Stranger by the Lake – 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 Stranger by the Lake – Way Too Indie yes Stranger by the Lake – Way Too Indie dustin@waytooindie.com dustin@waytooindie.com (Stranger by the Lake – Way Too Indie) The Official Podcast of Way Too Indie Stranger by the Lake – Way Too Indie http://s3-us-west-2.amazonaws.com/waytooindie/podcast-album-art.jpg http://waytooindie.com 13 Best Foreign Films of 2014 http://waytooindie.com/features/13-best-foreign-films-of-2014/ http://waytooindie.com/features/13-best-foreign-films-of-2014/#comments Mon, 30 Nov -0001 00:00:00 +0000 http://waytooindie.com/?p=28807 Way Too Indie's list of the 13 Best Foreign Language Films of 2014.]]>

With 2014 coming to a close, the tradition of an annual post-mortem begins. Was 2014 a good year? A bad year? Do the highlights outweigh the lowlights, or vice versa? While everyone will have an opinion on the quality of 2014’s output in film, one point will be hard to dispute: a lot of great foreign films came out this year.

That’s why we put together this list of the 13 Best Foreign Language Films of 2014. Three of these picks are quite obvious; they also placed on our list of the 20 Best Films of 2014 (with two placing in the top ten). The other ten are just as good in our eyes, placing on some of our individual ‘Best Of’ lists for the year, and in some cases came extremely close to placing on our main list. These 13 films make up a diverse list, but they’re all unique, challenging and thought-provoking in their own ways. Watch any film on this list, and you won’t regret it.

Way Too Indie’s 13 Best Foreign Language Films of 2014

A Girl Walks Home Alone At Night

A Girl Walks Home Alone At Night movie

There have been many movies like A Girl Walks Home Alone at Night in that there have been many movies that borrow stuff from other movies. Ana Lily Amirpour’s alluring debut feature is a rarity, however, in that it gives back what it takes, honoring its inspirations (Leone, Kiarostami, various horror classics) by using their wisdom to create something wholly new and exciting rather than retreading old ground. Amirpour’s out-of-nowhere use of vampire mythology to comment on Iranian gender politics is ingenious, and if heavier things like foreign gender inequity doesn’t suit your fancy, the film operates perfectly as a vintage romance, a pulpy street drama, and a moody horror piece as well. It sounds like a hodgepodge, but it’s not; everything fits snugly in its right place. Shot in Bakersfield, California in inky black and white, the film is a vision (especially for a shoestring production) much like lead actor Sheila Vand, the vicious vampire in a chador who quickly tears apart any notions of “vulnerable females” the film’s title suggests. [Bernard]

Force Majeure

Force Majeure movie

The winner of Cannes Un Certain Regard Jury Prize has a premise so intriguing that it can be hard to see the film’s other qualities. Particularly how beautiful Force Majeure films the scenic French Alps, holding shots long enough to let its central character ski off into the snowy fog. The story here is a family takes a ski vacation and gets engulfed in the snow cloud of a controlled avalanche; however, in the panic, the father Tomas (Johannes Kuhnke) briefly abandons his wife and two children. From there, Ruben Östlund’s film illustrates the damage this impulse has on the psyche of Tomas, his wife Ebba (Lisa Loven Kongsli), and their two young children. Force Majeure can be uncomfortable to watch but Östlund mines those moments for wonderfully honest laughs. If rumors of an upcoming American remake are true, it’s easy to imagine Jason Sudekis turning Tomas into a broadly comic role. In this highly original Swedish gem, both Kuhnke and Kongsli deliver hilariously understated performances that can demonstrate the evolving relationship dynamic with a simple glare. It’s all so good that Force Majeure took up two spots on Way Too Indie’s Best Scenes of 2014 list. [Zach]

Ida

Ida movie

“The brilliance of Pawel Pawlikowski’s Ida starts with the bleak elegance of its aesthetic: a black-and-white palate presented in a 4:3 aspect ratio that is haunting in its simplicity.” Read Michael’s take on the film in our Best Films of 2014 feature.

Leviathan

Leviathan 2014 movie

Russian cinema has historically given us some of the most aesthetically refined and formally adept films ever. From Eisenstein and Vertov, through Kalatozov and Tarkovsky, Russia was prosperous during its Soviet era. Recent times, though, haven’t been as kind, and if Andrey Zvyagintsev has anything to say about it, that’s all about to change. Of course, with his latest masterwork Leviathan, he says so much, especially since the actual state of Russia is a crucial character in itself. Nikolai (Aleksey Serebryakov, in an Oscar-worthy performance) is desperately trying to hold on to everything that makes life in his little town by the Barents Sea complete. His wife Lilya (Elena Lyadova) and best friend Dmitry (Vladimir Vdovichenkov), a lawyer from Moscow, act as his support group against the town’s mayor (Roman Madyanov, in an Oscar-worthy performance) who has plans to demolish his house and build corporate property over it. The film is an incisive examination of stifled life under a labyrinthine structure of corruption, a deeply profound story with the kind of sensibilities of fragile human condition on par with the greatest Russian novelists. Zvyagintsev directs Leviathan as a man who is one hundred percent in sync with the invisible powers of the moving image, and with his fantastically talented team (both behind and in front of the camera), is raising cinematic standards for Russian cinema yet again. [Nik]

Like Father, Like Son

Like Father, Like Son movie

The “switched at birth” premise sounds far more suitable for a goofy ’80s comedy or a made-for-basic-cable tearjerker than it does a modern Japanese drama. Yet in writer/director Hirokazu Koreeda‘s skilled filmmaking hands, the sublime Like Father, Like Son uses the premise mostly as a hook, pivoting off it to take a deeper look at fatherhood, nature vs. nurture, and providing vs. participating. When two sets of parents are told their six-year-old (!) sons were accidentally switched at birth, decisions must be made. The parents decide because six years have passed, the children should be gradually integrated into the opposite family’s life, with the long-term goal being a permanent switch. The slow-play not only proves to be more difficult than originally thought, it allows a patient length of time (months in the film) for a meaningful tale to be told and considerable emotional impact to be felt. It also prevents the story from being hijacked by manufactured, panic-fueled melodrama. Everyone in the cast is excellent, but Masaharu Fukuyama shines as the financially comfortable but career-driven father who must come to terms with more about himself and his past than he was prepared to do. How do you say “Pass the Kleenex” in Japanese? [Michael]

Norte, the End of History

Norte, the End of History movie

Zvyagintsev’s Leviathan may be this year’s closest example to the humanistic depth of a Russian novel, but Lav Diaz’s Norte, the End of History took a Russian classic and turned out a sprawling four hour re-imagining set in the Philippines almost to singlehandedly prove how quickly cultural barriers can shatter when you use art as the hammer. This is Dostoevsky’s Crimes and Punishment as seen through the glacially paced and enormously immersive world of Lav Diaz, alienating mainstream audiences since 1999. In case you haven’t read our review, we’re big fans. Norte sees Fabian (Sid Lucero, who does really brilliant work here considering the scope and the evolutions his character goes through) as the Filipino Raskolnikov, committing murder more as an attempt to reach a philosophical conclusion than out of practical reasons, and left disillusioned. Diaz’s branches away from Dostoevsky most vividly because he pays equal attention to the man Fabian accuses of the murder, and the man’s wife left to fend for herself and her children. In this way, Norte is more of an expansion than an adaptation, where the gorgeous milieu photographed with a keen sense for environment by Larry Manda leaves Diaz’s imagination to take center stage and pull you into an incredibly involved story of crushed human spirit. Here lie the fastest four hours of the year. [Nik]

Stranger by the Lake

Stranger by the Lake movie

I find it interesting to note about myself that my capacity for the audacious and erotic in a film goes up substantially when it happens to be foreign. I imagine it’s how non-Americans feel about the way their capacity for pyrotechnics and CG must increase to watch our films. Even so French film Stranger by the Lake pushed me to the edge of my extended limits. This homoerotic thriller feels like a combination of an adolescent summer outdoor romance, mixed with a Hitchcockian thriller, mixed with gay porn. But put it all together and it’s an engaging look at the extent to which lust and emotions can cloud our judgement. Franck (Pierre Deladonchamps), an overly lubido-driven and naively romantic man, spends his days at the lake looking for sex and possibly love. He finds instant lust for Michel (Christophe Paou), a tall, dark and handsome man known for his hard-to-get ways. So great is his attraction, he turns a blind eye when he sees Michel unceremoniously dump a lover he’s grown weary of by drowning him in the lake. Without making any statements Alain Guiraudie’s minimalistic film explores varying levels of attraction and the very human habit of misplacing feelings. While all the sex feels absurd, its really only a backdrop to the tensions at play. And those tensions build to a harebrained ending that while thrilling, mainly serves to show the extent to which we are capable of lying to ourselves. [Ananda]

The Strange Little Cat

Stray Dogs movie

Ramon Zurcher’s The Strange Little Cat is fiercely non-narrative and non-mainstream. A real-time examination of a German apartment during a busy day, the film zooms at a brief 72 minutes, with its characters entering and exiting still frames, simply living their lives. While the plot rambles through conversations, the film has an uncanny attention to detail. The camera’s eye seems to wander until it catches something interesting to witness or study – in one of my favorite scenes this year, we watch an entire game of Connect Four played without any conversation or distraction. I don’t know if The Strange Little Cat has a lot of deep, hidden meaning, but it is a strangely addictive and entertaining film. And, yes, there is a cat, though it really isn’t all that strange. [Aaron]

Stray Dogs

Stray Dogs movie

I’ll get straight to the point: Stray Dogs is a masterpiece. Director Tsai Ming-Liang’s final feature film finds him setting his sights on a family in poverty, a topic fitting his slow, patient, and uncompromising style perfectly. With Tsai’s muse Lee Kang-Sheng playing the father, Stray Dogs follows him as he tries to support his two children with menial work, including a job as a human billboard. For these characters, time takes on a different meaning, and Tsai’s approach to cinematic duration similarly breaks conventions. These people simultaneously struggling and stagnate, and Tsai’s static camera captures a range of emotions through shots that sometimes go past the ten minute mark. I haven’t even mentioned how immaculately composed all of these shots are, making it quite easy to stare at them for what can feel like an eternity. And I haven’t said a word about the film’s baffling and incredible second half, where Tsai hits a sort of reset button that suddenly introduces one surreal and achingly gorgeous image after another. Stray Dogs may be challenging to watch, but if you’re willing to adjust to Tsai’s rhythms, the results reach a level of transcendence few other films can achieve. [C.J.]

The Tale of the Princess Kaguya

Stranger by the Lake movie

Isao Takahata, considered by most to be Studio Ghibli’s second fiddle, made what might be the best work of the great Japanese animation house. The Tale of the Princess Kaguya isn’t as emotionally devastating as Takahata’s The Grave of the Fireflies, but it is every bit as rich in character, theme and story. The tale of the fairy princess is both lightly entertaining and expansive, with elements of fantasy, nature, humor, tragedy, romance, quest, history, and tradition in Japanese jidaigeki. Stylistically, this is one of the most beautiful animations I have ever seen. I’m not someone that usually cries out when technological advances pushes out the old ways of movie making, but this is a prime example of the possibilities and, frankly, the necessity of hand-drawn animation. I don’t know much about the actual production, so I don’t know how much of the film is man-made vs. computer generated, but there is something intrinsic about the animation that hits on a higher level. The wispy, dreamlike movements of the characters and environments are the perfect way to tell this story. With The Tale of the Princess Kaguya, Isao Takahata has capped off a stellar career with a stellar work, a wonderful tribute to animation and Japanese storytelling. As he moves on, The Tale of the Princess Kaguya is surely the type of film that will inspire film artists around the globe interested in stories with emotionally complex narratives and extraordinary focus in style. [Aaron]

Two Days, One Night

Two Days, One Night movie

“…in Two Days, One Night, [the Dardenne Brothers’] first collaboration with an A-lister proves to be terrific, and for fans, assuaging.” Read Bernard’s take on the film in our Best Films of 2014 feature.

Winter Sleep

Winter Sleep movie

“…there’s simply no other film that will suck you into its world faster and smoother than this opulent Turkish delight.” Read Nik’s take on the film in our Best Films of 2014 feature.

Young & Beautiful

Young & Beautiful movie

Leave it to provocative French filmmaker François Ozon to explore adolescent sexuality with masterful style and deliberate focus. Ozon divides Young & Beautiful into four seasons, observing Isabelle (Marine Vacth in an exceptional breakout performance) as she enters her sexual discovery phase near her 17th birthday. In the beginning her actions are innocent enough, losing her virginity during a summer vacation. However, when the film jumps ahead to autumn, she’s secretly working as a high-class prostitute. With someone else behind the wheel Young & Beautiful could have easily veered into softcore porn territory, but Ozon’s skillful artistry shines through in this voyeuristic coming-of-age study. The film astutely observes teenage rebellion and self discovery without misplaced melodrama, manipulating emotions, or judging its characters. For those reasons Ozon allows the audience to draw their own conclusions, making Young & Beautiful an excellent conversation piece. [Dustin]

Honorable Mentions

We always want to spread the love at Way Too Indie, and some of us felt so passionately about certain candidates for this list that we had to give them a mention of some sort. Lukas Moodysson’s We Are The Best! is a total blast, a film combining the rebellious nature of punk with the innocence of youth perfectly; Pascale Ferran’s diptych Bird People is, by far, one of the year’s most daringly original films of the year; Yuval Adler’s Bethlehem is a taut, compelling procedural from Israel; Sergei Loznitsa’s Maidan stands alongside Citizenfour as one of the year’s most vital documentaries; Sean Ellis’ Metro Manila proves that a familiar story can still feel exciting when done right; and Alex van Warmerdam’s Borgman is as funny as it is baffling, turning out to be one of 2014’s true curiosities.

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Way Too Indie’s Best Films of 2014 (So Far) http://waytooindie.com/features/way-too-indie-best-films-of-2014-so-far/ http://waytooindie.com/features/way-too-indie-best-films-of-2014-so-far/#respond Mon, 30 Nov -0001 00:00:00 +0000 http://waytooindie.com/?p=21663 Now that we’re officially at the halfway mark of the year, we put our heads together here at Way Too Indie to come up with our favorite films of 2014 so far. Our list contains a variety of films ranging from festival darlings, indie dramas, horror movies, and even a couple of (really good) mainstream […]]]>

Now that we’re officially at the halfway mark of the year, we put our heads together here at Way Too Indie to come up with our favorite films of 2014 so far. Our list contains a variety of films ranging from festival darlings, indie dramas, horror movies, and even a couple of (really good) mainstream movies. We decided to only include films that had a North American release date between January 1st through June 30th to keep things consistent. Considering our list for the front-half of the year looks this solid, we’re eagerly waiting to see what the rest of year brings. In the meantime, here are the best films of 2014…so far.

Way Too Indie’s Best Films of 2014 (So Far)

#15 – The Immigrant

The Immigrant movie

James Gray is quickly becoming one of the most shamefully unsung directors of American cinema today. He started off remarkably well in 1994, when his debut Little Odessa won the Silver Bear at Venice. Fast forward 20 years, and he’s only managed to complete four more features, mostly because his films haven’t been getting the critical and box-office love needed to stay prolific. The pattern continues with his latest, The Immigrant – which premiered at Cannes last year, and bless the French festival for realizing Gray’s talent because since his debut, every single one of his features unveiled there. If you’ve seen the first part of our Best Of 2014 (So Far) Hangouts session, you’ll hear me showering all kinds of praise on this beautiful, gentle, unique, and softly stirring picture about a woman’s unwavering love for her sister, a man’s wavering love for this woman, and the rock-solid strength of faith. Detractors like to call it out on its melodrama but I think Gray manages, thanks in large part to the orchestration of the mise-en-scene and cinematography which glide us back into its 1920s New York setting, to put the mellow in the real drama of the story. Marion Cotillard, Gray-regular Joaquin Phoenix, and Jeremy Renner deliver outstanding performances, and lovers of visual storytelling will be rightly gawking at the last shot of the film for some time. It’s still my favorite of the year. Don’t listen to the hushed-up welcome The Immigrant received once it finally got released this year, and go melt into it on the big screen as soon as you can. [Nik]
Watch Trailer

#14 – Oculus

Oculus movie

I’ll be the first to admit that a horror film centered around a haunted mirror sounds ridiculous. While Mike Flanagan’s Oculus contains a simple premise—an antique mirror that possesses people to commit murder—the film is surprisingly smart. The film begins by having two siblings recall their past with wildly different interpretations, forcing the audience to pick a side. Then with fancy editing techniques, Oculus seamlessly blends flashbacks into the present, making it impossible to tell what’s real and what the mirror is manipulating. Like The Conjuring before it, Oculus demonstrates how unsettling suspense that sticks with you is far superior to temporary jump scares. [Dustin]
Oculus Review | Watch Trailer

#13 – A Spell To Ward off the Darkness

A Spell To Ward off the Darkness movie

The symbol separating each of the three acts in A Spell to Ward off the Darkness is an equilateral triangle, an image that would appropriately sum up the film’s structure. As a mute, unnamed man (Robert A.A. Lowe) spends a third of the film trying out a specific lifestyle (living on an Estonian commune, living in isolation in Finland, performing with a black metal band in Norway) before promptly moving on to the next, directors Ben Rivers & Ben Russell craft a cinematic powerhouse about an existential quest for belonging. The sublime camerawork, from a hypnotic opening shot to a gorgeous long take watching the man fish, comes to a head in the film’s final third. As the man embraces primal fury through his playing with the metal band, the film’s themes come together in a spiritual, near-transcendental way. It’s sublime filmmaking, plain and simple. [CJ]
A Spell To Ward off the Darkness Review | Watch Trailer

#12 – Locke

Locke movie

On a late night highway drive into London, Tom Hardy navigates a series of phone calls that unravel his life in close to real time, despite his never leaving the confines of a BMW X5. If that idea doesn’t intrinsically sound compelling, there is little in Locke that will convince you otherwise; however, the subtle-yet-bold execution from writer-director Steven Knight (writer of Dirty Pretty Things & Eastern Promises) makes the film stand out even amongst one-man thrillers. In the lead role, Hardy delivers a strong performance that doesn’t require overt physicality. Despite its limiting setting, Locke remains compelling through carefully constructed dialogs and engaging until its ending. [Zachary]
Locke Review | Watch Trailer

#11 – Chef

Chef movie

Food porn it is, but one-dimensional it’s not. Jon Favreau’s winning, heartfelt dramedy Chef follows a creatively plateaued executive chef (Favreau) as he travels cross-country with his son and best friend (John Leguizamo) in the food truck of his dreams to rediscover his passion for food. From watching Favreau chomp on a crispy-on-the-outside, gooey-on-the-inside grilled cheese, to seeing him in ecstasy as he savors a smoky, tender morsel of Texas barbecue, the film will make you want to sprint out of the theater and straight to the closest eatery, guaranteed. The film’s got soul, too, as it tells a touching father-son tale that’ll make even the hardest of hearts a little sniffly. (Or maybe it’s the onions…) The cast of A-players, including Sofia Vergara, Oliver Platt, Robert Downey Jr., and Scarlett Johansson, are well-suited in their roles and each have good chemistry with Favreau. Post-movie dinner plans are a must! [Bernard]
Chef Review | Watch Trailer

#10 – Cold in July

Cold in July movie

Jim Mickle has been stunning audiences for a few years now with his run of successful indie horror films, but this sopping wet with sweat, moody and atmospheric 1980’s set Texan thriller is his best yet. When a decent man (Michael C. Hall) accidentally kills an intruder in his home, it brings the intruder’s father to town to even the score. When Hall does some digging into his own shooting he finds out that he may or may not be able to trust the cops that investigated the crime. From there Cold in July unspools into gritty grind house delight as loads of blood is spilled in a spectacular shootout. [Blake]
Cold in July Review | Watch Trailer

#9 – Blue Ruin

Blue Ruin movie

This Southern thriller is a mixture of revenge, brutal violence and unpredictability. A mysterious man, who happens to be horrible as an assassin, goes after a family of hicks who in some capacity (we never find out why) wronged his own. What makes Blue Ruin so good is that it never insults the audience’s intelligence and has a clear direction it wants to go in. It also has a lead character who chooses to carry out acts of violent vengeance and at times isn’t completely up to the task. Making a revenge film with a lead character that is very sloppy is a breath of fresh air. The lesson of the film? Revenge is never simple and it’s never clean. [Blake]
Blue Ruin Review | Watch Trailer

#8 – The Double

The Double movie

Two Jesse Eisenbergs: one painfully nebbish, the other unflappably confident. Many actors have pulled off portraying their own doppleganger but in The Double, Eisenberg’s dual roles exist in a beautifully detailed retro-futuristic environment reminiscent of Terry Gilliam’s Brazil. The 2nd feature from actor/filmmaker Richard Ayoade retains the quirky sense of humor that defined his teenage love comedy Submarine, but the tone is considerably more mature in The Double with darker jokes and deeper philosophical themes. Ayoade’s movie moves at a brisk pace, bouncing between comedy, drama, romance and thriller in an unpredictable manner until its shocking ending. Although The Double contains significant, notable influences from others filmmakers, the amalgam of ideas portrayed in this movie becomes the unique vision of Ayoade. [Zachary]
The Double Review | Watch Trailer

#7 – Stranger by the Lake

Stranger by the Lake movie

Set entirely on a beach where gay men rendezvous for brief sexual encounters, Stranger by the Lake is among the year’s best and most unusual thrillers. When Franck witnesses a man being drowned in the lake by his lover, he is pulled between fear and seduction, unsure whether to go to the police or get even closer to the mysterious killer. Still, Stranger by the Lake is much more than a run-of-the-mill murder thriller — though those elements are extraordinarily tuned. Dealing with many issues surrounding homosexuality, including inclusion, community and being “the other”, the film also becomes among the most probing films in a rapidly growing gay cinema. You can come for the exploration of these issues and then stay for the explicit sex scenes. All of this tension (sexual and otherwise) leads to a dynamite conclusion that will have you on the edge of your seat. [Aaron]
Stranger by the Lake Review | Watch Trailer

#6 – Snowpiercer

Snowpiercer movie

Summer is normally the breeding ground when studios launch their latest franchise/sequel blockbuster to the masses. At first glance, Snowpiercer seems to hit all the check marks for a standard popcorn movie: huge budget ($40 million), all-star cast (Chris Evans, Ed Harris, Tilda Swinton), and a graphic novel adaptation that promises action. But Snowpiercer remarkably satisfies both the arthouse and mainstream crowds with a high-concept plotline stuffed with stunning visuals and marvelous action sequences.

This single location blockbuster is set in the near feature where a chemical reaction creates a new ice age, survived only by a small group of people aboard a sophisticated train that travels around the world on an endless loop. A class system divides the train’s society, causing the lower class to revolt against the billionaire industrialist at the helm. The film’s pacing perfectly balances thoughtful backstories with action-packed mayhem. The Weinstein Company’s decision to make Snowpiercer a limited release is a shame, this is a rare science-fiction film that everyone should see. [Dustin]
Snowpiercer Review | Watch Trailer

#5 – Only Lovers Left Alive

Only Lovers Left Alive movie

Yes, Only Lovers Left Alive is one of the best vampire films in ages, but calling it a “vampire movie” would be selling it short. Jarmusch is more fascinated by immortality and human creativity. Vampire couple Adam & Eve (Tom Hiddleston and Tilda Swinton, both fantastic), while madly in love with each other, differ on their view of humans. Adam’s cynicism toward “zombies” consistently goes up against Eve’s optimism (when Adam says he feels like the sand is at the bottom of the hourglass, she tells him to turn it over), but Jarmusch clearly takes Eve’s side on the debate. Only Lovers Left Alive is a celebration of artistic triumphs, with piles of literary and musical references only Jarmusch is able to pull off without any sense of pomposity. These characters have lived for centuries, and it becomes clear that, for them, their only true friends are the various forms of art they surround themselves with. Through this Jarmusch paints a different view of eternal life; humans may not live forever, but their art and legacy will never die. [CJ]
Only Lovers Left Alive Review | Watch Trailer

#4 – Under The Skin

Under The Skin movie

If there is a more alluring and visually striking film than Under the Skin to come out this year, I want to see it immediately (and then probably disagree). Jonathan Glazer’s nine-year return to feature filmmaking is a strange mix of science fiction and horror, though it doesn’t really try hard to be either. Instead, it simplifies everything (almost radical for modern sci-fi), taking out most of a conventional plot for mood and visual poetry. The film never gives us any direct explanation of who our alien protagonist is and why she is on her mission, but these answers probably aren’t that important. Scarlett Johansson’s unnamed visitor, who roams through the misty Scottish cities looking to trap men to steal their essence, is both otherworldly and human, frightening and sympathetic. Even though there isn’t a lot of plot for her to deliver, it is one of the most challenging performances of the year so far and one of her best. Add in one of the most interesting productions ever, an unforgettable score, and a repeated haunting scene featuring total blackness, and Under the Skin is creeping in on special distinction. [Aaron]

Under The Skin Review | Watch Trailer

#3 – Nymphomaniac (Vol 1+2)

Nymphomaniac movie

Lars Von Trier, you lunatic. Much has been said about Von Trier’s latest opus, starting with its various lengths, versions, and parts. The bottom line on that is that the original 5 and a half hour uncut full version has yet to see a theatrical light of day anywhere, the film was split into two volumes for easier distribution, and both volumes were censored and cut down into two 2-hour-long parts. An uncut Vol.1 premiered at the Berlinale, and an uncut Vol.2 will premiere at TIFF later this year, but consider this entry as the full, censored & stripped-down version of Nymphomaniac that’s seen public release. There should be colossal quotations marks around stripped down, of course, since even a censored and cut Von Trier manages to protrude, probe, and puncture all kinds of safety nets to make – in my opinion – the greatest film in 2014 released so far. What makes Nymphomaniac one of Von Trier’s greatest accomplishments and something of a crowning achievement for his career thus far, is that the film manages to be his funniest, most entertaining, deeply felt, super-intellectual, and most vulnerable to date. Through the character of Joe (Charlotte Gainsbourg), Von Trier gets to criticize humanity’s hypocritical ethics and morals, and through Seligman (Stellan Skarsgaard) he gets to make the most wonderful digressions about the art of fly-fishing and Edgar Allan Poe, among other things. Nymphomaniac is also a film about storytelling, individual freedom, identity, sanctity of faith, and sex. Lots and lots of sex. It’s something of a miracle, then, that it’s one of the most tasteful and thought-provoking films of the past few years. [Nik]
Nymphomaniac Review | Watch Trailer

#2 – The Grand Budapest Hotel

The Grand Budapest Hotel movie

Never has Wes Anderson worked with such precision, elegance, and style as he does in The Grand Budapest Hotel. Brimming with delectable fancies, the tale of hotel concierge M. Gustave (Ralph Fiennes) and his misadventures with his loyal lobby boy Zero (newcomer Tony Revolori) is one of Anderson’s best, transforming from murder mystery to heist film seamlessly all while telling a charming story of friendship throughout. Fiennes gives one of the deftest performances of his career, bringing M. Gustave to life while upholding the character’s rigid formality. The period setting of the remote, 1930s European resort plays to Anderson’s strengths, fitting his colorful visual style like a glove and making the film a wonder to behold. It’s hard to think of a moviemaker more technically sound, and The Grand Budapest Hotel is quite possibly the finest demonstration of his skills. [Bernard]
The Grand Budapest Hotel Review | Watch Trailer

#1 – The LEGO Movie

The LEGO Movie

If you’ve seen The Lego Movie, you probably aren’t judging us right now quite so harshly as our indie-devoted followers are, because you are in on it. We know guys, we know. Our #1 of the year so far is an animated so-called children’s movie starring a toy brand. Which just proves great movies can come out of anywhere.

Directing-writing duo Phil Lord and Christopher Miller have written a script that jumps the adult-child barrier possibly better than any family film ever has. Employing major voice talent throughout, the film features the voice of Chris Pratt as Emmet, a construction worker Lego who wholeheartedly embraces the Lego drone lifestyle, being the best version of the limited self he can be. When he finds a strange red block that attaches itself to him in a construction zone one day, badass chick Wildstyle (voiced in sultry tones by Elizabeth Banks) declares him the prophesied ‘Special’, the Lego hero who will save them all from Lord Business (Will Ferrell, of course) and encourage creativity in the Lego world. Emmet accepts the title, hoping to get in with Wildstyle, and the two, along with Batman (Will Arnett), Unikitty (Alison Brie), Spaceman Benny (Charlie Day), and the Gandalf/God-like Vitruvius (Morgan Freeman), embark on an epic journey to save the people of their world. The film is sharply hilarious and perfectly poignant. Opting for a refreshing think for yourself message and positing that being oneself is better than hoping for ‘specialness’, The Lego Movie throws the usual themes of uniquely qualified heroes down the drain. Adding to the impressive story and non-stop laughs is a film that looks truly innovative. Bright and colorful, the film looks like a stop-animated film made from real Lego materials, the details are simply astounding.

When a film gets all the elements right, it doesn’t matter if it was made for 4-year-olds or 40-year-olds, it’s just damn good. [Ananda]
Watch Trailer

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Staff Top 10 Lists For 2013 http://waytooindie.com/features/staff-top-10-lists-2013/ http://waytooindie.com/features/staff-top-10-lists-2013/#respond Mon, 30 Nov -0001 00:00:00 +0000 http://waytooindie.com/?p=17271 Now that you have gotten a chance to read Way Too Indie’s Best Films of 2013, a cumulative list from our staff, check out the individual Top 10 Lists from the eight staff members that created the list. The differences between the cumulative site list and these individual ones are actually quite different. First of […]]]>

Now that you have gotten a chance to read Way Too Indie’s Best Films of 2013, a cumulative list from our staff, check out the individual Top 10 Lists from the eight staff members that created the list. The differences between the cumulative site list and these individual ones are actually quite different. First of all, even though mathematically Gravity was our overall #1 film for 2013, it only appears in the #1 spot in one of the eight lists below. Also, because a film had to get at least two mentions to quality for our cumulative list, you’ll find quite a few different titles down below: Leviathan, Paradise: Love, Blackfish, A Hijacking, The Past, and many more.

Staff Top 10 Lists For 2013

Dustin’s Top 10

#10 Gravity

#9   Drinking Buddies

#8   Nebraska

#7   Upstream Color

#6   The Place Beyond the Pines

#5   12 Years a Slave

#4   Short Term 12

#3   Paradise: Love

#2   Frances Ha

#1   Blue Is the Warmest Color

Honorable Mentions:
The Hunt
Fruitvale Station
Welcome to Pine Hill

Dustin Jansick Top 10 Movies 2013

Jansen’s Top 10

#10 Blue Jasmine

#9   Drinking Buddies

#8   Museum Hours

#7   Captain Phillips

#6   The Hunt

#5   The Past

#4   A Hijacking

#3   Gravity

#2   Stranger by the Lake

#1   Before Midnight

Honorable Mentions:
Stories We Tell
The Selfish Giant
Shadow Dancer

Jansen Top 10 Movies 2013

Ananda’s Top 10

#10 Blue Is the Warmest Color

#9   Room 237

#8   Side Effects

#7   This is the End

#6   The Hunger Games: Catching Fire

#5   Nebraska

#4   Dallas Buyers Club

#3   Gravity

#2   12 Years a Slave

#1   Frances Ha

Honorable Mentions:
Stoker
The World’s End
Stories We Tell

Ananda Dillon Top 10 Movies 2013

Bernard’s Top 10

#10 Short Term 12

#9   Fruitvale Station

#8   Wadjda

#7   Gravity

#6   Blackfish

#5   12 Years a Slave

#4   All is Lost

#3   Stories We Tell

#2   Like Someone In Love

#1   Before Midnight

Honorable Mentions:
Much Ado About Nothing
You’re Next
Simon Killer

Bernard Boo Top 10 Movies 2013

Amy’s Top 10

#10 The Truth About Emanuel

#9   Warm Bodies

#8   Rush

#7   Pacific Rim

#6   Frances Ha

#5   Stoker

#4   In a World

#3   Mud

#2   The East

#1   About Time

Honorable Mentions:
Don Jon
Touchy Feely
ACOD

Amy Priest Top 10 Movies 2013

Pavi’s Top 10

#10 The Place Beyond The Pines

#9   Fruitvale Station

#8   The Great Beauty

#7   Gravity

#6   Short Term 12

#5   Before Midnight

#4   Blue Is the Warmest Color

#3   The Act of Killing

#2   The Spectacular Now

#1   Frances Ha

Honorable Mentions:
Mud
Wadjda
Midnight’s Children

Pavi Top 10 Movies 2013

Blake’s Top 10

#10 Pain and Gain

#9   Upstream Color

#8   Reality

#7   Dallas Buyers Club

#6   The Hunt

#5   12 Years a Slave

#4   Blue Is the Warmest Color

#3   The Spectacular Now

#2   Spring Breakers

#1   Gravity

Honorable Mentions:
Inside Llewyn Davis
Nebraska
Side Effects

Blake Ginithan Top 10 Movies 2013

CJ’s Top 10

#10 Let The Fire Burn

#9   Side Effects

#8   The World’s End

#7   Outside Satan

#6   Drug War

#5   Spring Breakers

#4   Beyond the Hills

#3   Before Midnight

#2   The Act of Killing

#1   Leviathan

Honorable Mentions:
The Great Beauty
Blue Jasmine
A Hijacking

CJ Prince Top 10 Movies 2013

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TIFF 2013: Top 20 Films of the Festival http://waytooindie.com/news/tiff-2013-top-20-films-festival/ http://waytooindie.com/news/tiff-2013-top-20-films-festival/#respond Mon, 30 Nov -0001 00:00:00 +0000 http://waytooindie.com/?p=14633 Over the last 2 weeks my opinions have changed towards some of the films I’ve seen. Watching up to 4 films in one day can be exhausting, and sometimes through reflection films can seem better or worse in retrospect. In other words, if there are inconsistencies between my list and the reviews/ratings I gave, deal […]]]>

Over the last 2 weeks my opinions have changed towards some of the films I’ve seen. Watching up to 4 films in one day can be exhausting, and sometimes through reflection films can seem better or worse in retrospect. In other words, if there are inconsistencies between my list and the reviews/ratings I gave, deal with it.

My Top 20 Films from the 2013 Toronto International Film Festival:

#20 – The Strange Colour of Your Body’s Tears

The Strange Colour of Your Body's Tears

It’s amazing how much Cattet/Forzani’s style worked in Amer, and how much it didn’t work here. At the start I was thinking it might be the best film I saw at TIFF up to that point. At the end it felt like nails on a chalkboard.
The Strange Colour of Your Body’s Tears review

#19 – Moebius

Moebius

This only gets ranked above Strange Colour purely by the fact that I could watch it without a problem.
Moebius review

#18 – The Green Inferno

The Green Inferno

Half of the movie is poorly acted and written drivel. The other half’s nastiness and excellent make-up by KnB make it more tolerable, but this belongs right alongside the other horror films only available on VOD.
The Green Inferno review

#17 – Like Father, Like Son

Like Father, Like Son

A complicated moral tale destroyed by its director making his characters spend 2 hours catching up to agree with his point of view (which is established immediately). A snooze.
Like Father, Like Son review

#16 – A Field in England

A Field in England

A cheap, nonsensical and mind-maddening period piece involving alchemists and hallucinogenic mushrooms. Some fun moments when things go berserk editing-wise, but that’s about the only entertainment value I got out of it.
A Field in England review

#15 – Night Moves

Night Moves

Kelly Reichardt is still terrific behind the camera, but she put all her eggs in the wrong basket this time. Nothing really works here on a fundamental level, leaving the visuals and cast to do their best.
Night Moves review

#14 – October November

October November

Gotz Spielmann’s disappointing follow-up to Revanche tries to tell a dramatic story with no real drama in it. An admirable effort, but nothing more than that.
October November review

#13 – Canopy

Canopy

An amazing debut on a technical level, but ultimately lacking. Still, Aaron Wilson will be a name to look out for if he makes another film.
Canopy review

#12 – R100

R100

At times hilarious, but completely baffling overall. Hitoshi Matsumoto’s usual brand of off-kiler humour and self-aware jokes just don’t mix as well as his other films this time.
R100 review

#11 – The Sacrament

The Sacrament

Ti West’s attempt to document a modern-day Jonestown hasn’t been aging well with me. It’s still well-done, and has some excellent warming up in the first two acts, but it isn’t making much of an impact in the way his previous films have with me. The subject matter seems a little bit in poor taste too if you know what it’s based on, but it’s still an effective horror film.
The Sacrament review

#10 – Under the Skin

Under the Skin

I have my issues with it, but I can’t deny Under the Skin‘s power. It’s one of the more Kubrickian films I’ve seen in years, and I still can’t shake some images from it out of my head. I wish the shift in the second half was handled better, but in time I feel like I’ll grow to appreciate Under the Skin much more than I already do.
Under the Skin review

#9 – Gravity

Gravity

It’s disappointing from Cuaron, but I can’t deny how much of a technical marvel this is. Expect this to win all the technical awards at the Oscars. There won’t even be a competition.
Gravity review

#8 – Manakamana

Manakamana

One of the most fascinating films I saw at the festival, and it further establishes Harvard’s Sensory Ethnography Lab as one of the best documentary producers today. It was a pleasant surprise when Cinema Guild picked this up for distribution, and I hope that people are willing to give it a chance.
Manakamana review

#7 – Blind Detective

Blind Detective

Johnnie To loses his mind, and the results are just as entertaining as many of his other films. Even when he’s switching genres between films (or within the films themselves), To proves he’s one of the more consistent filmmakers working today.
Blind Detective review

#6 – Why Don’t You Play In Hell?

Why Don't You Play In Hell?

Sono is back on form with his absolutely insane love letter to 35mm filmmaking and projection. It’s gloriously bonkers, simultaneously all over the place and tightly controlled, and a fun time for the most part.
Why Don’t You Play In Hell? review

#5 – The Past

The Past

Asghar Farhadi makes yet another well-done drama, with a terrific cast playing people who can’t escape the tragedies from (say it with me) their pasts. Farhadi seems to be the only filmmaker doing stories like this today, and we’re all the better for it.
The Past review

#4 – Oculus

Oculus

Mike Flanagan lives up to the potential he showed in Absentia. It’s a horror film that understands the power of story, with a terrifying villain and a terrific script that uses its single location brilliantly. Hopefully audiences will discover Oculus, as the horror genre needs more people like Flanagan.
Oculus review

#3 – Stranger By The Lake

Stranger By The Lake

Gorgeous, seductive and a total nail-biter by the end. Stranger is an amazingly well-constructed film that will resonate with anyone who watches it.
Stranger By The Lake review

#2 – Only Lovers Left Alive

Only Lovers Left Alive

A film where one can live vicariously through its characters, and Jarmusch nails the carefree tone he’s clearly going for. It’s a big, long kiss to great artists throughout history, and it’s a total blast to watch.
Only Lovers Left Alive review

#1 – Stray Dogs

Stray Dogs

Tsai Ming-Liang’s swan song pushes the limits of his style (and his actors!) further than ever before. It’s a film where the weight of time on its characters are fully understood, and a showcase of just how masterful Tsai is when it comes to form. If it truly is his last film, he’ll be going out with one of his best films to date.
Stray Dogs review

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TIFF 2013: Stranger By The Lake & Moebius http://waytooindie.com/news/tiff-2013-stranger-lake-moebius/ http://waytooindie.com/news/tiff-2013-stranger-lake-moebius/#respond Mon, 30 Nov -0001 00:00:00 +0000 http://waytooindie.com/?p=14626 Having missed Blue is the Warmest Colour at TIFF this year, I went for another gay-themed film from Cannes: Alain Guiraudie’s Stranger By The Lake. Blue might have won the Palme D’Or, but Stranger actually took home the Queer Palme this year in France (given out to the best film about LGBTQ issues at Cannes […]]]>

Having missed Blue is the Warmest Colour at TIFF this year, I went for another gay-themed film from Cannes: Alain Guiraudie’s Stranger By The Lake. Blue might have won the Palme D’Or, but Stranger actually took home the Queer Palme this year in France (given out to the best film about LGBTQ issues at Cannes every year). After seeing it, I can understand why the judges at Cannes were so taken by it. It’s a top-notch thriller, and it directly addresses certain issues with gay lifestyles that haven’t been explored as much in the past.

Stranger By The Lake

Stranger By The Lake film

Franck (Pierre Deladonchamps) goes to visit a lake where men like to sunbathe in the nude. He starts chatting with Henri (Patrick d’Assumçao), an older man who sits alone and fully clothed. Their friendly conversation is interrupted when Franck lays his eyes on Michel (Christophe Paou), a good-looking man who ends up walking alone into the woods. The forest next to the lake is where men go to sleep with whoever they fancy at the beach, and Franck tails him only to see him having sex with another man.

Franck’s disappointment turns into fear when, the next day, he sees Michel drown the other man in the lake. It doesn’t take long for Michel (who obviously isn’t aware of what Franck witnessed) to take a liking to Franck, and soon the two are in a passionate relationship fueled by lust. Franck’s falling head over heels for Michel, but at the same time he’s not sure if he might end up becoming Michel’s next victim.

People may find Franck to be stupid for falling in love with a murderer, but Alain Guiraudie brilliantly finds a way to make his actions understandable. Early on Franck is seen asking one of his hookups at the beach if they can have unprotected sex, which they flat-out refuse. “I trust you” Franck says, making the other man ask if Franck usually trusts people so easily. Franck’s approaches to sex and Michel are one and the same, both fueled by similar desires and flirting with seriously dangerous consequences. It’s a brilliant move on Guiraudie’s part, and at times it makes for a scathing criticism of the cruising lifestyle (or, more generally, promiscuous sex).

If the parallels Guiraudie establishes don’t resonate with viewers, the tone he establishes definitely will. Stranger By The Lake is incredibly precise in its execution, utilizing only several locations (the parking lot, the woods surrounding the lake, the shore and the lake itself) and taking place over ten days. The location is gorgeous, with most of the film’s soundtrack devoted to the sounds of nature or wind blowing through the trees. There’s a quality to the location that makes so much of the story, even the more preposterous elements, feel natural in their execution. The pace may be a little too relaxed at times, and I’ll admit the ending left me feeling a little cheated, but Guiraudie is in total control for the entire film. It’s an expertly realized thriller, and deserving of its Queer Palme.

RATING: 7.7

Moebius

Moebius film

I’ll try to be brief for my last film: In a last-minute decision I decided to check out Moebius, Kim Ki-Duk’s latest look at everything terrible about humanity. I said in my last update that I had the craziest day at the festival in all my years of going, but this one film came very close to topping the insanity of what I saw the day before. Whether that’s a good or bad thing I can’t say because, by the end of Moebius, I really didn’t give a shit.

Shot without a single line of dialogue for no apparent reason other than for the sake of it, Moebius opens with a family in disarray. The father is cheating on his wife with a shopkeeper, and their teenage son is right in the middle of their fights. One night the wife takes things into her own hands by trying to slice off her husband’s penis while he’s sleeping. He wakes up just in time to stop her, so she merely glides over to her son’s room and chops his off instead. To make matters worse, she decides to chew and swallow her son’s severed member just to make sure he can’t get it re-attached.

That’s where Moebius starts, and it only goes downhill from there. Father and son team up to Google for anywhere that can transplant penises, while the son discovers that extreme pain is the only thing that can bring him to orgasm. This usually involves getting his father’s mistress to stab him and vigorously wiggle the knife around inside him until he ‘finishes.’

The shock factor will entice many (I’m sure my descriptions alone have peaked your interest slightly), but it’s not worth it. Moebius isn’t a bad film per se, I’ll admit that Kim brings out some visceral qualities and a few good laughs through his cheap handheld style, but I really saw no purpose for what was unfolding on screen. By the time I got through an elongated rape scene and scenes of people rubbing skin off their feet with rocks, I more or less shrugged my shoulders and gave up. I let Moebius do its thing, and I just sat there and watched it happen. I said I’d try to be brief, and while this is a little long it’s mostly been describing what goes on in Moebius. And in a way that’s all it’s really good for. It’s something twisted you can tell other people about, but looking for anything beyond its grotesque surface is a waste of time.

RATING: N/A

Next up:

A final festival wrap-up of the 2013 Toronto International Film Festival which includes my Top 20 films of the festival.

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Stranger by the Lake http://waytooindie.com/review/movie/stranger-lake/ http://waytooindie.com/review/movie/stranger-lake/#respond Mon, 30 Nov -0001 00:00:00 +0000 http://waytooindie.com/?p=13923 Never leaving the rural French lakeside setting on which it opens, Alain Guiraudie’s new film Stranger by the Lake (L’inconnu du lac) establishes an economy from its opening frame. In spite of the abundant sunlight and wide, cinematographic expanses (exceptionally lensed by Claire Mathon), there is an uneasy feeling of closure and confinement to the […]]]>

Never leaving the rural French lakeside setting on which it opens, Alain Guiraudie’s new film Stranger by the Lake (L’inconnu du lac) establishes an economy from its opening frame. In spite of the abundant sunlight and wide, cinematographic expanses (exceptionally lensed by Claire Mathon), there is an uneasy feeling of closure and confinement to the scene, achieved through an impeccable sense of composition, editorial timing, and with particular mention to the film’s densely layered, natural soundscape. Within moments Guiraudie has established the milieu: a secluded gay cruising spot; and the players, principally Franck (Pierre Delandonchamps), an unfazed and fit twenty-something who considers himself an infrequent visitor these parts of the lake, and Henri (Patrick d’Assumçao), a heavy divorcee content with staying clothed and dry, and not speaking unless spoken to. What is less clear—and let to unfold across the artfully modulated, ensuing hour-and-a-half—are Guiraudie’s stakes.

To establish these, Guiraudie purposefully employs a cinematic language that keeps its distance but nonetheless invites interpretation. Franck engages an intellectual and platonic friendship with Henri, whose return sentiments are stunted by his introverted nature, and then a physical relationship with Michel (Christophe Paou), whose forwardness and unpredictability suggest a direct link between sexual desire and the inexplicable. The filmmaking repeatedly engages these opposites—most prominently through these main characters—diving right in to ideas that should repel or negate each other, and dwelling within the pathological anxiety that naturally surfaces when these come together. I’ve already mentioned the seclusion and exposure of the setting, but Guaraudie’s chronicling of the frankly explicit sexual encounters of his players, over the course of a few weeks in summer, occupy the troubling space between love and a danger that’s both physical and emotional.

Stranger by the Lake movie

Guiraudie is first and foremost an imagist, and with Stranger By The Lake excels at storytelling without spoon feeding. His script is minimally composed with regard to dialogue; Guiraudie would prefer to hold a frame and pose an idea with a minute action than an overabundance of words. In this respect the film as a whole is offered a sense of uncluttered and immediate potency while scarcely feeling as if it’s trying—not a simple accomplishment. Its refined and pared-down parts make for a lingering and thoroughly engaging, shrewdly thrilling whole. Guiraudie’s closing shot is one that will long haunt anyone who sees it, where the literal and figurative darkness envelops our subjects, but in such a way that vision (or the knowing that is associated with light) is not discounted. It’s the clarity Maton finds in this barely moonlit scene, in that rare instance where digital camerawork offers an aesthetic advantage over film, that affords the finale its atmospheric power.

I think the bravura of Stranger By The Lake is finally in this defiantly committed embrace of metaphor, in a independent filmmaking typology that often shies away from direct allegory in a yearning for ‘arty’ credentials. Murder features in the film not merely as a narrative propeller, but a proxy for actual death and the complex perils of this subset of the homosexual lifestyle. Guiraudie has spoken of his characters as being splintered personas of the same man. It’s a provocative and beautiful way to assess Stranger By The Lake in hindsight, an occasion where the artist, precisely like his movie, says so much while saying so little.

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