The Hunt – Denmark & Sweden (2012)
The Hunt represented Denmark at both the 2014 Academy Awards & 2014 Golden Globe in the Best
Foreign Language Film category. Lucas, played by Mads Mikkelsen (seen in Casino Royale), is a kindergarten
teacher in a small Danish town. While waiting to be picked up after
school one day, one of the children says some very damning things about
Lucas. In a small town, news travels fast, and before Lucas knows it,
all those close to him shun him. Lucas is faced with day-to-day ridicule
in a situation that he seems to be stuck in permanently.
Directed by Thomas Vinterberg, this film does an amazing job at exposing Lucas' inner turmoil on screen. As the Star Tribune puts it, "It’s a contemporary horror story about a respected man’s descent into a
Kafkaesque nightmare of denunciations, dread and danger." The Hunt also features some great cinematography in the Danish film tradition and is something that shouldn't be missed.
A what-to-watch foreign film guide for movie fans who would rather watch their movies than read them.
Wednesday, January 28, 2015
Monday, December 29, 2014
Joyeux Noël
Directed by Christian Carion
France, Germany, United Kingdom, Belgium & Romania (2005)
Premiering at the Cannes Film Festival, Joyeux Noël was nominated for rewards at several major film industry competitions, such as the Academy Awards & Golden Globes of the United States, the British BAFTA Awards, and the French César Awards. The film is a European co-production based upon the true story of the Christmas truce that took place during World War I.
From 1914 to 1918, the Great War was raging on in Europe, which saw many casualties and a change in how war was fought. In the early 1900s, nations were eager to go to war with their new technologies and assumed that battles would be battles between machinery. Being the first modern war to use technologies such as army tanks, trenches, and mustard gas, over 16 million people, both soldiers and civilians, lost their lives. As a result, many soldiers returned home with scaring experiences to a public who didn't fully understand how the way war was fought changed.
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Lewis, Brühl, and Boon in their roles as Scottish, German, and French leaders |
Friday, October 24, 2014
If You Like "Weekend at Bernie's", You Will Love...
Waking Ned Devine – United Kingdom/France (1998)
Waking Ned Devine is a hilarious movie that takes place in the Irish countryside. A lotto winner is announced in the town of Tully More, a town with just over 50 residents. It should be pretty easy to find out who won that lotto and then be extra nice to them so that they will give you some of the winnings, right? Think again.
As parties are thrown and schemes are created to figure out who the lotto winner could be, two friends and one of their wives successfully figure out who the winner is... It's Ned Devine! But the problem is that Ned is dead. And smart enough to write his name on the back of the winning ticket. So now how can anyone else claim the prize money? Simple: by pretending to be Ned Devine. And then getting the entire town to support your impersonation.
Shot on the Isle of Man, this under-the-radar co-production is filled with many great moments and jokes, especially if you're a fan of British comedy. And if you're searching for it outside of North America, you'll find it under the title, Waking Ned.
Waking Ned Devine is a hilarious movie that takes place in the Irish countryside. A lotto winner is announced in the town of Tully More, a town with just over 50 residents. It should be pretty easy to find out who won that lotto and then be extra nice to them so that they will give you some of the winnings, right? Think again.
As parties are thrown and schemes are created to figure out who the lotto winner could be, two friends and one of their wives successfully figure out who the winner is... It's Ned Devine! But the problem is that Ned is dead. And smart enough to write his name on the back of the winning ticket. So now how can anyone else claim the prize money? Simple: by pretending to be Ned Devine. And then getting the entire town to support your impersonation.
Shot on the Isle of Man, this under-the-radar co-production is filled with many great moments and jokes, especially if you're a fan of British comedy. And if you're searching for it outside of North America, you'll find it under the title, Waking Ned.
Tuesday, September 30, 2014
Chungking Express
Directed by Kar Wai Wong
Hong Kong (1994)

One of my favorite things about the film is the dialogue. It is filled with many memorable lines that make you laugh or think but are not too painstakingly witty. For example, the mysterious woman that He Qiwi falls in love with (yes, she is so mysterious that she doesn't even have a name), always walks around wearing sunglasses and a raincoat, two very opposite pieces of clothing. She says, "I don't know when I started being so cautious. If I put on a raincoat, I wear sunglasses too. You never know if there's going to be rain or shine."
Several film reviewers & critics have compared this film to the French New Wave cinema era. Quentin Tarantino even liked the film so much that he was able to get Miramax to distribute it in the United States. Visually, the film is beautifully done, filled with lots of colors, filters, and visual effects, and all these features are not shown in an over-the-top, "I'm trying to be artsy" fashion. The storylines are not anything too unrealistic either, but show a day-in-the-life portrait without all the frills of a blockbuster movie.
Chungking Express is a very well-done portrait of Hong Kong in the 90s. And as a bonus feature, there is a great cover of The Cranberries' hit song, Dreams, once you make it all the way to the end.
Thursday, August 28, 2014
If You Like Wes Anderson, You Will Love...
Micmacs – France (2009)
If you've seen the French modern classic Amélie (with the true French title
being Le Fabuleux Destin d'Amélie Poulain), you might have an idea of what to
expect from this movie. If you have not, you can expect a quirky side of
humor with some bizarre characters and situations much like any Wes
Anderson movie.

Micmacs is the story of Bazil, a video store employee who is shot by a stray bullet one night on the job. He survives and decides to live life as everyday is his last, as the bullet was not removed from his skull, and it could kill him at any moment. While street performing, an onlooker sees Bazil and takes him to a junkyard, Tire-Larigot. There, he meets a whole group of outcasts with very bizarre talents and backgrounds, ranging from a contortionist and human cannon ball all the way to a guillotine survivor. Bazil decides that he wants to take revenge on the weapons company whose bullet hit him in the head (and whose weapons killed his father many years ago). His new friends refuse to let him live at Tire-Larigot if they cannot help him, and as the French translation of the title suggests, many shenanigans ensue.
Clearly by the above description, this is not your typical movie. Very
bizarre and quirky, it is not a drama by any means, but a very ironic
tale. And while you watch this, you can ponder the following question: How do you bring down a weapons dealer when they have all the weapons?

Micmacs is the story of Bazil, a video store employee who is shot by a stray bullet one night on the job. He survives and decides to live life as everyday is his last, as the bullet was not removed from his skull, and it could kill him at any moment. While street performing, an onlooker sees Bazil and takes him to a junkyard, Tire-Larigot. There, he meets a whole group of outcasts with very bizarre talents and backgrounds, ranging from a contortionist and human cannon ball all the way to a guillotine survivor. Bazil decides that he wants to take revenge on the weapons company whose bullet hit him in the head (and whose weapons killed his father many years ago). His new friends refuse to let him live at Tire-Larigot if they cannot help him, and as the French translation of the title suggests, many shenanigans ensue.
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Comedian Dany Boon as Bazil. |
Monday, July 28, 2014
Trainspotting
Directed by Danny Boyle
Scotland (United Kingdom) (1996)
The British Film Institute
considers Trainspotting to be one of
the top British films of all time, and it is probably the most-highly acclaimed
film coming from the country of Scotland. (Scotland is a part of the island of
Britain, and Britain is a state in the United Kingdom, making Scotland British
by association even though it is considered its own country.) The cult classic
revolves around the lives of heroin addicts in the late 1980s in Edinburgh. The
title, Trainspotting, has nothing to
do with watching trains (although there is a scene in the movie where the characters
wait on a train platform, and there is a wallpaper print with trains all over
it), but has to do with using heroin. A frequent user of heroin will have a
series of spots that resemble train tracks on their arms from injecting the
drug into their system. The movie is based on the novel of the same name written
by Irvine Welsh.
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Literally, trainspotting. |
Trainspotting follows the life of Renton (Ewan McGregor) who is
involved in the Scottish drug scene. All of Renton’s friends are fellow drug
addicts, and they find themselves in lots of compromising situations while
trying to get money to continue funding their addictions. Renton finally tries
to get himself out of the drug scene but finds it difficult as he keeps associating
with the same influential friends and remembering how good the high of the drugs
feel. The film shows the many effects of the drug, both the highs and the
lows, and the desperate actions the characters will take to continue their
habit.
Trainspotting documents the increased drug epidemic in the 1980s
Edinburgh neighborhood of Leith. Edinburgh was a popular haven for drugs,
dating all the way back to the late 1600s, and in the 1800s, it was one of the
world’s highest producers of opiates. Drug use was popular among the middle
classes and those with money. The 1970s saw high rates of unemployment, and the
1980s brought in cheap heroin from Pakistan, making it easier for people with
less money to purchase the drug. Because of the unemployment rates, people felt
they had nothing to work towards, making drugs a more attractive time killer.* Edinburgh
then not only saw a drug epidemic, but also a surge in communicable diseases
such as hepatitis B & C, as well as HIV.**
Even though this movie is in
English, I had to watch it with subtitles because of the heavy Scottish accent.
It is not for the queasy of heart as some parts are pretty graphic, but it is a
great commentary on the world of drug addiction. As a viewer of the movie, you
feel like you are experiencing the constant high that these characters are
going through. Part comedy, part drama, part crime film, it is a very
well-crafted movie.
* http://www.theguardian.com/society/2009/aug/15/scotland-trainspotting-generation-dying-fact
** http://www.heraldscotland.com/news/home-news/the-fatal-legacy-of-a-nations-drug-use-epidemic.18619037
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