David Robert Mitchell – Way Too Indie http://waytooindie.com Independent film and music reviews Fri, 02 Dec 2016 17:34:42 +0000 en-US hourly 1 Way Too Indiecast is the official podcast of WayTooIndie.com. Our film critics grip and gush about the latest indie movies and sometimes even mainstream ones. Find all of our reviews, podcasts, news, at www.waytooindie.com David Robert Mitchell – Way Too Indie yes David Robert Mitchell – Way Too Indie dustin@waytooindie.com dustin@waytooindie.com (David Robert Mitchell – Way Too Indie) The Official Podcast of Way Too Indie David Robert Mitchell – Way Too Indie http://s3-us-west-2.amazonaws.com/waytooindie/podcast-album-art.jpg http://waytooindie.com 2016 Independent Spirit Award Nominations Announced http://waytooindie.com/news/2016-spirit-award-nominations-announced/ http://waytooindie.com/news/2016-spirit-award-nominations-announced/#comments Tue, 24 Nov 2015 18:14:17 +0000 http://waytooindie.com/?p=41946 Todd Haynes' Carol led the 2016 Independent Spirit Award nominations, with Beasts of No Nation and Spotlight close behind. ]]>

Moments ago, actors John Boyega (Star Wars: The Force Awakens) and Elizabeth Olsen (Martha Marcy May Marlene) announced the official list (which leaked on their site earlier for the second year in a row) of nominees for the 2016 Independent Spirit Awards. Todd HaynesCarol hauled in the most nominations with a total of six, including Best Picture, Best Director, Best Cinematography, and two Best Female Lead nominations. Close behind were Beasts of No Nation (which debuted on Netflix) and Tom McCarthy‘s Spotlight each with five nods in major categories.

The most surprising snubs this year were Rick Famuyiwa‘s Sundance hit Dope, Grandma which got rave reviews due to Lily Tomlin’s performance, and Noah Baumbach’s Mistress America, all which failed to earn a single nomination. Distributor Fox Searchlight had to feel the most disappointed, seeing just one nomination for their recording-breaking Sundance pickup Me and Earl and the Dying Girl, and even more shocking, coming up empty-handed for Brooklyn, Mistress America, and Youth.

On the flip side, we were happy to see Sean Baker’s Tangerine so well represented, grabbing four nominations including one for Best Feature. Other pleasant inclusions in this year’s list were the indie horror film It Follows, the foreign coming-of-age drama Mustang, and Benny and Joshua Safdie’s Heaven Knows What.

As with last year’s show, the 2016 Film Independent Spirit Awards will be broadcast live exclusively on February 27, 2016 on IFC at 2:00 pm PT / 5:00 pm ET.

Coming Soon: Our 2016 Spirit Award predictions.

2016 Independent Spirit Award Nominations:

Best Feature:

Anomalisa
Beasts of No Nation
Carol
Spotlight
Tangerine

Best Director:

Sean BakerTangerine
Cary Joji FukunagaBeasts of No Nation
Todd HaynesCarol
Charlie Kaufman & Duke JohnsonAnomalisa
Tom McCarthySpotlight
David Robert MitchellIt Follows

Best Screenplay:

Charlie KaufmanAnomalisa
Donald MarguliesThe End of the Tour
Phyllis NagyCarol
Tom McCarthy & Josh SingerSpotlight
S. Craig ZahlerBone Tomahawk

Best Male Lead:

Christopher AbbottJames White
Abraham AttahBeasts of No Nation
Ben MendelsohnMississippi Grind
Jason SegelThe End of the Tour
Koudous SeihonMediterranea

Best Female Lead:

Cate BlanchettCarol
Brie LarsonRoom
Rooney MaraCarol
Bel PowleyThe Diary of a Teenage Girl
Kitana Kiki RodriguezTangerine

Best Supporting Male:

Kevin CorriganResults
Paul DanoLove & Mercy
Idris ElbaBeasts of No Nation
Richard JenkinsBone Tomahawk
Michael Shannon99 Homes

Best Supporting Female:

Robin BartlettH.
Marin IrelandGlass Chin
Jennifer Jason LeighAnomalisa
Cynthia NixonJames White
Mya TaylorTangerine

Best First Feature:

The Diary of a Teenage Girl
James White
Manos Sucias
Mediterranea
Songs My Brothers Taught Me

Best First Screenplay:

Jesse AndrewsMe and Earl and the Dying Girl
Jonas CarpignanoMediterranea
Emma DonoghueRoom
Marielle HellerThe Diary of a Teenage Girl
John Magary, Russell Harbaugh, Myna JosephThe Mend

Best Cinematography:

Cary Joji FukunagaBeasts of No Nation
Ed LachmanCarol
Joshua James RichardsSongs My Brothers Taught Me
Michael GioulakisIt Follows
Reed MoranoMeadowland

Best International Film: (Award given to the director)

Embrace of the Serpent
Girlhood
Mustang
A Pigeon Sat on a Branch Reflecting on Existence
Son of Saul

Best Documentary:

Best of Enemies
Heart of a Dog
The Look of Silence
Meru
The Russian Woodpecker
(T)ERROR

Best Editing:

Beasts of No Nation
Heaven Knows What
It Follows
Room
Spotlight

John Cassavetes Award: (Given to the best feature made for under $500,000)

Advantageous – Jacqueline Kim and Jennifer Phang
Christmas, Again – Charles Poekel
Heaven Knows What – Ronald Bronstein, Arielle Holmes, and Joshua Safdie
Krisha – Trey Edward Shults
Out of My Hand – Takeshi Fukunaga and Donari Braxton

Robert Altman Award: (Best Ensemble)

Spotlight

Truer Than Fiction:

Mohammed Ali & Hemal TrivediAmong The Believers
Elizabeth Chai VasarhelyiIncorruptible
Elizabeth Giamatti & Alex SichelA Woman Like Me

Producers Award:

Darren Dean
Mel Eslyn
Rebecca Green & Laura D. Smith

Someone to Watch Award:

Robert Machoian & Rodrigo Ojeda-BeckGod Bless The Child
Felix ThompsonKing Jack
Chloe ZhoaSongs My Brothers Taught Me

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It Follows http://waytooindie.com/review/movie/it-follows/ http://waytooindie.com/review/movie/it-follows/#comments Mon, 30 Nov -0001 00:00:00 +0000 http://waytooindie.com/?p=31031 Sustaining an extreme level of tension the whole way through, Mitchell's teen horror opus is one of the best of its kind.]]>

The ultimate sign of a great movie, to me, is when it follows you home. Like a heated argument with a friend or a flirty chance encounter with a pretty girl, you just can’t stop thinking about it. A great movie occupies your head for days, creeping up on you when you’re doing the dishes, driving to work, or even having sex. David Robert Mitchell‘s It Follows is such a movie, and what makes it even more precious a gem is that it’s a horror movie, and a downright terrifying one at that. I can’t remember the last movie that freaked me out so thoroughly. Great movies stick to the back of your mind; It Follows breathes down the back of your neck.

What is It exactly? Well, it’s a shapeshifting monster that stalks its victims until A) it kills them or B) the hunted has sex with someone, passing the “infection” along. While on paper it seems a clear metaphor for STDs or AIDS (were it made 25 years ago), it’s actually more complex than that. If the monster manages to kill its target, it shifts its focus to the previous one. It’s invisible to everyone but its current and former prey, and the closer it gets, the more fucked up it looks (from afar it could appear to be a normal-looking granny; up close, it could be a rape victim pissing down her own leg). It doesn’t run (thank goodness—I’d have a heart attack) and it doesn’t talk. It just walks toward you perpetually, its destiny to dine on your flesh.

Maika Monroe (The Guest) plays Jay, a pretty girl from the suburbs of Detroit who, after having sex with her new boyfriend in the back of his car, becomes the paranormal stalker’s new mark. Unless she can find someone new to have sex with (it wouldn’t be hard considering she has plenty of admirers to choose from, but she’s got too much self-respect for that), she’ll have to live the rest of her days on the run. Thankfully, she’s got a tight contingent of friends to protect her and help save her from the monster: her sister, Kelly (Lili Sepe); her nerdy best friend, Yara (Olivia Luccardi); and her childhood playmate, Paul (Keir Gilchrist), a puny fellow who’s always had a crush on Jay. Joining them later in the story is Greg (Daniel Zovatto), the hunky guy from across the street. How will they get rid of the demonic lurker? Will Jay sleep with a stranger, Greg, or Paul (with his nerdy-virgin aura, you can’t help but root for him)?

One of the coolest things about the movie is how insular it is, focusing the story squarely on the young leads and their immediate surroundings, letting the rest of the world fall away into nothingness. The kids’ parents are essentially non-entities (except when the monster takes their form), giving the film a nostalgic, urban legend flavor that brought me back to when Are You Afraid of the Dark haunted my dreams on Saturday nights in the ’90s. The nostalgia factor runs even deeper than that: the film seems to exist in a time period that’s a scattered conflation of the past 60 years. The kids watch TV on an old boob tube in a wood-paneled room, and yet Yara runs around with a pink, seashell-shaped smartphone or e-reader of some sort. Mitchell doesn’t seem to want us to be concerned with the story’s time period, leaving it largely ambiguous, which at the same time affords him the liberty to pick and choose props and design aesthetics from any decade he wants, authenticity be damned. As a result the film has a look and feel you can’t really put your finger on, which is a very, very good thing.

It’s hard to pin down the mood Mitchell is able to create, but I wouldn’t say the film is necessarily enigmatic or elusive. What’s going on here is that Mitchell is aiming to evoke and trigger abstract feelings, fears and emotions rather than let plot define the experience. There are several dark themes at play (primarily the dangers of sexual awakening), but they emerge organically. It’s as if we discover them rather than have them fed to us by a heavy-handed screenwriter. The film’s generated so much talk and critical momentum because it bucks convention in so many ways. Trashy jump-scares are nonexistent because the movie doesn’t need them; it’s extremely tense and unsettling all the way through. Most teen horror movies manufacture drama via dissent within the core group, but It Follows‘ characters stay (mostly) supportive and loyal.

The most atypical element of all, though, is the film’s villain, ingenious in its simplicity. It awakens common social and sexual fears on a primal level, acting as a blank canvas for us to project our darkest fears onto. I can remember thinking when I first heard the infectious guitar riff from The White Stripes’ “Seven Nation Army” back in 2003, “How the hell did no one write this until now?” It felt so immediately classic and iconic, and yet it was also brand new. That’s exactly how I feel about the titular “It.” Unique. Terrifying. Elemental. Innovative. It’s the best, most nightmarish horror creation in recent memory.

That’s not taking anything away from Monroe, though, who’s critically instrumental in making the monster so frightening. Some of the film’s scariest moments aren’t when we see the monster itself, but when we see Monroe seeing the monster. She knows how to tell a story with her eyes, the sure sign of a skilled actor. It’s all but undeniable at this point that she’s destined for big things. Sepe plays a great confidant and is a generous on-screen partner for Monroe, never trying to outshine her. (Unfortunately, she won’t get the credit she deserves because her role is so understated.) Gilchrist is incredibly sympathetic and surprisingly winds up becoming the heart of the film.

Like Jim Mickle did in Cold in July, Mitchell uses eerie, ’80s-style synths to emulate the classic soundscape John Carpenter perfected in Halloween. He’s a bit too aggressive with the score at times, though, sometimes bumping up the siren-like synth wails so loud it distracts from rather than supports the imagery. He more effectively ratchets up the film’s overwhelming sense of dread with his camera, occasionally using sweeping 360 degree pans as an opportunity for us to scour the environment for “It” and exacerbate our paranoia. He’s letting us scratch our itch: it makes us feel good momentarily, but he knows it’ll only make things worse in the long run. Though early in his career, Mitchell already seems to be approaching “Master of Horror” status alongside Carpenter, Tobe Hooper, and Guillermo del Toro.

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TIFF 2014: It Follows http://waytooindie.com/news/tiff-2014-it-follows/ http://waytooindie.com/news/tiff-2014-it-follows/#comments Mon, 30 Nov -0001 00:00:00 +0000 http://waytooindie.com/?p=25213 Poor Jay (Maika Monroe). She’s a young, attractive girl dating a guy she really likes, but once she has sex with him things go sour. Turns out her date (Jake Weary) only wanted to get in her pants so he could give her his ghostly STD. Anyone with the curse/disease starts seeing something in the […]]]>

Poor Jay (Maika Monroe). She’s a young, attractive girl dating a guy she really likes, but once she has sex with him things go sour. Turns out her date (Jake Weary) only wanted to get in her pants so he could give her his ghostly STD. Anyone with the curse/disease starts seeing something in the form of a human walking towards them at a slow, steady pace. They can outrun it, but they can’t stop it, and if it catches up it will brutally murder them. To make matters worse, the thing can only be seen by those afflicted with the curse, and even passing it on through sex isn’t a guarantee; once the apparition kills whoever it’s after, it simply goes right back to haunting the last infected person.

Sounds convoluted, but through David Robert Mitchell’s writing and direction It Follows is one fun, lean horror machine. Mitchell uses the rules behind his horror villain to create some seriously eerie, intense moments, milking the image of someone slowly walking towards the camera as much as he possibly can. The use of long shots and 360 degree pans not only give the film a neat stylistic quality, they also go a long way establishing the fear and paranoia Jay goes through. Jay needs to keep moving to save her life, and the camera’s elegant restlessness evokes her feelings of constant fear and paranoia perfectly.

A heavily aggressive sound design and over the top score (seriously, if you thought Cold in July‘s Carpenter throwback soundtrack was too much, it’s nothing compared to this) kills some of the tension. The bombast of the film’s sounds and music don’t make for a good match with the simplicity and restraint of Mitchell’s core concept. Luckily the creepiness doesn’t get drowned out, making It Follows an enjoyable piece of genre fun.

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