I Declare War – 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 I Declare War – Way Too Indie yes I Declare War – Way Too Indie dustin@waytooindie.com dustin@waytooindie.com (I Declare War – Way Too Indie) The Official Podcast of Way Too Indie I Declare War – Way Too Indie http://s3-us-west-2.amazonaws.com/waytooindie/podcast-album-art.jpg http://waytooindie.com Top 10 Films from SF IndieFest http://waytooindie.com/news/top-10-films-from-sf-indiefest/ http://waytooindie.com/news/top-10-films-from-sf-indiefest/#respond Mon, 30 Nov -0001 00:00:00 +0000 http://waytooindie.com/?p=10744 The lineup at this year’s SF IndieFest was unbelievably strong; I anticipated that there would be at least a few certified duds, but that wasn’t the case. Though I didn’t love every film, each had its unique voice, ambition, and spirit. From the lowest-budget short to the most polished full-length feature, they all offered a […]]]>

The lineup at this year’s SF IndieFest was unbelievably strong; I anticipated that there would be at least a few certified duds, but that wasn’t the case. Though I didn’t love every film, each had its unique voice, ambition, and spirit. From the lowest-budget short to the most polished full-length feature, they all offered a brand new experience. This made making my list of ten favorite films very difficult. I connected with many, many films at the festival, but these ten are the ones that I felt compelled to champion the most.

Top 10 Films from SF IndieFest

#1 Simon Killer

Simon Killer movie

The thing about Simon Killer is, it’s a difficult movie to digest, but in the best way possible. The teeth-grinding level of discomfort Antonio Campos and Brady Corbet are able to achieve in Simon Killer resonated with me more than anything else at the festival. Corbet finds a way to make Simon both magnetic and repulsive, and Campos captures Paris at its most deeply colorful and richly textured. Pound for pound, my favorite movie of the festival.

Remember to keep it tuned in to Way Too Indie in April for our full review of Simon Killer and our interview with director Antonio Campos.

#2 Be Good

Be Good movie

Though not as flashy as Simon Killer, Todd Looby’s Be Good also finds its protagonist going through alarming mental transformations that surprise even him. Be Good will break your heart stealthily, little by little. Joe Swanberg’s All the Light in the Sky does the same and shares the same naturalistic tone, but when it comes to picking my personal favorites of the festival, Be Good just hits closer to home. Every moment in this movie feels earned, and Looby’s characters are handled with care. It’s the type of movie that just might teach you something about yourself by the time the credits roll.

#3 I Declare War

I Declare War movie

There were more than a few movies at this year’s festival that evoked feelings of nostalgia, but I Declare War recalls an era of movies (The Goonies, Stand by Me) that I just happened to grow up with. The kids playing their supposedly innocent ‘game’ quickly realize that their heated prepubescent emotions are too powerful to contain. The child actors’ performances are beyond impressive, and the film’s intensity and stakes are consistently high throughout the running time.

#4 The Legend of Kaspar Hauser

The Legend of Kaspar Hauser movie

‘Strange’ does not begin to describe this movie. To attempt to describe what ‘happens’ in The Legend of Kaspar Hauser would be to betray it. It’s a visually and sonically stimulating film that rubs you in a way that no other film can. It will make you laugh, squirm, headbang, ponder, gag, yadda yadda yadda. You just…you just need to watch it. It’s absolutely nuts… in a good way.

#5 Antiviral

Antiviral movie

Brandon Cronenberg’s Antiviral serves as a showcase for its gifted lead actor, Caleb Landry Jones, much like two other films at the festival, Simon Killer and The Story of Luke. What sets Jones’ performance apart from the other two is his spine-chilling physical transformation. Cronenberg’s imaginative and haunting imagery are as arresting as his fathers’, but Jones makes use of every bit of his body to burn the images of his painful deterioration into our minds.

#6 All the Light in the Sky

All the Light in the Sky movie

Films are best when they act as a mirror, illuminating our darkest fears and forcing us to confront them. As Jane Adams, as Marie, fights internally to find her place in this gigantic world, we realize that she’s fighting something we all must all face sooner or later. Nobody has captured the 21st century adult on film quite like Joe Swanberg, and he delivers another stunning time-capsule work of art with All the Light in the Sky.

#7 The Story of Luke

The Story of Luke movie

Of all the characters I’ve encountered in the many films at SF Indiefest, The Story of Luke is the one I hold nearest to my heart. The attachment you feel for Luke and his quest for love is inescapable, mostly due to Lou Taylor Pucci’s spot-on performance. The powerful message of acceptance and love The Story of Luke delivers is one that fit the spirit of SF Indiefest and the great city of San Francisco like a glove.

#8 The We and the I

The We and the I movie

Leading up to the opening night screening of Michel Gondry’s The We and the I, the thing I was most looking forward to was just how innovative Gondry would get with his camera in the super-enclosed space that is a city bus. Just how many interesting camera angles could he find? The answer? It doesn’t matter. Gondry does use his camera in interesting ways, but what makes this film special are the ever-changing dynamics of the loud-mouthed, quick-witted, unfiltered characters that occupy the bus.

#9 The Ghastly Love of Johnny X

The Ghastly Love of Johnny X movie

Watching this film in 35mm at The Roxie was one of the cornerstones of my incredible SF Indiefest experience. Having the director, Paul Bunnell, and the cast there, the energetic crowd, the buttery popcorn, the technical difficulties; these things all added up to an unforgettable night at the movies, which is what SF Indiefest is all about.

#10 Funeral Kings

Funeral Kings movie

The ultra-vulgar kids in Funeral Kings remind me of myself as an awkward teenager. I chuckled at how much of myself I saw in these characters in their pursuit of attention, validation, and sex. To see them chase after girls and sneak around their parents’ houses in the middle of the night was like a blast from the past. Like I Declare War, Funeral Kings features some incredible performances by young actors. The attitude these kids exude is authentic, and nothing about their performances feels forced.

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2013 SF Indiefest Day 4: I Declare War, Simon Killer, Various Shorts http://waytooindie.com/news/2013-sf-indiefest-day-4-i-declare-war-simon-killer/ http://waytooindie.com/news/2013-sf-indiefest-day-4-i-declare-war-simon-killer/#respond Mon, 30 Nov -0001 00:00:00 +0000 http://waytooindie.com/?p=10443 On the docket for day 4 of the festival were two shorts programs: Defying the Limits, a collection of boundary-shattering films that push the medium in new directions, and An Animated World, which, as the title would suggest, showcased several animated pieces. Next up was Jason Lapeyre and Robert Wilson’s I Declare War, in which we watch a group of kids play a pretend game of “war” in the woods that begins to feel more real than they’d planned. The final film of the day, Antonio Campos’ Simon Killer, takes an unsettling look at a young man’s descent into madness.]]>

Before covering SF Indiefest, I expected that by now, the 4th day of watching films for 10 hours straight, I would be starting to fade a little. At this point, I have seen over 40 films in under two weeks, a number I’d never approached before. My brain should be fried by now (my sleep-deprived body sure is), but the films being shown here at SF Indiefest are so varied, fascinating, and of such high quality that my sprint through the festival’s lineup has been nothing but pleasurable. All I heard when walking around the festival was how strong this year’s lineup is, and I totally agree.

On the docket for day 4 of the festival were two shorts programs: Defying the Limits, a collection of boundary-shattering films that push the medium in new directions, and An Animated World, which, as the title would suggest, showcased several animated pieces. Next up was Jason Lapeyre and Robert Wilson’s I Declare War, in which we watch a group of kids play a pretend game of “war” in the woods that begins to feel more real than they’d planned. The final film of the day, Antonio Campos’ Simon Killer, takes an unsettling look at a young man’s descent into madness.

Stay tuned to Way Too Indie for an incoming review bonanza of the shorts from the festival. For now, here’s a preview of the shorts shown on day 4.

Defying the Limits (Shorts Program)

To watch experimental film is sometimes uncomfortable, often confrontational, and always enlightening. These films can be difficult to watch, as they typically aren’t clear in their intentions and ask us to interact with them on a high emotional and intellectual level. They seldom cater to a popcorn-eating, blockbuster consuming audience; these films tell their stories on their terms, without compromise. The short films in the Defying the Limits program play by their own rules and urge us to look at film from a new perspective.

In Ewan Bailey’s DeafBlind, a deaf-blind woman explores her relationship with god when, unbeknownst to her, a mysterious man with unknown intentions appears in her home and begins to watch her. Sonia’s Story, a Sergio Leone inspired short by director Lorenzo Guarnieri, follows the titular character on her journey from childhood to adulthood in a politically turbulent 1970s Italy. In Christopher Graybill’s strange and enigmatic The Great Gastromancer, we observe Charlie, a ventriloquist, and his dummy, Rudy, as they struggle to fit into a world that doesn’t need or want them. All three movies are definitely worth keeping an eye on.

An Animated World (Shorts Program)

The second shorts program for the day focused entirely on animated films, and the selection presented was top-notch. Some shorts were wacky and comical, some were just plain gorgeous to look at, and some were irresistibly heart-warming.

The two claymation shorts in the program, Alex Bruel Flagstad’s The Hopper, and James Stewart’s Foxed! both packed an emotional punch, but differed greatly in tone and setting. The Hopper is a cautionary tale about two kids in the murderous streets of west Baltimore who try to rip off some local drug dealers and find themselves in deeper trouble than they were prepared for. Foxed!, is a gorgeous, nightmarish nugget about a young girl enslaved by foxes who makes a last-ditch effort to escape their clutches and return to her home, but discovers that her mother, bizarrely, hasn’t missed her at all.

Evlyn Mcgrath’s dark, digital playground, Here to Fall, Rosa Peris Medina’s hand-drawn tale of physical discovery, Libidinis, and Alessia Travaglini’s haunting Silenziosa Mente are all drop-dead gorgeous. If you were to ask me to explain exactly what these shorts are about, I would be evasive, but their visual beauty alone warrants a second look.

Retrocognition, by Eric Patrick, the most visually striking short in the program (that’s saying a lot), takes different images, sounds, and tropes from retro American sitcoms and radio dramas, and cuts and pastes them together to unsettling (and often darkly funny) effect. Fernando Maldonado and Jorge Tereso’s Shave It is a charmingly fun story about a monkey who is driven out of his jungle home, shaves off his body hair to resemble us, and works his way to the tip-top of society. The final short of the program, The Missing Key by Jonathan Nix, is one of the most heart-melting movies I’ve seen in a long time. It follows a young musician and his cat in a lushly rendered 1920s Venice as they compete for the top prize at the prestigious Abacus Scroll musical competition. To describe it as eye candy would be an understatement. Absolutely a must-watch, please seek it out.

I Declare War

I Declare War movie

A group of kids play a fiercely competitive fantasy game of “war” in a forest, after school. Their “game” is played with sticks in place of guns and water balloons in place of grenades, but their artillery is very real in their minds, as real as the strong emotions they carry into the “game” from the real world. As their real-life feelings of jealousy and resentment toward each other begin to dictate the decisions they make, their fantasy game escalates to very real, dangerous levels.

Jason Lapeyre and Robert Wilson’s I Declare War stars a very talented young cast, much like SF Indiefest’s opening night film, Michel Gondry’s The We and the I, and tells a coming-of-age story that is refreshingly intelligent, savvy, hilarious, and universally relatable. More importantly, it’s pure, unbridled fun at the movies. We occasionally see the sticks and slingshots the kids hold in their hands as the kids see them in their minds, and the image of kids in print t-shirts and shorts running around with real-life bazookas and automatic rifles is as entertaining as anything I’ve seen at the festival thus far. The action is shot much like the classic war movies the characters love (Patton, Full Metal Jacket). The comedy works quite well, and the clever one-liners are genuinely funny, not overly cute like typical kid-movie zingers. The performances by the actors are impressively sincere. When the kids argue, the urgency and fire behind their cutting words feels very real, and the scenes unfold organically.

Like in The We and the I, the dynamic between the different groups of kids is constantly shifting and evolving, and the escalation of emotions is handled with care so that every moment is earned. Though the premise at first seems innocuous, the stakes become very real by the end, which is the key to making a story work, and separates good movies about kids from the bad ones. The news that I Declare War has been picked up by Drafthouse films for distribution is fantastic, as fans of movies like The Goonies and Stand by Me would be cheating themselves to miss it.

RATING: 8.8

Simon Killer

Simon Killer movie

Writer/Director Antonio Campos was in house at the Roxie to present his unnerving meditation on loneliness/madness, Simon Killer. Simon, played by the uber-talented Brady Corbet (Martha Marcy May Marlene), is a recent college graduate who, reeling from a recent break-up, travels to (a beautifully photographed) Paris and bums around looking for love to fill his void. He meets a prostitute named Victoria and the two fall hatch a dangerously risky plan to extort Victoria’s clients. Corbet commits himself to the role completely, and I defy you to not have nightmares about him after the credits roll. This could possibly end up being my favorite film of the festival, though I’ll bite my tongue until I see the rest of the films.

STAY TUNED: to Way Too Indie for our full review of Simon Killer which will be posted around the film’s release, April 26th. PLUS, Antonio Campos was nice enough to give us an interview about the film, which we will be posting around the release date as well. Campos gives fascinating insight into his filmmaking process, and any aspiring filmmakers and film geeks shouldn’t miss this look inside the techniques and influences of an incredibly talented director.

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