No Reservation

Beans-movie-review-rainbow-dickerson-kiawentiio
Sébastien Raymond

MOVIE REVIEW
Beans (2021)

“Beans” is the kind of movie that will get passed around between teenage girls the way Judy Blume books did back in the day. It knows things about growing up that kids are eager to learn whether they are ready for it or not. It’s the summer of 1990 and Beans (Kiawentiio) is 12. She lives on the Mohawk side of a small town outside Montreal with her parents and little sister, Ruby (Violah Beauvais, the dictionary definition of irrepressible). Her mother, Lily (Rainbow Dickerson), who is eight months pregnant, has encouraged Beans to apply to a swank private school for grade 7. Beans is clearly smart enough, but she’s still naive. This is the summer she gets her real education.

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Secrets Stashed

Memory-box-movie-review-manal-issa
Haut et Court – Abbout Productions – Micro_Scope

MOVIE REVIEW
Memory Box (2021)

The layered memories of this film work surprisingly well, both as a historical document and as an uncovering of buried truths. The set-up is simple: Alex (Paloma Vauthier) is 14. She lives in Montreal with her mother, Maia (Rim Turki), after her father has left them to start a new family in France. Alex and her grandmother Téta (Clémence Sabbagh) are getting ready for Christmas when a large box is delivered; the grandmother pales and insists it should be hidden away. Alex, obviously, snoops. The box has been sent from the family of Maia’s teenage best friend Julie, who has recently died without Maia’s knowledge. It contains the extensive journals, photographs and cassettes that teenage Maia (Manal Issa) obsessively made for Julie, so they could keep in touch after Julie’s family left Beirut in the mid-’80s. Alex knows nothing of any of this – not of the war in Lebanon, not of her family history, and not of what her mother was like when she was young. So she snoops some more.

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Lies After Death

Ballad-of-a-white-cow-movie-review-maryam-moghaddam
Amin Jafari

MOVIE REVIEW
Ballad of a White Cow (2021)

“Ballad of a White Cow” is about a woman who, offered the choice of cake or death, rejects the cake every time. It’s a bitter pill to swallow and a bitter film to watch.

Mina’s (Maryam Moghaddam, who not only cowrote the screenplay with Behtash Sanaeeha and Mehrdad Kouroshnia, but codirected with Mr. Sanaeeha) husband Babak was convicted of murder and put to death a year before the main action starts. In all that time, she has been unable to bring herself to file for government assistance, instead living off her measly job in a milk factory. She has further been unable to tell her little daughter Bita (Avin Purraoufi), who is deaf, the truth about Babak’s absence; instead she maintains that he is studying abroad and will return soon. Bita acts out in school, and otherwise spends her time watching old movies, including those of Shirley Temple. Mina herself has neither family nor friends; instead her only contact is with her brother-in-law (Pourya Rahimisam), the messenger of her unpleasant (and unseen) father-in-law, who will not cede Mina control of her own life. His demands that Mina give up her job and allow herself to be protected/controlled by the family are firmly rejected, but they know as well as Mina does that her options are running out.

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When You’re My Age

Petite-maman-movie-review-joséphine-sanz-gabrielle-sanz
Lilies Films

MOVIE REVIEW
Petite Maman (2021)

In 72 short minutes, Céline Sciamma’s new film manages to cover grief, complicated families, the sadness of children and impossible magic. It builds a world where little girls have to negotiate, alone, the feelings of others and the limits of their own understanding. And it suggests that the best way to cope with these awful pressures is to go build yourself a home of your own.

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The Cage of Innocence

Night-raiders-movie-review-brooklyn-letexier-hart-susanne-cyr
Christos Kalohoridis

MOVIE REVIEW
Night Raiders (2021)

The emotional stakes of “Night Raiders” are so high that it doesn’t matter the movie is a mash-up of “Children of Men,” “Young Ones” and “Leave No Trace.” It’s a bilingual Cree-English futuristic re-enactment of The Scoop – that is, the forcible removable of Indigenous Canadian children to residential schools where their connection to their culture was tortured out of them. (The most notorious residential school in Canada had its own electric chair.) Such tortures have been undertaken on indigenous children all around the world, including those currently happening on the American border with Mexico, and since this is a Canadian co-production with New Zealand, with Taika Waititi and his wife Chelsea Winstanley as producers, there are global points to be made. In a certain way the fact we’ve seen these miseries onscreen before is almost the point, because this shit keeps fucking happening.

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Gravity of Law

Drift-away-movie-review-jérémie-renier-albatros
Guy Ferrandis

MOVIE REVIEW
Drift Away (2021)

This is a movie for adults. In America death and suffering are for other people, and humans will go to any length, make any excuse, twist themselves into any knots in order to avoid it. If it’s inescapable, it’s treated with either self-pity or sarcasm, but either method is a refusal to accept it. But “Drift Away” is a French film that knows that suffering is all around and the best way to handle it is to confront it honestly. The French title of the movie, “Albatros,” is after a model ship Laurent (Jérémie Renier) is gifted from his mother. His family have lived on the Normandy coast for generations. Laurent can’t afford his own boat, but his friend Olivier (Alexandre Lefrancois) can, and they often go fishing. Laurent has a partner, Marie (Marie-Julie Maille, the director’s wife, who also co-wrote the screenplay and co-edited the film), who works in the town hall, and together they have a daughter named Lucie, but who everyone calls Poulette (Madeleine Beauvois, the director’s daughter). The movie opens with Laurent proposing marriage, in front of Poulette, on Marie’s birthday; she accepts, but without enthusiasm. She is happy with the status quo, and she would rather their money go for the house they are renovating together.

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Ex Machina

I-am-your-man-movie-review-maren-eggert-dan-stevens-ich-bin-die-mensch
Christine Fenzl

MOVIE REVIEW
I’m Your Man (2021)

The question is not whether you would if you could, because of course you would. The question is whether or not you should. Alma (Maren Eggert, who won the Silver Bear at this year’s Berlinale for her performance) is the only professor at her entire university in Berlin with neither a partner nor a family, which is why she has been compelled to participate in the project. There has been months of research and probing questions designed to reveal her deepest desires. And all that information has been run into the program that created Tom (Dan Stevens; yes, really), her perfect man.

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Distance Learning

Language-lessons-movie-review-natalie-morales-mark-duplass
Jeremy Mackie

MOVIE REVIEW
Language Lessons (2021)

As an exercise in pandemic filmmaking, “Language Lessons” could hardly do better. Designed to be viewed on a laptop, the movie is the conversations between two people conducted entirely over screens. Cariño (Natalie Morales, who also directed) is a Spanish teacher, whose deluxe package of 100 online lessons is a surprise birthday gift for Adam (Mark Duplass) from his husband, the unseen Will. After a pleasant initial chat, a standing time is agreed for the next 99 weeks, but next week Adam is late. Cariño is annoyed, but it becomes immediately obvious something is very wrong; and to Cariño’s eternal credit, she does the right thing. But as the saying goes, no good deed ever goes unpunished.

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Writer’s Block

The-world-after-us-movie-review-aurélien-gabrielli
Les idiots, 21 Juin Cinéma

MOVIE REVIEW
The World After Us (2021)

Anyone who dreams of the romance of Paris should watch this adorable love story for a reality check. It’s expensive being broke, especially in Paris, so Labidi (Aurélien Gabrelli, utterly lovable) is having a tough time. He is so broke the bedsit he shares with his awkward friend Alekseï (Léon Cunha Da Costa) is only wide enough for a single bed, a shower stall and a kitchenette. They must take it in turns to sleep on the floor; but since there is something of the Simon Pegg-Nick Frost dynamic between them there’s no friction or drama. Labidi has an education, as well as parents who love him, but they are barely scraping by themselves, and he’s not so young anymore that he can lean on them. But then there are two pieces of luck. A short story Labidi wrote wins a contest, which gets him an agent (Mikaël Chirinian), and the agent gets him a meeting with a publishing house, who ask him to deliver a novel within six months. And then, on a visit down south to Lyon to tell his parents the news, Labidi sees a young woman named Elisa (Louise Chevillotte), and the whole world changes.

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Doing Storytime

Night-of-the-kings-movie-review-koné-bakary-anzian-marcel
Neon

MOVIE REVIEW
Night of the Kings (2021)

In appearance and execution, “Night of the Kings” makes it clear audiences underestimate it at their own risk. The set-up is direct: La MACA is a prison in the middle of the Côte d’Ivorian jungle, and while it’s led by head guard Nivaquine (Issaka Sawadogo), it’s run by its prisoners, of whom Blackbeard (Steve Tientcheu) is the chief. But Blackbeard is sick, and according to the prison’s laws, a sick chief must kill himself to make way for a stronger successor. But Blackbeard is not quite ready to die. He’s allowed to buy time by nominating a prisoner as a storyteller, someone to distract the prisoners from the impeding war while negotiations take place. When a wide-eyed young man in a yellow t-shirt is driven alone through the gates, Blackbeard nominates him as Roman (French for novel; played by Bakary Koné). There are a thousand men who will kill him if he gets it wrong.

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