The World Beyond BetterMost > The Culture Tent
Resurrecting the Movies thread...
Jeff Wrangler:
--- Quote from: southendmd on November 29, 2010, 07:54:15 pm ---
--- End quote ---
As they used to say, "Hubba-hubba." ;D
Meryl:
--- Quote from: crayonlicious on November 29, 2010, 08:14:45 pm ---That's funny! It made me think of a scene in Snow White where she gets help with the housework from woodland creatures. ;D
--- End quote ---
Oh yeah, that too! ;D
oilgun:
INCENDIES is Canada's submission for the Foreign Language Film Oscar and I'll be surprised if it doesn't make the short list. It's an astonishing film that packs an emotional wallop. In fact, it's my favourite film of the year, so far. If you guys have a chance to see it, don't miss it. Like I love saying: run, don't walk, to see this, you won't regret it. :D
To encounter a film of heart-wrenching tragedy, mythic proportions and sweeping visual majesty is rare, but such are the riches of Denis Villeneuve’s Incendies. After last year’s multiple Genie Award-winning Polytechnique, Villeneuve continues his acute examination of women in devastating situations facing complex and harrowing circumstances.
At the reading of their mother Nawal’s will, twin siblings Simon (Maxim Gaudette) and Jeanne (Mélissa Désormeaux-Poulin) learn for the first time that they have a brother, and that their father, whom they thought was dead, is in fact alive. Among their mother’s various unsettling requests is her final wish that the twins find both brother and father and deliver to them certain sealed letters. Nawal (Lubna Azabal) was a mystery to her children and their relationship is a difficult one. Simon is angry and resistant, but Jeanne feels compelled to respect her mother’s requests.
As a young woman, Nawal fell pregnant out of wedlock in her Middle-Eastern homeland. After narrowly escaping an honour killing, she was forced to give up her baby boy, vowing one day to find him. Shifting back and forth in time, Incendies follows two parallel journeys, expertly interwoven: the twins’ journey to find their brother and father in their mother’s homeland, and Nawal’s journey to find her son. Both journeys shine a disturbing light on Nawal’s past and culminate in a shocking final revelation.
Villeneuve masterfully adapts the acclaimed play by Wajdi Mouawad, while André Turpin’s arresting cinematography captures the arid landscape of the Middle-East, seamlessly shifting between shadowy corners and stark, bright daylight. Azabal is riveting as Nawal, while Désormeaux-Poulin and Gaudette deliver equally strong performances as the twins. Moving, visceral and epic, Incendies shows Villeneuve reaching ever greater heights as he probes characters that must face obstacles with extraordinary resilience and love. –TIFF
http://mubi.com/films/33111
oilgun:
I just found out that the National Board of Review included INCENDIES in their Top Five Foreign Films 2010 along with I AM LOVE, LIFE ABOVE ALL, SOUL KITCHEN & WHITE MATERIAL
http://www.nbrmp.org/awards/
INCENDIES trailer:
[youtube=425,350]
[/youtube]
oilgun:
James Franco, James Franco, James Franco
[youtube=425,350]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-J2UZZ45BqU[/youtube]
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