The 2023 SLO Film Fest has opened. I’ve screened over a dozen of the features, and here are eight that you shouldn’t miss:
- Scrapper: Georgie, a precocious 12-year-old girl, thinks that she is independently living her best life, until the unexpected appearance of the dad she hasn’t known. In her first feature, British writer-director Charlotte Regan has created a deliciously charming character, played to roguish perfection by Lola Campbell. Harris Dickinson (Triangle of Sadness) is very good as the dad. The screenplay, about loss, connection and second chances, is brimming with humanity. Won the Grand Jury Prize for World Cinema/Dramatic at Sundance.
- BlackBerry: This is the funny true story of Canadian geeks who find themselves suddenly dominating the nascent smartphone market…but only for a while. It’s an odd couple pairing of co-CEOs – a shy and brilliant engineer (Jay Baruchal) and brutally obnoxious master of the pitch (Glenn Howerton). Engineering and marketing genius, paired with breathtaking audacity, take them to the top. Unfortunately, hubris is generated, too. BlackBerry is a a surefire audience-pleaser. Make sure you watch the end credits to see what happened to the real guys.
- Rodeo: A remarkably fierce young woman invites herself into a crew of dirt riders, Rodeo is set with remarkable verisimilitude in a subculture of young bikers from France’s hardscrabble immigrant communities. First feature for French director Lola Quivoron, who is the real star of this ever kinetic, roller coaster of a movie. If she wants to, Quivoron will be making big Hollywood action films like The Fast and the Furious. Won the Un Certain Regard coup de coeur prize at Cannes.
- The Grab: This exposé is an important documentary at the level of An Inconvenient Truth. The Grab documents and clearly explains the global grab for food and water resources by corporations and nations. Impressively researched, The Grab is engrossing and sobering.
- Mediterranean Fever: A depressive writer becomes friends with his shady neighbor and the two embark on a dark journey. Second feature for Palestinian director Maha Haj. I don’t want to describe the tone of Mediterranean Fever, like I do many films, as “darkly funny” because the tone is singular. Haj has written a story about that unfunniest of topics, depression, and keeps us watching with subtle, observational humor. Won the Un Certain Regard screenplay prize at Cannes.
- Everybody Wants to Be Loved: This German dramedy is a triumph of the harried mom genre. As a psychotherapist, Ina (Anne Ratte-Polle) spends her workdays listening to whining and naval-gazing. Then she goes home to her self-absorbed boyfriend and her teen daughter – and the job of teenagers is to be self-absorbed. Nobody is more narcissistic and entitled than Ina’s mom. It’s the mom’s birthday, and she is rampaging with demands. The daughter is threatening to move in with Ina’s ex, and the boyfriend wants to move the family to Finland for his career. As Ina is swirling around this vortex of egotism, she gets some sobering news about her own health. As everyone converges on the birthday party, what could possibly go wrong? First feature for director and co-writer Katharina Woll.
- Searching for Sugar Man: Great choice for a retrospective by SLO Film Fest programmers. This doc is about a modest guy who didn’t know that he was a rock star. For real. Won the 2013 Oscar for Best Feature Documentary.
- Dusty and Stones: For an unadulterated Feel Good movie, it’s hard to beat this little documentary that layers on the improbabilities. It’s about a Country Western duo from Swaziland (since renamed Eswatini) who get a chance to visit Nashville and compete in a Texas country music festival. Who knew there was a Country Western music scene in Swaziland, complete with line dancing and Stetsons? There are plenty of nuggets here., beginning with the guys’ unbounded joy at hearing their music recorded with the very best Nashville studio equipment and session musicians. And they explain to the denizens of an African-American barbershop that they are headed for a country music festival in a small East Texas town. And, sitting in a Nashville motel, they contemplate their first Taco Bell cuisine. It’s a little movie, but it’s a hoot.
The SLO Film Fest runs in-person through April 30 in San Luis Obispo. The encore week, from April 30 through May 7, will feature both live screenings in Paso Robles and much of the program being available virtually. Peruse the program and get your tickets at SLO Film Fest. Here’s a teaser for BlackBerry.