The New Zealand Herald

Screen scene offers variety and emotion

We recap our favourites from the first week of the New Zealand Internatio­nal Film Festival 2019

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The Farewell

Concise and delicately comedic, The Farewell takes an big-hearted approach to the tension of living in two worlds — in Billi’s (Awkwafina, excellent) case, feeling disconnect­ed from her Chinese heritage, having grown up in America. Lulu Wang sketches out her characters in The Farewell beautifull­y, analysing the big personalit­ies and high emotions that make families so difficult, but so essential.

5/5. (George Fenwick) The Wild Goose Lake

Chinese filmmaker Diao Yinan has crafted an exquisite-looking, at times frustratin­gly over-complicate­d noir that generally makes up for its convoluted narrative and stockstand­ard characters through its lush, evocative camera-work. Goose Lake is an ode to inventive image-making, at the expense of a clear script.

3/5. Screens again July 31, Hollywood Avondale (Tom Augustine)

Cold Case Hammarskjo¨ ld

For a film, it’s a deeply encapsulat­ing story, director Mads Bru¨ gger proving a master at commanding your attention as he pulls every disparate strand together into one tight knot. Yet, as a piece of journalism, it veers too far into the conspiracy theory genre. Bru¨ gger has crafted something entertaini­ng, chilling and totally captivatin­g, but by presenting a conspiracy theory as the answer to a murder mystery, he makes it easier for his project to be disregarde­d.

3.5/5. Screens again July 30, 31, ASB Waterfront Theatre (Ethan Sills) The Invisible Life of Euridice Gusmao

A lush South American melodrama about two sisters separated by patriarcha­l 1950s happenstan­ce, this film is often squirm-inducingly grim, but compensate­d by the vivacity of its lead performanc­es and some lovely camerawork. An old-fashioned but fleetingly powerful exploratio­n of lost opportunit­ies.

3.5/5. Screens again August 3, ASB Waterfront Theatre (TA) Manta Ray

Manta Ray takes a hypnotic look at a politicall­y urgent topic. It’s intellectu­ally challengin­g, with much of the story lying in what’s left unsaid but for those lulled into Aroonpheng’s sensual rhythms, a moving, heartbreak­ing tale of human connection is on offer.

4/5. Screens again July 26 and 27, Event Cinemas Queen St (GF) The Hole in the Ground

Dense, atmospheri­c Irish horror film about a mother (Sea´ na Kerslake, wonderful) who becomes convinced her son has been replaced by an imposter. Parallels to The Babadook abound, but this film escapes its more stereotypi­cal horror trappings through inventive set-pieces and an exquisitel­y mounted feeling of escalating dread.

3.5/5. Screens again August 2, Event Cinemas Queen St (TA) Litigante

Litigante acts as a telescoped window into one woman pushing against the odds to keep her head up and love her son the best way she can. In that regard, director Franco Lolli succeeds. While it doesn’t do anything similar films haven’t done before, Litigante nails the way life just happens sometimes, illustrati­ng one woman’s struggle to stay afloat with authentici­ty and grace.

4/5. Screens again July 21, Academy Cinemas (GF) Bellbird

An immensely charming, kindhearte­d Kiwi drama as modest, patient and full of good humour as the characters that populate its story. Director Hamish Bennett captures the quiet dignity of its characters as they grapple with tragedy and new beginnings with subtlety and, occasional­ly, flashes of quiet transcende­nce.

4/5. (TA)

The Nightingal­e

With its lengthy runtime and shocking, graphic violence, criticisms of The Nightingal­e are warranted. But if you can stomach it, Jennifer Kent’s sophomore feature delivers a gutpunch message about the cost of violence and the futility of revenge, as well as a no-holds-barred indictment of colonisati­on and white male violence.

4.5/5. Screens again August 2, Academy Cinemas (GF)

 ??  ?? From the homegrown film Bellbird — modest, patient and full of good humour.
From the homegrown film Bellbird — modest, patient and full of good humour.

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