Saturday, February 25, 2012

Hurt Village (Katori Hall)

I learned a great deal from the play set in a condemned housing project in Memphis, Tennessee.  Though parts of the play didn't work as well as others, I'm glad we saw it.

Recommend.

Wednesday, January 25, 2012

Macbeth 1969 (adapted from Shakespeare by Eric Ting)

Well, this thoughtful adaptation of Shakespeare's Scottish play uses lines derived solely (I think) from Macbeth, but rearrangements them and distributes them among only six parts to tell an entirely different story.  Despite the obvious difficulties with such a project, I think it could work.  For example, the new version is set in a Vietnam-era VA hospital, and the lines of the Weird Sisters are given to the three nurses who staff the ward (and two of whom are also married to Macbeth and Macduff--or is it Banquo?).  Sometimes it is clear that when the nurses recite the Weird Sisters' lines, they are the hallucinations of the traumatized war hero, Macbeth; other times, it's just the nurses speaking those lines.  Nor is it clear what role Macbeth's PTSD plays vis-a-vis his murder of Duncan: does the PTSD cause him to kill his king, or does he kill his king because of PTSD? 

I think there are ways that the lighting and sound (which are already used to great effect) could answer some of these questions and give the production more coherence.  Because I have faith in Ting's ability to pull all of this together, I'd like to see the next iteration.  I bet it will be provocative.

Recommend.

Tuesday, January 24, 2012

The Women on the Sixth Floor (Philippe Le Guay)

Predictable but absolutely charming.  No one does a romantic comedy like the French.

Recommend

Le Havre (Aki Kaurismäki)

This Finnish film makes a simple but eloquent statement:  when you're down and out, your best source of help are the others who are also down and out...just not as far down or out.  Set in the gritty, yet almost nostalgically impoverished working class neighborhood near Le Havre's dockyards, the movie follows the efforts to help a young Gabon refuge reunite with his mother in London.  With nothing but their wits and their hearts, they simultaneously hide him from the authorities while raising the 3000 francs needed to smuggle him out.  Surprising lack of sentimentality.

Perhaps the best moment, though, is the Roberto Piazza (aka Little Bob) gig.  Why isn't this guy better known?

Highly recommend.




Sunday, January 22, 2012

Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close (Daldry)

Yes, this is a moving, maybe even sentimental, film, but that doesn't keep it from being a timely story well told. 


Recommend

Shame (Steve McQueen)

Intriguing examination of sexual addition spinning out of control, with only (very suggestive) hints about the underlying cause. 

Fantastic performances by Michael Fassbender and Carey Mulligan; however, it's the director's willingness to hold the camera still for long cuts that most captivated.

Highly recommend...as long as you remember its NC-17 rating


Tuesday, January 17, 2012

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