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Saturday
Dec072019

Animated Feature Contenders: "I Lost My Body" 

by Tim

I Lost My Body, the first animated film to win the top prize at the Cannes International Critics's Week, is nothing if not distinctive. The "I" of the title is a sapient severed hand, which spends the length of the feature skittering around on its fingers, looking for the human to whom it used to be attached; this is a journey that is by turns bittersweet, sentimental, and horrifying. Director Jérémy Clapin, making his feature debut (he was also responsible for the celebrated 2008 short Skhizein), spent years sheperding this project into existence, and it has the unmistakable feeling of a passion project, one whose odd shifts in tone and moody emotional appeals are wonderfully earnest. While it is probably not the best animated feature of 2019, it's surely the most uncompromised and confident.

The film, adapted by Clapin and Guillaume Laurant from Laurant's novel Happy Hand (his other film credits include Amélie, and the echoes of that story ring very loudly here), divides itself into two strands. One is about that hand, deftly making its way through the all the dangers that reside six inches above the ground in Paris. The other is a quasi-romantic drama about a lost soul, twentysomething sad sack Naoufel (Hakim Faris)...

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Saturday
Dec072019

Best International Feature: France, Denmark & Russia's contenders

by Cláudio Alves

In less than two weeks, December 16th to be exact, we'll know the Best International Feature shortlist. In previous years, there were only nine finalists but, due to recent rule changes, the list has been expanded to ten titles. As usual, expect to see a lot of European productions since this category loves to reward the cinema of the Old Continent. Thinking of those preferences, I've decided to purview the submissions of three European champions of the past. 

Specifically, they are France, with nine competitive wins and three honorary awards uner their belt; Denmark, with three victories; and Russia, which won once or four times if you count USSR's wins. We'll start with the most-nominated country in the category's History…

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Friday
Dec062019

Cahiers du Cinéma chooses ‘Twin Peaks: The Return’ as Best of the Decade

by Murtada Elfadl

Cahiers du Cinéma, the prestigious French film magazine, has selected David Lynch’s Twin Peaks: The Return as the best film of the decade. By doing so it reignites the twin debate of what is cinema / what is TV. Those lines have been blurring with the advent of streaming. Obviously Lynch is one of cinema’s most respected auteurs and while Twin Peaks: The Return was shown on TV, it also debuted at the Cannes Film Festival.That is similar to The Irishman or Marriage Story from this season which also debuted at prestigous film festivals but their ultimate home is Netflix...

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Friday
Dec062019

Oscar Mythbusting: 'Weak' Best Actress Years (feat. "Tom & Viv")

by Cláudio Alves

There's been much talk of this year being a weak one for the Best Actress category. That's nonsense. While it's easy to understand where such dreary thoughts come from, it's a foul myth. Every year has the potential to be great, you just need to look at films outside the Academy's usual favorites and our preconceptions about what constitutes awardable acting. 

Take 1994, a year traditionally considered among the weakest for the Best Actress Oscar. While it's true the nominated five aren't a particularly stellar collection, they each bring something to the table. There's Winona Ryder and her anachronistic charm, Jessica Lange's primordial rage and lust, Susan Sarandon's solid reactions, and Jodie Foster's fearlessness. Finally, there's the lead actress of Tom & Viv, a film now celebrating its 25th anniversary…

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Friday
Dec062019

Jennifer Kent makes history at the AACTAs with "The Nightingale"

by Travis Cragg

Magnolia Maymuru from The Nightingale wins Best Supporting Actress

The Australian Academy of Cinema and Television Arts (AACTA) gave out their awards at two functions this week: one was an industry luncheon where they did the technical and supporting awards, the other was a glitzy evening televised on delay with many of the gongs awarded in the ad breaks (mostly, it seemed, to people who weren’t present and therefore wouldn’t give the viewers the requisite spontaneity that ratings prefer). The two biggest Australian box office hits of the year, Top End Wedding and Ride Like A Girl, went home empty-handed, but the wealth was spread out amongst the other (limited bunch of) nominees with The Nightingale leading the pack...

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