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« "Ema" at Sundance | Main | Yes No Maybe So: Swallow »
Wednesday
Jan292020

Sundance Review: Nine Days

by Murtada Elfadl

There’s a very fine between profound and superficial, what is genuinely revelatory and what is obvious. It’s a line that writer / director Edson Oda straddles in his sweeping drama about the meaning of life (yep, I know), Nine Days. Unfortunately to these eyes he ultimately falls on obvious and unearned, while asking the audience to believe it’s profound.  

Oda pulls us into a world wholly conceived by him. A man named Will (Winston Duke) who used to be alive now watches VHS tapes of people going on about their lives. When someone dies he gets nine days to interview unliving souls for the vacant position of a new life on earth...


As the film unfolds he gets to ask questions about specific situations to see how the applicants will behave on earth, what their sensibilities would be. Among the applicants are characters played by Tony Hale, David Rysdahl and Perry Smith, though almost instantly the script zeroes in on the two that are at the extreme. An optimist who sees potential in every situation (Zazie Beetz) and a pessimist who sees life as cruel and unforgiving (Bill Skarsgård).

Will himself had a hard time when he was alive. He was bullied and never realized his potential. It’s obvious on who’s side of the two top candidates he’ll lean and of course which one of them is bound to teach him a lesson about finding peace and beauty in the little things. I kid you not, this is the plot of the movie. I could not believe how straightforward and cookie cutter Hallmark card like the themes Oda is dealing with are. 

Good intentions do not always lead to good art. It’s clear that Oda wants to say something about how life is worth living as several characters question its validitly and contemplate suicide. Yet he only finds skin deep truths and proclamations. He’s more successful in effectively building a world for his story to exist in, without too much exposition. Visually the retro production design and costumes add striking power to some scenes, especially when Will re-creates some affecting moments from the lives he’s been watching. He uses carpenting and visual illusions to take us to a sandy beach or a joyful party while never leaving his backyard. There’s demonstrable ingenuity in crafting those scenes, yet everything else around them is ponderous and clumsy.

The actors give their all to this material with Duke emerging as the most successful. Despite some of the clunky dialogue he’s given to deliver, he credibly shows us how a man hurt by his circumstances can behave while retaining a shred of hope. Beatz and Skarsgård’s characters are so predictable from the get go that I don’t think there’s anything they could’ve done to lend them any integrity.

Nine Days commits the ultimate artistic sin; thinking it’s so profound and moving when it’s anything but. Dealing in big life themes and with a primarily positive message, it will work for some but others will be dismissive.

Writer/Director Edson Oda (front) and cast at Sundance

more from Sundance

 

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Reader Comments (8)

Why is no one talking about how Charlie Chaplin was a pedophile and rapist?

January 29, 2020 | Unregistered CommenterMike

@Mike-Because it never happened! God, what is up with you SJWs trying to go after this person and that person over bad shit they did a long time ago? You people are a bunch of Fascists cunts.

January 29, 2020 | Unregistered Commenterthevoid99

@thevoid99, it did happen, I just want to make sure people are keeping the same energy for the rapists and pedophiles in the film community. You used the term SJW/Cunt, that really tells me a lot about you.

January 30, 2020 | Unregistered CommenterMike

What’s this got to do with Nine Days?

January 30, 2020 | Unregistered CommenterMurtada Elfadl

http://thefilmexperience.net/blog/2020/1/28/links.html

January 30, 2020 | Unregistered CommenterMike

Mike: Because it happened - if happened - in an era when there wasn' t the media circus of our days, when the studios controled their employees's lives and informations about them. There's a lot of things about the stars of the past that would make people today be horrified. You would be shocked to find out that some beloved stars were racist, for example. Better not to know. Today, our celebrities fall on their own web of self-exposure and burn in the bonfire of vanities. The law of the old studios system was right: the less the fans know about their idols, the better."

January 30, 2020 | Unregistered CommenterRafaello

@thevoid99

'fascist cunts' indeed.

January 30, 2020 | Unregistered CommenterPaul

The Film Experience used to be a fun and entertaining blog, it’s being ruined by the nastiness that has now crept into the comments section.

January 30, 2020 | Unregistered CommenterJoe (uk)
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