Not that it was any mystery, since I blasted the fact over every square inch of internet, but I was in Winston-Salem, NC last week for the River Run film festival, an amazing feast of fantastic films that just coincidentally has my little sister as one of the two organizers of the entire event. But that’s pure coincidence.
I got there on Wednesday thinking that I was just going to go to a few movies, but as I read through the descriptions in the program, my brain changed from dabbler to glutton, and I wondered how I was going to fit it all in.
But fit I did, and I saw more movies in the span of four days than I think I’ve seen in the last year, DVDs included. So here, in bite-sized nugget reviews that contain zero high fructose corn syrup, are the movies I saw. My descriptions of the movies are as basic as I can make them, so click on the link for the full descriptions at the River Run site.
In order in which they were viewed…
(500) Days of Summer
If High Fidelity had a kid, it would be this movie. It’s an indie rom-com that comes equipped with everything that that description implies, but done absolutely perfectly. It’s hilarious even with familiar jokes, heartbreaking even when it feels kind of corny, and feels universal even while it is, from the opening disclaimer, clearly a movie for dudes. It perfectly blends the quirkiness of an indie with the slick feel of Hollywood in ways that would make Little Miss Sunshine puke with envy.
Zoey Deschanel finds a perfect role with her unconventional beauty and spacey acting, but Joseph Gordon-Levitt is a revelation. You may remember him as the kid from Third Rock From The Sun, but if this perfect performance as a naive romantic doesn’t give him a whole new career, then I don’t know what.
Note: I may not know what.
Herb and Dorothy
One of the things that I noticed about a lot of the smaller-budget documentaries is that they’re quilts of film styles. Since a lot of them were filmed over the course of years (12 years was the max that I heard at this festival), the filmmakers have to film when they can with whatever they can get their hands on.
Herb and Dorothy was the quilt-iest of the bunch. It combined cheap camcorder-like digital video with slick re-animation of old photos and just about everything in between. It’s a interesting story of the evaluation of art and obsession that goes well beyond appreciation, but the jumbled timeline meant that it was a great watch because of the fascinating story rather than any kind of impressive craft.
Waveriders
Waveriders, on the other hand, was almost the opposite. It’s not that I don’t like surfing movies, but surfers are generally not a highly articulate bunch, and the filmmakers insistence on relying on repetitious soundbites of surfers trying and failing to describe the trancendence of surfers bogged this movie down in parts.
But that’s the bad news. The good news is that the footage is incredible, with waves whose height is unbelievable and surfing moves that even those of us who’ve never set foot on a board could gasp at. The back story of the development of surfing and it’s movement away from Hawaii and California and to Central America and ultimately to Northern Ireland is interesting in and of itself. It’s absolutely worth plowing through dudes fumbling to express themselves to get to some of the most amazing footage I’ve seen in a long time.
Documentary Shorts
Among these short documentaries were some good ones–a simple film about an immigrant woman cleaning offices in Australia and a fun film about the Jewish singles in the upper west side–but they were all overshadowed by Witness, an incredibly powerful story told from the perspective of one of the preachers on the balcony of the motel where MLK was shot. Witness was saved for last, and it’s a good thing it was. Everything else would have been a letdown after that.
Rumba
My review to Mary when Rumba ended was, “What a strangle film.” It was a blast to watch the brightly-colored dark humor and ridiculous physical comedy, and marvel at how much was done with so little dialog, but it’s an odd one.
Unmistaken Child
Behind (500) Days Of Summer, this was my favorite film of the festival. It’s a documentary that could succeed on the incredible scenery alone, but the story of young Buddhist monk who’s looking for the reincarnation of his recently-deceased master in the infants of small towns is one of the most amazing stories I’ve ever seen. It’s one of those moments where fantastic scenery and cinematography mesh with a story that’s totally foreign that really shows why the documentaries are some of the best entertainment around.
Food Inc.
This is basically the film version of Fast Food Nation (a book that permanently changed the way I think about business and industry) and The Omnivore’s Dilemma (a book that I’m in the middle of and has already had a big effect on me), and features both authors prominently. But even though many of the points of the film were already familiar to me, it’s still an amazing tale of how business has changed the way we eat for the worse.
If you’ve read the books, this film is highly recommended. If you haven’t read the books, you MUST see this movie.
Kalinovsky Square
This was the only disappointment of the festival. A documentary of the recent corrupt elections in Belarus, it was nearly impossible to figure out what was going on. That the filmmaker leaned on sarcasm to make the film a little lighter made it that much harder to figure out both its timeline and its points.
That the sleaziness in Belarus constantly reminded me of the days of the Bush administration may have reminded me just how bad things got in this country, but it also made me think that maybe things weren’t nearly as severe as the film made them out to be, and that this film was really the equivalent of talking to some IMF protesters and presenting it as the horrible conditions of modern America. Of course, Belarus is much worse than that, in that the citizens have difficulty leaving the country, but not that you could really tell from this film.
But this film also showed how great it is to see these films as part of a festival, because almost every one of the films I saw had a Q&A with the director afterwards, illuminating the motivations for the film’s creation and making the quality of even confusing films like this one jump dramatically between the end credits and actually leaving the theater.
The Burning Plain
Take a dramatic narrative about infidelity and mysterious death. Now take it so that it starts with the end. Now take it and chop it up so that the end is at the beginning and the climax and almost every part of the plot becomes a puzzle that slowly gets put together as it goes along. It sounds infuriating, but it was one of the most riveting films I’ve ever seen.
Goodbye Solo
I love Winston-Salem. I’ve never lived there for longer than a month at a time, but it’s the closest thing I have to a hometown, being the only place that I knew from the start of my memory that I still return to often.
So I’m biased, but I really think that Winston is a little-known treasure. It has a fantastic arts scene for a town of its size, and has a unique character that never ceases to amaze me.
Setting a movie entirely in Winston-Salem, with scenes and shots that were recognizable even to a semi-hometowner like me is a sure way to get it into my heart. Goodbye Solo isn’t–as the New York Times apparently said–”nearly perfect”, but it is a fantastic film with uncommon and extremely moving story. I hope that it finds an incredible amount of success and becomes a cult classic, so that the shots of Winston-Salem get burned into film history.
The Q&A of this film was done with Angus MacLachlan, the write of Junebug, and at the beginning of the Q&A, both writers laughed at how you could watch Junebug and Goodbye Solo back-to-back and be amazed that they’re set in the same small city. Goodbye Solo is pretty gritty, and shows a side of Winston-Salem that’s much more diverse than the one that I ever saw.
Roccaterania
A decade ago exactly, my friend Becky mentioned to me a guy who worked with her at the North Carolina Museum of Natural Sciences and mentioned an odd guy who worked as an illustrator at the museum, and was brilliant at his work in spite of his eccentricities.
It turns out that this guy–Renaldo Kuhler–was both brilliant and eccentric enough to warrant his own documentary. It focuses mostly on the country of Renaldo’s invention: a country called Roccaterania that existed in between New York State and Canada. This imaganation went as far as creating an entire history that coincides with the events of Kuhler’s life, and it’s endlessly fascinating. Kuhler may be an odd guy, but this movie is actually really inspiring in a lot of ways.
Wrap-up
Okay…so, in order to give it to you nice and easy, here’s the wrap-up:
Make sure you see them in the theaters: (500) Days of Summer and Unmistaken Child.
See them in the theaters because, even if they’re not amazing films, they look really great: Waveriders and The Burning Plain
If you can’t see them in the theater, at least put them on your Netflix queue: Goodbye Solo, Food Inc. and Rocaterrania
And finally: support your local film festival!