Real Women Have Curves
Personal Velocity
Sister Helen
Daughter from Danang
Paradox Lake
The Inner Tour
Amandla! A Revolution in Four-Part Harmony
Human Nature
Intacto
Narc
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Hollywood On Ice
The Sundance Film Festival doesn't fit. It's too big
for its perennial location, Park City, Utah, yet too
small for New York or Los Angeles. It's too creative
and defiant for mainstream Hollywood, yet too
entrenched and predictable for the independent film
world. It's too exclusive to welcome all possible
audiences, yet too accessible to be a glorified
Hollywood trade convention. And as hard as it tries to
remain on the "outside," everyone who's anyone in the
business wants to be inside it.
Sundance hasn't always been this way. Although the
Festival existed before Robert Redford, when he came
on board 20 years ago, it began to evolve. At first it
became another stop on the film festival circuit --
another Mill Valley, another Telluride. What thrust it
to the forefront of the film world was the
increasingly organized and respected independent film
industry, and, of course, the independent filmmakers
themselves, who increasingly secured funding for their
films outside of Hollywood and came to consider
Sundance a non-Hollywood venue for first screenings.
In 1989, sex, lies & videotape premiered at
Sundance and went on to gross over $100 million at the
box office. Its success instantly "validated" the
independent film world in the eyes of the mainstream
movie business.
Since then, Sundance has not only become the Holy
Grail for indie filmmakers, but also the most
important winter vacation spot for every level of
Hollywood player. Today, the snowy sidewalks and
shoddy theaters in this resort town 30 miles east of
Salt Lake City (which in turn seems like it's 1,000
miles from nowhere) are filled with visitors --
tourists, industry people, artists, movie stars, and
many, many reporters. For 10 days each January, Park
City is a conversely utopian and dystopian microcosm
of the entertainment industry, a Hollywood-as-mountain
kingdom that is as isolated and insular as it is
enviable and confounding. It's also one hell of a good
time.
Part of the fun is the spectacle. Every year, you're
bound to see incredibly powerful men and women,
pleading and screaming for distribution rights to The
Next Big Thing. You're also bound to see the biggest
actors in the world uncomfortably seated next to the
commoners at the Eccles Theatre, which doubles as a
high school auditorium. And don't forget everything
else associated with the uncontested independent
behemoth: thousands of filmmakers and actors handing
out promotional flyers and free merchandise; tiny
basement clubs and private condominiums hosting the
biggest names in the music world; an endless stream of
guerilla festivals (primarily Slamdance, along with
others that come and go, such as Nodance, Lapdance,
Fundance, and Slumdance); and, of course, the massive
lines for everything, from the hottest movies to the
hottest pizza slices.
Immediate word out of the 2002 Festival is that
business was up and quality was down, which was more
or less the opposite of pre-Fest predictions. (One
major management company that usually sends 20 agents
to Sundance reportedly only sent four this year.) But
the relatively small expense of buying rights to a
movie, as opposed to bankrolling one from conception
to completion, combined with grimmer-than-normal
release slates (caused by fears over last summer's
writers' and actors' strikes that never happened), led
to one of the busiest buying sprees in Sundance
history. Miramax paid $5 million for Gary Winick's
dramatic competition entry, Tadpole, before the
end of the first weekend, and by the end of the second
weekend, 13 movies had secured distribution deals,
with more reported to be just handshakes away.
As for quality, it would be tough to hold up any
Festival to last year's, which included critical
favorites, like The Deep End, Hedwig and the
Angry Inch, In the Bedroom, Donnie
Darko, and Go Tigers!, as well as the
box-office hit, Memento. This year's slate
didn't include as many unique and well-crafted
stories, but where 2001 may be remembered as the Year
of Plot, 2002 may be remembered as the Year of
Character and, specifically, the Year of Busting
Female Stereotypes.
This supports the Festival's well-known but often
forgotten reputation as a strong breeding ground for
non-mainstream perspectives put to film, in addition
to being a launch-pad for occasional blockbusters. One
prominent mainstream screenwriter who was at the
festival in 1989 told me that at the time, he'd never
seen anything like the sex, lies & videotape
phenomenon (in which a blockbuster came from an
unknown filmmaker with absolutely no prior hype), and
that he doesn't think it will ever happen again.
He may be right, but let's not forget that Steven
Soderbergh, who is arguably the most successful
and respected director currently working in or
out of Hollywood, wasn't the only filmmaker who's come
to Sundance a nobody and left with instant industry
clout. Quentin Tarantino, Todd Solondz, Robert
Rodriguez, Miguel Arteta, and plenty of other writers
and directors have experience the same Sundance boost.
These include Native American filmmakers Chris Eyre
and Sherman Alexie, who came to Sundance in 1998 with
Smoke Signals, and returned this year, not in
competition, but to premiere new movies, Eyre's
Skins and Alexie's The Business of
Fancydancing.
This year's Festival focused on unique female
characters, in films by women. The Dramatic Audience
Award winner was Patricia Cardoso's Real Women Have Curves, a portrait of Mexican-American family
dynamics as seen through a young woman's eyes. The
Dramatic Grand Jury Prize winner was Rebecca Miller's
Personal Velocity, a collection of stories
about three modern women in flux. The Documentary
Directing Award winner, Rob Fruchtman and Rebecca
Cammisa's Sister Helen, features an
incomparably strong and complex lead character. The
Documentary Grand Jury Prize winner, Daughter from Danang, by co-Directors Gail Dolgin and Vicente
Franco, considers generational and cultural
differences between mothers and daughters. Other
spectacular depictions of women abounded, including
the three generations of Chinese Americans in Bertha
Bay-Sa Pan's Face, Patricia Arquette's hairy
turn in Michel Gondry's Human Nature, and Kathy
Bates' quietly desperate mother-in-law in Todd
Louiso's Love Liza (whose writer, Gordy
Hoffman, took the Best Screenplay Prize).
Other Festival films addressed themes rarely taken up
by mainstream movies with originality or sensitivity.
Przemyslaw Shemie Reut's Paradox Lake, this
reviewer's pick for best film in Dramatic Competition,
is a touching portrait of autistic children. Solondz's
Storytelling depicts a college student (Leo
Fitzpatrick) with Cerebral Palsy; while it's hardly
touching, it's certainly not the typical
manchild-savant story favored by mainstream Hollywood.
Even Adam Larson Broder and Tony Abrams's
Pumpkin, which suffers from a juvenile script,
takes a new approach to characters with developmental
disabilities.
Another major, if unintentional, theme at the Festival
was behind the scenes unity. At least three of this
year's best films were produced, directed, and even
funded by traditionally adversarial groups. Bloody
Sunday, Paul Greengrass's dramatic recounting of
the "Bloody Sunday" massacre in Derry, Northern
Ireland 30 years ago, was acted, funded and produced
by Irish and British partners. The Inner Tour,
Ra'anan Alexandrowicz's breathtaking documentary about
Palestinians on a bus tour of Israel, featured an
Israeli director and a Palestinian cinematographer.
And The Two Towns of Jasper covers the trial of
the white supremacists who murdered James Byrd in
1998, using two separate film crews -- Marco Williams'
black one and Whitney Dow's white one, to interview
residents. Face, Paul Goldman's Australian
Rules, Lee Hirsch's Amandla! A Revolution in
Four-Part Harmony, and The Business of
Fancydancing, also consider issues of racial
intolerance and cultural identity.
You could probably find dozens of other cogent themes
running through the Festival, which is yet another of
Sundance's countless strengths. It's one thing to
sustain a festival that focuses on independently made
movies. It's another thing to premiere some of the
most financially successful and critically acclaimed
movies of that same 20-year period. But to do both
while providing a welcoming venue for free-thinking
filmmakers who are shunned by mainstream Hollywood (or
at least shunned until they arrive at Sundance) --
that's revolutionary in practical and political terms.
No wonder everyone wants to be part of it.
With such lofty ideals that it reaches with such
regularity, it's almost a shame that the Sundance
Institute has to pick favorites among a crop of movies
that are so inherently different. Yet, the results are
also revealing: the Grand Jury prize winners are
rarely the same as the Audience Award winners, and
none of these prizes has historically meant much once
the films, or at least the ones that secure
distribution, make it to the mass movie marketplace.
And with that inherent arbitrariness in mind, here's
my take on the best and worst at Sundance 2002:
Best Picture in Dramatic Competition
Paradox Lake
Director: Przemyslaw Shemie Reut
The dream world we're taken to in Paradox Lake
is not a dream at all, but the reality of autism. Reut
uses real autistic children at a summer camp in
upstate New York, and he sends Matt Wolf -- a
privileged young Manhattanite who's searching for
meaning in his life -- to work with them as a
counselor. What Matt discovers is a world where simple
chores can leave nearly grown men a shattered mess,
where every action can have a surprising reaction, and
where secrets are the currency of communication. He
also finds that ego can be the most dangerous handicap
of all. Where mainstream Hollywood tends to Forrest
Gumpify its developmentally disabled characters, Reut
takes them very seriously, and the result is a film of
inspiring depth and emotional resonance. Reut's
frantic yet seamless style makes us feel the confusion
and frustration that defines life at the camp, and
though the last 15 minutes are a bit of a non-sequiter
-- save for the mesmerizing final scene -- the rest of
the movie brilliantly portrays not only the
idiosyncrasies of autism, but also the tangled
emotional webs of human nature.
Best Director in Dramatic Competition
Rebecca Miller, Personal Velocity
The sharp dialogue and stark narrative tone of
Miller's second feature (based on her book of the same
name) owe a debt to one of the greatest-ever
playwrights and the filmmaker's father -- Arthur
Miller. That family dynamic is also felt in the
hereditary Nature vs. Nurture burdens that guide
Personal Velocity's three vignettes about
women: Kyra Sedgwick is a battered wife and reformed
tough-girl who tries to break from her past but
ultimately finds solace in a
depressingly co-dependent routine; Parker Posey is a
newly successful book editor who's having second
thoughts about how stable her life has become; Fairuza
Balk is a former runaway who picks up a young
hitchhiker and sees in him a shot at her own
redemption. What drives the women to action are the
men in their lives -- abusive, ineffectual or
philandering fathers, husbands, and lovers -- as well
as the unspoken concern that, no matter how hard they
might try, they will end up like the generation that
preceded them. Miller gets affecting performances out
of all three women, in brutally honest depictions of
relationships that aren't so serious that there are no
laughs. With Personal Velocity, Miller
illustrates how unconsciously the familial seeds of
similarity are sewn.
Best Documentary
The Inner Tour
Director: Ra'anan Alexandrowicz
One scene sums up the power and paradox of The
Inner Tour: A young Palestinian man who, along
with about 20 other Palestinians, is on a three-day
bus tour of Israel, walks to the high, razor-wired
fence that separates Israel from Lebanon; some
distance from the opposite side of the fence stands
his mother and several family members, whom he cannot
visit because Palestinians cannot travel to Lebanon --
he, along with everyone else on the tour, is only in
Israel on a special permit; the two sides exchange
their love and throw presents to each other over the
fence, as if both are trapped in prisons they cannot
escape. There is a poignant irony in seeing a
Palestinian imprisoned by the Israeli government in
much the same way Jews were imprisoned by many
European nations over the centuries, and that irony is
not lost on the makers of this enlightening and moving
documentary, a joint Israeli-Palestinian production.
When the tour participants speak to each other, it is
with a contemplative understanding of a life of war
and persecution. When they speak to Israelis, you can
watch as each side discovers the humanity in the
hearts of their adversaries. The bus tour is only
three days, but the journey the participants and
viewers are taken on will last a lifetime.
Best Director in Documentary Competition
Lee Hirsch, Amandla! A Revolution in Four-Part Harmony
The musical tradition of South Africa often makes it
to American shores through the well-intentioned but
ultimately filtered recordings of white pop musicians
such as Peter Gabriel and Paul Simon. But in
Amandla!, Hirsch lets those who created the
beautiful and complex songs tell their own stories.
The result is a deftly organized history of the
Anti-Apartheid movement as chronicled by the powerful
protest songs that marked the struggle of black South
Africans, from the inception of Apartheid to the
excavation from a pauper's grave of the body of the
nation's greatest protest songwriter nearly five
decades after his death by hanging. We see and hear
the anger that permeated the protestors' songs, the
beautiful harmonies that buoyed their spirits, and the
dances that moved them forward, literally and
figuratively. Amandla! illustrates in vivid
sound and color how unifying music can be to a society
in turmoil, and how much strength a community gains
from songs everyone -- from grandparents to parents to
children to grandchildren -- can claim as a rallying
cry.
Most Original Script
Human Nature
Writer: Charlie Kaufman
Regular Bjork music video collaborator Michel Gondry
creates a hyperreal world of saturated hues and fairy
tale exteriors in his directorial debut, but the real
genius behind Human Nature is screenwriter
Charlie Kaufman (Being John Malkovich).
Patricia Arquette is a nature writer with a terribly
carnal secret that she's trying to keep from her
husband (Tim Robbins), a scientist who's charged
himself with the task of teaching the world some
manners. All sense of sophistication goes out the
window with the salad fork when the couple goes hiking
and find Puff (Rhys Ifans), a grown man who was raised
as an ape by another man who thought he was an ape.
Kaufman explores what it means to get back to basics
without resorting to an ignorance-is-bliss myth or
self-realization garbage, and he does it all with
punchlines and turns of phrase that you're guaranteed
never to have heard before. Kaufman is one of the most
original and subversive minds writing today, and he's
proving it with each successive script made into an
incomparable movie experience.
Funniest Movie
Run Ronnie Run!
Director: Troy Miller
Nearly four years after completing the last season of
Mr. Show on HBO, Bob Odenkirk and David Cross
bring their whippet-fueled train wreck of sketch
comedy to the big screen. Ronnie Dobbs is a white
trash loser like no other; Terry Twillstein is an
infomercial loser like no other. Together, they become
the biggest thing to hit Hollywood since penis pumps.
Scene after scene of ridiculous predicaments, unsubtle
misunderstandings, and good old fashioned crudeness
come at you so fast that you only catch half the jokes
the first time around. The only flaw is the plot: the
sketches are so funny and so neatly connected already
that the story arc just seems to get in the way. Other
than that, Run Ronnie Run! is the funniest
thing to hit the big screen since South Park:
Bigger, Longer, and Uncut.
Most Entertaining Movie
Intacto
Director: Juan Carlos Fresnadillo
Some movies are just cool. Intacto has got
coolness it in spades. And aces, and hearts, and
jacks. Frederico used to be lucky, but he had his luck
stolen by an aging Jew (played with sinister humanity
by Max Von Sydow) who lives in an isolated casino.
Frederico believes Tomas, the only survivor of a plane
crash, may be able to get his luck back for him.
Director and screenwriter Fresnadillo takes the
ingenious step of treating luck as a preternatural
destiny for an unironically lucky few, a few who also
have the ability to rob others of their luck. This
secret society of high-stakes gamblers meets in
secluded locations and bets "stakes" -- snapshots of
people whose luck they've stolen -- in crazy games on
the way to the ultimate prize: a 5-to-1 odds game of
Russian Roulette with the old Jew, with his thousands
of stakes going to the winner. Intacto is
extraordinarily shot, meditatively acted, and
consistently surprising. Hollywood only wishes it
could make movies this cool.
Worst Movie
(tie) Cherish and The Business of
Fancydancing
If I hadn't seen Finn Taylor with my own eyes, I'd
think the real director of this catastrophe was a
14-year-old who was trying to make a movie about what
it's like to be an adult. The plot is intriguing in
the abstract: a young, pop-music-obsessed animator
who's unlucky in love soon becomes unlucky in life
after a carjacker/stalker runs her into a pedestrian
police officer and then takes off, forcing her to take
the rap and serve a two-year house arrest. Rather than
explore the psychological and humorous possibilities
of such urban isolation,
Taylor treats it like a combination sitcom and
suspense thriller. Everything is so antiseptic, from
the Ikea furniture to the eerily spotless "seedy"
neighborhood to the cast of characters
(cute-as-a-button lead, dorky male co-star, "Sesame
Street"-esque racial mix of neighbor kids, et. al.)
that what could have been a scrumptious dark comedy
ends up somewhere between Gidget N the Hood and
Nancy Drew Presents: The Case of the FM
Stalker. Either way, without tongue in cheek, such
homages to bad TV and ridiculously overplayed love
songs make for one massive Sundance disaster.
And if you're looking for proof that good
screenwriters don't always make good directors, The
Business of Fancydancing should convince you in
less than 15 minutes. Smoke Signals writer
Sherman Alexie pontificates all over his directorial
debut, in which a young poet returns to the
reservation to find a community that ostracizes him
both for being a sellout and for being a homosexual.
Alexie manages a handful of beautiful sequences, but
merges them with too many embarrassingly underplanned
ones that are personalized to the point of banality.
If the directing doesn't turn you off, the acting
will. And if the acting doesn't turn you off, the
shoddy production will.
Best Category
Whereas the U.S. films, in and out of competition,
seemed to be too personal, too political, or too
rehashed, almost every foreign film this reviewer saw
balanced emotion, politics, and innovation with the
most important thing of all: brilliant stories. Even
if the action gets a little confusing, as in the
Russian movie Lubov and Other Nightmares, the
stories are still far from the cookie-cutter approach
that plagues Hollywood and, increasingly, U.S.
independent movies.
Most Likely to Succeed (Non-Premiere)
Narc or Intacto
(Note: this prediction is made without seeing
Tadpole, which generated the most buzz at this
year's Festival.) Joe Carnahan's follow-up to
Blood, Guts, Bullets & Octane features an
A-list cast and already has distribution. Though it's
a bit heady for a cop drama, it has just enough
shooting and intrigue to attract moviegoers in droves.
And if Intacto was a U.S. film, it would be the
most likely to succeed, hands-down. As it is, it may
be the "Most Likely to Get Remade in English."
Best Character
Sister Helen, as herself in Sister Helen
You can't make up people like this foul-mouthed,
recovering alcoholic, saintly, and undeniably lovable
Benedictine nun.