Wednesday, April 15, 2020

Review: Argo (2012), dir. Ben Affleck


The following review is spoiler free and is meant to be read BEFORE seeing the movie.

The brilliance of Ben Affleck is that he recognizes the impact of sound in movies better than many of his contemporaries. There is a moment in Argo, which I saw in theaters, where a single gunshot punctures your very sense of security in your seat. You know it’s coming. You dread it. But that ability to foresee it makes it no less shocking in the hands of a competent filmmaker.

Argo tells a stripped-down version of a true story played out behind the scenes of the Iranian hostage crisis, as the CIA plans a stunningly complicated and yet fascinatingly credible rescue mission by utilizing a CIA asset who works in the film industry to help put on a fake movie, set to film in Iran. The opening of Argo is tense despite knowing the end result, because Affleck keeps the momentum rolling through perfect timing of intercutting and showing the progressively dire situation deteriorate.

The film is able to maintain a languid pace at times by always keeping the danger of discovery and failure dangling over the heads of the hostages, who are posing as the fake film crew in Iran. What Affleck and the editor have accomplished is an incredible feat of narrative storytelling, as the one side of the story, filled with tense and sober intrigue in Iran, is interwoven with an absurd and at times openly comedic story of putting on a fake film production in Hollywood. One crucial scene mixes both of these stories, with both tones playing simultaneously, and manages to be absurd and horrifying at the same time, in exactly the way it was meant to.

The story is simplified, in many ways to the detriment of real heroes who were left out of this telling of the story, and there are times where it is obvious that events were heightened for dramatic tension and suspense, but otherwise there is little to be said about Argo that isn’t high praise. Argo represents another high point in Affleck’s directing career, coming after the equally compelling The Town and the masterpiece that is Gone Baby Gone. I have yet to see the widely panned Live by Night, so I might sit that one out to keep my faith in Mr. Affleck’s directorial abilities.


Rating:
«««½
(3.5/4)

Tuesday, April 14, 2020

Celluloid Freaks will Return in... My Mid-30's


My fellow Freaks,

Eight years is a very long time for anything. I’m finding it hard to believe that it has been almost eight years since I’ve last updated Celluloid Freaks. There was nothing related to film that caused me to stay away. So why did I stop?
It may sound trite, but life got in the way. A series of personal complications including major depressive disorder and a long journey toward self-realization made it difficult to continue the task of seeing a new movie almost every week. So why did I come back? Because of COVID-19, is the short answer, but only part of it.
I have come to the realization through this quarantine that the constant negative feedback loop of life needs to be broken in order for life to have meaning beyond mere survival. My life is undoubtedly better than it was in the Summer of 2012, without a doubt; however, the ability to navigate the day-by-day chaos has become harder.
And my life has been undeniably better since then. When I was 27, I lived in my parents’ basement and I worked at a pet supply store, and had a serious drinking problem. Today, at 34, I own a home, I am months away from graduating law school, I have come out as transgender, and I am married to my soulmate, who I’ve been with for six blissful years.
So, I am coming back in part because I believe it will allow me to focus on something that brings me joy, and allow me to put all of the horror of current events in the back of my mind, for my own sake.
There is another reason I’ve decided to come back. And this is the triggering event. Last December, the very first guest on a test episode I put together, film journalist Charlie Allbright, passed away. It was devastating. I cared deeply about him and we had developed a lovely friendship since we became acquainted in 2009. There isn’t a day that goes by that I don’t miss him and his updates about the squirrels he was training, and knowing that he isn’t there any longer is a stabbing pain in my heart. He was one of the very first people I came out to, and little did I know at the time, we had that in common, as he came out to me very soon after.
Knowing that I won’t get to hear his voice, see his face, watch the adventures he had with his squirrels, or ever do a follow-up episode reviewing the entire Blood and Ice Cream Trilogy, is the push that made me want to open this back up again. I feel as if returning to my passion for film is the only way I know how to pay my respects to him in a way he would appreciate.
So here I am. This will be a very slow return, I must tell you. I have final exams for law school coming up soon, then I have studying for the Bar exam, whether COVID-19 causes it to be postponed or not, so I won’t have the time to be setting up, recording, editing, and posting a regular podcast. What is more likely is that I will be reviewing films I have seen over the past eight years, and post the reviews as I finish them. I don’t know what form the podcast will take when it eventually comes back. I am aiming to upload an episode in early 2021, and discuss what I feel are the most essential films to see of the last eight years. For a taste, I have below my top movies of 2019:

10. Captain Marvel
9. Spider-Man: Far From Home
8. Avengers: Endgame
7. Doctor Sleep
6. Parasite
5. The Irishman
4. Midsommar
3. Us
2. Knives Out
1. Uncut Gems

Sincerely,
Lauren

PS. Apologies. This isn’t my best writing; I mostly threw this together at 1:30am on a Tuesday after deciding I had put it off too long.