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Americano (2005)
7/10
Solid film-making and soulful story makes for great cinematic experience
28 April 2006
Writer/Director Kevin Noland's debut feature, Americano, starts out large and loud, with a birds-eye view of a Spanish crowd packed into a plaza like conquistadors on a gold-bound ship. It is the annual Pamplona running of the bulls festival, and the anticipation and jubilation rise on the air in a celebration of the very Spanish tradition that culminates in a series of duels between matadors and their bull partners. Americano is rife with metaphor, utilizing both Spanish festival traditions and the surrounding land and cityscapes to hammer home the theme of finding oneself at the crux of a life changing moment.

Joshua Jackson plays Chris, a twenty-something whose days at the festival are the last before returning to the States for a career in a possibly lucrative, but soul-deadening office. With his two friends Ryan (Timm Sharp) and Michelle (Ruthanna Hopper) in tow, the three are in high festival mood when Chris' backpack is stolen. Suddenly, the future looks even closer, and Chris begins having doubts about going back to the States. Here, I feel alive he writes in his journal, as he participates in the mad dash running of the bulls, escaping into the stadium where the bright sunshine overwhelms Chris in his ecstasy (no matter that the film was overexposed for that particular scene...the sentiment is there).

At a curious ex-pat bar owned and operated by an eccentric (Dennis Hopper) who shouts bizarre and cryptic sayings like "Be very wary of the con...the Ameri-con...Americano!", Chris meets the vivacious Adela (Leonor Varela), a beautiful actress who takes to his plight and invites them all to her villa, set in the wide sweeping vista of an Iberian paradise. Here Chris really takes to heart his impending future and begins to question what he wants out of life. His friends too, begin to see cracks in their own self-built wall of security, and suddenly their lives have become a bit more complicated.

If the plot sounds hazy and indistinct, that's because it is, but not to its detriment. While a bit more structure might be helpful to create a sense of the whole, Americano dwells not on the outward events, but on the inward spirit and thought of its characters. Using Hemmingway's The Sun Also Rises as Chris' guidebook and the film's thematic conceit, Kevin Noland displays no urgency in presenting his vision of the anxieties and enthusiasm of young adulthood, its trials, its secrets, and its ambivalence. We aren't given easy answers, but the questions posed are introspective, to be taken in softly and quietly, with a sincerity of expectation for seeking out what's right and real and true.

In the end, Americano is a finely tuned, though technically flawed in some respects, film with fine performances from Joshua Jackson and Dennis Hopper, though the revelation is Leonor Varela, who injects her character with a sense of the sublime, an earthy angel with a taste for the dangerous and exotic, but not without a sense of home. Timm Sharp supplies some good comedic moments, and though understated and slightly old for the part, Ruthanna Hopper shows she's a capable actress. Noland's direction is subtle. The film suffers from a few technical problems, including poor ADR sync and a few scenes where footage appears overexposed. However, these should not be cause to miss a wonderful debut from an ambitious and talented writer and director.
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An unfulfilling and mostly unfun film.
4 January 2004
An unlikeable `heroine,' a bleak and wandering story, weak and unthreatening villains, and an ultimately unsatisfying conclusion are the hallmarks of this unstunning effort by Bille August. Julia Ormond is ice queen Smilla, half Inuit whose keen understanding of snow and direction seems to be her only redeeming quality. She questions the death of her six year old neighbor, a young Inuit boy, and in investigating, discovers a dubious operation in the North Atlantic to retrieve a scientific discovery that could provide the world with a new energy source.

The investigation is lackluster. Smilla breaks into the archives of Greenland Mining and discovers that the boy's father was killed on a previous expedition to the North Atlantic. She follows the trail, hooks up with her mysterious and bleary-eyed apartment neighbor (Gabriel Byrne), almost dies in a boat explosion, and eventually worms her way onto the ship heading back to the North Atlantic expedition location.

There was very little redeeming about this film. It lacked subtlety and style, and insisted on perpetuating the coldness and meanness of the main character making her investigation seem hollow and unfounded. Though she tries to open up, it seems more to be vague feelings of unrecognized guilt on her father's behalf for taking her from the wild and open Greenland to the stuffy and civilized Denmark. The root causes of her problems interacting with people in a civil manner are never explored or justified, nor is her continued conflict with her father's wife.

The movie gets progressively more uninteresting and unbelievable, with the discovery of a meteor that seems to contain a mysterious energy, and pretends to threaten via the very unthreatening Richard Harris as a scientist on a quest for power, money, and fame. These hackneyed characteristics do no one any good, especially savvy moviegoers.
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The Thin Man (1934)
A stylish and humorous detective story from the Dashiel Hammett
4 January 2004
A slightly different take than the normal Hammett hardboil, this features a husband/wife team who somehow find the time to solve cases between long bouts of heavy drinking and hosting parties. The rich blend of dialogue overshadows the few weak characters, especially the antagonists and supporting players, but overall does justice to the genre.

An eccentric inventor goes missing, and his mistress/secretary turns up murdered. A man who was seen at the scene of the crime (and is consequently played in such a way as to make us believe he is responsible for the woman's death) is also killed. The detective Nick Charles (William Powell) and his able, beautiful, and insightful wife Nora (Myrna Loy) only officially take the case to discover the killer and the whereabouts of the mysterious `Thin Man.' Nick rousts the killer using a dinner party, with all the suspects as guests, and his ingenius wit, improvisation, and ability to hold attention as the hooks.

Powell and Loy work admirably together (as they did in four other `Thin Man' movies), playing off each other, complimentary and interesting. Their devotion to each other matches their aloofness from the case, and ultimately it is the charm and good-natured aspects of their characters that pull this movie to its final great moment.

All the typical 30's detective movie characteristics are here: witty dialogue, veiled sexual innuendo, the dull but likeable police detective, the woman in distress. Here, they play together in a very likable way. The ending, while not glistening with the Hitchcockian Freudism of North by Northwest, is wonderfully suggestive, and brings to a close excellent performances by Powell and Loy.
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