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Fairytale (2022)
4/10
Blurry and Purgatorial Voyage
14 May 2024
Warning: Spoilers
This film manipulates historical footage to reanimate bygone leaders, from European fascists to Jesus Christ. It's darkly entertaining stuff - but its lack of a clear strategy make its 78 minutes feel long.

The dictators are portrayed in 'deep fake' archival footage, presenting them as their authentic selves. These images evoke a ghostly presence; occasionally, one of these spectral figures will engage in an action, like caressing the face of an adoring yet unseen member of the crowd or raising an invisible cigar.

In James Joyce's Ulysses, Stephen Daedalus melodramatically observes that history is "a nightmare from which I am trying to awake." Sokurov, in a literal sense, embodies this notion.

There's also a curious sense of nostalgic fondness for these revived dictators, reaching a level where the director's intentions become uncertain. We witness these perpetrators of mass violence engaging in mundane activities like using urinals - Adolf Hitler even seen using a toilet - but does this portrayal serve to humanize them or diminish their significance?

In a pitiful scene, Mussolini catches sight of his and his mistress's battered, disfigured bodies among a heap of corpses. However, this experience fails to impart any lesson, devoid of any redeeming influence. Their sole remorse isn't for the enormity of the massacre but rather for its perceived inadequacy. Stalin ruefully states: "We didn't have enough time to shoot them all."

In the end, Sokurov's film proves to be as perplexing as a haunting dream. It resembles more of a scenario than a narrative, and despite its concise 78-minute duration, it feels long. While there may be a form of retribution for the dictators - albeit feeling ultimately inadequate, particularly since their victims are depicted as mere indistinct figures - it lies in the relentless cycle of repeating their actions, unable to break free from their destructive tendencies. On screen, at least, this serves as their eternal fate: forever trapped in the unending nightmare of history.
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3/10
Healing movie
30 December 2023
Overall, I found The Boy and the Heron a mysterious afantasy that goes back to Hayao's Miyazaki's classic themes of childhood pain and grief and how these were forged in the fires of the World War II.

The great orchestral score, by regular Miyazaki collaborator Joe Hisaishi was excellent.

Having said that, some of that trademark Miyazaki magic has been ruined by overplotted, muddled storytelling and a poor final third act.

The unlimited fantasies of Miyazaki's imagination work great if they are physically contained in some method - within the bathhouse of Spirited Away, the enchanted forest of Totoro, the castle in Howl's Moving Castle. Here, the world in which Mahito finds himself is vast and limitless but the film felt a little cluttered for me.
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Fantadroms (1985–1995)
3/10
Funky dory
24 July 2022
Warning: Spoilers
The main character of the show is a yellow shape-shifting robot called Indrikis XIII, who usually takes the form of a cat. He flies through the universe mediating various disputes between the other characters or saving them from disaster.

One recurring dynamic in the show is the love triangle between Indrikis, Receklite (a flying purple cat-octopus with whom Indrikis is in love), and the rat (who is in love with Indrikis). Other recurring characters include a cow, two young humans, and an amorphous pink blob.
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6/10
Not masterpiece but nicely offered.
25 March 2015
Hotel Rwanda broke the ice in 2004 with its devastating look at the 1994 Rwandan genocide. And now, The Last King of Scotland, the story of Ugandan President Idi Amin, is the next to hop on the bandwagon.

Where Hotel Rwanda seemed highly biographical and strove to stick to the facts as much as possible, The Last King of Scotland takes a much more theatrical approach. It sets forth by heightening the drama and high adrenaline, even creating a completely fictional character through whom the audience sees and experiences the story. Whether or not you find that tack patronizing, there's no doubt that the movie is genuine in its intent, emotionally wrenching to the very last second, and not afraid to display the brutalities of Amin's regime and the circumstances behind them.

Does The Last King of Scotland have a message for the world? All too clearly it does, and it's nicely but subtly offered.
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Nabat (2014)
1/10
The best art-house film from Azerbaijan
15 March 2015
Azerbaijan's Oscar submission, is an exquisitely shot minimalist tale of an elderly woman who finds herself the last remaining resident in a village evacuated during the Nagorno-Karabakh war of two decades ago. With little in the way of commercial prospects, the film's poetic strengths should nonetheless continue to find favour among viewers.

Bleak and greatly wordless as this tale is, there's a certain quiet grandeur to its unfolding. The low-key, somber colors and elegant crane shots of Abdulrahim Besharat's lensing make Nabat inevitably part of a pitiless yet graceful landscape. Hamed Sabet's sorrowful string score is only occasional present, capping an assembly as handsome as it is spare.
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