the traveler's resource guide to festivals & films
a FestivalTravelNetwork.com site
part of Insider Media llc.

Connect with us:
FacebookTwitterYouTubeRSS

Reviews

A Classical Evening With Bernard Labadie at Carnegie Hall

Bernard Labadie conducts the Orchestra of St. Luke’s. Photo by Chris Lee

At Carnegie Hall on the evening of Thursday, February 9th, I was fortunate to be able to attend a splendid concert featuring the Orchestra of St. Luke’s, under the distinguished direction of Bernard Labadie.

The program began promisingly with a very accomplished account of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart’s impressive Piano Concerto No. 18, beautifully played by the eminent soloist, Emmanuel Ax. The initial movement—one of pure elegance and ultimately intricate in construction—opens charmingly and proceeds ebulliently. The slow movement, which is more serious in character as it starts but is more variegated in tone as a whole, reaches a pinnacle in a brief, fugue-like section, while the finale is jubilant and exciting but not without its weightier moments. Enthusiastic applause elicited a fabulous encore from the pianist: Franz Liszt’s "Ständchen," S. 560, No. 7 (after Franz Schubert's Schwanengesang, D. 957, No. 4).
 
The second half of the event was even stronger, consisting in a solid interpretation of Schubert’s imposing, marvelous “Great” Symphony in C Major. The stirring first movement, which has an enchanting introduction, seems distinctively Mendelssohnian—it recalls the“Italian” Symphony, which is maybe a musical example of what the incomparable literary critic, Harold Bloom, called “transumption,” whereby a later work seems to be the earlier one—even though Felix Mendelssohn had led the work’s world premiere in 1839 with the Leipzig Gewandhaus Orchestra. With the ensuing Andante con moto—which is remarkably dramatic at times—the influence of Ludwig van Beethoven is paramount but there are also passages redolent of the Baroque. Beethoven is also an unmistakable progenitor of the appropriately playful Scherzo, even in the elevated Trio, while the finale was exhilarating. The artists deservedly received a standing ovation.

February '23 Digital Week III

4K/UHD Releases of the Week 
The Fabelmans 
(Amblin/Universal)
Obviously a labor of love, Steven Spielberg’s most personal film is also, unsurprisingly, one of most sentimental—as well as an often exhilarating and touching journey through his own life story, with many of the sequences that show a boy falling in love with movies and then moviemaking among the most thrilling he’s ever committed to celluloid.
 
 
Those indelible moments include his obvious wink to the audience in the final shot (preceded by a gloriously grumpy cameo by director David Lynch as director John Ford) and mitigate the bumpy parts of the ride, like the pet monkey scenes, too-fluttery Michelle Williams as Spielberg’s beloved mother and no-talent Seth Rogen ruining every scene he’s in as the young hero’s uncle. The 4K transfer looks immaculate; extras comprise three making-of featurettes with interviews with Spielberg and his cowriter Tony Kushner, along with the cast and crew.
 
 
 
The Return of Swamp Thing 
(Lightyear)
This 1989 campfest, sequel to 1982’s all but forgotten Swamp Thing, lives on, kind of, thanks to its star, Heather Locklear, at the height of her TV fame (the soap Melrose Place) and her marriage to Motley Crue drummer Tommy Lee. The movie at least knows it’s silly and leans into that, so when Locklear falls in love with the title creature, it’s not as completely idiotic as it might have been.
 
 
There are also good actors doing decent work like Louis Jourdan as the mad doctor and Sarah Douglas as his valuable assistant. The film looks gloriously colorful on 4K; extras include interviews with director Jim Wynorski, producer Michael E. Uslan, editor Leslie Rosenthal and composer Chuck Cirino, commentary by Wynorski, music video by the Riff-Tones and vintage promo material.
 
 
 
Warm Bodies 
(Lionsgate)
This often risible attempt at a rom com-cum-zombie movie became an unlikely hit in 2013, but it remains a half-baked, too-clever attempt to retell Romeo and Juliet with a young woman and male zombie in the leads (she’s Julie; he’s R., natch).
 
 
Luckily, Teresa Palmer and Nicholas Hoult make the pair’s growing relationship almost touching, which makes us forget, if only for a fleeting moment, that neither director-writer Jonathan Levine or original novelist Isaac Marion are a patch on Shakespeare. The UHD transfer looks great; extras include several making-of featurettes, interviews, deleted scenes (with Levine commentary) and a gag reel.
 
 
 
In-Theater Release of the Week
Consecration 
(IFC Films)
What starts as a genuinely creepy incursion into a deeply problematic murder-suicide at a Catholic convent in rural Scotland populated by a group of troublesome nuns soon becomes a standard-issue horror flick that relies on the clichéd dreams, hallucinations and implausibilities that permeate the genre.
 
 
Jena Malone is her usual sober self as the aptly named Grace, an ophthalmologist  who decides to investigate her brother’s mysterious death—it’s linked, maybe, to a cycle of abuse in their family and, by extension, the church itself—but she is defeated by writer-director Christopher Smith’s singleminded insistence on making his story as convoluted as possible—he even ruins the disturbing opening shot of a nun with a gun by returning to it at the end, where it’s simply ludicrous.
 
 
 
Blu-ray Releases of the Week 
Cinematic Sorceress—The Films of Nina Menkes 
(Arbelos)
For a few decades, Nina Menkes has carved out her own niche in the American independent cinematic landscape with challenging films that deserve more notoriety than they’ve gotten: so this two-disc set, comprising five of her features and two shorts, is quite noteworthy.
 
 
Among her films that compellingly skirt the line between fiction and documentary—several starring her sister and muse, Tinka Menkes—are Magdalena Viraga, Queen of Diamonds and The Bloody Child, all intelligent in their dramatic vision. The films look splendid in new hi-def transfers, especially the transfixing long shots in The Bloody Child and the intimate B&W images of Phantom Love. Extras include several interviews/Q&As with and commentaries by Menkes.
 
 
 
The Dentist Collection 
(Vestron)
In this pair of schlocky horror flicks, 1996’s The Dentist and 1998’s The Dentist 2, Corbin Bernsen plays an insane dentist who maims and/or kills whoever crosses his path or gets in his chair, starting with his cheating wife, whose tongue he tears out after seeing her going down on the pool boy. Both flicks have a few memorable moments of crazed gore, which will delight those who like that sort of thing.
 
 
For others, Linda Hoffman brightens the first film as the cheating—then cut-up—wife, while Jillian McWhirter plays Bernsen’s romantic foil in the sequel with a bit less panache. Both films look good on Blu; extras include commentaries by director Brian Yuzna and makeup supervisor Anthony C. Ferrante as well as interviews with Bernsen, McWhirter, and other crew.
 
 
 
Love on the Ground 
(Cohen Film Collection)
This overlong, underwhelming 1984 Jacques Rivette film follows Geraldine Chaplin and Jane Birkin as actresses who perform plays at homes who are hired by a mysterious man to act in his mansion in a new work he’s writing.
 
 
Rivette spends much time with this intriguing but slight premise, touching on—but never developing—themes of reality vs. illusion and theater vs. film, Chaplin and Birkin are game in the leads, and William Lubtchansnky’s photography and Nicole Lubtchansky’s editing are expert, but spending three hours with these women is undeniably dreary. The hi-def transfer looks gorgeous; lone extra is scholar Richard Pena’s informative commentary.
 
 
 
A Woman Kills
(Radiance)
French director Jean-Denis Bonan’s 1968 drama about a serial killer went unreleased, and it’s easy to see why: it’s a disjointed, barely coherent, awkwardly acted feature almost redeemed by the final 15 minutes, encompassing a reveal of the murderer and a Parisian rooftop chase. Shot on the cheap during the fateful events of May 1968 in France, Bonan’s film is definitely a relic of its era and has a certain value as an historical curio.
 
 
The UK-based company Radiance has done a superb job with this release, providing a textual introduction and commentary, several of Bonan’s short films from the ’60s, and a 40-minute documentary about the director, On the Margin: The Cursed Films of Jean-Denis Bonan. The Blu-ray transfer of the B&W feature is appropriately grainy.

February '23 Digital Week II

4K/UHD Release of the Week 
Three Colors Trilogy 
(Criterion Collection)
Polish director Krzysztof Kieslowski’s trilogy, made in 1993 and 1994 and based on the colors of the French flag, varies wildly in quality—austere Blue, clumsy White, occasionally affecting Red—with each starring a then-young French/Swiss actress (Juliette Binoche, Julie Delpy, Irene Jacob).
 
 
I prefer Kieslowski’s Polish films, which culminated in the awe-inspiring Decalogue; contrarily, his airy, elliptical French films come off as aesthetic and dramatic misfires. The one memorable constant is Kieslowski compatriot and composer Zbigniew Peisner’s varied scores. The Criterion Collection, of course, gives the trilogy the deluxe treatment, from the splendidly grainy UHD visuals to the plethora of extras (video essays/featurettes/interviews on each film and early Kieslowski shorts on each disc).
 
 
 
In-Theater/Streaming Releases of the Week
Una vita difficile 
(Rialto Films/Film Forum)
Italian director Dino Risi’s adventurous 1960 comedy-drama tells the compellingly complex story of post-WWII Italian history through the on-again, off-again relationship of a progressive writer Silvio and the beautiful Elena, whom he meets while hiding from the Nazis. They fall in love, get separated, find each other, get married, break up, get back together, and generally act like their fellow Italians do in the volatile political, social, class and economic upheavals of that era.
 
 
It never truly coheres, almost inevitably, because so much is going on—preceding this splendid restoration, there are many unnecessary intro titles that try to explain what happens in the next two hours—but Alberto Sordi is a terrific Silvio, the magnificent Lea Massari is a transcendent Elena, and Risi has made a challenging examination of his native country’s psyche.
 
 
 
Full Time 
(Music Box Films)
Reminiscent of the Dardennes’ Two Days, One Night and Benoit Jacquot’s A Single Girl, Éric Gravel’s film breathlessly follows harried single mother Julie, who is juggling her high-stress position as head chambermaid at a top Parisian hotel with taking care of her children, literally running from home to work and back, all the while looking for a betterm less harried place of employment.
 
 
Like those two previous films, Gravel’s drama takes lazy shortcuts and ends up being a superficial showcase—as for both Marian Cotillard and Virginie Ledoyen—for Laure Calamy, who gives a spectacular but showy performance, brilliant in spots but undercut by her director’s singlemindedness.
 
 
 
Let It Be Morning 
(Cohen Media)
As in earlier films such as his breakthrough, The Band’s Visit, writer-director Eran Kolirin has made another audacious film skirting the line between black comedy and outright tragedy; Palestinian-born Israeli citizen Sami, returning to his hometown from Jerusalem for his brother’s wedding—and where he reunites with his estranged wife Mira, whom he’s cheating on with a colleague—finds himself trapped when the military authorities suddenly begin building a wall as part of a local blockade.
 
 
As usual, Kolirin incisively finds humor and horror in a real but patently absurd situation, which doubles as a pointed satire of Israeli-Palestinian relations. The superlative cast is led by Alex Bacri as the put-upon Sami and Juna Suleiman as the spirited Mira.
 
 
 
The Locksmith 
(Screen Media)
This routine crime thriller about a locksmith named Miller who, after getting out of prison for a robbery in which his best friend was killed by a corrupt cop, tries to make amends by agreeing to a risky robbery at the behest of his dead friend’s sister April. The twists and turns of Joe Russo and Chris LaMont’s script are predictable from the get-go, and despite a game cast led by Ryan Philippe (Miller), Kate Bosworth (Miller’s ex, Beth, who’s also a detective), Ving Rhames (Miller’s best bud) and Gabriela Quezada (April), director Nicolas Harvard is unable to make this more than a pale imitation of better genre pictures.
 
Love in the Time of Fentanyl 
(ITVS/Lost Time Media/Castle Mountain Media)
When the drug crisis overwhelmed Vancouver—with more people fatally overdosing than ever—a special clinic, the Overdose Prevention Society, opened to help addicts with supervised dosages to mitigate fatalities.
 
 
Director Colin Askey chronicles the difficulties but ultimate triumphs of the clinic’s staff—comprising former and current drug users—who do whatever they can to help others in this important report from the front lines of a war that might be winnable with the right soldiers.
 
 
 
The Student 
(Capelight Pictures)
This cogent if familiar character study of Russian sociology student  Lera, who, as Gerda, becomes a stripper to continue her studies of ordinary people as well as earn needed extra money, is too dour, set as it is in a bleak environment that’s underscored in nearly every shot.
 
 
Anastasiya Krasovskaya gives an intense portrayal of Lera/Gerda, who lives with her single mother, but despite director-writer Natalya Kudryashova’s obvious knowledge of this milieu, her film is too one-note to be a truly effective psychological portrait. 

February '23 Digital Week I

In-Theater Releases of the Week 
Remember This 
(Abramorama/PBS Great Performances)
This riveting film, from the play by Clark Young and Derek Goldman, introduces Jan Karski, a member of the Polish resistance during WWII, who went to France, London and the U.S. to give eyewitness testimony of how Jews in the Warsaw Ghetto and a nearby concentration camp lived…and died.
 
 
Out of this rich dramatic ore, directors Goldman and Jeff Hutchens have fashioned a breathless, emotional 90-minute journey, given more depth by Hutchens’ illuminating B&W photography. And David Strathairn’s unforgettable, physically imposing performance as Karski is simply jaw-dropping to watch—and listen to: he not only voices Karski but dozens of other characters, from Nazis and Polish Jewish leaders to FDR.
 
 
 
The Son 
(Sony Classics)
Florian Zeller’s heavy-handed plays The Height of the Storm, The Father, and The Son have begotten, from the latter two so far, equally ponderous films adapted and directed by Zeller himself. As small-scale family dramas go, they have juicy roles for his casts (Anthony Hopkins won the best actor Oscar two years ago for The Father)—too bad the latest, The Son, shows Zeller at his most ham-fisted.
 
 
A study of a divorced couple whose teenage son deals with depression and suicidal thoughts, The Son is superficial and often risible, forcing able actors (Hugh Jackman, Laura Dern, Vanessa Kirby) and the less-than-able Zen McGrath to clench their jaws and grit their teeth as they dive into Zeller’s mechanical melodramatics.
 
 
 
Blu-ray Releases of the Week 
Bones and All 
(Warner Bros)
Italian director Luca Guadagnino’s 2017 breakthrough, Call Me By Your Name, featured breakout star Timothee Chalamet—and now the pair reunites for a young-adult cannibalistic love story (yes, you read that right).
 
 
But while Guadagnino spends two-plus hours desperately trying to make this romance even more bizarre with his visual flourishes, Chalamet and the extraordinary Taylor Russell actually make us care about them—through intelligent, subtle acting. The film looks splendid on Blu; extras are several short making-of featurettes.
 
 
 
Carly Simon—Live at Grand Central 
(Arista Records)
This 1995 concert—during rush hour for a surprised bunch of New York commuters—was originally shown on the Lifetime network but now gets its first hi-def release. It’s a terrific hour-plus of Carly Simon in great voice and enjoying herself in front of an audience (she’s often had notorious stage fright) backed by a crack band and terrific backup singers.
 
 
The selection leans a bit much on her then-current album Letters Never Sent—which does include her touching goodbye to her mom, “Like a River”—but there are lots of hits from “Anticipation” to “Let the River Run,” along with her most memorable melody, “That’s the Way I’ve Always Heard It Should Be.” But the hi-def presentation is a missed opportunity: the video looks like upscaled videotape and the audio, while crisp and clear, is only stereo—sadly, there’s no surround-sound option.
 
 
 
The Dante Project 
(Opus Arte)
Choreographer Wayne McGregor’s latest ballet, based on Dante’s trilogy, is fantastically visceral, thanks to the marvelously elastic, lithe movements of London’s Royal Ballet dancers, led by the incredible Edward Watson, Gary Avis and Sarah Lamb.
 
 
Thomas Ades’ score consolidates his early avant-garde leanings with his later sophistication, making this a complete visual and aural success. Both the hi-def video and audio are topnotch; lone extra is a making-of featurette with interviews with McGregor and dramaturg Uzma Hameed.
 
 
 
DVD Release of the Week
My Imaginary Country 
(Icarus Films)
Chilean director Patricio Guzmán, who has chronicled his country’s history in memorable documentaries for several decades, adds to that glorious run of films with his latest, a look at the massive 2019-20 protests as millions swarmed the streets of Chile’s capital, Santiago, hoping for a return to the democracy that was lost following the 1973 Pinochet coup.
 
 
With stirring footage shot on location by participants during the police crackdown, Guzmán also interviews several brave women who took part in the protests, placing them in their proper historical context. Guzmán, who was tortured by the Pinochet regime (and whose three-part The Battle of Chile stands as one of the great political documentaries ever made), once again insightfully shows history repeating itself—but this time possibly for the better. 
 
 
 
CD Release of the Week 
Herbert Howells—Piano Music, Volume 2 
(Naxos)
English composer Herbert Howells (1892-1983) is remembered for his choral works, notably the masterly Hymnus Paradisi, which he wrote after the death of his nine-year-old son. But he also composed two first-rate piano concertos, and his solo piano music has a jaunty air that’s surprising coming from someone who wrote dour church music.
 
 
This excellent chronological disc, played with zest by pianist Matthew Schellhorn, alternates between many attractive miniatures with weightier works like Howells' 1971 Sonatina. 

Newsletter Sign Up

Upcoming Events

No Calendar Events Found or Calendar not set to Public.

Tweets!