TIFF: A Funny Man, Love and Bruises,... Anatolia
Friday, September 16, 2011 at 7:09PM
Amir, here, back with more coverage of new TIFF films. The Toronto International Film Festival is winding down but luckily I have a couple of big name movies still scheduled. Here's a few from the last two days.
ONCE UPON A TIME IN ANATOLIA (Nuri Bilge Ceylan)
This Cannes grand prix winner is a slow-paced police procedural in which a doctor, a prosecutor and a group of other police agents drag an alleged murderer along with them in the rural Anatolia region of Turkey so he can show them where he’s hidden his victim’s body. More than half of this gorgeously shot film is spent during the night and I for one wished the morning never came. Gokhan Tiryaki’s impeccable lighting and the varied range of shots he creates in the limitless but monotonous locale of the film easily tops my personal list of best cinematography of the year.
There’s more to the film than the actual nightly search as Ceylan gives us indications that we should question the nature of the crime. Supernatural observations, spirituality and religious themes of guilt and faith all play a part in this hypnotic film. At two and a half hours, Anatolia won't be for everyone, but if you’re willing to go along with Ceylan’s delicate look into the social structure of Turkey and his humanistic approach to this crime tale, the end result is incredibly rewarding.
The cast of "A Funny Man" (Nikolaj Lie Kaas in the center)
LOVE & BRUISES (dir. Lou Ye)
Rahim tries but the script gives him very little to work with. Worse still, the film gives us a whopping total of ZERO reasons to like Hua’s character who’s inexplicably adored by almost every man she meets. Though, I'd add that my reasons for disliking Hua all relate to how flatly written the character is which is entirely different from the misogynistic reasons the film itself seems to hate her. Lest you think sexism is the film’s only fault, its on-the-nose depiction of social class division is surprisingly even more distasteful. I’d give this film a straight "F", but I’d probably listen to Peyman Yazdanian’s score out of context, so a "D-" would be fair.
CUT (Amir Naderi)
>Final Weekend: back-to-back screenings of Marjane Satrapi’s Persepolis follow-up and Andrea Arnold’s Wuthering Heights which has just been picked up for distribution (albeit in 2012), actressy musicals and Joachim Trier still to come.



Reader Comments (5)
Awesome, I'm seeing Anatolia here at the New York Film Fest next month and I hadn't heard much but the few pictures I could find of that cinematography were enough to get me to find the time for it. It looks stunning.
Wow! Someone going to TIFF and not just seeing all the big movies that'll be out in the next few months? Shocking!
I saw "Anatolia" at my city's recent fest and I liked it greatly, except for the final act which I think took the idea took far and, by stretching the running time out to over two and a half hours, was a bit too much for liking at 10am.
Also seeing Anatolia at NYFF, but I saw Love & Bruises in Toronto yesterday afternoon. Not *quite* as negative on it as Amir (I'd maybe go D+ rather than D-), but it is definitely a disappointing film - especially since Ye's last two fllms, Spring Fever and Summer Palace, were both pretty complex and rewarding. And the script truly is terrible - not sure if we were at the same screening (yesterday afternoon at Bell Lightbox), but by the end, some of Rahim's more whiny pronouncements were getting pretty good laughs from the crowd. Ouch.
Roark - Yeah, it was the same screening and I noticed the laughters, too.
On a side note, since you don't have a URL here, i didn't know how to tell you this, but i've quoted you on my blog before. haha
http://amiresque.blogspot.com/2011/08/on-tiff-and-other-film-festival.html
i'm glad we're both seeking the same movies, however disappointing some of them are.
Oh cool! Thanks for mentioning. Btw, I also saw the Ratanaruang film - I wasn't just pulling that name out of thin air! Ha. Hope the rest of the fest (all one day of it) treats you well!