5.10.2011

San Fran - Part One

Last week, I spent an amazing weekend in San Francisco with a friend who used to live there and who took me to the coolest places. There's no better way to visit a city you don't know.
Everything they say about San Francisco is true: European architecture, great food, super chilled and nice people, weed everywhere, open mindedness, awesome music and fog on the bridge.
Go and see by yourself!

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The Fillmore - temple of Jerry Garcia and The Grateful Dead

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AC.

5.07.2011

Melrose Place? Oh no, sorry, Melrose Market

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Because it's on Capitol Hill.
Because it's right in front of Bauhaus * see last picture - great cafe to work, enjoy the sun and watch cute guys.
Because they have a REAL butchery - with REAL butchers and tons of meat.
Because you could die eating a Turkey, Avocado, Bacon sandwich at Homegrown - healthy fast-food.
Because the cooks at Sitka & Spruce are stylish, tattooed and hot.
Because next to them, you can taste wine or buy flowers or cheese - your call.
Because it's a nice place to have lunch, hang out - and there's a floor, with a home décor store.


5.06.2011

Time To Leave - or Time To Live?





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On a very common and quiet Thursday night, as I was wandering with A. on Netflix, looking for a simple, easy, feel good movie, I found out that TIME TO LEAVE, a film directed by French director François Ozon, could be watched online. I had heard about this film, and knew that it was closer to a hard and disturbing drama than to a chick-flick. Nevertheless, I had seen many of Ozon's works, and I wanted to add this one to my list. Even if I believe A. didn't find it as powerful, extraordinary and true as myself, I still think that it is worth talking about for a bit in here. Because if you're a Netflix subscriber, maybe you'll want to take a look at it - even though it's not a light and entertaining piece of art.

Romain, a 31 year old gay photographer, has everything to be happy: a career, a gorgeous and young boyfriend, a life pretty enjoyable. One day, while shooting two models at the top of a Parisian building, he feels faint. After some medical exams, he meets with his doctor who's not carrying good news: Romain has a malignant tumor and lesions spread all over his body. He is dying. When? He doesn't know, as the disease could take a month or a year to kill him. With less than 5% chances to heal with chemotherapy, he decides to let time and life do their thing, and to take a last look at those he loves and the places he grew up in.


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What can I say about such a film? Everyone - or almost everyone - is afraid of death. I am even having trouble to watch movies about it, when it's too obvious, too sudden, too unfair - put me in front of LOVE SONGS by Christophe Honoré, you'll see how anxious I'll get. However, Ozon treats it with such humanity, such power, such truth and such beauty that I couldn't take my eyes off the screen. Melvil Poupaud is incredibly touching and fascinating as a dying young man who tries to accept his destiny and to leave life as peacefully as he can. He goes to all the love ones to tell them the truth, stops lying, wanders around looking for things that make him feel good: a visit to his grandmother (the great Jeanne Moreau), a vodka in the afternoon, a walk in a park, a swim in the sea - all the things he wants to enjoy one last time.


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The familial relationships are so well treated - the dialogue in between the son and the father, the phone conversation between the brother and the sister, the confession between the grandson and the grandmother, the love scene between the woman wanting to be a mother and the dying man who wants to leave something behind- that I felt alive and inhabited by emotions and feelings during the whole film.

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In the end, I believe that Ozon made a film that is as much about death as about life - and this is why you don't want to miss it if you get a chance to see it.


MJ.

5.05.2011

SIFF Favorites

A quick list for you all, if you're in Seattle during Festival - from May 19 until June 12 - and if you trust my opinion somehow. GET YOUR TICKETS and SEE AMAZING FILMS.

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BELLE EPINE (FRANCE): In her first feature, Rebecca Zlotowski offers us a dark and sensitive film about a 17 year-old girl who becomes entangled in an illegal motorbike racing circuit after her mother's death. Trailer: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pgUvwbBADiI (no sound but English subtitles :) )

EVERY SONG IS ABOUT ME (SPAIN): A tribute to the French Nouvelle Vague, EVERY SONG IS ABOUT ME is a clever first feature about relationships and Madrid. Trailer: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mEqFnKtXk98 (in Spanish, but you'll see what it looks like)

BIBLIOTHEQUE PASCAL (HUNGARY): In between the fairy tale and the true drama about sex-trafficking, BIBLIOTHEQUE PASCAL is one of the most original and colorful films you'll ever see. Trailer: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Z8UVHlY3AQg

JESS + MOSS (USA): Caught between past and present, between dream and reality, JESS + MOSS tells the story of a boy and a girl enjoying their summer, and offers us an impressive and retro cinematography. Trailer: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EGX_FD2gSxE

BLACK VENUS (FRANCE): Abdellatif Kechiche succeeds in making a powerful, disturbing but true film about the Hottentot Venus, a woman who has been belittled for years and who is now given back her pride. Trailer: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EGX_FD2gSxE

12 ANGRY LEBANESE (LEBANON): A prison, a woman and a room full of men talking about their feelings, mistakes and anger, while they're learning to act for a play. Bewitching. Trailer: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xDvCifo3NE4

A SCREAMING MAN (CHAD): Winner of the Jury Prize at Cannes Film Festival, this film is a way out to the situation in Chad, a beautiful film about a father and son relationship, and a true hope for the African Cinema. Trailer: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8_rvfk5psbU

A CAT IN PARIS (FRANCE): In this funny, gorgeous and thrilling animation film, a cat follows a thief at night in the streets of Paris. A delight for both children and adults.Trailer: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SiuH5Ye8aoI (in French, but still, you get how GREAT the animation/ story is)

WEEKEND (UK): On a Friday night, two men meet and end up spending their weekend together, learning more about themselves and their true feelings than ever before. Profoundly human and romantic. Trailer: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6cdnGHU5gZg

On the opposite, MAN AT BATH (FRANCE) tells the story of the ending of a relationship in between Paris and New-York. A superbly made and moving film about love, desire and grief. Trailer on Youtube.

And some more, just as incredible: As If I'm Not There, Mysteries of Lisbon, On Tour, Clink of Ice, Love Like Poison, Gainsbourg: A Heroic Life, A Quiet Life, 3, Black Field, Circumstance, Mammuth, If I Want To Whistle I Whistle, Small Town Murders Songs, Cameraman, Flamenco Flamenco... and still more, more, MORE interesting films!



PS: For a full list, check SIFF's website: http://www.siff.net/festival/film/ - and enjoy the festival!



MJ.

5.03.2011

Honoré yé yé yé


You are probably wondering why in hell I decided to write something about Christophe Honoré, right? Well, I just saw the first images if his next film, LES BIENS AIMES, that will be presented at Cannes Film Festival as the Closing Night Film, and I thought that it could do me some good - and maybe also be a reminder somehow for you - to think about all his films, even if I haven't seen (or liked) them all. It's not about him, his life, his career, more a recap of his work - quick quick quick. I am not a huge fan, but I did enjoy some of his films, and the fact that he is basically the only French director still very much influenced by Jacques Demy - a director I adore - and that he gives a central role to music in his films, make me like him, no matter what.



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Last one out: MAN AT BATH, a powerful, extravagant, experimental but beautiful poem to homosexual desire and love. A tail about relationships and cities. Amazing.


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MAKING PLANS FOR LENA: a wonderful Chiara Mastroianni, but I must confess that I found it confusing, messy and pretty boring.



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THE BEAUTIFUL PERSON: this film made me dislike Léa Seydoux at first - but BELLE EPINE, one of my first reviews on this blog, made me change my mind about her. A modern adaptation of The Princess of Cleves - a film for television more than for cinema.


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LOVE SONGS: A three-some, a musical, a film about death and grief, desire and changing sexual orientation - warning: if you're a hypochondriac, stay away from it, I had anxiety attacks for months because of this film.


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INSIDE PARIS: My favorite - without any hesitation. An ode to Paris, to brotherhood, to grief, to life and to love. Beautiful, touching, a life-changing experience.



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MY MOTHER: one of the first ones I saw. If you're into weird "mother & son" relationships, the kind where your mum wants you to have sex with a girl she chose in front of her, that's for you. But certainly not for me!



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17 TIMES CECILE CASSARD: I'm planning on watching this one, it's his first and people around me seem to have liked it quite a bit. I'll tell you what I thought!




MJ.