Apart from That (2006) Poster

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6/10
Stuck in a rut of self-congratulatory experimentation, this film is hideous even if it may be art
Chris_Docker13 August 2006
It's necessary to be open to new forms of cinema, just as cinema needs to be open to real life. Just as effective marketing (brainwashing) can boost one's enjoyment (and the ticket sales) of a relatively artless blockbuster, so can a knowledge of the artist's technique boost one's enjoyment of a largely experimental work.

Shainin and Walker are nothing if not inventive. They make a loose story, find non-actors who can come across effectively as the characters as well as improvising, make two independent edits and then distil it down to two hours. The initial flow of the camera around a party feels like a Virginia Woolf novel, a stream of consciousness across an onslaught of characters but with little clue as to what to grasp onto as important. Unlike Woolf however, who used the technique to cull the significant from the seemingly superficial and unimportant, Shainin and Walker go from superficiality to dysfunctionality. Skimming the veneer from a cross-section of barely related individuals, they present us with people that neither satisfy their dreams, nor have much point to their existence. They are neither intelligent or make the best of what they have, and the film, apart from revelling in its own innovativeness, forces us to find some delight in their quirkiness in a way that is neither uplifting or beautiful. Apart From That is the sort of art-house belch that critics fall over each other to say how clever it is without once being able to say why.

"She was still physically strong, just didn't have any software left," is, in the first few minutes, one of the strongest lines in the film. As the lives of five of the partygoers are unravelled with all excitement of a long, loose thread coming off a patchwork quilt, we conceive it may apply to Peggy, an old lady who likes taking most of her clothes off and then phoning the fire brigade. Equally pathetic (and when it is shot with such realism should we laugh?) is the boss who makes a mess of firing his friend and is called to account by his son, who gets him to play act the scene. Peggy's lodger, Ulla, tape records the irritating sounds in her irritating landlady's house, such as the refrigerator. Leo is a native American Indian whose best friend is dying and doesn't know what to do. Apart From That is like dystopian Reality TV.

All the characters want to be loved or liked, without being either lovable or likable. I started wondering at what point do we start to care for someone? At what point did any of the characters start to become interesting? Not at the point where a fat woman gets her head and arms stuck in a dress. Perhaps when we see that they are trying, however ineptly.

Apart From That is a composite rather than linear story - a bit like Magnolia only with less redeeming characters, lower production values and, like its characters, with even less tangible point for existing (for all the innovative development, the end product seems rather derivative, rather like a Todd Solondz movie on a tight budget). It paints an unlikeable picture of 'ordinary' Americans as pathetic, as people who are loved only out of duty. Whether it is art or simply art for art's sake may best be answered by whether it still seems so imaginative when considered a few years from now, when the tendency to embrace its avant-garde pretensions have vanished or been vindicated (that question alone may make any serious watchers of cinema rush out to see it). Perhaps by then I will have changed my opinion; for now, this two hours of reel life, imaginatively made, sadly has little to say about anything beyond its own brilliant, idiosyncratic quirkiness.
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honest cinema
matijakluk21 September 2006
Warning: Spoilers
You can sense the freedom and celebration of people right from the start of this one. For the first 20 minutes or so you're in the crowd, not knowing where to look exactly. It's little uncomfortable looking at all this faces interact in the way you probably interact. You can feel your dumb face expressions and than, after a while, you're becoming proud of your dumb self. Nowadays, the image everyone has about themselves is pure fantasy and they try their best to look good. Sounds like people are constantly auditioning, even when they're walking down the street. For that matter it's really hard to see naked face in the cinema today. Authors are vain and public is even more. So here it is, Apart From That, the film that gives it to you raw, beautiful and real. There's a scene at the beginning (while you still don't know who's who and who you're about to observe through the rest of the film) where we see an old woman in hospital bed, right there on the dying sheet. Her face is a life of its own. Normally, the scene would be about her. Than bunch of kids come in with their guidance and they're supposed to sing and dance to make an old dying woman feel better. Everybody is doing what they're told, under a mask, except this one boy. He doesn't feel like singing. He's being punished by his teacher to wait outside because he's hurting the old woman's feelings by not dancing for her. "You think, just because she's old and sick, she can't see what's going on?" And than camera stays on him while everybody is having a "good time" in the hospital room. Switching the position of who is hurt in just a few seconds of the film's time is something I admire very much because there stands no judgments on part of anyone. Everyone is innocent and everyone is guilty. All you have to do is LOOK and you'll see nobody's in control of their behavior even when they think they are. Who's doing right and who's doing wrong? It backfires from second to second. Later in the film that same kid will be more mature than his super-dad. Peggy, other character in the film, is too old to waste time on "auditioning" and she throws herself in the arms of strangers and close-ones right to the bone, with no shame in her wild behavior, but only when she's prepared to be that open. Catch her by surprise and she's vulnerable as a 10-year-old. She is bored and she doesn't quit life. She really doesn't have anybody by her side and yet she tries more than anybody else (besides the little boy) to live to the fullest, with no apology. Everybody else is apologizing most of the time, but don't even care (let alone think) about the people who they were apologizing to when they're spending their time apart from them. Ulla has apology. The only time she lets her mind go in uncontrolled fashion, speaking what's really on her mind, is when she's acting in the fake intervention hosted by her co-workers for her co-worker. In that acting she's more honest than ever. But, after the acting is finished she apologizes for maybe going too far. It's interesting seeing how that device of agreed acting is getting across to other characters in that scene, because you know how hurt would they be if it was unprepared with not knowing the origin of that bluntness. Later in the film, little boy and his super dad will catch the highest level of their relationship through the acting. Little boy plays his father's co- worker who was fired from the job by him. It's like a safe territory for testing honesty. After those experiences they feel a little bit stronger. (something similar, but not that worked out, can be seen in "In The Mood For Love" by Kar-Wai) I can go on and on about what went through my mind about these characters, and myself for that matter, and all the time I wasn't feeling betrayed by the possibility of filmmaker's manipulation. They put it on the surface, made it strong and open. Style is vulnerable as their characters. But all the way you can feel the good arm is leading you through the experience of watching the people. Honest, fresh and a must-see.
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1/10
Awful
DaveB197218 August 2006
This is one of those movies where I wish I had just stayed in the bar.

The film is quite frankly boring. What story there is is very flimsy and you pretty much have to guess at it. The film indulges itself with pretentious camera techniques that seem intent on causing migraines and makes it look like a student film. Did I say it was boring already? If all the characters had suddenly died at the end of the movie I would not have cared less as I had no emotional attachment to any of them.

There are about 4 good minutes in this movie, but that was about it. This is the first time I have ever considered walking out of a cinema during a performance, but I held on believing that it had to get better. I was wrong.

The sort of film you could threaten naughty children with.
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10/10
Best movie at CineVegas
belove20 June 2006
Saw this my last day at the festival, and was glad I stuck around that extra couple of days. Poetic, moving, and most surprisingly, funny, in it's own strange way. It's so rare to see directors working in this style who are able to find true strangeness and humor in a hyper-realistic world, without seeming precious, or upsetting the balance. Manages to seem both improvised, yet completely controlled. It I hesitate to make comparisons, because these filmmakers have really digested their influences (Cassavetes, Malick, Loach, Altman...the usual suspects) and found their own unique style, but if you like modern directors in this tradition (Lynne Ramsay, David Gordon Greene), you're in for a real treat. This is a wonderful film, and I hope more people get to see it. If this film plays in a festival in your city, go! go! go!
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10/10
Within the very first moments, before the opening title appeared, I knew I was going to love this movie.
jinkoBeat21 March 2006
At a time in our culture where reality exposed as narrative is overpowering fiction as we know it on the small and big screen, "Apart From That" is a film that exposes real life moments that feel more honest, fresh and innovative in there presentation than I have ever seen before. The usual spoon feeding conventions are non existent in this film, leaving a content audience to sit and watch these real life moments trickle one after the other on the screen. While watching the movie, and even upon post contemplation, it is hard to believe that these amazing performances where actually that, performances. Every moment with the large cast of actors felt like the truth being exposed in their daily usual lives. Even so, "Apart From That" does not feel like a documentary or reality television, but instead transcends into a category of its own, with its unique cinematography and direction. I look forward to watching this new category of storytelling continue with other films by directors Jennifer Shainin and Randy Walker.

This movie must be seen.
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10/10
Highly recommended multi-ethnic drama
jmichaelheaton6 April 2006
An excellent film depicting the cross currents in the lives of a multi-ethnic mix of not so ordinary people in the rural Pacific Northwest. Solid directing and writing along with fine acting, especially the performances by Kwami Taha and Dan Stowe. Interestingly, this film was made in the same year as the highly successful "Crash," written and directed by Paul Haggis. The pace of the action may not be as frantic as that in urban Los Angeles, and the characters may seem to be better acquainted with each other in "Apart From That," but the personal relationships of the characters are as flawed and troubled and their stories as resonant as any of those in "Crash." For those viewers who appreciated "Crash" this is a must see film. Also, fans of Jim Jarmusch and John Cassavetes will like this movie.
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