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Showing posts with label Pablo Larraín. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Pablo Larraín. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 19, 2023

MOVIE REVIEW: EL CONDE

 






















Augusto Pinochet is a vampire ready to die, but the vultures around him won't let him go without one last bite.

Director: Pablo Larraín

Cast: Jaime Vadell, Gloria Münchmeyer, Alfredo Castro, Paula Luchsinger, Catalina Guerra, Marcial Tagle, Amparo Noguera, Diego Muñoz, Antonia Zegers, Stella Gonet, Clemente Rodriguez

Release Date: September 8, 2023

Genre: Comedy, Fantasy, History, Horror

Rated R for strong violence and gore, some graphic nudity, rape, language and sexual content.

Runtime: 1h 50m

Pablo Larraín surreal satire, El Conde, is a fascinating and darkly funny deconstruction of the Chilean dictator as a decrepit, isolated vampire.  Larraín approach is rather interesting as he turns a real life monster into a self loathing creature who's primarily concerned with his historical legacy while having very little power to change it.  The dialogue’s heavy script provides plenty of laughs thanks in part to a heavy dose of gallows humor and the character's general oblivious, aloofness.  Larraín makes a concerted effort to display the general disconnect from reality and humanity throughout and horrific moments are played as mundane minutiae of a monstrous existence.  Jaime Vadell plays Pinochet as a pathetic, exhausted creature who would like nothing more than to end his existence in spite of his parasitic family's wishes.  His children and wife being little more than single minded hangers on who are unwilling to let him die until they've collected all the money, they believe they are owed.  Alfredo Castro, who plays his loyal servant Fyodor, leaves the biggest impression with his performance which carries the veneer of loyalty before something duplicitous is revealed.  Paula Luchsinger delivers an equally impressive turn as the nun tasked with dispatching Pinochet after she's taken a full accounting of his misdeeds and stolen wealth for the benefit of the church.  Luchsinger mile a minute delivery makes for some of the film's best interchanges especially when she interviews the children as they reveal their superficial motivations.  Her character is more than a bit scattered as her emotional state and motivation take some interesting turns especially in the final act.  Some of the characters’ actions don't make total sense but she's given an moment that delivers the sense of an ethereal awaking in a wonderfully composed shot which is a solid culmination of the film's wonderful cinematography.  The visuals alone will leave a lasting impression even as the film moves into even stranger territory as it barrels into its finale where some of the subtext is more blunt in its messaging.  El Conde is the type of film that will delight a certain group of film lovers while others might loath it at the same time, either way it will elicit a reaction.  

B+

Friday, November 5, 2021

MOVIE REVIEW: SPENCER

 



















In 1991, while spending the Christmas holiday with the royal family at Sandringham House, Princess Diana decides to leave Prince Charles.

Director: Pablo Larraín

Cast: Kristen Stewart, Jack Farthing, Timothy Spall, Sean Harris, Sally Hawkins, Stella Gonet, Richard Sammel

Release Date: November 5, 2021

Genre: Biography, Drama, Romance

Rated R for some language

Runtime: 1h 51min

Review:

Pablo Larraín's poetic nightmare opens with the preamble "A fable from a true tragedy."  Those expecting a more tactile grounded approach to Princess Diana will likely be frustrated by Spencer since it plays more like a fever dream.  Larraín's film delivers a disquieting disorienting experience from the onset and it rarely lets up.  Long tracking shots mixed with an unnervingly but effective soundtrack echo sequences from Kubrick's The Shining or even Polanski's Rosemary's Baby.  He builds Diana's mental claustrophobia and paranoia with expert precision but the film hinges on Kristen Stewart's turn as Diana.  Stewart's performance bleeds through the screen as she makes you feel every moment of Diana's mental tightrope walk on the edge of madness through whispered words and outburst of rebellion.  She shares believable chemistry with Jack Nielen and Freddie Spry who play Diana's children with those moments working as anchors for the character's state.  Sean Harris and Sally Hawkins deliver strong supporting turns as supportive confidants while Timothy Spall is ever present and menacing throughout.  The film's script is dense with thematic undercurrents and meaning which it subtly weaves into the story early on however it decides to hammer home the point by spelling out metaphors in the final act.  It's a minor complaint to an otherwise mesmerizing film which takes you on an unexpected journey into Diana's psyche.   

A-

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