CONFESSIONS OF A GOOD SAMARITAN: of course, wouldn’t you?…WHAT?

Photo caption: Penny Lane in her CONFESSIONS OF A GOOD SAMARITAN. Courtesy of Sandbox Films.

Documentarian Penny Lane is known for her choice of offbeat subjects (Nuts!, Hail Satan?) and her unexpected takes on the familiar (Our Nixon, Listening to Kenny G). In Confessions of a Good Samaritan, she turns her camera upon herself as she decides to donate one of her kidneys to a person that she doesn’t know and will never meet. An in-depth exploration of both kidney transplants and altruism ensues – all from the very personal perspective of a person about to go under the knife herself. Lane herself is a delightful subject, and she courageously shares her most intimate feelings, making Confessions of a Good Samaritan ever more engrossing.

I screened Confessions of a Good Samaritan for the SFFILM; this week, it opens at Laemmle’s Royal, NoHo and Monica Film Center in LA and the Roxie in San Francisco.

MOTHER COUCH: obstreperous mom, surreal situation

Ewan McGregor (right) in MOTHER COUCH. Courtesy of Film Movement.

In the nightmarish fever dream Mother Couch, Ewan McGregor plays a man trapped in an absurd situation – his obstreperous, estranged mother (Ellen Burstyn) is refusing to leave a couch in a furniture store. His adult siblings (Rhys Ifans, Lara Flynn Boyle), whom he barely knows, are present but not supportive. The oddly singular furniture store is itself a bizarre construction, and this fable of parental emotional abandonment just keeps getting ever more surreal.

The now elderly mom has been a terrible mother – selfish, emotionally unconnected and not the least bit nurturing – and unashamed. Now that she needs care, her two oldest kids are prepared to giver a dose of her own medicine. But the youngest son (McGregor) feels obligated to take care of dear old mom, as hateful as she is.

Ellen Burstyn in MOTHER COUCH. Courtesy of Film Movement.

McGregor’s and Burstyn’s performances are very strong, and the depth of the cast is extraordinary: Taylor Russell, F. Murray Abraham and Lake Bell.  I particularly admired Rhys Ifans’ subtle performance as guy who doesn’t want to be as apathetic and irresponsible as his behavior would indicate. We get to enjoy Abraham as two characters – twin brothers with very disparate personalities.

Mother Couch is the first narrative feature for writer-director Niclas Larsson, an acclaimed director of car commercials, and it’s a remarkable calling card.

This is the most surreal film that I have seen in a long while. I screened Mother Couch for the SFFILM in April; it releases into primarily arthouse theaters on July 5.

BANEL AND ADAMA: we want to be together and left alone

Photo caption: Khady Mane and Mamadou Diallo in BANEL AND ADAMA. Courtesy of Kino Lorber.

In the well-crafted and beautifully shot Senegalese drama Banel and Adama, a 19-year-old couple live in a remote village, happily in love with each other, but chafing at cultural traditions. Banel (Khady Mane) suffers her nightmare of a mother-in-law, and Adama (Mamadou Diallo) resists the burdens of community leadership that he knows he isn’t ready for. Can they find happiness in their village? Will they leave together?

Their personal stories are set in a dramatic, drought-stricken landscape with houses buried in sand and dust. Writer-director Ramata-Toulaye Sy, in her first feature, and cinematographer Amine Berrada deliver one of the most visually singular films of the year.

Sy gets fine performances out of cast of non-actors. Mane is especially charismatic as Banel.

I screened Banel and Adama for this year’s SFFILM, where I highlighted it in my Under the radar at SFFILM. It’s now been released into arthouse theaters by Kino Lorber.

AFTER ANTARCTICA: one man, two poles

Tasha Van Zandt’s AFTER ANTARCTICA. Photo courtesy of SFFILM.

The fine documentary After Antarctica follows ecological adventurer Will Steger on two polar expeditions – different poles and twenty-five years apart.

In 1989-90, Steger led the first non-mechanized expedition to cross continent of Antarctica (the LONG way – from one coast to the other). This was a grueling and risky endeavor. The international team needed to avoid terrifying crevasses; (check out the beginning of the trailer below.) The volatility of the weather was brutal. Steger noted, “Antarctica doesn’t want us here, and is making every effort to remind us”.

The team faced a crisis of supplies and exhaustion just 16 miles from the end of their 3700 mile journey.  They knew that the earlier Antarctic explorer Robert F. Scott had died only 12 miles from a supply cache. Steger’s leadership, informed by zen discipline and sheer force of will, brought them through.

The Steger team’s achievement will not be matched – due to climate change, the 4000 square mile Larsen ice shelf that they traversed is no longer there.

Tasha Van Zandt’s AFTER ANTARCTICA. Photo courtesy of SFFILM.

A quarter of a century later, After Antarctica follows a 75-year-old Steger as he undertakes a solo expedition above the Arctic Circle – contemplating the effects of climate change and and his own mortality. In contrast with the global celebrity of the Antarctic expedition, the Arctic march is solitary.

Will Steger, who has survived both a lethal mountain climbing accident and cancer, has lived a life on the extreme. He is self-focused, crusty and open, without defensiveness, about own personal flaws.

The two polar journeys, the examination of climate change and Steger’s own life are told through the voice of Will Steger himself.

After Antarctica is the first feature for director Tasha Van Zandt. We see never-before-seen file footage of the Antarctic expedition. The Arctic cinematography by Van Zandt and DP Sebastian Zeck is extraordinary. Van Zandt has said that the icy ground and the grey sky of the Arctic hindered depth perception, making the piloting of drones for aerial photography especially difficult.

I screened After Antarctica for the 2021 San Francisco International Film Festival (SFFILM), where it won a jury award. It’s finally available to stream on Amazon, AppleTV and YouTube.

Under the radar at the 2024 SFFILM

Isabelle Huppert and Tsuyoshi Ihara in Élise Girard’s SIDONIE IN JAPAN. Courtesy of SFFILM.

This year’s San Francisco International Film Festival (SFFILM) opens on Wednesday. SFFILM presents a wide-ranging slate of films from 40 countries. The opening and closing night films, Didi and Thelma, are justifiably generating the buzz. Here are four more under-the-radar recommendations.

  • Sidonie in Japan: The great Isabelle Huppert stars in this French drama as a writer whose life has been shaped by grief. Her first success came from a book about her own traumatic loss; her life was reignited by a supportive husband, whom she has also now lost. A new translation of her first book finds her on a book tour of Japan. Sidonie eventually finds that she can explore the navigation of grief with her translator (Tsuyoshi Ihara), for whom still waters run deep, and the silent beauty of Japan’s gardens and temples, helps too. Add some magical realism, and Sidonie in Japan becomes a satisfying story of surviving painful episodes in life. The personal drama is leavened by fish-out-of-water comic touches as a Frenchwoman is introduced to the oft counterintuitive protocols of Japanese culture.
  • The Practice: This deadpan Argentine comedy is a triumph of absurdism. An Argentine yoga instructor living in Chile (Esteban Bigliardi) faces a set of challenges that most people find a way to overcome, including an ex-wife who doesn’t want him back, a nagging mother, a knee injury, a thieving student. Unfortunately, he is devoid of common sense and his every instinct is a misfire. A romantic opportunity arises, but will he find a way to self-sabotage that, too? Ever droll, this film by writer-director Martín Rejtman is very funny.
  • Mother Couch: In this nightmarish fever dream, Ewan McGregor plays a man trapped in an absurd situation – his obstreperous, estranged mother (Ellen Burstyn) is refusing to leave a couch in a furniture store. His adult siblings (Rhys Ifans, Lara Flynn Boyle), whom he barely knows, are present but not supportive. The oddly singular furniture store is itself a bizarre construction, and this fable of parental emotional abandonment just keeps getting ever more surreal. McGregor’s and Burstyn’s performances are very strong, and the depth of the cast is extraordinary: Taylor Russell, F. Murray Abraham and Lake Bell. Mother Couch is the first narrative feature for writer-director Niclas Larsson, an acclaimed director of car commercials, and it’s a remarkable calling card.
  • Banel and Adama: In this well-crafted and beautifully shot Senegalese drama, a 19-year-old couple live in a remote village, happily in love with each other, but chafing at cultural traditions. Banel suffers her nightmare of a mother-in-law, and Adama resists the burdens of community leadership that he knows he isn’t ready for. Can they find happiness in their village? Will they leave together? Their personal stories are set in a dramatic, drought-stricken landscape with houses buried in sand and dust.

Peruse the program and buy tickets at SFFILM. All my SFFILM coverage, including eventual full reviews, will be linked on my SFFILM 2024 page.

A scene from Martin Rejtman’s THE PRACTICE. Courtesy of SFFILM.

First look at the 2024 SFFILM

Izaac Wang stars as “Chris” in writer/director Sean Wang’s DÌDI, a Focus Features release. Credit: Courtesy of Focus Features / Talking Fish Pictures LLC © 2024 All Rights Reserved.

This year’s San Francisco International Film Festival (SFFILM) opens April 24, and runs through April 28. The fest is in-person, at the Marina, the Premier Theater at One Letterman, t Vogie, the Walt Disney Family Museum, and Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive (BAMPFA).

The menu at SFFILM includes films from 40 countries, including 12 world premieres, 8 North American premieres and 5 US premieres. Peruse the program and buy tickets at SFFILM.

Here are more special elements of this year’s SFFILM:

  • The opening night film is the the highly-buzzed-about coming age dramedy Didi. This will be only the third festival for Didi, which was a hit at both Sundance and SXSW, and which is scheduled to be released on July 26. It’s the first narrative feature from director Sean Wang, who was Oscar-nominated for his documentary short Nai Nai & Wai Po.
  • The closing night film is a hoot – Thelma, starring 93-year-old June Squibb (Oscar-nominated for Nebraska) in an action picture. Squibb plays a scammed senior who goes on a quest to recover her money from the scammers. I’ve seen it, and it’s a surefire audience-pleaser. Thelma also features indie favorite Parker Posey and the sweet final performance of Richard Roundtree (Shaft).
  • Tributes to Joan Chen and Chiwetel Ejiofor.
  • Movies starring Chen, Squibb, Roundtree, Posey, Isabelle Huppert, Colman Domingo, Ellen BurstynEwan McGregorRhys IfansLara Flynn BoyleLake BellTaylor Russell,  F. Murray Abraham, Judy Greer, Julianne Nicholson, Elias Koteas and Paul Raci,

As usual, I’ll be looking for under-the-radar gems and posting my recommendations just before the fest’s opening. My coverage will be linked on my SFFILM 2024 page.

BEING MARY TYLER MOORE: you might just make it after all

Photo caption: BEING MARY TYLER MOORE. Courtesy of HBO.

The showbiz biodoc Being Mary Tyler Moore traces the career and life of an important trailblazer who captivated American TV audiences for decades. The ever-relatable Mary Tyler Moore pioneered the fictional single woman on TV, an important cultural moment.

While she was playing the archetypal single career woman, Moore was a wife and mother. She and husband Grant Tinker created some of the best TV ever – The Bob Newhart ShowWKRP in CincinnatiHill Street Blues, and St. Elsewhere – and pioneered the TV spinoff with Rhoda. It bears remembering that CBS’ Saturday evening 8-11 pm slate in the fall of 1973 was the best nightly TV lineup ever: All in the FamilyM*A*S*H, The Mary Tyler Moore ShowThe Bob Newhart Show and The Carol Burnett Show

Being Mary Tyler Moore traces the lesser known aspects of Moore’s life, including her childhood and retirement years. Of course, there’s a clip from the Mary Tyer Moore Show’s unforgettable Chuckles the Clown episode.

Incidentally, I highly recommend Joan Jett’s version of the MTM Show theme Love Is All Around, which you can find on YouTube.

Being Mary Tyler Moore is streaming on HBO, beginning May 26. I screened it for the SFFILM in April.

is in the Air.

Under the radar at SFFILM

Photo caption: Francisco Reyes in Lorena Padilla’s MARTINEZ. Courtesy of SFFILM.

This year’s San Francisco International Film Festival (SFFILM) opens tomorrow. SFFILM presents a wide-ranging slate of films from 37 countries. Here are four under the radar recommendations. Each has a female director. Each of the three narratives is the first feature film by its director, two from Mexico and one from Turkey.

  • Martinez: In this sly portrait of a man isolated by his own routine, the titular character (Francisco Reyes of A Fantastic Woman) cannot suffer fools. That is a curse because no one can meet his standards, and he loathes every human interaction. His employer decides that forty years of Martinez is enough and decides to push him out the door. Then, a neighbor he has met only once dies, and Martinez unleashes some unexpected curiosity. The two co-workers who are his biggest irritants become more sympathetic as we – and Martinez – can see their vulnerabilities. Eventually, a life is changed. First-time director Lorena Padilla also co-wrote the docu-fable 499, a highly original contemplation of Mexico’s Original Sin of colonialism.
Merve Dizdar in Selcen Ergun’s SNOW AND THE BEAR. Courtesy of SFFILM.
  • Snow and the Bear: Asli (Merve Dizdar) is a young nurse assigned to a tiny village in the most remote mountains of northeast Turkey. She’s both compassionate and fearless, and a thoroughly modern woman plopped into a decidedly backward community. It’s brutally cold, isolated after every snowfall, and the menfolk spend the nights at noisy bonfires to ward off a human-hunting bear that they imagine lurks in the forest. The village’s blustery and selfish butcher reacts with hostility when Asli reinforces his pregnant wife’s need for bedrest. Asli finds the kindnesses proffered by the village’s animal-loving simpleton too creepy. The butcher disappears, setting up a slow-burn mystery. In her first feature, director Selcen Ergun brings us exteriors that will chill a California audience and moody, barely lit interiors – all visually captivating.
Daniela Marín Navarro in Valentina Maurel’s I HAVE ELECTRIC DREAMS. Courtesy of SFFILM.
  • I Have Electric Dreams: In this coming-of-age narrative brimming with authenticity, the spirited 16-year-old Eva (Daniela Marín Navarro) and her longsuffering mom are on each other’s very last nerve. Eva decides to go live with her father, who is decidedly not Parent of the Year material. For the first time, she gets an up-close-and-personal look at his inner demons, and an increasingly harsh immersion in human behavior. Daniela Marín Navarro’s performance in her first screen credit is incendiary, and she’s been piling up festival awards for best actress.
Penny Lane in her CONFESSIONS OF A GOOD SAMARITAN. Courtesy of SFFILM.
  • Confessions of a Good Samaritan: Documentarian Penny Lane is known for her choice of offbeat subjects (Nuts!, Hail Satan?) and her unexpected takes on the familiar (Our Nixon, Listening to Kenny G). Here, she turns her camera upon herself as she decides to donate one of her kidneys to a person that she doesn’t know and will never meet. An in-depth exploration of both kidney transplants and altruism ensues – all from the very personal perspective of a person about to go under the knife herself. Lane is a delightful subject, and she courageously shares her most intimate feelings, making Confessions of a Good Samaritan ever more engrossing.

All my SFFILM coverage, including eventual full reviews, will be linked on my SFFILM 2023 page.

SUPERCOOL: a teen comedy familiar, until it isn’t

A scene from Teppo Airaksinen’s film SUPERCOOL, which played at SFFILM. Photo courtesy of SFFILM.

Supercool has the familiar arc of a teen comedy – until it doesn’t. We get the high school cafeteria lunch period, the adolescent social awkwardness, the bullies and the parents-away teen house party. And then there are some unexpected sparkles.

Our protagonists, Neil (Jake Short) and Gilbert (Miles J. Harvey) have a commonplace obsession for teen boys: they aspire to get SOME sexual experience with another person. And Neil worships a girl whom he is afraid to even talk to,

There’s a funny scene (glimpsed in the trailer below) where the guys fantasize a situation where girls would be attracted to them, unaware that Neil’s parents are hearing every word.

The guys also have two misadventures that put them in hilariously uncomfortable sexual situations.

Neil has a helluva imagination and creates graphic novels that picture how he hopes to eventually woo his beloved. Fortunately, he is sweet on a girl who turns out to have an awesome sense of humor.

I must note that Supercool does contain the best-ever movie use of the (only?) Haddaway song What Is Love.

I screened Supercool for its world premiere at SFFILM in April 2021. Supercool can now be streamed from Amazon, Vudu, YouTube and redbox.

HIT THE ROAD: a funny family masks their tough choice

Photo caption: Pantea Panahiha and Amin Simiar in HIT THE ROAD. Courtesy of Kino Lorber.

In Hit the Road, we join an Iranian family’s road trip. It’s a relatively uneventful journey through barren countryside, but it’s unforgettable because of the characters and the reason for their trip. Their motivation is more loaded than it first appears.

The 20-year old Big Brother (Amin Simiar) is driving the little four-door hatchback sedan, with Mom (Pantea Panahiha) in the front seat. Dad (Hasan Majuni) is sprawling in the middle of the back seat, his leg in a massive cast. The six-year-old Little Brother (Rayan Sarlak) is bouncing around the back. An old dog (literally on his last legs) is in the way-back.

The first thing we notice us that the little kid is very precocious and a tornado of energy, a naturally caffeinated rascal. He has no volume modulation dial, and this kid is going full blast all the time. Fortunately, he is really smart and mostly funny, and his parents have built up a tolerance, so they don’t bind and gag him (which, admittedly, briefly crossed my mind).

The second thing we notice is the banter between the mom, dad and little kid. They are sarcastic, always teasing, and hilariously deadpan. Everyone is constantly tossing off playful threats. Everyone, that is, except for Big Brother, who sits behind the wheel in stoic silence, steeped in melancholy.

That’s because he knows the real reason for the trip, which the parents have not truthfully disclosed to the kid brother. That reason is never made entirely explicit, but there’s a telling clue over halfway through.

[MILD SPOILER: Suffice it to say, sometimes parents must lose their child to save him.]

Hasan Majuni and Amin Simiar in HIT THE ROAD. Courtesy of Kino Lorber.

The acting is top-rate. Hasan Majuni is perfect as the dad, a guy you can imagine holding forth in front of the TV and bellowing, “Hey, bring me a kabob”. He is jovial and commanding, even when hobbling along on his cast. But when the dad is unwatched by anyone else, his thoughts are of what is ahead for his family – his look intensifies as it takes on loss, determination, grief and resignation.

Pantea Panahiha is just as excellent as the mom, caustically funny, but with strong emotions sometimes leaking out. She’s just trying to make sure the little kid doesn’t notice.

The Wife liked Hit the Road even more than I did. I found this especially significant since I generally enjoy both international cinema and challenging films more than she does. She particularly admired and was drawn in by the acting, especially by Majuni and Panahiha.

Rayan Sarlak in HIT THE ROAD. Courtesy of Kino Lorber.

Hit the Road is the first feature for writer-director Panah Panahi. Panahi clearly has a gift for making the most from a low budget, a tiny cast and a bleak landscape.

Hit the Road premiered at Cannes’ Directors Fortnight and then took to the festival circuit, including SFFILM 2022. It is now in theaters.