Guy Lodge
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Guy Lodge
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‘A Silence’ Review: Joachim Lafosse’s Gradually Shattering Probe Into Toxic Family Secrets - variety.com - Belgium
variety.com
26.09.2023 / 07:45

‘A Silence’ Review: Joachim Lafosse’s Gradually Shattering Probe Into Toxic Family Secrets

Guy Lodge Film Critic In his staggering 2012 film “Our Children,” Belgian writer-director Joachim Lafosse turned an unthinkable true-life tragedy — the story of a mentally ailing mother who, one hitherto ordinary afternoon, single-handedly murdered all five of her children — into deeply compassionate drama, focusing not on the lurid whats of the event, but its more intimate, less discussed whys. That approach again serves Lafosse well in “A Silence,” another solemn, upsetting domestic chamber piece that lightly fictionalizes and foregrounds the hidden, knotty familial tensions behind a headline-making scandal.

‘Fingernails’ Review: Jessie Buckley and Riz Ahmed Prove Chemistry Isn’t a Science In a Wise, Tender Sci-Fi Romance - variety.com - Greece
variety.com
23.09.2023 / 22:01

‘Fingernails’ Review: Jessie Buckley and Riz Ahmed Prove Chemistry Isn’t a Science In a Wise, Tender Sci-Fi Romance

Guy Lodge Film Critic It’s the stock answer that many a happy long-term couple has given prying friends and relatives to explain why they haven’t married: “We don’t need a piece of paper to prove our love.” True enough. What can official documents tell you of something as wily and elusive as human desire? Is a band of gold a safeguard against a change of heart? Of course not, yet millions want it anyway, a ratification of feelings that might otherwise seem slippery or intangible from the outside.

‘Day of the Fight’ Review: Another Broken-Down Boxer Travels the Comeback Trail - variety.com - New York - USA
variety.com
23.09.2023 / 16:25

‘Day of the Fight’ Review: Another Broken-Down Boxer Travels the Comeback Trail

Guy Lodge Film Critic As directorial head-to-heads go, Jack Huston versus Stanley Kubrick isn’t anyone’s idea of a fair fight. But that’s exactly the clash the actor and Hollywood scion sets up for himself in his directorial debut “Day of the Fight” — named for Kubrick’s famous 1951 documentary short of the same title, and likewise following an Irish-American boxer through his daily New York routine, in the hours leading up to a climactic evening match.

Ellie Kemper Reveals What It Was Like Having Jon Hamm As Her High School Drama Teacher - www.justjared.com - Los Angeles
justjared.com
21.09.2023 / 14:35

Ellie Kemper Reveals What It Was Like Having Jon Hamm As Her High School Drama Teacher

Ellie Kemper is sharing some new details about her surprising history with Jon Hamm.

‘The Featherweight’ Review: Lovingly Textured Faux-Documentary Charts a Champion’s Slide Into the Shadows - variety.com
variety.com
20.09.2023 / 13:57

‘The Featherweight’ Review: Lovingly Textured Faux-Documentary Charts a Champion’s Slide Into the Shadows

Guy Lodge Film Critic An Emmy-nominated documentary cinematographer with credits including “Procession” and “All the Beauty and the Bloodshed,” Robert Kolodny puts his expert eye for shooting nonfiction to playful narrative use in his feature directing debut “The Featherweight.” A meticulously designed, gutsily played biopic of world champion featherweight boxer Guglielmo Papaleo, better known as Willie Pep — covering not his 1940s glory days but his faltering attempt at a comeback two decades later — the film is convincingly fashioned as a candid all-access documentary, a promotional puff piece curdling before our eyes into an unintended study of mental breakdown. So convincingly, in fact, that uninformed viewers chancing upon “The Featherweight” on the festival circuit may wonder exactly what it is they’re watching, not least if — in a realization of Pep’s own glumly stated fears — they have no idea who this once-celebrated sportsman was.

Mads Mikkelsen to Be Honored at Zurich Film Festival With Its Golden Eye Award - variety.com - Hollywood - Switzerland - Denmark - Indiana
variety.com
18.09.2023 / 09:29

Mads Mikkelsen to Be Honored at Zurich Film Festival With Its Golden Eye Award

Leo Barraclough International Features Editor The Zurich Film Festival, which runs Sept. 28 – Oct.

Jamie Lynn Spears Shares Photos Of Daughter Maddie’s High School Homecoming - etcanada.com
etcanada.com
18.09.2023 / 00:45

Jamie Lynn Spears Shares Photos Of Daughter Maddie’s High School Homecoming

Jamie Lynn Spears is celebrating an important milestone in her eldest daughter’s life. 

‘Coup!’ Review: Jaunty Class-War Comedy Pits Peter Sarsgaard Against Billy Magnussen - variety.com - Spain - county Stark - city Venice, county Day
variety.com
16.09.2023 / 16:29

‘Coup!’ Review: Jaunty Class-War Comedy Pits Peter Sarsgaard Against Billy Magnussen

Guy Lodge Film Critic That perky exclamation point sets the tone for “Coup!,” a story of murder, class struggle, One Percent entitlement and a global pandemic that nonetheless unfolds with all the eager, scrappy energy of an off-Broadway musical, minus most of the songs. The pandemic in question is not the one you’re thinking of — Austin Stark and Joseph Schuman’s puckish comic thriller unfolds against the dire backdrop of the 1918 Spanish Flu — but it also sort of is, as its study of wealthy exceptionalism in a time of national crisis is clearly intended to chime with more recent memories of regimented distancing and mixed safety messages from on high.

‘Housekeeping for Beginners’ Review: Goran Stolevski’s Queer Family Portrait Bursts Onto the Screen With Equal Parts Joy and Fury - variety.com - Australia - city Venice - Macedonia
variety.com
14.09.2023 / 15:29

‘Housekeeping for Beginners’ Review: Goran Stolevski’s Queer Family Portrait Bursts Onto the Screen With Equal Parts Joy and Fury

Guy Lodge Film Critic Unorthodox family structures yield correspondingly unpredictable drama in “Housekeeping for Beginners,” a vital, febrile multi-character study that further confirms writer-director Goran Stolevski as a talent to be reckoned with. Departing radically from the poise of his folk-horror debut “You Won’t Be Alone” and the gentle intimacy of its swift follow-up “Of an Age,” this study of domestic, romantic and generational conflicts in a crowded queer household instead embraces a spirit of antic chaos, both in subject matter and jagged, hit-the-ground-running execution.

Abby Lee Miller, 57, admits being attracted to high school football players: ‘That’s my downfall’ - nypost.com
nypost.com
11.09.2023 / 20:55

Abby Lee Miller, 57, admits being attracted to high school football players: ‘That’s my downfall’

“Dance Moms” star uttered the cringe-making confession on a recent episode of ex-“Call Her Daddy’ co-host Sofia Franklyn’s “Sofia with an F” podcast.The pair were wrapping up an interview with a bit of light chit-chat about Tom Cruise — regarding the “Mission: Impossible” actor’s well-known habit of sending cakes to friends as an annual gift — when Miller asked Franklyn, 31, “Have you seen ‘All the Right Moves?’ “Franklyn claimed she had not seen the well-known 1983 sports flick, starring Cruise as a teenage athlete. “Oh, that’s my downfall.

‘Society of the Snow’ Review: J.A. Bayona Wrests the Andes Flight Disaster Away From Hollywood - variety.com - Britain - USA - Hollywood - Argentina
variety.com
09.09.2023 / 20:11

‘Society of the Snow’ Review: J.A. Bayona Wrests the Andes Flight Disaster Away From Hollywood

Guy Lodge Film Critic Frank Marshall’s film “Alive” has never exactly been a classic, but for a certain bracket of moviegoers who saw it in 1993, it remains a vivid memory. A heart-in-mouth recreation of the 1972 Uruguayan Air Force Flight 571 crash — from which 16 people eventually survived 72 days stranded in a remote, snowy stretch of the Andes in western Argentina, while 29 perished — it visualized the events past the remit of worldwide news reports and magazine stories.

‘Out of Season’ Review: Two Lost Lovers Get a Second Chance to Say Goodbye in Stéphane Brizé’s Delicate Mood Piece - variety.com
variety.com
08.09.2023 / 17:45

‘Out of Season’ Review: Two Lost Lovers Get a Second Chance to Say Goodbye in Stéphane Brizé’s Delicate Mood Piece

Guy Lodge Film Critic There’s a faintly between-worlds air to the coastal luxury spa in which the bulk of “Out of Season” is set: Spartan and depopulated, decorated in assorted shades of oyster white and palest aqua, it’s half sanatorium and half heaven’s gate, made uncannier still by the empty, forbidding sprawl of the wintering beach outside. That makes it an apt place for burnt-out actor Mathieu (Guillaume Canet) to come and consider where his life has led him thus far; it also proves a kind of corridor to the past, minus any actual time travel, when his visit reunites him with Alice (Alba Rohrwacher), a spurned lover from years before.

‘Woman Of…’ Review: Heartfelt Polish Character Study Unpacks a Trans Woman’s Life, From Cradle to Rebirth - variety.com - Poland
variety.com
08.09.2023 / 14:17

‘Woman Of…’ Review: Heartfelt Polish Character Study Unpacks a Trans Woman’s Life, From Cradle to Rebirth

Guy Lodge Film Critic There will come a time, perhaps not even too far from now, when films like “Woman Of…” may feel, if not old hat, at least familiar, part of a genre unto itself: not a coming-of-age story but a coming-of-self one, tracing the particular life stages of identifying oneself as transgender, accepting oneself as such, and finally living that truth out loud. Spanning decades in its closeup portrait of a Polish trans woman traveling that trajectory in a social climate hostile to her very existence, Małgorzata Szumowska and Michał Englert’s heart-on-sleeve film isn’t aiming to be revolutionary — there’s an old-fashioned melodramatic heft to its episodic construction, setting its heroine’s tale in a pointedly mainstream context.

Who Is Patrick Mahomes' Wife? Meet Brittany Mahomes, His High School Sweetheart! - www.justjared.com - Texas - county Patrick - Kansas City
justjared.com
07.09.2023 / 19:27

Who Is Patrick Mahomes' Wife? Meet Brittany Mahomes, His High School Sweetheart!

Patrick Mahomes is the star quarterback for the Kansas City Chiefs, but it’s time to take a minute to get to know his longtime love Brittany Matthews!

‘Me Captain’ Review: Matteo Garrone’s Migrant Epic Feels Like a Complete Odyssey Even Before Reaching the Shore - variety.com - Italy - Senegal - city Dakar
variety.com
06.09.2023 / 15:11

‘Me Captain’ Review: Matteo Garrone’s Migrant Epic Feels Like a Complete Odyssey Even Before Reaching the Shore

Guy Lodge Film Critic Though it’s become a convenient catch-all term for journalists covering the subject, the phrase “European migrant crisis” can’t help but leave a sour taste in the mouth — implying as it does that Europe, the destination for so many hard-up voyagers from variously ailing or hostile countries, is the disadvantaged party in all this. That bias carries through to the bulk of well-intended films on the matter, which tend to pick up migrants’ stories, however sympathetically, on European turf.

‘Explanation for Everything’ Review: A Witty, Multi-Faceted Study of a Manufactured Controversy - variety.com - Hungary
variety.com
06.09.2023 / 06:07

‘Explanation for Everything’ Review: A Witty, Multi-Faceted Study of a Manufactured Controversy

Guy Lodge Film Critic If we’ve learned anything from the last few years of polarized political discourse surrounding everything from gun control to gender identity, it’s that when somebody pulls out the “won’t somebody please think of the children” card, the children are rarely the first thing on their mind. Even as it plays out on a specifically Hungarian social landscape, the satire of Gábor Reisz’s astute, drily funny third feature “Explanation for Everything” — in which an underachieving high-schooler becomes a right-wing cause célèbre on the strength of some dicey tabloid reporting — resonates more widely.

‘Enea’ Review: Super Rich Kids With Nothing but Loose Ends, Italian Style, in Pietro Castellitto’s Emptily Swaggering Youth Study - variety.com - Italy - city Venice
variety.com
05.09.2023 / 18:27

‘Enea’ Review: Super Rich Kids With Nothing but Loose Ends, Italian Style, in Pietro Castellitto’s Emptily Swaggering Youth Study

Guy Lodge Film Critic About 20 minutes pass in “Enea” before someone asks the young, handsome, splendidly attired title character what he does for a living, during which time audiences are likely to be wondering the same thing. This, to be fair, is not a negligent omission in writer-director-star Pietro Castellitto’s script, which tells us early on that Enea, the elder son of a wealthy Roman family, ostensibly manages a high-end sushi restaurant, atop an assortment of more underhand dealings.

‘Sidonie in Japan’ Review: A Haunted Isabelle Huppert Gives This Gently Drifting Ghost Story a Soul - variety.com - Japan - county Charles - city Venice, county Day
variety.com
04.09.2023 / 15:55

‘Sidonie in Japan’ Review: A Haunted Isabelle Huppert Gives This Gently Drifting Ghost Story a Soul

Guy Lodge Film Critic The mythology around Japan as a nation of everyday ghosts — where the living and the dead share space, occasionally in view of each other — can lead certain western filmmakers into dubious territory: If you don’t recall how Gus van Sant floundered with the mawkish, condescending exoticism of “The Sea of Trees,” trust that it’s best forgotten. Centered on a long-grieving Frenchwoman who finally makes peace with her husband’s death over the course of a Japanese work trip, “Sidonie in Japan” risks similar pitfalls — but Élise Girard’s droll, bittersweet romance mostly dodges them with grace and good humor, plus a pointed awareness of the limitations of its outsider perspective.

‘The Beast’ Review: Léa Seydoux and George MacKay Circle Each Other Through Time in Bertrand Bonello’s Languid Sci-Fi - variety.com - France
variety.com
03.09.2023 / 14:59

‘The Beast’ Review: Léa Seydoux and George MacKay Circle Each Other Through Time in Bertrand Bonello’s Languid Sci-Fi

Guy Lodge Film Critic It does rather feel as if the universe — or at least the French film industry — is trying to tell us something when 2023 has turned up not one but two loose Gallic adaptations of Henry James’s “The Beast in the Jungle.” That 1903 novella was about a man, John Marcher, who fails to fully live his life because he’s seized by premonitions of catastrophe that never visibly come to pass. It feels glumly relevant in an age of climate change, artificial intelligence and other obvious but indefinite signals of human demise; perhaps we should count this highly specific cinematic mini-trend as another.

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