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  • Lightly delightful

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    Basically another version of the Cinderella fairy tale, this time featuring a middle-aged woman.  Not a lot of character development or weight to the plot, and you can see where it's all going to end, but the cast is a delight.  You feel for Frances McDormand's Miss Pettigrew, the one sensible head to be found in the frivolous, gossipy society she's stepped into.  Amy Adams bubbles brightly; Lee Pace is adorable as her true love and musical partner.  Their scene in the club, where she sings "If I Didn't Care," is the highlight of the film, a lovely, poignant moment that, you might say, brings her character back to her senses.

    There were only four people in the theater when I saw it; all of us women.  We clapped at the end and came away dabbing our eyes.


  • The Darjeeling Limited

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    This latest of Wes Anderson's films is, for me, right up there with The Royal Tenenbaums and Rushmore, which I love dearly.  Quirky, offbeat, strangely simple (sometimes just strange), engaging, funny, sad.  Excellent performances from the three brothers (Owen Wilson, Jason Schwartzman and Adrien Brody) taking this train trip in order to renew their bond after their father has died and their mother disappeared into a convent in Tibet.  One of my very favorite moments has no dialog in it at all--it's just Adrien and Jason staring at Owen as he unwraps the bandages from his head and face.  Their expressions are perfect and priceless.  But throughout the film, more is often said with looks or gestures than through the understated dialog.

    Everything about it made me smile, from the large (characters and storyline) to the small:  the odd yet well-chosen soundtrack; Anderson's use of color and slo-mo; careful overhead shots of (for instance) a tray's contents; subtle running jokes throughout the film.  Etc.


  • What Heart?

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    The Heart Is Deceitful Above All Things

    Written & directed by Asia Argento, based on the novel by J. T. LeRoy

    My heart sank when I pulled the DVD out of the envelope.  Wasn't interested in watching this film, and my first instincts were correct.  A horror story told erratically and clumsily, without any relief.  Not the performances, not the writing, not the camera work.

    In hindsight I noticed that the kudos on the DVD sleeve are for the novel, not the film.  But the film doesn't make me want to read the book.


 

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