Author Archives: Dennis

Bareback Mountain

Brokeback Mountain [2005]

Director: Ang Lee
Actor: Heath LedgerJake Gyllenhaal

An absolutely fantastic film about two men who grow close while on a cattle-drive one season. They go their seperate ways and start families, but they always have intense feelings for one another. After getting back in touch with eachother they regularly go back to the spot where they originally met, Brokeback Mountain. Their love intensifies as time passes, and starts to influence the rest of their lives.

Heath Ledger especially, and Gyllenhaal to a lesser extent, puts down a fantastic performance, and the casting was spot on. Ledger as the stoic macho, and Gyllenhaal as the doe-eyed romantic.

The Departed

The Departed [2006]

Director: Martin Scorsese
Actor: Leonardo DiCaprioMatt DamonJack NicholsonMark WahlbergMartin SheenRay Winstone

A good film, but not a great film. I can’t help but compare it to the much more accomplished Infernal Affairs, of which The Departed is a remake. The acting is top-notch, although Jack Nicholson goes a bit over the top in his crazed-bad-guy-maniac role, and Di Caprio does an especially good job of portraying someone under the mental duress of an undercover cop who might not have the psychological fortitude for the job. The editing is absolutely abysmal, and perhaps that’s Scorcese’s quirky way of filming, but it wasn’t so much fun while in the cinema. He knows how to put a scene together like no other, he just doesn’t know how to start or end it, it seems. Ugly and sloppy.

See either Infernal Affairs or The Departed, but don’t see both, otherwise you’re going to be disappointed with the latter.

Babel

Babel [2006]

Director: Alejandro González Iñárritu
Actor: Brad PittCate Blanchett

This story is told through the eyes of four different people, most of them continents apart, but all directly or indirectly involved in the shooting of an American tourist (Blanchett) in Morocco. Her husband (Pitt) is confronted by the inability for a lot of people to comprehend him as he struggles to get his wife some medical help in the middle of rural Morocco, while back in the United States his maid (Adriana Barraza) takes care of the children, but wants to attend her son’s wedding back in Mexico. America is claiming it to be a terrorist attack, while the Moroccan police desperately try to find the perpetrator in order to avoid a political conflict. The perpetrator is a boy whose father is a goat-herder, and recently bought the rifle used off a friend, who frequently acts as a guide for tourists. The man told his son to shoot jackals, but the boy got a little carried away showing off his prowess to his brother. Meanwhile, halfway around the world, a mute Japanese schoolgirl is struggling in her own world of being unable to communicate as her father is sought by the police for questioning regarding the rifle he owned, and gave away to his guide when hunting in Morocco several years back.

Each of the characters is faced with their inability to properly communicate with those around them. Miscommunication in every linguistic form you can think of passes the revue in this film, and ironically, I took my girlfriend to see it, who couldn’t understand the Dutch subtitles so was left guessing as to what happened most of the time.

Not as good as I thought it would be, relatively predictable, though you are constantly angry at how the characters seem to dig their own grave deeper and deeper, seemingly disconcerned with the consequences to others. It’s a long movie, but very, very beautiful.

Children of Men

Children of Men [2006]

Director: Alfonso Cuarón
Actor: Clive OwenJulianne MooreMichael Caine

It’s 2027 and for the last 18 years women have been infertile, thrusting the world into a veritable anarchy. Terrorism is rife, cults and sects are gaining power as the last generation is slowly getting older and dying. Most countries are in anarchy, but “Brittain marches on.” Great Brittain is assaulted by waves and waves of refugees from all over the world, who are put in internment camps. Terrorist organisations fight for refugee-rights, refugees are trying to keep out of the hands of authorities, messiahs rise up and claim to have the one true faith that will guide people to safety while they are nearing the end of days, the end of humanity. People become apathic, polution is rampant simply because there’s no new generation to donate the world to. Who cares, anyway?

And then there’s is this young, refugee girl, Kee (Ashitey), who is miraculously pregnant. At first she doesn’t know what’s wrong with her because she’s never been taught by anyone how reproductivity works. When she reveals that she’s pregnant, she immediately becomes a pawn in the game of the Fishes, a terrorist organisation fighting for refugee rights and against government oppression. Lead by the charismatic Julian (Moore), the Fishes want to get her to the near-mythical Human Project, a group of researchers, grouped together on boats, disconnected from any country or authority, having mythical paradise havens on small islands. Kee will be well there, Julian believes, and she might unlock the mystery of fertility to the scientists. Others within the Fishes want to dissent and use her as a figure-head of refugee hope. Julian approaches her ex-boyfriend and jaded, long-time activist-turned-bureaucrat Theodore (Owen) because he might be able to help her get Kee to the coast, and onto the Human Project boats.

That starts a dramatic race against time to reach the boat of the Human Project, while the country is visibly breaking down further and further. Fighting in the street, Man’s inhumanity against Man, and one of the last countries on the break of dissaster.

This is one of those films that leaves a lasting impression on me. Anything with a dystopian outlook has the tendency to do that with me, but this film does it amazingly well. The acting is good, the story is compelling, the cinematography is amazing. It’s a great film that I recommend to everyone.

An Inconvenient Truth

An Inconvenient Truth [2006]

Director: Davis Guggenheim
Actor: Al Gore

Every once in a while, a movie comes along that appeals to your sense of righteousness, your ethics, your morality, and your sense of urgency. It opens your eyes to those things you were aware of, either directly or indirectly, but you kept putting off dealing with it because you know that once you start it’s going to be long and frustrating battle.

This is exactly such a film. Film really isn’t the right way to describe it. It’s part documentary, part spoken word performance, and part lecture; Al Gore speaks about what he has always been passionate about, and which give him direction after the 2000 election defeats; global warming.

Most of the things he talks about you will probably already know, directly or indirectly, but never really wanted to accept as truth, simply because it forces you to accept that you’re going to have to make a change. Most of us have all this dissociated information stored inside our little nugget, but it pays to have someone as intelligent and as charismatic as Al Gore put it in a neat and concise package which is easy to consume and understand. He appeals to your sense of responsibility and honestly makes you want to do something about global warming. And he does all that without being overly political about it, which is important, especially in the U.S. if you want to reach the republican base. It’s also nice to have some of the information presented to you without an overly biased political statement marring the purity of the message.

Anyway, I highly recommend everyone to go and see it, and I’ll be happy to hear your opinions on it.