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Category: Cinéma - Movies
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Published: Friday, 09 March 2018 05:16
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Written by Gilbert Seah
TIFF Cinematheque Presents - Filmmaker in 5: Sidney Lumet
In the first of the series Filmmaker in 5, the late director Sidney Lumet is selected with 5 of his notable films to be screened from March 10-16th.
The films are:
12 ANGRY MEN
PRINCE OF THE CITY
SERPICO
DOG DAY AFTERNOON
NETWORK
Though Lumet has never won an Oscar for any singular film, he did receive a Life Achievement Oscar. Yes, he has made over 50 or so movies including MURDER ON THE ORIENT EXPRESS recently screened by TIFF Cinematheque. He is well-known to be able to elicit the best performances from his actors. His last film BEFORE THE DEVIL KNOWS YOU’RE DEAD with the late Philip Seymour Hoffman was a minor classic.
Thee are many fond traits that can be observed from his films. For one, he is a kind director who examines the sufferings of the common individual. His films are thus,often angry films such as NETWORK where people scream outside their windows: “I am as mad as hell, and I am not going to take this anymore!” or SERPICO where the angry cop, mad at the corruption of the NYC Police Department takes it out on his girlfriend. His girlfriend is given a 3-minute rant as Beatrice Straight did in NETWORK winning her a Best Supporting Actress Oscar. Lumet’s films often contains very angry individuals or as many as 12 as in 12 ANGRY MEN. Lumet was kind enough to offer a sensitive look at the gay man, in one of the earliest films to deal with homosexuality with sensitivity and positivity.
A more complete series would perhaps be something TIFF Cinematheque should look at. I have not seen Lumet’s controversial EQUUS (the play about a young man blinding horses) or BYE BYE BRAVERMAN.
Below are capsule reviewed my favourite 3 of the 5 films to be screened.
DOG DAY AFTERNOON (USA 1975) ****
Directed by Sidney Lumet

My personal favourite Lumet film that was banned in movie anal-retentive Singapore where I was living at when DOGDAY AFTERNOON was released. It was banned of the reason the bank was robbed in the film - the money used to pay for a sex change operation for one of the homosexual robbers (Al Pacino). The entire film is the robbery and attempted getaway. As expected Lumet’s film is a compulsive watch from start to finish not only from the excitement of the robbery but equally from the drama of the robbers and the hostages. The entire enterprise is treated by Lumet as a circus with spectators cheering the robbers (the other played by John Cazale) on. The cops are clearly the and guys who cannot be trusted. The audience is also on the robbers side. Pacino and Cazale deliver outstanding performances with Lumet accomplishing a rare achievement of a lengthy credible sag baed on jet a magazine article of the robbery.
Trailer: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CF1rtd8_pxA
NETWORK (USA 1976) ****
Directed by Sidney Lumet

Lumet’s most outrageous film (understandably being based on a Paddy Chayefsky script), a farce on the dealings on a TV network that came away with 4 Academy Awards including three for acting. Beatrice Straight won the Best Supporting Actress for what was a 3-minute performance. “I am as mad as hell, and I am not going take this anymore!” This is the magic line that also won Chayefsky the Oscar for Best Original Screenplay. This script contains many monologues she he actors get to dream and strut their stuff. Peter Finch (who won the Oscar posthumously for Best Actor) plays a news anchor that sends his news show ratings soaring sky high after he threatens to blow his brains up on live television. The madness escalates in all ways leading to a crazed climax. The film’s last line which summarizes the entire film: This is the story of Howard Beals, the man who was killed on live television because he had poor ratings. The film did not get as high praise as expected likely because it was all too crazy, but its is undoubtedly extremely entertaining and totally amusing.
Trailer: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1cSGvqQHpjs
SERPICO (USA 1973) ****
Directed by Sidney Lumet

Written by Waldo Salt and Norman Wexler, adapting Peter Maas's biography of NYPD officer Frank Serpico, who went undercover to expose corruption in the police force, SERPICO is a film about another very angry man by Lumet. Serpcio (a brilliant performance by Al Pacino) is so mad because almost everyone in the NYPD is on the take and there is no one he can turn to. After witnessing cops commit violence, take payoffs, and other forms of police corruption, Serpico decides to expose what he has seen, but is harassed and threatened by his peers. His struggle leads to infighting within the police force, problems in his personal relationships, and his life being threatened. Finally, after being shot in the face during a drug bust on February 3, 1971, he testifies before the Knapp Commission, a government inquiry into NYPD police corruption. Lumet’s film traces all the events with conviction and gusto, even inciting the audience’s anger at the corruption going on.
Trailer: www.youtube.com/watch?v=LtTRYns
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Category: Cinéma - Movies
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Published: Thursday, 08 March 2018 23:03
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Written by Gilbert Seah
NELLY ET SIMON: MISSION YETI (Canada 2017) ***
Directed by Nancy Florence Savard and Pierre Greco

A Quebecois animated feature, it would be assumed that English Canada would get the English version. The film opens after premiering at TIFF kids 2018.
The film is set in Quebec 1956. The Nelly and Simon of the title are two friends that embark on an expedition in the Himalayas in search of the Yeti, a sort of missing link.
Nelly Maloye is a very amateur private eye who stumbles into the research lab of Simon Picard. Picard is a young anthropologist. Frustrated and nearing the end of his research grant, Simon has yet to find evidence of the existence of the elusive Yeti and prove his hypothesis that the Yeti is the missing link in human evolution. Given a three-month reprieve by his wealthy yet suspicious investor, Simon reluctantly accepts Nelly's help as they set out on a mission through the Himalayas in search of the Yeti. Using an explorer's journal that supposedly contains the location of the mythical creature's den, the two must learn to combine their methodological and improvisational approaches if they are going to be able to navigate the challenging terrain.
Nelly and Simon caters mainly for younger kids, judging from the humour. The animated humour contains lots of slapstick (Simon, the sherpa all falling down in the underground cave and swept away in the underground stream; the dancing and laughing Yeti tribe). The characters frequently gesture with frantic movements and there are kid anecdotes like good luck or bad luck story told to the sherpa. The animation looks great, though not concentrating on detail - similar to a cross between the look of the INSPECTOR GADGET cartoons on TV and the look of the Belgium comic book “The Adventures of Tin Tin”. The use of shadows enhance the atmosphere of the private investigator’s world.
The film aims at a message (though too obvious) for the younger folk too, that all species (like the Yeti) need to be respected and not turned into a circus. The bad guys are once again the establishment like Simon's boss and Simon’s financier, Edward who wants to make money from the discovery of the Yeti. Edward is clearly the villain of the piece, and he gets what is coming to him (in slapstick terms) at the end.
One wishes that for this grand adventures set in the mountains and with the discovery of a tribe of (Shrek-looking ) Yeti’s, the film could have been funnier. Perhaps the Quebecois jokes did not translate well into the English version.
For adults, the film can be a bit childish, especially with the introduction of a rather unfunny chatty myna bird named Jasmin. The film also lags in the middle. Still there is no excuse for an animated feature not to cater to both adults and kids, films like SHREK and even the fairytale BEAUTY AND THE BEAST serving as examples.
SIMON ET NELLY is an ok family animated feature but one wishes it could have been catered more to the adults.
Trailer: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KvukQXpI3Ws