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892
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After Yang
After his quiet 2017 masterpiece Columbus, filmmaker Kogonada moves tangentially into the world of heartfelt science fiction with After Yang, which debuted at last year’s Cannes Film Festival. Adapted from a short story by Alexander Weinstein, the film is set in the not-too-distant future and tells the story of parents Jake (Colin Farrell) and Kyra (Jodie Turner-Smith), who have an adopted daughter, Mika (Malea Emma Tjandrawidjaja), from China. When we meet them, they also apparently have an older Chinese son named Yang (Justin H. Min), who it turns out is an extremely lifelike android (or “techno-sapien,” as he is called in the film) that the couple purchased (certified refurbished) as a way to help Mika connect more with her Chinese heritage in ways that they couldn’t teach her. This well-meaning gesture becomes problematic when Yang malfunctions, leaving young Mika distraught and her parents desperate to find out how to fix her robot older sibling.
It turns out the couple bought Yang “slightly used,” and as a result, they can’t take him back to the manufacturer or any certified repair place, which leads Jake down a series of rabbit holes (recommended by neighbor George, played by Clifton Collins Jr.) of unsanctioned repair options, one of which discovers that Yang has a memory function that has been recording moments of everything he and the family have been doing their entire time together. But his memories also reveal encounters with previous owners, as well as a current relationship with a mystery woman (Haley Lu Richardson) that no one in the family knew he was capable of engaging in.
Jake combs Yang’s memories, hoping to discover a key to fixing him, but instead he discovers an artificial intelligence that seems to be on the verge of actual self-realization and emotion, which ultimately leads him to a museum curator (Sarita Choudhury) who believes this revelation about this model of robot sibling is worthy of study and research, which would ultimately mean permanently separating Yang from the family in the name of science and progress. Less a conspiracy-based tale (although that does factor into the equation) and more a study on how Yang impacted this family in meaningful and existential ways, After Yang uses its cold, sleek facade to barely veil its emotionally complex core that investigates everything from what makes a sentient being to the fractured state of Jake and Kyra’s marriage. Both parents work too long and too hard to provide for Mika the way they should, so Yang was also acting as her de facto babysitter much of the time, and his absence highlights what inattentive parents they’d become with him around.
While most films of this nature have many moments of the android attempting to find out how to be more human by asking often unanswerable questions (which this story does), After Yang features Jake digging deeper into the mind and memories of his android in an attempt to understand better how Yang functioned and what held value to him. Perhaps not surprisingly, the movie deals with topics such as loss, compassion, and the role of technology in our lives. At once sweeping and intimate, After Yang is never anything less than fascinating and endlessly moving. (Steve Prokopy)
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Call Jane
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Nothing Compares
Despite deciding only to cover the powerful Irish-born singer’s life up through her first three (admittedly most popular) albums, the Sinéad O’Connor documentary Nothing Compares, from director Kathryn Ferguson (her feature debut) does a solid job tracing the rise and fall of one of the most influential voices of the late 1980s and early 1990s. The work navigates through O’Connor’s difficult, often torturous, childhood in a deeply Roman Catholic Ireland, where the church was law and women were dismissed and reduced to second-class status without exception. Even after such an upbringing, which included time in a school for "difficult" girls, O’Connor remained steadfast about her desire to be heard as a singer, with a host of old friends and bandmates all agreeing that her unique voice made her almost destined for success.
Even as her notoriety grew, her career path was often blocked by men telling her what she should or shouldn’t do, from her album covers to production choices. Still, there’s not getting past that initial visceral sensation of hearing her debut album, The Lion and the Cobra, for the first time, with its blend of hip-hop beats and traditional Irish song stylings, all used as a bed for her howling voice as it pierced the soul and the skin. With a new (off-camera) interview with O’Connor, the film takes us inside the creation of this groundbreaking music, while also talking to more modern musicians about the impact such a record had on their young lives.
But it was O’Connor’s mega-selling I Do Not Want What I Haven’t Got that not only gave her success but also a platform from which she could discuss any number of topics, like the oppressive nature of religion, women’s rights, abortion, war—you name it, O’Connor probably had an opinion on it. The media loved poking fun at her for all of it, painting her as an attention-starved pop star who shaved her head just to be different and not because record company people were telling her how she should look in photo shoots. The discussion of the song “Nothing Compares 2 U” is minimal, with the film focusing on the creation of the hypnotic music video; in fact, the Prince estate refused to let them use the song in the movie, likely because O’Connor has had a few unkind things to say about how Prince treated her when they eventually met.
Not surprisingly, Nothing Compares culminates with the aftermath of O’Connor tearing up a picture of the Pope after a performance on “Saturday Night Live” when she was promoting her record Am I Not Your Girl?, an event that effectively ended her stardom in America (especially since it followed her refusal to have the American national anthem played before one of her live shows). Once you piss off patriotic Americans and Pope-loving Catholics, your career is effectively done, I guess. At this point, O’Connor became a punchline and an object of every type of prejudice and misogyny imaginable, and the film captures every heartbreaking minute of her downfall. But the truth is, her desire to push back against powerful establishments made her an inspiration to many, something she may not have been aware of until years later.
Those who have been tracking her life since this time period know that O’Connor has changed her religious beliefs a few times and had a number of public bouts with bipolar disorder (not to mention the very recent suicide of her son and her subsequent hospitalization to deal with the grief), and there are a great many mysteries still left to unpack about her life after her most famous period some 30 years ago. Still, what is contained in Nothing Compares is powerful stuff, from archival concert footage that really shows her power in a live setting to copious interviews and behind-the-scenes looks at her record-making process to her less guarded moments with friends and family who supported her more than most. You can’t come out from watching this movie without thinking that O’Connor got the rawest of raw deals because she dared to stand out from the crowd, but it’s useful and uplifting to see her true impact acknowledged and celebrated like this. (Steve Prokopy)
Watcher
One of the highlights of last year’s horror anthology V/H/S/94 was director Chloe Okuno’s creature-feature segment "Storm Drain.” Now making her feature-length debut, Okuno brings us the psychological thriller Watcher, about Julia (Maika Monroe), an American woman who has recently given up her acting career and relocated to Bucharest, Romania, with her husband Francis (Karl Glusman, from Greyhound) for his work. One of his parents is Romanian, so he speaks the language, but she is in the early stages of learning and feels horribly out of place and alone in this foreign land, especially since she spends the vast majority of her days on her own.
One night, Julia finds herself people-watching outside the floor-to-ceiling windows in their apartment when she spots someone standing and staring out their own window across the street. She can’t see this person’s face, but to her, it feels like he’s staring right at her. Almost convincing herself she’s overreacting, she waves to the motionless figure, and sure enough, he waves back. Over the next couple of days, she spots someone whom she believes is following her into a movie theater and the grocery store, and she convinces herself that this mysterious neighbor is the same man stalking her. Making matters worse, there is a serial killer (nicknamed The Spider) killing women in the city, the most recent attack being very close to where the couple lives.
As many thrillers of this nature do, Watcher allows for the possibility that Julia is simply letting her mind get away from her, growing increasingly paranoid as a manifestation of her empty life in an unfamiliar city. She enlists the help of her husband, but even he is worried that this is more about her not adjusting to her new surroundings—although he does contact the police, who go to visit the suspect across the street (an encounter we hear about, but Okuno wisely doesn’t show us). At a certain point, it is revealed that the neighbor in question is the rather timid Weber (Burn Gorman, The Dark Night, The Expanse), who simply lives a quiet life in the apartment he shares with his elderly father. But when you spot Burn Gorman in a movie, you know you can’t let your guard down.
Watcher is a terrific and highly effective, albeit low-grade, suspense film. Monroe is one of the reigning queens of this brand of anxious, neurotic character who also has the guts to fight back against (or at least look into) her suspicions. Cinematographer Benjamin Kirk Nielsen does a masterful job working with light and shadow within Julia’s apartment to illustrate how exposed, vulnerable and trapped she feels in those confines. I especially liked the scenes Monroe shares with her next-door neighbor Irina (Madalina Anea), a dancer with a strong personality who takes Julia under her wing and at least gives her someone to talk to and spend time with. There is something achingly clean and streamlined about the look of Watcher, and this contrasts beautifully with some of the nastier elements that come late in the story.
There are deeper themes at play here as well, especially the all-too familiar one about believing women and not dismissing them when they feel at risk. What makes Julia’s plight worse is how often she begins to doubt her own intuition and survival instinct. The film is frequently unnerving more than outright scary, and that’s a far more unsettling experience in the long run. Watcher is a worthy feature debut from Okuno, and I’m eager to see where she takes us next, since she’s clearly interested in exploring all manner of horror in her filmmaking. (Steve Prokopy)
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