Register  |   Log In  |  
Sign up to our weekly newsletter    
Search   
Empire Magazine and iPad
Follow Me on Pinterest
Empire
Trending On Empire
Get six issues of Empire for £15
A Day In The Life Of The BBFC
Empire's Soundtrack Celebration
90 Years Of Warner Bros.
Your chance to win a Blu-ray every day!
Subscribe Now For Only £15
Get six issues of the magazine today
Empire Blogs
Words From The Wise

Back to all blogs Comment Now

Sundance 2013: The Round-Up Part Two

Posted on Wednesday January 23, 2013, 10:34 by Damon Wise in Words From The Wise
Sundance 2013: The Round-Up Part Two

Two years ago I fell in love with Drake Doremus's Like Crazy, the small and intimate but very beautiful story of a British girl who falls for a classmate while studying in the US and begins a transatlantic relationship with him. The follow-up, Breathe In, reuniting Doremus with the fantastic Felicity Jones, is an equally low-key but much more adult affair, this time telling a similar story from the perspective of a much older man. Guy Pearce stars as a married music teacher whose family welcome a teenage girl - Jones, again playing a foreign-exchange student - whose precocious talents as a pianist, and jaded adult outlook, stir something in him and reawaken his youthful dreams. That it doesn't end well goes without saying, but though it does deal with the aftermath, Breathe In is more a superbly crafted character story, with a soulful central performance by Pearce.

Michael Winterbottom's The Look Of Love also rests on one man's shoulders, with Steve Coogan on excellent form as British sex-industry kingpin Paul Raymond, pioneer of strip shows in the UK and proprietor of pornographic magazines. Raymond's life was an interesting one to say the least, starting out as one half of a mind-reading act called Mr And Miss Tree, then ending up one of the richest men in Britain, having invested his porn profits in prime West End property. Though Winterbottom's film does capture the picaresque qualities of that, The Look Of Love portrays Raymond through the key women in his life - his wife, mistress and daughter - revealing how Raymond's heart was broken when the latter died of an accidental overdose. Though it doesn't labour the sentiment, the result is perhaps one of Winterbottom's more emotional projects; there are plenty of laughs (not to mention nude body parts, mostly female), but, ultimately, this is the melancholy story of a man who had it all, at the expense of the woman that mattered most to him.

In Fear is a very ambitious British horror-thriller that must be seen cold to experience the maximum impact. Filmed in an experimental style that required its two main players to be in character at all times, without any script or pages of dialogue, it begins with a young couple setting off from a pub in rural Ireland. The two haven't known each other long and are headed to a music festival, but Tom (Iain De Castecker) has a surprise for Lucy (Alice Englert): he has booked a hotel nearby. When they try to find it, however, things start to get weird: the signs lead them back to the same spot over and over, while strange figures seem to be lurking in the woods. Some of the film's pre-publicity suggests a Blair Witch-style creepfest with a supernatural flourish, but I'd say Jeremy Lovering's film owes more to The Game, a satisfying mystery that, once solved, falls beautifully into place.

The East piqued my curiosity simply because it is the new collaboration between Brit Marling and Zal Batmanglij, whose Sound Of My Voice was a minor hit here a few years back. The East, however, is one step forward and two steps back: it's slicker and brighter but the story is much sillier, telling another infiltration story, this time with Marling as a private-sector investigator who goes undercover to spy on Anonymous-like pressure group The East. The East believe in an eye for an eye, and strike back at evil corporations by given them a taste of their own medicine - literally in the case of a pharma giant that is flooding Africa with dangerous drugs. It's timely for sure, but nothing in this would-be edgy drama rings true, from Marling as a resourceful female Jason Bourne to a rich-kid dropout cult that puts on straitjackets when they eat their chickpea curry.

Stoker by Park Chan-wook was one of the more divisive titles here, and if anyone was expecting something along the lines of Park's vibrant, violent Oldboy they were going to be sorely disappointed. Stoker is vibrant, and it certainly is violent, but this is the playful, deliriously surreal Park that gave us I'm A Cyborg But That's OK, a wonderland of zooms and offbeat angles that counterpoint the claustrophobic intensity of the story. Mia Wasikowska stars as India Stoker, an 18-year-old schoolgirl whose father has just died in a mysterious car crash. At the funeral, India's uncle Charlie (Matthew Goode) appears out of nowhere, and at around the same time, people start disappearing, including India's housekeeper and a visiting aunt. The explanation is part of an intoxicating, hallucinogenic thriller that keeps us guessing till the end, portraying a dreamworld so twisted that nothing in it is ever what it seems. Black Swan is a decent enough comparison, but leavened with black humour and dressed in Southern Gothic weeds.

Finally, to become the most hated man in indie filmdom, I have to say I was very disappointed by Richard Linklater's Before Midnight, the third film in the Before trilogy. This one finds Jesse (Ethan Hawke) and Celine (Julie Delpy) on holiday in Greece with their two girls. After this surprising reveal, we learn that two are together, living in Paris, but Jesse is fretting about his teenage son, now growing up with his ex-wife in the US. After a long, boring dinner party scene, the pair take themselves off to a hotel that his been booked for them, a) so they can have a break from parenting, and b) as a pretext for a walk that enables them to banter like they did in the first two movies.

I'm not knocking the quality of the acting or the writing, but I do think his new Before entry lacks the freshness and authenticity of its predecessors. Where previously Hawke and Delpy sparked as people, and there was a genuine will-they-or-won't-they tension to the scenario, here the arguments seem laboured and the will-they-won't-they element is really a red herring (despite his protests, Celine is convinced that Jesse wants the family to move to America, and so threatens to leave him). To me, it seemed the duo were merely reprising well-rehearsed characters rather than inhabiting them as fully as they did before. I know I'm in the minority, but I'm just putting it out there. Apparently I don't get it because I'm not married, but, hey, I'm divorced, so touchē to that, mon ami.

Login or register to comment.

Comments

1 stevos
Posted on Thursday January 24, 2013, 14:34
Shame about Before Midnight. Before Sunrise/ Sunset, and The Dreamlife of Angels, are my favourite films!

I'm not married either :-(

:-)

Log in below, or register to post comments
Username:
Password:
Remember Me:

CATEGORIES

Empire States (413)

Under The Radar (289)

Infinite Lives (87)

Small Screen (53)

Cannes 2011 (28)

Off The Wire (23)

Comic-Con 2010 (21)

Words From The Wise (12)

Casting Couch (2)

Oscars 2011 (1)


RECENT POSTS

Hannibal: The Pilot Review
By Stephen Carty

House Of Cards: Our First Reaction
By Olly Richards

Arrow: The Pilot
By Stephen Carty

TV Review: Homeland Episode 1
By Stephen Carty

Empire Visits Fresh Meat Season 2
By Phil de Semlyen

Does Elementary Cut The Mustard?
By Stephen Carty

Dallas: Changing Of The Guard
By Stephen Carty

The Newsroom: First Reaction
By Stephen Carty

House: The Final Finale
By Stephen Carty

True Blood: Season Four - What A Witch
By Helen O'Hara


RECENT COMMENTS

Hannibal: The Pilot Review
"Agreed thought the show was absolutely terrific, looking forward to the next few episodes and seeing"  TheDavidFoster
Read comment

Hannibal: The Pilot Review
"I think you need to go a bit easier on the movies Hannibal and Red Dragon. Individually they are bot"  danielthompson99
Read comment

Hannibal: The Pilot Review
"I've been loving it so far but apparently NBC are already having the jitters having already moved th"  kisswithatear
Read comment

Hannibal: The Pilot Review
"I love it so far. I agree that it should have been a Showtime or HBO tv show because there's more ro"  thisiscarlijn
Read comment

Hannibal: The Pilot Review
"Didn't even want to watch this show initially. A friend talked me into watching the premiere episode"  readyrr
Read comment

Hannibal: The Pilot Review
"Agreed. Best new show I have see for a while. Totally destroys the god-awful The Following (not hard"  Youshouldberunning
Read comment

House Of Cards: Our First Reaction
"@lankeymarlon, it is in fact possible to access the US Netflix selection in the UK if you are watchi"  Craigmustdie
Read comment

House Of Cards: Our First Reaction
"Amazing show, really on a different intellectual level to most things on tv. Mostly avoids using the"  Zimbo
Read comment

House Of Cards: Our First Reaction
"Watched the whole series and its been excellent. Its the kind of role Kevin Spacey was born to play "  Popcorn Required
Read comment

House Of Cards: Our First Reaction
"I'm 6 episodes in too and this is an impressive start for Netflix as a specially commissioned series"  Brother L
Read comment


POPULAR POSTS

What's The Best TV Show Ever?
307 comments

We Don't Need Another Heroes
122 comments

Lost: The End
112 comments

What's The Best Show On TV Right Now?
104 comments

The Show Must Go On
102 comments

Smallville: The End Is Upon Us
63 comments

Ten Ways To Improve 24
58 comments

Why The US Office Is Undeniably Better Than The Original
57 comments

My Problems With Sherlock
49 comments

Sherlock Holmes And The Curious Case Of The Princess Bride
43 comments


BLOGGERS
Damon Wise (274)
Helen O'Hara (157)
James Dyer (85)
Chris Hewitt (83)
Amar Vijay (71)
Ali Plumb (50)
David Scarborough (38)
Sam Toy (34)
Sam Toy (31)
Stephen Carty (31)
James White (27)
Simon Braund (24)
Olly Richards (23)
Ian Freer (21)
Nick de Semlyen (20)
Phil de Semlyen (18)
Matt Kamen (12)
Nev Pierce (10)
Glen Ferris (8)
Nick de Semlyen (8)
Dan Jolin (8)
Owen Williams (8)
Peter Lord (6)
Emily Phillips (6)
Kat Brown (3)
Dan Goodswen (3)
Kim Newman (3)
Jodie McEwan (3)
Empire Empire (2)
Sebastian Williamson (2)
Eve Barlow (2)
Emma Cochrane (2)
Edmund Ward (1)
Chris Smith (1)
Alice Wybrew (1)
Jonny Pile (1)
Steve Charnock (1)
Empire Workie (1)
Colin Kennedy (1)
Tom Ambrose (1)
Lucy Quick (1)
Benjamin Lee (1)
David Parkinson (1)
Dallas King (1)
Ross Bennett (1)
John Hitchcox (1)
Siam Goorwich (1)
Anton Bitel (1)
Sanam Jehanfard (1)


CURRENT HIGHLIGHTS
David S. Goyer And Zack Snyder On Man Of Steel Secrets
Spoiler warning: The writer and director spill some super-sized beans...

Rila Fukushima On The Wolverine
The film's Yukio on working with Jackman and working as a hitman...

The Empire Podcast: Joss Whedon Special
Much ado about Avengers 2...

Full Q&A: Steven Spielberg And George Lucas On Hollywood's Future
'We're in a mess but of the chaos will come some amazing things'

Man Of Steel Interviews: Henry Cavill, Amy Adams, Zack Snyder, Michael Shannon & Antje Traue
The cast and director of the Superman reboot spill the beans...

Exclusive: Empire Meets Dan Stevens
The Summer In February star talks celebrity Downton fans and things he's rubbish at...

Alan Partridge: Alpha Papa Trailer Breakdown
What happens when the chat hits the fan?

Subscribe to Empire iPad edition
Get the Empire iPad edition today

Subscribe and save up to 44% on annual digital subscription

Print & digital packages
Buy single issues

Subscribe to Empire magazine
Subscribe to Empire magazine today

Get six issues of Empire for £15 and save up to 37%

All subscription offers

Empire Print & Digital Subscriptions
Get both the magazine and iPad edition in one amazing offer! Subscribe now
Steven Spielberg iPad App
Hollywood's most beloved director in this unique iPad special. Download now
Empire iPad Edition
The world's biggest movie magazine available on iPad Download now
Home  |  News  |  Blogs  |  Reviews  |  Future Films  |  Features  |  Interviews  |  Images  |  Competitions  |  Forum  |  iPad  |  Podcast  |  Magazine Contact Us  |  Empire FAQ  |  Subscribe To Empire  |  Register
© Bauer Consumer Media  |  Terms And Conditions  |  Our Data Promise To You  |  Bauer Entertainment Network
Bauer Consumer Media. Company number 1176085 (England). Registered Office: 21 Holborn Viaduct, London EC1A 2DY