Friday, January 20, 2012

What we are working on

Currently, I am finishing up the DIFF entry that I have been working on for a while. I will be finished by next Friday and we are currently brainstorming what my next project will be and I will start that future project the following Monday.

Sunday, January 8, 2012

happythankyoumoreplease

This film premiered at Sundance last year and I yearned to see it daily for about a year until finally it got released into theatres and onto Netflix recently. happythankyoumoreplease was written, directed, and starred in by Josh Radnor, who is famed by his television show, How I Met Your Mother. The writing of the film was superb, very witty, on point, and just quirky. The directing was normal at points, but in others, it took my breath away. Sam is a writer, played by Radnor, and when on the subway, he sees what he thinks is a boy get separated from his mother. The boy is actually in foster care and he does not like the foster parent he currently has. Sam decides to keeps him for a while as they become fond of each other. That is just one of the stories going on. There were three interlacing stories that were all mainly focused on love. My favourite of which was Sam's. He met a girl, Mississippi (played by Kate Mara, sister to Rooney Mara who is in Girl with the Dragon Tattoo right now), and before sleeping together, they decide to make a contract saying that they have to live together for three days before doing anything. It was just very interesting things like that that made the film what it is.
As I said previously, the directing was pretty good, at moments better than that. The writing was the best. The details that were inserted into the screenplay were put there in such original ways. One of the story lines is that Sam's friend who has some sort of auto-immune disease that renders her without hair, throws a party and invites all of their friends to explain the disease better. I had never thought of something like that before and it was details like that that made me smile because they were so original, or at least in my eyes they were. The ensemble acting was amazing. There were actors from everywhere that people would recognise but not be able to remember their name necessarily, but those are the best in a lot of situations.
I really enjoyed this film, which says something because I built it up in my head for a long time and it didn't live down my preconceived expectations.

Young Adult

This movie stars Charlize Theron as the grown up in age, but in mind still young, "bitch you hated in high school" as the trailer dubs her. She is the writer of a young adult fiction series that is published under someone else's name and she is just merely the writer. She lives in the relatively large city of Minneapolis and is from some other small town in Minnesota. She gets an email that her high school boyfriend just had a baby and she decides then and there to go back and break up his marriage and win him back.
I thought the writing of this film was superb. Diablo Cody, who also wrote Juno, was the screenwriter and she teamed back up with director Jason Reitman of Juno and Up in the Air. I love when the two do a movie together because the product is just so great. The directing was pretty wonderful. There were some shots of Minnesota and Minneapolis that were just wonderful because they showed just how bleak these places were. The opening shot was of a single skyscraper that the lead lived in and it had a banner on it that read, "Lots of Space" or something of that manner. Cody's writing is always on point. She develops such odd characters. The lead has to be borderline unlikeable and you ride that line the whole time, and for me, I didn't verge to the unlikeable side.
The acting was also rather amazing. Any Charlize Theron movie will be pretty amazing though. After her turn in Monster as the first woman serial killer where she was all dirtied up (and won an Oscar), you turn and look at this where she just diversifies herself as an actor. She played this woman who is just so unhappy and drinks herself to sleep, and its just so cool to see someone be able to not be defined by a certain type of role and go from different role to the complete opposite of different (which i guess would be the same, but you know what I mean). The supporting cast not only held her up, but stood out at points. But still, the true star was Charlize Theron.
I loved this film because it was just so blatantly true and didn't care about anything but to tell the truth. If Diablo Cody doesn't get an Oscar nomination for Best Original Screenplay I will be very surprised.