Showing posts with label International Feature. Show all posts
Showing posts with label International Feature. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 11, 2025

International Feature - The Girl with the Needle (France) and The Seed of the Sacred Fig (Germany)

 


Denmark traditionally does very well in the Oscar race, and I've seen lots of terrific films in this category. This one is no exception. Karoline is a young factory worker whose husband hasn't been heard from in over a year since he went to war. Her boss seduces her and wants to marry her when he discovers that she is pregnant, but his mother is not having it. Alone and scared, she decides to go to the women's bathhouse and tries to give herself an abortion with a long knitting needle. Another woman and her daughter discover what she has done to herself, and they offer to take her in and help her. By day, this woman runs a candy store, and under the cover of secrecy, she also takes babies from desperate women who simply can't afford to raise them, and she tells the women that she gives the children to families eager to adopt. But there is a darker secret that Karoline discovers, and when she does, her life changes forever.

This was a depressing film on so many levels, but it was excellent. Of course, I never share the most important spoilers, but I can tell you that this is not the film to watch when you want to see something light. The Oscars are not exactly known for their upbeat selections, but this one is particularly difficult and offers the tale of another unintended consequence when women have their choices limited or taken away.


While Germany is credited for this International Feature, the film was shot in secret in Iran and smuggled out to be assembled and produced in Europe. It is set against the background of nation-wide protests against the oppressive government which our protagonist Iman's teenage daughters support, and in which he is forced as a judge to pass sentence (often the death sentence) against protestors who are brought before his court. He is given a handgun to keep at home and when the gun goes missing, he panics knowing that losing it could result in his own death sentence. He goes over the edge and threatens his family with interrogations that increase in intensity, ultimately causing his own downfall and the collapse of his happy family life.

While this film is very well done, it is another one that lasts almost three hours (with no intermission). I don't have deep knowledge of what it is like to live in Iran and there are many surprising pieces of the story reflecting a lifestyle of which I would never otherwise have known. On the other hand, almost every scene in the movie had me on the edge of my seat, as each piece unfolds and all one can see is danger and disastrous consequences around every corner. If this is life in modern day Iran, human rights abuses abound, and it is most accurate to say that there are really no rights at all. That's what it is like living in an autocratic theocracy, and perhaps this is the best possible lesson for our time.









Friday, January 31, 2025

I'm Still Here - 3 nominations

 


I'm Still Here marks the 5th time that Brazil has had a nominee in the International Feature film category without any wins, and this one has the best chance so far to capture the statuette. This compelling film based on a true story recounts the political disappearance of a former Brazilian congressman, Rubens Paiva. He lives with his wife Eunice and their 5 children while secretly helping families who can't find loved ones arrested by the military. When the revolutionaries come to his door, his wife is in a panic, and eventually is arrested herself with her daughter to see if they are aware of Paiva's secret activities. She is held and tortured for 12 days, and though eventually released, she never stops looking for her husband to try to get some indication of what happened to him. 25 years later, she becomes a renowned expert on Indigenous Rights, all the while petitioning for a true accounting of what happened to husband from the government.

I'm Still Here was a powerful film and reminded me just a bit of the 1982 Sissy Spacek and Jack Lemmon movie Missing. What they have in common is unbelievably powerful performances and a total sense of fear and outrage at what is happening. How easy it is to live a life ignoring a coup, a descent from democracy to authoritarianism. How awful it is to realize that "they" has now become "you" and the injustice is so entrenched that it's too late to fight against it. This is not particularly the story of the Paiva family - after all, Rubens was disappeared for trying to do SOMETHING, even something small. But the lessons from Brazilian history are far too resonant today. It makes you wonder how much eggs cost before the coup.

My only criticism of the film is that there seemed to be multiple endings, the last of which was unnecessary. I suppose the filmmakers were very committed to showing the entire story of the strong and brave Eunice's life, but the very last bit was overkill. I recommend seeing the movie, just be aware that the post-script at the is for the sake of itself.



Wednesday, January 29, 2025

Emilia Perez - 13 nominations

 


Remember when I said that being nominated 4 times for a single movie was pretty impressive? Well Jacques Audiard is nominated 5 times for this single movie, where he seems to have done everything except craft services. Guess what else? The film is nominated for Adapted Screenplay, because Audiard had already produced an opera libretto which was based on a book.

The story follows Rita, a discontented defense attorney who is engaged by a cartel kingpin to give him the cover he needs to transition to being a woman, including helping him fake his own death and relocating his wife and children to Switzerland. Once she has transitioned, she begins to live a new life as a philanthropist and do-gooder (with a hint of corruption on the side), and she decides that she misses her family terribly and asks Rita to bring them back to Mexico to live with her. Her ex-wife rekindles an affair she was having while still married, and adds another layer of complication to this already complicated life. The film reflects on criminality, corruption, family, and the question of whether life truly changes when the core personality does not.

Before I saw the film, I had no idea it was a musical. Selena Gomez turns out to be a non-fluent Spanish speaker who pulls off acting and emoting while speaking the language. Zoe Saldana turns out to be a trained dancer who can also really sing. And those were just the smallest of surprises. Everything about this film is not what you expect it to be, in all of the best ways. I loved it, the music and the songs are excellent and beautifully choreographed. The cinematography was exceptional. I imagine that Selena Gomez was a breath away from a Supporting Actress nomination (which would have tied EP with the three other films in history to garner 14 nominations, the record.) The whole of this film is even greater than the sum of its parts, and its parts are pretty magnificent.