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Last day of the fest, which is always a bittersweet day. (I'm exhausted, but sad to see it end for another year.)


Title: The Libertine
Director: Laurence Dunmore
Country: U.K.
P's Rating: Recommended
Johnny Depp plays the Earl of Rochester, a famous wit and rake in the court of Charles II. The Earl had a real talent for writing, but chose to spend his energies more on drinking, whoring, and using his cutting wit on friends and enemies alike. The Libertine presents a fascinating, grotty and muddy view of Restoration England and neither the director nor his star flinch from presenting the unsavory aspects of the Earl.

Title: Ladies in Lavender
Director: Charles Dance
Country: U.K.
P's Rating: Okay
I picked this film mostly on the strength of the cast, and that's where its chief pleasures reside. Just before the outbreak of WW II, two spinster sisters (Judi Dench & Maggie Smith) find a young man (Daniel Bruhl of Goodbye Lenin!) washed up on the beach of their Cornwall home. While the two sisters become infatuated with their charge, he becomes involved with a young Russian painter staying in the village. There aren't any real surprises, but the film also doesn't proceed in quite the way that you expect, and in the end it's a pleasant entertainment.

Title: Steamboy
Director: Katsuhiro Otomo
Country: Japan
P's Rating: Recommended
Steam punk done in Japanese anime. Ray Steam is a youngster working in a Manchester factory of the 1860s while his father and grandfather are in the employ of a mysterious foundation in America. When his grandfather re-appears, chased by agents of the foundation, Ray is thrown into the middle of a race to keep a new steam technology out of the hands of the wrong people. Steamboy is a gorgeously designed cautionary tale about both the dangers and wonders of technological progress.

Title: Saw
Director: James Wan
Country: U.S.
P's Rating: Not-so-good
I was dubious about this film, but going to the final midnight screening is a long-standing tradition amongst my festival pals, so I figured what the heck. I'm not sorry I went (the final midnight is a trip unto itself) but the film wasn't good. It opens as two men find themselves shackled to opposite sides of a grotty abandoned bathroom with a dead body in between them. Turns out they've been abducted by a serial killer known as Jigsaw, who gives people a chance to escape from his traps if they're willing to be extreme enough. A potentially nifty concept, but the plot revelations all seem more than a bit naff and for me there were no big scares. The acting doesn't help either. Both the name stars, Cary Elwes and Danny Glover, are pretty atrocious, though the co-screenwriter, Leigh Whannell, is not bad as one of the victims.

Date: 2004-09-19 03:04 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] sooguy.livejournal.com
Glad to hear you survived the final day. Not sorry I missed the final midnight by the sounds of it.

Date: 2004-09-21 05:53 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] faramir-boromir.livejournal.com
I hate to think about what the title of the Midnight movie implies about being 'extreme enough.' *envisions cutting off limbs, and flinches*

The Libertine sounds very interesting. I go hot and cold on Depp, but the premise of this one appeals. I'll look for it.

Date: 2004-09-21 07:52 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] przed.livejournal.com
Well, Saw is partly a play on the act of seeing, but also refers to one of the twists. The killer leaves them hacksaws that aren't strong enough to cut through their chain, but will cut through bone...

My one disappointment with The Libertine was that they filmed a gay scene, but then chickened out on including it. Bastards. I tend to adore Depp, except when he seems to be deliberately trying to do a commercial film. (Nick of Time. {{Shudder}})

Date: 2004-09-21 07:53 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] przed.livejournal.com
Not sorry I missed the final midnight by the sounds of it.

No, you're not. You're really not.

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