London

Bite Club

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Shanna Besson/Apollo Films

MOVIE REVIEW
Dogman (2024)

Many an underdog ultimately has their day – often it's her day – in Luc Besson films, and in "Dogman" some actual canines ride the roller-coaster of abuse and transcendence that the director likes to think about. So too does their male human ally, Douglas (Caleb Landry Jones), whose childhood of relentless suffering culminates when his own Neanderthal father blasts him with a shotgun for the crime of caring about some helpless and photogenic puppies. Now largely confined to a wheelchair, an adult Douglas lives in a dilapidated old school with a pack of equally world-weary dogs, liberated from a pound. After what must have been some formidable training, which the film declines to show, he and the dogs happily cohabit in mutual respect and support. They fetch Douglas the correct ingredients from the kitchen for his cooking, and listen raptly while he reads Shakespeare to them. Retreating from society but still helping those who come to him with problems, Douglas sends his canine colleagues out on coordinated missions of justice, like Nick Fury dispatching the Avengers. The dogs evade capture and squeeze past obstacles and scamper between legs and through closing doors in order to locate exactly the right Latino gangster, and then clamp their jaws on his nuts.

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Scenes From a Divorce

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Vertical

MOVIE REVIEW
Our Son (2023)

It’s no one fault, or it’s both their faults, but even with the best will in the world sometimes marriages just can’t be saved. In the case of book publisher Nicky (Luke Evans) and stay-at-home dad Gabriel (Billy Porter) neither of them has been perfect – overwork here, infidelity there – but the main issue is their different parenting styles for their son, Owen (Christopher Woodley), and the resentment which has seeped in until it’s the only thing they can feel. But “Our Son” is not a gay “Marriage Story,” even if that’s the easy marketing tagline which brought it to BFI Flare. Instead it’s about ordinary adult disappointments between an ordinary couple who happen to be gay and the ways in which their homosexuality directs the choices around their completely ordinary divorce.

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Quiet Reflection

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BFI

MOVIE REVIEW
Solids By the Seashore (2023)

“Solids By the Seashore” is unusual for a few reasons. Firstly, it equates the changes people undergo in a new relationship with those a beach undergoes through the ebb and flow of the seasons. Secondly, the people in the new relationship are two young Thai women, one a free-wheeling artist and the other a quiet hijabi. And finally, it’s also a movie about art – the people who make it, the people who sell it and the relationship art has with the places where it’s made. It combines its themes for an unusually satisfying resolution that manages to make all its points despite its restraint.

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Northern Exposure

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Amanda Matlovich/Headless Films Inc.

MOVIE REVIEW
Seven Veils (2023)

If you’ve even seen a man on social media ask the woman who wrote the article if she’s ever read it, then you know exactly how “Seven Veils” feels. There’s a naivety here about how men in positions of power have exploited the women around them, both in the hallowed halls of opera and in the Bible, that feels somewhat unwarranted from a writer-director as attuned to sexualized bad behavior as Atom Egoyan. He’s directed more than one opera production of “Salome” himself, so this project is a meta attempt to analyze the text while also performing the text. And there’s nothing wrong with that, especially at the Berlinale. But his attempts to address how the world is no longer willing to tolerate sexualized violence needed less righteous indignation and more maturity.

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A Himalayan Blunder

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Aditya Basnet/Shooney Films

MOVIE REVIEW
Shambhala (2024)

It must be easy to be a cinematographer in Nepal. You take a camera outside, point it at nearly anything, and let the astonishing mountain scenery do the rest of the work. It’s so gorgeous it’s a surprise “Shambhala” was the first Nepalese movie in competition at the Berlinale, although that rather minimizes Aziz Zhambakiyev’s beautiful work. But in face of such beauty it can be tough not to lose sight of the plot.

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Danger Zone

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Courtesy photo

MOVIE REVIEW
Operation Valentine (2024)

“Fighter” was the Hindi-language response of “Top Gun: Maverick;” and now we have “Operation Valentine,” the Telugu-language equivalent. It's about the same real-life incidents from 2019 also referenced in “Fighter,” but “Operation Valentine” is much the worse movie for two reasons. Firstly, director Shakti Pratap Singh chose to use footage of the real-life funerals which followed the 2019 attacks, which is desperately inappropriate. Secondly, it reduces the entire history of hostilities between two nations into one man's struggle with himself. It's a breathtaking achievement but perhaps not the intended one.

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Mountainish Inhumanity

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Philistine Films

MOVIE REVIEW
The Strangers’ Case (2024)

A lot of people do not give a lot of thought to immigration except to wonder why all these people are suddenly here when they could just stay at home. What “The Strangers’ Case” does is walk us, step by painful step, through the awful things that lead to a small boat in desperate trouble arriving in Greek waters. It does this with perfect staging and acting, an enormous sense of urgency and a pointed beginning and ending that could make you cry. The title is even a quote from Shakespeare, for heaven’s sake. Unfortunately, “The Strangers’ Case” is too calculated in how it tugs at our heartstrings and it tries so hard to make its point that it backfires.

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Spider Sense: Far From Home

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Larry Horricks/Netflix

MOVIE REVIEW
Spaceman (2024)

After “Gravity” came out, Tina Fey famously quipped that it’s about how George Clooney would rather die in the blackness of space than spend time with a woman his own age. Along those lines, “Spaceman” is about how Adam Sandler would rather die in the blackness of space than spend time with his pregnant wife. Deep space is a long way to go to learn that your wife’s feelings are just as valid as your career; and a talking space spider is one hell of a therapist, but hey, whatever works.

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Return to the Shadows

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Travis Wilkerson

MOVIE REVIEW
Through the Graves the Wind Is Blowing (2024)

It’s time to become acquainted with the filmography of Travis Wilkerson. In “Through the Graves the Wind is Blowing,” his 10th film, he manages to combine a personal experience of life under fascism, a history of the fight against fascism in Croatia, the complicated history of its city Split as expressed by its soccer team and the life story and recent career history of a local policeman named Ivan Perić. Originally he planned to make a movie about the disintegration of Yugoslavia, but as he says in his introduction, “How in the world can you do a thing like that.” The answer is, like this. And the cherry on top is it’s very, very good.

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The Tea Is Piping Hot

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Olivier Marceny/Cinéfrance Studios/Archipel 35/Dune Vision

MOVIE REVIEW
Black Tea (2024)

What “Black Tea” should have been is an exploration of how an Ivorian woman is able to be herself only once she leaves home. But instead “Black Tea” is an interesting failure about the limits of the masculine imagination. It’s also a demonstration of the importance of structural consistency if you want an audience to stay with your characters. This is such a shame, because director Abderrahmane Sissako, who also cowrote the script, has a reputation for attentive movies about how people’s lives are shaped by global forces outside their control. But based on this movie, unfortunately he is also only a man. It’s really irritating when a movie misses its own point.

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