Austeria (1982) - 7/10. More singing and dancing than Fiddler on the Roof--and this isn't even a musical! What it is is a drama about Jews running for dear life on the first day of WWI and holing up in a Jewish tavern (which is what the "austeria" is, I believe). All manner of Judaism is represented, but the Hasidim are the nuttiest. Told not make any noise that might attract bands of roving Cossacks, they immediately burst into song. Well, I guess if you gotta go, one way is in a state of religious ecstasy. This film is nicely photographed and edited: it uses brief flashbacks to provide backstory, but sparingly. One such begins with a desaturation effect and closes, to great dramatic effect, by bringing the full colors back in. Very nice.
The opening chase isn't static though.And the battles are incredible.
Bardo (Inarritu, 2022) - 7/10Inarritu at his most Kaufmanesque. Mostly fun, sometimes moving, a tad repetitive (i don't think it's a smart move to show us so often the metaphorical, oniric scene and then the actual one: why not chose and show us just one version of it?). Terrific soundtrack.
Because I??rritu wanted the audience to feel immersed in his main character?s experiences, the decision was made to shoot the film with wide-angle lenses on a large format ALEXA 65, with the camera in constant movement. ?We wanted Silvero to feel bigger than life, and we wanted to feel close to him,? Khondji said. ?But we also wanted these angles where you could always be aware of the world around him: his friends and family and people in the desert and the city and its buildings.? Khondji felt the ALEXA 65 made the actors? presence feel bigger than 35mm or a camera with a regular digital sensor would have, and that combined with lenses around 17mm would give him the effect he desired.
The Banshees of Inisherin (2022) - 8/10. On an isolated Irish island, a life-long friendship is sundered when one of two men (Brendan Gleeson) suddenly decides life is too short to spend with the other (Colin Farrell, playing it a bit dim). The dull man's refusal to accept the rejection is the driving force behind this black comedy. Laughter, death, and mutilation follow. This film reunites the two leads and writer/director Martin McDonagh, 14 years after In Bruges. It is a kind companion piece to two of McDonagh's stage plays, The Cripple of Inishmaan, and The Lieutenant of Inishmore. The Irish locations are beautiful.
But it's the sweaters/jumpers that are key to the film's success:https://www.esquire.com/uk/style/a41736500/banshees-of-inisherin-knitwear/https://www.nytimes.com/2023/03/10/style/colin-farrell-sweaters-the-banshees-of-inisherin.html
Terrific photography, too. https://www.indiewire.com/2023/02/bardo-cinematography-interview-1234812221/