Four October movies you should see this month
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During the month of October, Monitor film critic Peter Rainer was impressed by movies that included a film adaptation of the life of Lee Israel and the story of a police dispatcher attempting to help a woman he believes has been the victim of domestic violence. Here's the full list of his top picks.
Melissa McCarthy turns to drama in 鈥楥an You Ever Forgive Me?鈥
It is unexceptional for a comedic actor to excel in drama, a truism demonstrated yet again by Melissa McCarthy in the marvelous 鈥淐an You Ever Forgive Me?鈥澛燤cCarthy plays the real-life author Lee Israel, who was a successful celebrity magazine profiler and bestselling biographer in the 1970s and 鈥80s until readers' tastes turned trendier.聽
Lee鈥檚 brittle misanthropy, and not-so-quiet desperation, is everywhere evident.聽This could all seem drearily Dickensian except that McCarthy gives Lee鈥檚 loneliness a spikiness that rescues it from pathos.
Through happenstance she discovers that a thriving market exists for signed letters from famous authors and actors. Utilizing a multiplicity of old typewriters, she proceeds to forge highly readable and witty letters from the likes of Dorothy Parker, No毛l Coward, Marlene Dietrich, and many others. Eventually she took on an accomplice, the flamboyant and aptly named Jack Hock, played by Richard E. Grant with perfect desiccated panache. Jack, like Lee, is gay, and he is even more of a con artist, and even more down on his luck, than she is. Once again the filmmakers defy our expectations: This is not a cute caper about two rascally rogues. Beneath Jack鈥檚 brio, his loneliness is just as palpable as Lee鈥檚.聽Grade: A- (Rated R for language including some sexual references, and brief drug use.)
In 鈥楾he Guilty,鈥 a police dispatcher races against time
鈥淭he Guilty,鈥 Denmark鈥檚 Oscar entry for best foreign-language film, is set entirely inside the grubby, low-lit confines of a police station and focuses almost entirely on the workings of its lone protagonist, Asger Holm (Jakob Cedergren), an emergency dispatcher who is racing against time to rescue a woman he believes has been abducted by her estranged husband. Despite, or perhaps because of, these constraints, it鈥檚 one of the most cinematically alive movies of the year.
Gustav M枚ller, in his feature film directorial debut (he also co-wrote the film with Emil Nygaard Albertsen), has such an assured style that I never for a moment had that cooped-up feeling that often descends on me while watching movies set in a single enclosed location. (It helps that the film鈥檚 running time is a brisk 85 minutes.) From the standpoint of craftsmanship, the film is a textbook example of how much can be done with so little.聽
None of this would matter much if the actor who is in almost every frame was not a spellbinder. M枚ller is smart enough to let Cedergren鈥檚 hard-edged face carry the action.聽Because Cedergren is so good in this movie, I鈥檓 not sure we needed the back story about Asger鈥檚 own fraught past. But this is the only pretentious note in a movie otherwise pretension-free.聽Grade: A- (Rated R for language.)
'Burning' is discursive, unsettling
鈥淏urning,鈥 directed by Lee Chang-dong, is a discursive, unsettling movie that is all the more so for being essentially undefinable. (It鈥檚 the South Korean entry for the Oscar for best聽foreign-language film.) Is it a murder mystery, a study of class conflict, a political allegory, a love story, a fantasia? In a sense, it is all of these things, all at once.
Jong-su (Yoo Ah-in) has a chance encounter with Hae-mi (Jeon Jong-seo), a former grade school classmate he once teased for being 鈥渦gly鈥 but is now far from it, leads to a casual romance until she embarks on a trip to Africa.聽When Hae-mi returns, she is accompanied by Ben (Steven Yeun), a rich slickster with an indeterminate source of wealth. Ben鈥檚 appearance transforms the scenario into a kind of romantic triangle; Hae-mi鈥檚 subsequent disappearance morphs the film into something stranger.
Lee is adapting a short story, 鈥淏arn Burning,鈥 by Haruki Murakami, which, of course, echoes William Faulkner鈥檚 story of the same name, and he also layers in references to such films as 鈥淰ertigo鈥 and 鈥淟鈥橝vventura.鈥 Ben is clearly a Jay Gatsby figure. With all these obvious cultural points of reference, 鈥淏urning鈥 is nevertheless very much its own creature. It builds slowly, and, at almost 2-1/2 hours, it occasionally drags. But it鈥檚 worth the time. This is a very knowing movie about the ultimate unknowability of people. Grade:聽B+ (This movie is not rated.)
鈥楢 Star Is Born鈥 returns to the big screen
The new version of 鈥淎 Star Is Born,鈥 starring Bradley Cooper and Lady Gaga, is the fourth iteration of this old warhorse. The surprise is that, at least for its first half, this newest 鈥淎 Star Is Born鈥 is so powerfully fresh.聽Cooper doesn鈥檛 only costar; he collaborated on the screenplay, does his own singing, and also makes an auspicious directorial debut. After Jackson Maine (Cooper), a country rock superstar who at this point in his career requires liquor more than adulation, is captivated by a waitress, Ally (Lady Gaga), singing 鈥淟a Vie en Rose," he takes Ally on tour with him.聽
It鈥檚 not altogether believable that Ally would be so selfless in her devotion to Jackson as he slides ever downward; any resentment Jackson might have for Ally鈥檚 success likewise barely registers. In spite of all this, the matchup works because in this love story, the love really hits home. As opposed to the earlier versions of this story, alcoholism is really delved into here as a disease. Because it鈥檚 more psychologically articulated, Jackson鈥檚 descent is more emotionally compelling than Ally鈥檚 ascent, which is too rapid and generic.
Cooper鈥檚 performance, with its dark depths and hollows, comes as something of a surprise. (So does a great cameo from a low-key Dave Chappelle as a rocker buddy of Jackson鈥檚 who gave up the business.) It should not, however, come as a surprise that Lady Gaga is as good as she is here. I鈥檓 not sure how she pulled it off, but Lady Gaga manages to create a character who is believably both tough-minded and tenderhearted.聽Grade: B+ (Rated R for language throughout, some sexuality/nudity, and substance abuse.)