FILM

"Groundhog Day" and the Strange Phenomenon of Time Loop Movies

Since Bill Murray's 1993 classic, time loop narratives have somehow become a genre unto themselves.

Groundhog Day, Bill Murray

Moviestore/Shutterstock

Andy Samberg's record-breaking Sundance hit Palm Springs is the latest entry in the storied genre of time loop movies.

These now-familiar stories involve one or more characters becoming trapped by mysterious forces that cause them to relive the same stretch of time (usually a single day) over and over and over again. The phenomenon was made iconic by the 1993 film Groundhog Day, in which Phil Connors (Bill Murray) is a jaded TV weatherman who becomes trapped in the small town of Punxsatawney, Pennsylvania for an endless recurrence of the titular holiday.

Keep ReadingShow less
Film News

This Year's Sundance Features Lineup is Very 2019

The new, colorful, unique stories and voices on the docket are, as all art is to a certain extent, a result of their creators reacting to and reflecting the culture around them

Late Night - Official Trailer | Amazon Studios

Sundance Film Festival, the annual showcase in Park City, Utah, announced its 2019 feature film lineup on Wednesday. The festival, which has been the first stop for independent film since 1985, will screen 112 feature films from 33 countries in this year's edition, which will run from January 24 through February 3, 2019. While success at Sundance doesn't usually lead to huge box office returns, films that do well there often go on to achieve critical acclaim and attention at awards shows (for example, "Wildlife," "Sorry to Bother You," "Eighth Grade," "The Miseducation of Cameron Post," "We the Animals," "Leave No Trace," and "Won't You Be My Neighbor?" all recently received Film Independent Spirit Award nominations; they all premiered at last year's Sundance Film Festival).

Keep ReadingShow less
FILM & TV

INTERVIEW | Cinematographer Jeremy Rouse on "Burden"

FILM/TV | The film took home the Audience Award for best U.S. Drama at the Sundance Film Festival

U.S. Dramatic Competition: Burden

"This film is not reactionary to what's happening in America right now, it's a timeless study on love overcoming hate."

The 2018 Sundance Film Festival may have wrapped up, but the impact of the films that screened there are just getting underway. Among these soon to be beautiful classics was Burden, a drama based on the true story of a Klu Klux Klan member who has a change of heart and beliefs after a woman has the power to change his mind. With Garrett Hedlund and Forest Whitaker in the cast, it's not surprise that the film won the hearts (and an award) from the audience at the festival.

The film's cinematographer, Jeremy Rouse, spoke with Popdust about his career in the industry, why he was inspired to take on this film, and why the message continues to be so relevant in today's sociopolitical climate.

Keep ReadingShow less
FILM & TV

REVIEW | "The Kindergarten Teacher" at Sundance 2018

Maggie Gyllenhaal goes too far in to mentor one little boy

U.S. Dramatic Competition: The Kindergarten Teacher

They say teacher's pets are terrible, but what about the teachers who find favorite students?

There is something far more complicated going in this film than just an odd teacher-student relationship. There are parents and children who don't interact normally with one another as they hardly seem to be speaking the same language. There is a loss of appreciation for things outside of the mundane. Most prominently, however, there is a woman who is losing her sense of herself and therefore her piece of mind, leading to some inexcusable actions. How do we react to such a character?

Directed by Sara Colangelo, who was last at Sundance in 2014 for her film Little Accidents, returns with a remake of an Israeli film that tells the story of a very gifted young boy who is able to recite poetry unlike the world has ever experienced before, and his teacher who is obsessed with this talent. In this version, Lisa Spinelli (Maggie Gyllenhaal) is a forty year-old mother of two impossible teenagers, bored and numb from her days teaching kindergarten in Staten Island. While taking a poetry class in night school, she longs for something more than average. The mundane is broken up when she realizes one of her students possess a gift. Her curiosity quickly boils over into madness, however, putting the boy and herself in danger.

This film will make you uncomfortable, and perhaps even worried for children's safety in schools. Gyllenhaal wakes the boy up from naps to take him to the bathroom to recite poetry. She puts her number in his cell phone under "L." She tracks various members of his family down and even goes as far as to kidnap him from his home and have him spend the night at her house. This is all supposedly done in the name of preserving a talent she believes to be on the level on Mozart, but it's not necessarily easy to take this claim at face value.

Yes, the boy can write poetry, and it's better than Lisa's. However, it feels as though Colangelo is less interested in whether or not it is plausible that a woman could care so much about a child's talent (especially a woman who doesn't seem all that interested in her job to begin with) and more interested in what can happen when a person, most especially a woman, if left to whither away in a town that is fading into the black.

Juxtapose this film with Gyllenhaal's other role on the HBO program, The Deuce, where she steps into the shoes of a woman who is rewriting the porn industry by producing the films herself. Is there anything really more radical in her character in this film, a woman who wants to change the way that art is appreciated? On the surface, no, but the definitive change is in the way that she abuses her power as an adult to earn the trust of the child. Audiences around me looked away and mouthed expletives while watching this kind of behavior on screen. However, her motives don't feel entirely insane. It's impossible for you to say that you like the character of Lisa Spinelli, but it is equally as impossible for you to say that you haven't at one point in your life understood her frustration with her environment.

The film is not the best that Sundance had to offer this year, but it does have some of the strangest and most unsettling ideas it brought to mind. Scenes in it will stick to you like all of that heavy food you ingested back at the holidays. You won't be able to let many things go: the struggle of Gyllenhaal's character to write a poem as successfully as this young boy, the way she will take him out to a lake upstate and help him to find happiness that isn't quite in his home already, or the final scene, after all is said and done, where you aren't sure if either of their futures are brighter without the other.

Find out more about The Kindergarten Teacher here.

Keep ReadingShow less
FILM & TV

REVIEW | "Hearts Beat Loud" at Sundance 2018

Nick Offerman can sing and the other interesting insights in this big, loving flick

GLAAD At Sundance: Meet the Stars at the Heart of “Hearts Beat Loud”

The last thing most teenage girls want to do their last summer before college is to start a band with their dad.

However, this plot line is at the heart of Hearts Beat Loud, a film that might be questioned regarding whether or not it is "edgy" enough to hold a place in the usual boundary-pushing arena of Sundance. The oddness of the partnership alone, combined with the various other topics the film manages to cover without hitting you over the head with their relevance to the plot over the course of its hour and a half run, should confirm for critics that this is premier Sundance material.

Written and directed by Brett Haley (previous work includes I'll See You in My Dreams and The Hero), the film follows Frank (Nick Offerman), a single dad with a failing record shop in Red Hook, Brooklyn, who struggles with letting go of his teenage daughter, Sam (Kiersey Clemons) the summer before she is to attend UCLA. Where Sam is a dedicated student with dreams of becoming a doctor, Frank is focused on her musical talents, and urges her to pursue them further than their weekly jam sessions. Sam's opposed, but when Frank uploads their first single to Spotify, their not-band, aptly named "We're Not a Band," could show some potential, even if it's just for a little emotional relief.

Haley's previous films have brought him to the festival before, so he is no stranger to the kind of material usually showcased over the ten days. On the surface, Hearts Beat Loud is an light-hearted, emotionally touching story about a parent and child relationship that is in transition. In the same way that Lady Bird curated a coming-of-age for mother and daughter, Hearts Beat Loud does so with a father tackling letting go, putting a more prominent focus on the parent overall. We see Offerman's character falling back into his cigarette habit, reading through his old musical composition notes, and trying desperately to discover what his life will be when he is no longer spending it predominantly as a single parent. Similarly, Clemons's character struggles with being caught between two wonderful worlds, not knowing where to go or stay. Interestingly enough, the knee-jerk reaction of both characters in ultimately to rely on one another.

This story is not necessarily revolutionary, but its handling of outside elements is what allow it to shine, incorporating details within without marking them in red in some sort of unnatural way. Sam's relationship with girlfriend Rose (Sasha Lane, also known for 2016's Cannes hit American Honey and fellow Sundance flick The Miseducation of Cameron Post) is not exotic, or at least no more so than any teenager who is interested in someone new and disinterested in discussing it with a prying parent. Similarly, the effects of early onset Alzheimer's in Frank's mother (Blythe Danner) are rawly portrayed as an obstacle to his moving on in his life. These are exactly the ways in which these elements appear in our lives: not as abnormal, but as average as passing a local coffee shop or seeing a cloud cover up the sun. Haley's skill shines in adding this normality into a slightly offbeat premise.

Where the film will struggle is in audiences' polarizing views of the genre. Musicals are not for everyone, and certainly not the kind that border on heartwarming. It could very well pigeon hole this film into being reserved for the HBO Family channel down the line. Audiences leaving the film also spoke about how it's hard to separate Offerman from his Parks & Recreation days and take him in another role. Hopefully, people will get over both of these issues and appreciate this film for the story it is trying to tell, one of a changing family we will all inevitably experience.

Find out more about Hearts Beat Loudhere.

Keep ReadingShow less
FILM & TV

MOVIE REVIEW | “Rebel in the Rye” explores life and loves of J.D. Salinger

FILM | If you liked Holden Caulfield, you'll love his origin story

J.D. Salinger is attributed with the quote, "People never notice anything," but J.D. Salinger wasn't your average person.

Known for writing what is considered one of the best coming-of-age novels during the past century, gaining fame only to become a notoriously private recluse, J.D. Salinger was likely on your high school required reading (and if you have literary nerd friends, they probably have a lot of feelings regarding The Catcher in the Rye). But how much do you know about the man behind one of literature's most curious characters?

Written by and also acting as the directorial debut for Danny Strong (Gilmore Girls and Mad Men, among others), Rebel in the Rye tells the coming-of-age story of J.D. Salinger (Nicholas Hoult) as he finds his voice in a mid-century New York City and the inspiration within himself for the legendary Holden Caulfield character. We see him go from a sarcastic youth smoking and dancing in jazz clubs, to an ambitious published author, to shaken combat soldier at the height of World War II – the last of which would be the event that would help crystalize his final creation of Caulfield and send him directly into stardom.

Along the way we're introduced to the strongest influences in Salinger's life, including his Columbia professor turned mentor Whit Burnett (Kevin Spacey) and first love Oona O'Neill (Zoey Deutch), and how his experiences shaped the lines in stories that generations of readers have read and fallen in love with. Traveling around New York, we follow Salinger as he goes from frustrated youth to success story, only to discover that the side effects of fame are not all he had originally dreamed out.

If you're a lover of period pieces, you'll fall for the big band music and the quirky dialogue of the characters (a young Salinger certainly calls a fair few people a "phony"). However, if you believe anything from Sundance Film Festival reviews, this film will fall short. This is no fault of the actors for each does an impeccable job on the screen. Deutch allows us to fall for Oona just as young "Jerry" Salinger does, and Hoult, despite being far more attractive than the actual author, portrays the many moods of the author powerfully.

The issue many instead have is with Strong's efforts to depict the intensity of the creative process, and no one caring about it.

As sexy as it looks to see Hoult as a never-aging Salinger furiously smoking cigarettes and writing about his woes over a typewriter or demanding that The New Yorker not make edits to his story because of his deep emotional attachment to the characters, it's not very sympathetic. Once Salinger does go through the life-changing experiences of war and finds success his quirks might become tiresome. Additionally, because it's a biopic, there's no way to brighten up the dullness that was Salinger's later years in life: he escaped to a farm in New Hampshire with the large sums from Catcher, eventually put up a large wooden fence, and wrote in his office for himself until his passing in 2010. It's far from the glamour one might picture from people living at the height of short story craze, but in all of its disorganized narrative it still remains feeling true to the disorganized truth of reality.

Throughout the film, Burnett reminds young Salinger that no person is truly a writer until they know that they will write regardless if anyone else is reading their work or if they're getting paid. If you don't consider yourself a "true writer" or a huge Salinger fan, the chances of you fawning over this film are likely bleak. You'll probably find yourself bored by the visual depiction of the creative process. However, if your weapon is the pen, it's certainly worth 100 minutes of your time, if only to learn about what it means to be a tortured artist.

Rebel in the Rye will be distributed by IFC Films and released in theatres September 15.

Keep ReadingShow less