the rounds currently on general release and as Reviewed and Previewed in previous Blog Posts here at Odeon Online, you are most welcome to share your movie going thoughts, opinions and observations by leaving your relevant, succinct and appropriate views in the Comments section below this or any other Post. We'd love to hear from you, and in the meantime, enjoy your big screen Odeon outing during the coming week.

'TOY STORY 4' (Rated G) - and continuing with this hugely popular and acclaimed computer animated comedy offering that first graced our big screens back in 1995, we have the fourth feature film instalment in the franchise that has spawned a limited series of television specials under the banner of 'Toy Story Treats', short animated films under the headline 'Toy Story Toons', a straight to video film, three 'Disney on Ice' productions, a musical, video games, merchandise, theme park rides and comic books. The first three films in the series were made for a collective US$320M and grossed a total Box Office haul worldwide of US$1.97B. This film is Directed by Josh Cooley in his feature film debut, taking over from John Lasseter who Directed the first two and Lee Unkrich the third. John Lasseter and Andrew Stanton were among the talent who dreamt up the story for all four films. The film saw its Premier screening on 11th June and goes on general release in the US and here in Australia this week.

And so turning back to the story behind 'Toy Story 4' which is set a couple of years after Andy gave his toys to Bonnie. Woody (voiced once again by Tom Hanks), Buzz (voiced again by Tim Allen) and the rest of the toys are faced with a problem when Bonnie creates a new toy from arts and crafts, named Forky (voiced by Tony Hale). Forky suffers an identity crisis about being a toy, which the others try to help him understand how to be one. As Bonnie and her family go on a road trip, Forky escapes and Woody goes to save him, becoming separated from the group near a small town. As Buzz and the others try to help find Woody, Woody finds Bo Peep (voiced by Annie Potts) among other toys in the town's antique shop, and she gives him a new outlook on what being a toy is really about. Also starring the voice talents of Joan Cusack, Don Rickles, Estelle Harris, Timothy Dalton, Laurie Metcalf, Keegan-Michael Key, Jordan Peele, Keanu Reeves, Christina Hendricks, Mel Brooks, Carol Burnett, Carl Reiner and Betty White amongst notable others.

'THE SECRET LIFE OF PETS 2' (Rated PG) - continuing with the animated genre, this American computer animated comedy film produced by Illumination, is Directed by Chris Renaud, with Jonathan del Val, and is the sequel to 2016's 'The Secret Life of Pets' which was also Directed by Renaud and grossed US$876M off the back of a US$75M production budget. This is the tenth animated feature from this Studio since its founding in 2007, and since this films release in the UK on 24th May and the US on 7th June, it has grossed US$158M off the back of an US$80M investment. Featuring the voice talents of Patton Oswalt, Eric Stonestreet, Kevin Hart, Harrison Ford, Tiffany Haddish, Ellie Kemper, Pete Holmes and Dana Carvey amongst others, this film reunites all the pets from the first instalment and some new ones too. Here we find Max the terrier, who must learn to cope with some major life changes when his owner, Katie marries Chuck and has a baby, Liam. When the family takes a road trip out to the country, nervous Max has numerous run-ins with canine-intolerant cows, hostile foxes and a scary turkey. Luckily for Max, he soon catches a break when he meets Rooster, a gruff Welsh Sheepdog who tries to cure the lovable pooch of his neuroses.

'UNDER THE SILVER LAKE' (Rated MA15+) - this American neo-noir mystery thriller is Directed by David Robert Mitchell and follows up his second feature film, the highly acclaimed horror 'It Follows' in 2014. Here Sam (Andrew Garfield) lives in the Sliver Lake district of Los Angeles leading a largely aimless, lazy and jobless life with more than an avid interest in conspiracy theories and finding hidden meanings in our everyday culture. One day he befriends his beautiful neighbour Sarah (Riley Keough), who invites him to come over the next day. However, when he drops by he discovers that she and her roommates moved out during the night. Sam becomes obsessed with finding what happened to Sarah. Obsessed with finding out the truth behind Sarah's sudden disappearance, and through a series of seemingly random yet connected encounters, he inadvertently stumbles across an elusive and dangerous large scale conspiracy. The film saw its World Premiere screening back in May 2018 at the Cannes Film Festival, where it was in competition for the Palme d'Or. It was released in the US in mid-April this year and has divided critics with some praising its originality, Direction, soundtrack, cinematography, and Garfield's performance while others found the script confusing, too cryptic, and lacking substance. The film has so far grossed US$2M.

'CHILD'S PLAY' (Rated MA15+) - this American horror slasher film is Directed by Lars Klevberg and is seemingly a remake and a reboot of the original 1988 film of the same name that spawned a whole host of sequels taking off with 'Child's Play 2' in 1990, 'Child's Play 3' in 1991, 'Bride of Chucky' in 1998, 'Seed of Chucky' in 2004, then 'Curse of Chucky' in 2013, and 'Cult of Chucky' in 2017, and a TV series planned for next year. The films original premise was on Chucky, a notorious serial killer who escapes death by performing a voodoo ritual to transfer his soul into a 'Good Guys' doll. The plot here harks back more to the original film. Having moved to a new city, young Andy Barclay (Gabriel Bateman), a lonely 13-year-old deaf boy with a hearing aid, receives a special present from his widowed mother Karen (Aubrey Plaza) - a seemingly innocent Buddi doll (voiced by Mark Hamill) that becomes his new best friend. When the doll suddenly takes on a sinister life of its own, Andy unites with other local children to stop the deadly toy from wreaking bloody murder most foul. In this film, unlike the original, Chucky is portrayed as an out of control hi-tech robot doll, rather than one that is possessed. Also starring Brian Tyree Henry, the film is released Stateside this week too.

'NEVER LOOK AWAY' (Rated M) - is a 2018 German drama film directed by Florian Henckel von Donnersmarck. It was nominated for a Golden Lion at the 75th Venice International Film Festival where it saw its World Premier screening in September last year, and for a Golden Globe by the Hollywood Foreign Press Association. It was also nominated for two Academy Awards earlier this year in the Best Foreign Language Film and Best Cinematography categories. With a running time of just over three hours, the film has been lauded by audiences and Critics alike with some stating that it is the best movie they have ever seen! And so to the story, which is based loosley on the early life of famed German artist Gerhard Richter, here portrayed as Kurt Barnert (Tom Schilling) whom we are first introduced to at the tender age of six. As the years progress and Kurt enrols at the Dresden Art School he meets and falls in love with Ellie Seeband (Paula Beer) whose father holds a dark and devastating secret from his past, and vows to end their relationship.

'CLAIRE DARLING' (Rated M) - here this French foreign language film is Directed by Julie Bertuccelli and based on the best selling novel 'Faith Bass Darling's Last Garage Sale' by Lynda Rutledge. In the small country village of Verderonne, in the Oise, on the first day of Summer Claire Darling (Catherine Deneuve) wakes up convinced that today will be her last day. She then decides to rid her house of all her possessions from prized and valuable antiques, to art works, to personal mementos, family heirlooms, everyday furniture and bric-a-brac which she has accumulated over many many years and which she subsequently decides to sell for a song. The objects so loved resonate with her tragic and flamboyant life with pertinent moments seen in flashback. This last act of apparent madness brings back her daughter Marie (Chiara Mastroianni, and the real life daughter of Catherine Deneuve) whom she has not seen for 20 years, who is naturally perplexed by her mothers current state of mind. The film has generated largely positive Reviews.

With six new release movies this week to tempt you out to your local Odeon, remember to share your movie going thoughts with your other like minded cinephile friends afterwards here at Odeon Online. In the meantime, I'll see you sometime somewhere in the week ahead, at your local Odeon.

-Steve, at Odeon Online-