Opening Weekend
The Champagne
Spy (Saturday, 7:30 p.m.). The saga of an Isreali agent posing
as a German horse breeder in 1960s Egypt is detailed through the
eyes of his son. The non-fiction exploration tantalizes as the image
and reality skews when his cover is blown and he becomes a media
celebrity for a fleeting moment. The pursuit of the son to discover
a father that by necessity had to be oblique isn't quite as compelling.
(Landmark Pavillion)
It's Winter
(Saturdy, 2:30 p.m.). A brooding and elliptical love story from
Iran. Naturalistic and poetic, the film grapples with a young mechanic
who's come to Tehran seeking gainful employment who becomes enamored
with a young woman and her child abandoned by a husband seeking
a better life. The sense of longing muted by culture reserve provides
the film with poignancy. (Mann Festival)
Join
Us (Saturday, 7:15 p.m.). A documentary exploration of religious
cultism made chilling by the seeming avuncular quality of its leader.
The film is most effective in conveying how easy it is to fall under
a charismatic spell as it details how four families seek to wrest
his control at a deprogramming center but only find catharsis by
returning to confront their victimizer. (Majestic Crest)
The Last
Winter (Friday, 9:30 p.m). A horror yarn with an ecological
strain. Flaunting genre conventions the film outwardly recalls The
Thing with its Arctic locations but places its emphasis on characters
unraveling rather than visualized perils. Centered around a team
exploring the ecological impact of oil drilling in an Alaska reserve
it definitely gets across not to fool with Mother Nature. (Majestic
Crest)
Liberty Kid
(Saturday, 7:45 p.m.). There's the suggestion of something catastrophic
brewing in this story of two young men who lose jobs at the Statue
of Liberty on September 12, 2001. Ultimately it's a very engaging
and life-affirming tale despite endless bad decisions and dead ends
as they strive to create new lives. The film's disarming honesty
trumps the sort of hyped drama we've been accustomed to swallow
in similar sagas. (Landmark Regent)
The Man Who
Shot Liberty Valance (Friday, 6:30 p.m.). John Ford's
classic 1962 western about "printing the legend" rather
than the banal truth is worth revisiting. It's a great story of
the civilization of the American frontier that's effectively bittersweet.
John Wayne and James Stewart are clearly 20 years too old for their
roles and one can only fondly imagine the actors doing it on the
heels of Stagecoach and Mr. Smith Goes to Washington. (Billy
Wilder Theater)
Prison Town,
USA (Saturday, 3 p.m.). One of the stronger documentary entries,
the film takes a close look at a small California town whose penitentiary
is the primary economic engine. Rather than merely a look inside,
it trails struggling farmers not benefiting from the institutional
presence, those trying to get guard jobs and inmates making the
transition to the outside. Humanistic and non-judgmental, it has
plenty of sneaky punches to shake up one's preconceptions. (Landmark
Regent)
Straight
Time (Saturday, 6:30 p.m.). Dustin Hoffman at the height
of his commercial clout began directing an adaptation of Edward
Bunker's No Beast So Fierce, a tale of a recidivist struggling
to go legit when he gets out of prison. On the second day of filming
it proved too much and he begged Ulu Grosbard to take over
and that led to a famous fight over final cut. Despite the acrimony
it's one of the actor's best performances and a brutally frank examination
of a character whose best efforts are thwarted by his worst instincts
and an indifferent and suspicious society. A real gem. (Billy
Wilder Theater)