Indie Focus: Eternal issues in 'A Ghost Story,' 'Spider-Man: Homecoming' and 'Scum'
Hello! Iâm Mark Olsen, and welcome to another edition of your regular field guide to a world of Only Good Movies.
Los Angelesâ LGBTQ festival Outfest is celebrating its 35th anniversary this year. The Timesâ Treâvell Anderson wrote about this yearâs festivities, running through the 16th, and the overlapping functions it serves as a showcase for filmmakers, a focal point for the community and an incubator for new talent.
Filmmaker Andrew Ahn won the festivalâs top prize last year with his film âSpa Night,â and he gives much credit to the festival for helping boost his career. Though he sees progress and hope in this yearâs winner of the best-picture Oscar, as Ahn put it, âThe solution comes with having a diverse range of representations. That doesnât mean just âMoonlight.â It means many âMoonlights.â â
We have two screening events this week, and both are extremely exciting. On Tuesday, weâll screen the drama âTo The Boneâ with a Q&A featuring writer-director Marti Noxon and star Lily Collins. Then on Thursday, weâll have the comedy âLandline,â with director Gillian Robespierre, co-writer and producer Elisabeth Holm and actresses Jenny Slate, Abby Quinn and Edie Falco. For updates on future events, go to events.latimes.com.
âA Ghost Storyâ
By turns moody and metaphysical, David Loweryâs âA Ghost Storyâ is a measured, melancholy look at love and loss. Rooney Mara plays a woman struggling to get over the death of her husband, as Casey Affleck plays the husband, who returns as a ghost to the house they shared.
In his review for The Times, Justin Chang said the film âisnât a horror story exactly, unless you count the horror of permanent solitude. Opening in domestic contentment, moving through personal anguish and ending with a cosmic lament, itâs a simple, wrenching story of love and loss that pries open a window onto eternity.â
I spoke to Mara, Affleck and Lowery about Maraâs epic pie-eating scene, Affleckâs acting from under a sheet and how they were all prepared to scrap the project if it didnât turn out as they hoped.
âI didnât know if the ghost would work,â Lowery said. âI thought it just might be too silly of a concept to function the way I hoped it would. I always hoped that shape and symbol and character and presence would be maybe a little bit amusing from time to time but ultimately a very emotional presence in the film.â
I also recently spoke to actor and musician Will Oldham about his pivotal scene in the film, for a story Iâll be publishing soon.
And The Timesâ Steve Zeitchik visited the temporary âA Ghost Storeâ in New York City that the movieâs adventurous distributor, A24, is using to promote it. âMy hope is that, while regarding the images in here, minds c an wander in a way that is complementary to what Iâm trying to do with the movie,â Lowery said of the unusual space.
At the New York Times, A.O. Scott said, â âA Ghost Storyâ is suspenseful, dourly funny and at times piercingly emotional,â before going on to add, âtime â" the ways it can accelerate through years, freeze in moments and defy measurement altogether â" is Mr. Loweryâs chief preoccupation here, his major theme and his raw material.â
Writing for the Tribune News Service, Katie Walsh added, âLowery reverses the perspective of the grief process to fascinating ends. We are aligned with his point of view as a ghost, and palpably feel his own sense of loss, of his life, of hi s wife slipping away from him as she continues living. ⦠Itâs the cycle of life â" destruction, development, creation, crumbling and so on.â
âSpider-Man: Homecomingâ
Youâre probably asking yourself, âAnother âSpider-Manâ movie?â Or maybe, âDonât I read this newsletter to get away from the bombardment of summer franchise tent-pole filmmaking?â The answers to which are yes and no t so fast. The new âSpider-Man: Homecoming,â starring Tom Holland in the lead role, is directed by Jon Watts, whose previous film âCop Carâ was a Sundance standout a few years back. The mix of youth movie and outsized action spectacle makes for an intriguing blend of sensibilities.
In his review for The Times, Kenneth Turan referred to the film as âa weak copy of the teen-centric epics of John Hughes,â before finding that âagainst considerable odds, âSpider-Man: Homecomingâ finds its pace and rhythm by the end. Not only did figuring out how to become an effective Spider-Man require more of a learning curve than Parker anticipates, figuring out how to make a successful superhero movie mandated one for the filmmakers as well.â
The Timesâ Jen Yamato spoke to director Watts about the move to big-budget studio filmmaking, and as the filmmaker said, âOn an independent film where youâre working with just a handful of people, you donât have to explain anything ⦠because no one cares. You can do whatever you want. Thereâs no one there to tell you not to do it.
âBut if youâre in a larger situation, the best thing you can do is just have a vision and donât hide it,â Watts added. âMake sure everyone understands it as completely as possible â" and understands the controversial elements of it so that youâre not running into trouble later on down the line.â
Yamato also wrote specifically about how Watts was able to add a role for actor Donald Glover, after a passionate online campaign to see the actor cast as Spider-Man. She also took a look at the new filmâs purposeful efforts toward diversity in the cast, which includes Zendaya, Tony Revolori, Laura Harrier, Abraham Attah for a story publishing soon.
As Watts said, âA big part of it was what I thought the cast should look like. I separated them â" these are what the nerdy kids would be like, these are the cool kids â" and because I was pulling from real life, it was this very diverse group. And that was my pitch from the very beginning.â
For the New York Times, Manohla Dargis said of the new film, âWhat makes Spider-Man different and, ideally, work as a character, giving him an off-kilter charm, is he retains the uncertainties and vulnerabilities of adolescence. For all his super-gifts and despite the weird and dangerous company he keeps, he is also a teenage boy â" thatâs his Kryptonite, what cuts him down to recognizable human size.â
For the AP, Lindsey Bahr took note of the new filmâs forward progress, while also noting there are some strides left to be made. âMy only quibble with âSpider-Man: Homecomin gâ is that for all of its charming and infectious realism about race, high school life and class issues, it has a bit of a woman problem. Simply: Every significant and semi-significant female character looks like a model. ... Taken together, you start to wonder if maybe things would have been different if just one of the six screenwriters was a woman.â
âScumâ
Alan Clarke is the kind of filmmaker that is in danger of falling through the cracks of movie memor y. Frequently spoken of by other filmmakers, ranging from Paul Greengrass to Gus Van Sant, Clarke made bracing visions of a dark, violent world that bore a startling clarity and disturbing closeness to reality. Which makes the run at L.A.âs Cinefamily of a new restoration of his 1979 film âScum,â a youth prison drama starring Ray Winstone, something worth noting.
Writing about the film for The Times, Justin Chang said, âA ferocious exposé of life in Britainâs notorious borstals, or youth detention centers, the movie tells yo u much that you probably already know about incarcerated young men, their vicious pecking orders and the corrupt authorities overseeing their rehabilitation. But it tells it with scalding wit and coolly riveting style, in the visual equivalent of spare, brilliant prose that occasionally bleeds (and bleeds and bleeds) into poetry.â
Email me if you have questions, comments or suggestions, and follow me on Twitter@IndieFocus.
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