By George Kozera
Infrequently, I’ve watched a Documentary then wonder why in the world was it even made. MOLECULES is one of those. Marketed as a son investigating his failed relationship with his father while in lockdown in Venice, it includes numerous scenes that lead nowhere and spews platitudes like “is there anything you can see in the invisible” on the soundtrack that had me scratching my head so intensely that I will never develop dandruff. Other than the remarkable scenes of Venice emptied of people on the streets and boats on the canals, I can think of no reason to see this.
By George Kozera
ALL-IN follows Hakim and Ismail, both from small villages, as they work the summer months at a luxury, all-inclusive resort on the Turkish Riviera. Ismael is younger, always smiling, willing to learn new skills and highly productive. Hakim is more introspective, somewhat surly and lax with rules, regulations and management. The two develop a lovely friendship and it was interesting to watch how two distinctly people react to different scenarios, especially when it comes to customer service. Yes, there are “Karens” worldwide!
There are perhaps too many scenes with Hakim spewing philosophical and too few scenes where we really get know more about what makes Ismail tick and one winds up ultimately feeling uninvolved and not totally invested in this movie.
By George Kozera
It is imperative that I first note that the black and white Cinematography in GREY ROADS is beyond impressive; it is moody and atmospheric and sensual, making the sleepy town of Markdale, Ontario (not far from Toronto and home to Chapman’s Ice Cream manufacturing plant) a fascinating character on its own. Filmmaker Jesse McCracken (who edited, filmed, produced and directed this Film) takes us on his quest back home to reconnect with his estranged father and his gentle, soft-spoken grandfather. The two men differ wildly: his father is part of a motorcycle gang going by the name of Redneck Riders and the grandfather is involved in local community events. This is where GREY ROADS faltered for me as I was genuinely disinterested.
As much as we all might feel that our lives would make a fascinating movie, it is prudent to say that not everything in life is worthy of a Documentary feature film. There is no denying that Jesse McCracken is supremely talented and I anxiously hope he finds a compelling story, be it fictional or not, to highlight and share in the near future.
By Justin Waldman
There are very few Documentaries that feel as timely and powerful as The Return: Life after ISIS, as it follows several women but focuses on two specifically. These women left their respective homes to join ISIS, have left ISIS and want to return to their home countries, except they are no longer welcomed.
Since their home countries no longer are accepting them back home, they are trapped in Syria and living in detention camps with their children who they are taking care of. Their stories are told, mainly through the writing workshop that they are doing to talk about why they joined. The Documentary asks its audience to re-evaluate any predetermined notions that would be had about women who joined ISIS and changed their mind and want to return back to their normal life.
By Justin Waldman
Three couples, with three different starting points to their relationships, are tasked to have candid conversations with the same questions being asked by Director Dorota Proba making them re-evaluate what they want, what they want to experience, and what their relationship is.
Unfortunately, Between Us misses the mark with their questions and answers that are expressed throughout the Documentary. It is an unsettling, awkward experience watching these couples answer these questions that push the boundaries of their relationship and in some instances put them on-the-rocks, its almost watching a relationship dissolve in front of ones eyes.
By Justin Waldman
In 2004, the Silk Road reopened between China and Tajikistan which was great for the latter as it was the economic boost the country needed. Davlat, who is the subject of this Documentary bought some freighters and tried to pave a new life for his family. Unfortunately, Capitalism intruded these plans and made life exceedingly more difficult for Davlat and his family.
The New Plastic Road shows one mans motivation for a better life, and his drive and tenacity but also what modern Capitalism and bigger pockets can do to nearly crush one’s spirit and drive. It is a beautiful Documentary that looks into what even the fight that humans will give to protect what is theirs.
By George Kozera
WELCOME TO SPAIN opens with an undisputable fact: Seville is the most beautiful city in Spain. Having spent a few days there many years ago, I wholeheartedly agree! When the city’s last brothel turns into a refugee recreational center for those seeking to start a new life in the country, Filmmaker Juan Antonio Moreno Amador meets a number of the people of different nationalities and starts a two year quest as he films their journeys while they try to adapt to a new culture and experiences. It’s an eclectic group.
Omnia is perhaps 8 years old and she, alongside her parents and two younger siblings, escaped from Yemen. Amelia is the oldest of the group. She’s a grandmother of nine, a retired schoolteacher and left Venezuela to start a new life in Spain. Marouane is 18, proudly gay and fled Morocco seeking asylum from sexual persecution back home. One cannot help but to cheer all of them on, praying they succeed.
WELCOME TO SPAIN, with great sensitivity, takes the audience on a trek while these newly displaced people adapt to new cultures, religious beliefs and food, unfamiliar places and ways of thinking. We smile as broadly as Omnia does when she receives a Christmas gift from one of the Three Wise Men or learns something new at the school she attends. When Marouane celebrates attending his first gay pride parade in Madrid, his enthusiasm and love of the freedom that he can finally express his true identity without shame or fear is palpable.
WELCOME TO SPAIN is replete with scenes that are humorous, heartbreaking, life-affirming and fascinating, it is a film with no fillers nor judgment and I enjoyed it tremendously.
By George Kozera
I first saw Italian Director Luchino Visconti’s Oscar-nominated “Death in Venice” at a private screening in the early ’80s. Whereas I was not as enamored by the Film as others, I found Dirk Bogarde’s performance as a sickly Composer fixated on a young boy while recuperating in Venice astonishing. What made it fascinating and believable was the look of the lad and, playing Tadzio, Bjorn Andresen embodied pulchritude. Described by Visconti at the Premiere of the Movie at the Cannes Film Festival as THE MOST BEAUTIFUL BOY IN THE WORLD, Andresen evoked an androgynous innocence, immortalized forever on celluloid. Whereas Andresen was never able to parlay that initial fame into a profitable career, he looks back on the 50 years since the release of “Death in Venice” with honesty and clarity. His personal life may have been in shambles which he never disowns but there is also a little sense of pride that his face inspired Japanese Manga.
THE MOST BEAUTIFUL BOY IN THE WORLD held me enthralled throughout. Bjorn Andresen’s life is worth visiting.
By Justin Waldman
Apart is going to make you angry, and it absolutely should. There is another war on drugs, and instead of getting help and providing sentencing that is not rehab or something helpful to first offenders to get the help they need, they serve sentences, long sentences that can destroy their lives. The Documentary focuses on three women: Tomika, Lydia, and Amanda, and their reasonings for being in prison, whether it be they got addicted to prescribed medication, and then got cut-off, being forced to buy elsewhere and getting caught. Or being caught in possession with intent to distribute when they simply a passenger in car. These women are not felons, they got caught in a war that is raging across the United States.
What makes Apart so powerful is listening to these women’s stories about what they did, how they got there, and exposing how broken the system is. Rehabilitation is not cheap, there is no denying that, but why can’t there be court mandated rehabilitation instead of prison time for first offenders? This Documentary focuses on their time spent in and out of prison and what their lives have become because of their sentence.
By George Kozera
When the relationship with his much older male companion rapidly declines, Filmmaker Isidore Bethel returns home to Chicago to emotionally recuperate and to reassess his needs and desires. His solution is to interview and film men that he meets on various gay dating aps to, ostensibly, get varied responses to how they deal with sexual scenarios and personal relationships, much to the chagrin of his mother with whom he has many telephone conversations. It becomes somewhat too apparent that the validity of this undertaking turns into opportunities to have sex with a large number of men and one can’t help but to agree with his mother when she states that this is strictly a vanity project. In a series of scripted and non-scripted scenes, some of which verging on graphic and explicit, ACTS OF LOVE is disjointed and its success relies on whether you find legitimacy in the theme being explored. I did not.
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