Change Your Image
jalawa-2
Reviews
Day on Fire (2006)
A beautiful vision of how chance encounters can have unexpected consequences
Jay Anania's new film, "Day on Fire," is a haunting story about a Palestinian journalist and a Jewish model who meet by accident in New York, and whose lives become inextricably, and shockingly, intertwined. The remarkable cast is led by the always-excellent Martin Donovan, playing an enigmatic man, handsome, solitary, and fastidious, who's on a kind of quest through the streets of the city that will bring him into contact with one of these women, in a way one could never predict. Carmen Chaplin (granddaughter of that other Chaplin), gives an exquisite performance of a woman who is carrying on her shoulders a personal grief, as well as the weight of her people's struggles, as she pursues her own search for understanding. And Alyssa Sutherland, an actress I hadn't seen before, plays the model with great dignity and unusual intelligence. The struggles that are playing out on the other side of the world are reflected here, both in the sadness that darkens their lives, and in the hope their shared emotions gives rise to. A lovely performance by Olympia Dukakis, and a cameo by the wonderful Richard Bright (The Godfather, among many others), playing a homeless man, and filmed shortly before his untimely death, are worth the price of admission. A gorgeous series of duets by the singer Judy Kuhn and the pianist John Medeski provide a kind of poetic counterpoint to the main story. The cinematography, by Kathryn Westergaard, shooting in hi-definition video, is beautiful, unsurprising for this filmmaker who always makes us look at the world through fresh eyes. A movie to see again and again.
Demi-tarif (2003)
A small and delicate masterpiece
This is an exquisite tone poem about childhood, and abandonment, and freedom. I saw this a year ago and still can't get it out of my mind. Isild le Besco, perhaps the most gifted actress of her generation in France, and the most haunting screen presence, shows herself to be a greatly gifted director as well. She has crafted a delicate and very moving story from the simplest of elements. It's a film that in many ways reminds me of Truffaut's "The Four Hundred Blows." Without much in the way of exposition or dialogue, we enter into the minds of the parentless kids as they move about Paris hustling to stay alive and in school. It gives a wonderful feeling of the city, as seen from the level of a child's eye, and of how the world looks to children who are trying to navigate life without the usual protection of adults. I was entranced
Her Name Is Carla (2005)
a visual poem about suspicion, delusion and coincidence
I saw this film at a screening in New York, and found it a fascinating exploration of the lives of two couples, one played by Julian Sands in his best and most controlled performance in years, and Julianne Nicholson, one of the most talented and alluring young actresses around, and the other by Max Beesley, an intense young English actor and musician, and Mina Badie (from "Anniversary Party"). The four come together at a beautiful old house on the water where one couple is having marital troubles and the other arrives and complicates their lives even further, in ways both sexual and menacing. The tension within each couple, and the disturbing quality of their relationship as it evolves over the course of two days and a night, leading to a surprising and shocking conclusion, reminds me of the films of Haneke. I haven't seen the DVD but have heard that the transfer quality is less than optimal. The image at the screening I saw was quite beautiful, so if that's true it's a shame. This is a visual tone poem about four people who lives so intensely in their imaginations that the rest of life becomes almost impossible.
Long Time Since (1998)
a reminder that film is a visual art
This film is a beautiful and evocative drama about a botanical illustrator, played by Paulina Porizkova in her best screen role, who is haunted by a violent memory she can neither understand nor forget. Julian Sands, a stranger she happens to meet, seems connected with this memory in some way, but she is unable to remember why. The film traces her quest to understand and recover a part of her past that she has lost. It's stunningly photographed, as are all of Anania's films, and becomes a meditation on the act of watching, as much as it is an exploration of how a fugitive memory can haunt one. Porizkova, with her almost supernaturally beautiful face, has never really found a film role she could comfortably inhabit until now. But her perfect face, exquisitely lit and framed, almost always still and unsmiling, suggests depths heretofore unseen. Julianne Nicholson, playing a character who is part of the answer to the heroine's quest, gives a wonderfully simple and moving performance. A film that ravishes the eye and lights unexpected fires in the imagination.