Showing posts with label New Mexico. Show all posts
Showing posts with label New Mexico. Show all posts

Monday, June 1, 2020

"The Vast of Night" now playing on Amazon Prime: A Subtle Soft-Voiced Film That Mesmerizes



                                 

A Rod Serling-like voice opens the film, telling us we are entering Paradox Theatre, “…a realm between clandestine and forgotten.”  Through the oval screen of a vintage  television, we watch the opening of a story set in 1950s Cayugo, New Mexico (actually shot in Texas, though reminiscent of our vision of Roswell, New Mexico in that time frame).  The whole town is excited about that evening’s basketball game.  Lights flicker in the gym.  Squirrels are blamed. But they are not at fault, after all.

“The Vast of Night” (2019, USA), which began streaming on Amazon Prime on May 29th,  is the first feature film of Oklahoma  City director Andrew Patterson, and it is an incredible production. This story of friendship between the highly confident and competent radio host Everett (Jake Horowitz) and Fay (Sierra McCormick), a switchboard operator filled with curiosity, begins as they each head to work and he explains to her the best way to interview folks.

They hurriedly walk out of the gymnasium, a room bursting with pre-game activity and brightly lit but bathed in dusty yellow light.  The contrast in lighting outside the gym - darkness lit by car headlights of those waiting for the game to begin, with blue and green hues - is jarring .  Kudos to Chilean cinematographer M.I. Littin-Menz for creating this beautiful noir eeriness.


Almost immediately there are strange happenings at Fay’s job: lights flicker and switchboard calls are cut-off.  As Fay listens to Everett’s broadcast in the background, suddenly his voice is replaced by weird industrial sounds.  Then, Fay receives a call that is also peculiar mechanical or underwater sounds. She calls Everett, wanting his opinion on the sounds.

Patterson uses odd machine sounds and strange flashes of soft light when he brings us back to watching the story on the screen of the retro television. Also, his technique of going back and forth from the television screen to the story on the full screen distances us from the story and the characters.  Are we just watching a show?  Is there something else going on in the world of the television viewer?


Effective use of occasional black screens build the mystery.  During a phone call from Billy (Bruce Davis), who calls Everett’s station after Everett airs the weird sound on his broadcast , there are times when we only hear Billy's voice since the screen is black.  In this fashion, we experience the call as if we are receiving it ourselves. There are no visuals to distract. It’s quite a powerful way to ensure the viewer focuses on the words of the story.  Another technique is used to get our focus on the story:  when Mabel (Gail Cronauer) calls in, she intrigues Everett and Fay.  “I can tell you what’s going on.” But they must come to her home.  There, Mabel, in an extraordinary and lengthy monologue, tells her tale of woe that relates to those “up there.”  Her story stuns; it is heartfelt. But Everett is skeptical.

I particularly enjoy the cinematography of the film - the use of grain, color filters, shadows, darkness and mist to create an enigmatic mood,  a sense of mystery and danger.  Also, the use of mostly interior rooms gives a claustrophobic feel even though the suggestion throughout is that they may be dealing with aliens from outer space.  It’s rare we get a look at the full sky, or that the lead characters look up. “If there’s something in the sky, I want to know,” laments Everett.  When they do gaze upwards, it is powerful.

Yes, we know this plot isn’t completely original. We’ve seen many television shows and films about the possibility of others “out there.”  But Patterson’s storytelling (and credit is due also to his co-writer, Craig W. Sanger) is fresh, his visual style intriguing. There’s no intent to be campy, to wink at the genre.  We genuinely begin to see and feel the story as Everett and Fay do. Patterson gives due credit to filmmakers who have influenced him: Michael Mann, David Fincher, Yann Demange, Gaspar NoĆ© and Alan J. Pakula.

Here is the director’s philosophy of filmmaking with respect to challenging the audience:

“I always want to feel like that kind of, ‘Catch up, catch up, catch up’ quality when I’m watching a movie. The best is when I am watching a film and I like the characters and I like the world but there’s so much going on that keeping up is a challenge. And I hate when the dialogue is just characters saying things to each other they would never say at that moment or in that dynamic. And so I like making movies where you don't feel like you are getting all the answers handed to you early on. Eventually you get the answers, but maybe not right out of the gate. So building the trust in a viewer that you will get a chance to catch up all the while not handing them everything is the real challenge.”
  

“The Vast of Night” was an official selection at the 2019 Slamdance Film Festival and won the Audience Award for Best Narrative Feature. The film also has won the Feature Film Jury Prize at the Overlook Film Festival in 2019 and is nominated for Best First Screenplay at the Film Independent Spirit Awards. 

Here is a link to the trailer, but I actually suggest you NOT watch it since trailers these days pretty much tell you the whole story.  https://youtu.be/ZEiwpCJqMM0   

I recommend that you just watch the film and live in it from beginning to end. That way, you experience the strange mystery with no preconceptions. Trailers are a necessary part of promotion, but as the director says, that  ‘catch up, catch up, catch up’ quality is what he looks for as a viewer. If that fits you, then, watch this film fresh.

Tuesday, August 15, 2017

New Mexican-Shot Film - "Shot Caller" - Opens Friday, Aug. 18th - In Albuquerque

NEW MEXICAN-SHOT FILM - "SHOT CALLER" - OPENS FRIDAY, AUG. 18th - IN ALBUQUERQUE

 An ordinary life, albeit one of a wealthy stockbroker, a “money man,” comes to a screeching halt when Jacob  accidentally kills his best friend while driving under the influence.  His life, and that of his family and the victim’s family, is shattered and he enters prison.  His life up to this point has been sheltered, privileged, and far removed from the world of prisons and gangs. 

While in the real world it’s highly unlikely an upper middle-class white man would end up in a maximum security prison for a first time offense, disbelief has to be suspended for the story to work. And it does work.

“Shot Caller” (2017) - directed by Ric Roman Waugh -  opens not with the idyllic life of Jacob (Nikolaj Coster-Waldau)(“Game of Thrones”) but with his prison release with a bit of cash, an ID card, and a ride to the station.  This man is hard as nails, tattooed, eyes with a glint of steel. 

The film flashes back to his gilded past, forcefully contrasting it with the harsh and cruel present.  The director’s use of intercuts from the past to the present particularly highlights the acting abilities of Coster-Waldau since Jacob and “Money” (his prison moniker) have distinctly opposite personas.

Will any of Jacob’s humanity return? That’s the question.

In prison, his first lesson is a hard one.  He has to stand up for himself in a milieu dominated by gangs or he’ll be brutalized.   In the yard, he fights someone who bumps him, leading to being thrown in the hole but gaining that curious macho respect one gains by being violent.

Violence incrementally escalates in him when he’s coerced into a drug transaction, then amplifies when he’s ordered to kill someone. He is told, “a place like this forces us to become angels or victims.”  On the outside he was a high-end money-maker. On the inside, he begins the rise to the top.  He has made his choice.

His heart shows briefly when his wife - despite his wishes - brings his son to prison for a visit.  He tells him to stay away.  “Some things just don’t go back together again.”  Alone later, he cries.

Crime as entertainment is not the reality of crime and punishment. It is a way the filmmaker works through mythologies - good and evil, redemption, punishment, life and death, a morality tale, the hero journey.  “Shot Caller” shows the dehumanizing process people go through when thrust into harsh environments filled with desperate people with no hope. While the film visualizes an extreme, the fact is that the prison experience damages people who already are damaged. Utilizing this setting to tell a story acknowledges that reality to an extent, then moves into the mythology to entertain the audience.

(One personal aside, if you will: It would be a better world if Hollywood would donate some of the profits it makes off of crime stories to prison reform and prison re-entry programs).

“Shot Caller,”  like other crime films, brings out in the audience all the contradictory thoughts and feelings we have towards crime.  We empathize with the need for protecting one’s family and oneself and put aside our abhorrence at the violent means to ends portrayed in these films.  We fear crime and criminals yet strangely root for some of them in films and television.  


Walter White is another prime example of how the entertainment industry creates an anti-hero whom we love.  How many people admired him while at precisely the same time were appalled by his expanding sociopathology?

Likewise, this is how we view Jacob / “Money.”  Through his choices, we see his true character, and it’s repulsive.  He is a warrior, a gangster, and once released kills without remorse.   He tells his family once and for all, “It’s over.  Forget I exist.”

Until.... Yes, there is a more than satisfactory twist to the story. 

Most of the other characters are not well-developed with the exception of Omari Hardwick (“Saved,” “Dark Blue”), who plays Jacob’s beleaguered but street-wise parole officer. Again, suspend disbelief because his duties as parole officer go above and beyond those of parole officer in the real world.

Lake Bell (“In A World,” one of my favorites) is underutilized in this film portraying his wife Kate. More of a contrast between who Jacob was and who he became could have been developed had there been more scenes between Jacob and Kate.  Co-stars also include Jon Bernthal (“Sicario”) and Jeffrey Donovan (“Burn Notice”), the latter in a role completely opposite the Michael Weston character.
 

Ric Roman Waugh wrote, produced, and directed this film. It is the third of a trilogy of his films, “Felon,” and “Snitch” preceding “Shot Caller.”  I commend him for drawing the viewer into the story with compelling action scenes and a different perspective on the crime story.  Cinematographer Dana Gonzales is also to be commended for the stunning visuals that show the claustrophobia of both prisons and the post-prison world where one surrounds oneself with other ex-cons and furtively hides from law enforcement and normalcy.

Filmed in New Mexico in 2015,  this film is opening on August 18th at Icon Cinemas in Albuquerque - located in the Four Hills Shopping Center.  Contact the theater at 505-814-7469 or check out their website for more information. http://albuquerque.iconcinemas.com  “Shot Caller” also opens that date in 17 other U.S. markets and is available as premium video-on-demand.   Here is a link to the trailer:  https://youtu.be/Xm157yQ7g1E


Sources aside from the film:  Press material from Saban Films (including photos), IMDb, Variety Magazine