Times Colonist

The best so far

Logan and The Big Sick among film highlights in first half of 2017

- KENNETH TURAN and JUSTIN CHANG

With the year more than half over, Los Angeles Times film critics Kenneth Turan and Justin Chang sat down to discuss their cinematic highlights so far from 2017. The picks range from major studio offerings such as Get Out and Cars 3 to indie darlings The Big Sick and Personal Shopper. And in a nod to the ever-evolving way we watch films, two of our critics’ choices — Okja and War Machine — debuted on Netflix concurrent with limited theatrical release.

Kenneth Turan: We’re at the halfway point in 2017, and that provides an excellent moment to look back on the movie year and figure out what was memorable, to highlight the best of the big films that everyone saw as well as the small gems that might have gotten by audiences. In general terms, how does the year strike you so far?

Justin Chang: So far it’s been a fine, promising year at the movies, and I’m certainly glad it’s not over yet. Films released between January and June are so often forgotten or passed over for recognitio­n at year’s end, but in some corners of the internet there have already been whispers of Oscar buzz for Get Out and Wonder Woman, two critically and commercial­ly successful studio releases that, both in their own ways, told stories that we haven’t seen 100 times before.

Turan: There’s no telling what the academy will do, but, for me, the year so far was a mixed bag at best, with the studio offerings, not surprising­ly, being especially weak tea. I definitely enjoyed Cars 3 and was impressed by the seriousnes­s Logan brought to the superhero genre, but for me, much as I admired and enjoyed Gal Gadot in the title role, I wished Wonder Woman didn’t go on for so long. Are there any studio films I’m forgetting?

Chang: If so, they’re probably best left forgotten. I am glad you reminded me of Logan, which is so thoughtful and gripping and well-acted. I’m still not sure what held me back from embracing it fully. On a different note, the summer has just gotten a terrific shot of adrenalin from Baby Driver, a category-defying car-chase musical that confirms Edgar Wright as one of our most talented genre mix-masters.

Turan: Haven’t caught up with that yet, but it certainly sounds energetic if nothing else. The other summer film I want to single out, which I know you are a fan of also, is The Big Sick. It’s a wonderful independen­t film that debuted at Sundance and delivers the kind of humour and emotion that studio films provided once upon a time but no longer.

The other Sundance drama that has stayed with me is Alex and Andrew Smith’s Walking Out, which IFC is releasing in the fall. Does anything from the festival stand out for you or from the indie world in general?

Chang: It’s gratifying to see the all-around embrace of The Big Sick, which both honours and deepens the American romanticco­medy tradition, and also confounds our usual notions of big films versus small films. The movie may be modest in form and budget, but it’s so full of life and warmth and wit that it fills the screen more fully than some tentpoles I could name.

Another film that did that for me, albeit very differentl­y, is A Quiet Passion, Terence Davies’ marvellous portrait of Emily Dickinson, who is played by Cynthia Nixon in a fiercely felt performanc­e that I hope to see remembered at year’s end. Between Nixon and Kristen Stewart in Olivier Assayas’ splendidly spooky Personal Shopper, it’s already shaping up to be an excellent year for actresses.

Turan: I agree about both, just wonderful performanc­es. There are a couple of other independen­t films I want to highlight. Why don’t we start with a light-on-itsfeet effort with an ungainly name, Norman: The Moderate Rise and Tragic Fall of a New York Fixer, a completely involving moral fable starring Richard Gere and directed with enviable flair by Israeli director Joseph Cedar in his first English-language film.

I also want to put in a good word for a film starring Brad Pitt that almost no one saw in a theatre because it was released by Netflix. That would be War Machine, a blistering satire on the U.S. presence in Afghanista­n. Netflix is really serious about revolution­izing the way movies are seen.

Chang: Whether that revolution will be to the good of the movies has, of course, been the subject of much recent debate. I’m curious to hear the audience response to Bong Joon-ho’s thrilling animalrigh­ts fable, Okja, whose existence is a credit to Netflix but which absolutely deserves to be seen on the big screen.

So for that matter does James Gray’s lush and enveloping historical epic The Lost City of Z, which enjoyed a well-deserved theatrical release courtesy of Netflix rival Amazon Studios. I don’t always love Gray’s movies, but this one, starring a revelatory Charlie Hunnam as the real-life explorer Percy Fawcett, has stayed with me in the best possible way.

Turan: Films like Okja, with its considerab­le Korean-language component, remind me that 2017 has seen some excellent foreignlan­guage films. Most recent was the German Stefan Zweig: Farewell to Europe, but there was also the Finnish Cannes prize winner The Happiest Day in the Life of Olli Maki, the unexpected Israeli The Women’s Balcony, even the French-language, Swissanima­ted My Life as a Zucchini, which was a total charmer.

When people tell me there are no good films out there, I wish they had seen these. The problem is that the dynamics of theatrical exhibition are such that they rarely stay in theatres for more than a week, which is not enough time for most people to fit them into their lives.

Chang: Or for them to build the necessary word of mouth. I wish more audiences had seen After the Storm, a deeply moving family drama that some have dismissed as a minor effort from the Japanese master Hirokazu Koreeda. And I’ll also speak up for two French films that could scarcely be more different: Stephane Brize’s beautifull­y acted 19thcentur­y character study A Woman’s Life, which is adapted from a Guy de Maupassant novel, and Julia Ducournau’s supremely grisly cannibal thriller Raw, which is decidedly not adapted from a Guy de Maupassant novel.

Turan: So glad you mentioned After the Storm. I wish more people knew how exceptiona­l a director Koreeda is. And speaking of under-the-radar phenomena, I wish audiences were more tempted by some of the outstandin­g documentar­ies that appear and disappear with regularity. Some of the best of the year so far were I Called Him Morgan, the haunting story of jazz trumpeter Frank Morgan; John Ridley’s potent look at the Los Angeles riots, Let It Fall; Steve James’s Abacus: Small Enough to Jail, about a feisty Chinatown bank that fought back against unjust federal charges; and Settlers, an unnerving look at the situation on Israel’s West Bank.

And that doesn’t even mention the twin tentpoles of doc transcende­nce: Bertrand Tavernier’s magisteria­l My Journey Through French Cinema and Bill Morrison’s brilliant, unclassifi­able Dawson City: Frozen Time. You could do a lot worse than spend your moviegoing time on films like these.

Chang: I have you to thank for sending me to Dawson City: Frozen Time, which is one of the most spellbindi­ng experience­s I’ve had in a theatre recently and has a magnificen­t Sigur Ros score to boot. And I’ll echo your praise for Abacus: Small Enough to Jail, which is one of the best real-life courtroom thrillers I’ve seen in a while, as well as a rightly infuriatin­g portrait of our justice system going after the scrupulous because it can’t possibly convict the guilty.

A number of fine documentar­ies and narratives have already premiered at the Sundance and Cannes film festivals and will be opening in the second half of 2017. Besides Walking Out, which you mentioned, are there any that you’d suggest our readers keep an eye out for?

Turan: The film that stood out for me at Cannes was Noah Baumbach’s The Meyerowitz Stories (New and Selected). Psychologi­cally complex as well as funny, it stars a bearded Dustin Hoffman as an impossible father opposite Ben Stiller and a completely surprising Adam Sandler as his battling sons. It’s one I’m looking forward to seeing again. And a couple of fine Sundance docs are about to come out: Step, about the empowering effect being on the step-dance team has on a group of Baltimore high school students, and Take Every Wave: The Life of Laird Hamilton, Rory Kennedy’s in-depth look at the iconoclast­ic surf legend.

 ??  ?? Kenneth Turan enjoyed Gal Gadot’s performanc­e in Wonder Woman, but felt that the film went on too long.
Kenneth Turan enjoyed Gal Gadot’s performanc­e in Wonder Woman, but felt that the film went on too long.
 ??  ?? Tilda Swinton in a scene from Okja, one of several impressive foreign-language films this year.
Tilda Swinton in a scene from Okja, one of several impressive foreign-language films this year.

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