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springbreak 2“SPRING BREAKERS”  My rating: C+ (Now playing wide)

93 minutes | MPAA rating: R

I’m going to give filmmaker Harmony Korine the benefit of the doubt and argue that his college-coeds-on-a-grand-Florida-debauch epic “Spring Breakers” is more than just exploitation, that behind its lurid face it has some serious stuff on its mind.

At least for now. That could change.

This spring break yarn, told with jittery methhead editing, blaring rap and a veritable cornucopia of pulsating navels and breasts, begins with four childhood friends – played by Disney Channel veterans Vanessa Hudgens and Selena Gomez, Ashley Benson (of ABC Family’s “Pretty Little Liars”) and Rachel Korine (the filmmaker’s wife) – sitting around their nearly empty college campus and grousing because they haven’t enough money to go on spring break to Florida.

(For the record, their campus has palm trees, so it’s not like they’re stuck in some icebound New England hellhole or anything.)

Three of these young women, whose names I never caught (names aren’t important here…nor is character development or common sense), decide to make a quick buck by disguising themselves in ski masks and matching pink sweatshirts and robbing a local all-night restaurant with realistic-looking squirtguns. They really get into the deception, threatening and abusing diners like veteran psychopaths.

Evidently all those first-person-shooter video games are paying off.

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56 up“56 UP” My rating: A- (Opening March 8 at the Screenland Crown Center)

144 minutes | No MPAA rating

Every seven years for the last half-century, director Michael Apted has turned his camera on a group of former British schoolchildren he first encountered in 1964 when they were only seven years old and he was an assistant with the BBC.

The idea back then was to take a dozen or so kids from all sorts of social and economic backgrounds and follow them for…well, for as long as they would tolerate it. There undoubtedly were political/sociological gears turning behind the project — one suspects the creators of the “7 Up” series envisioned it becoming an indictment of the British class system.

But over time it has become something even more powerful…a study of the stages of life we all go through, of marriages and divorces, careers established and lost, of becoming parents and losing parents, of love and loneliness, wealth and poverty.

Now we have “56 Up,” with the 14 former children now on the brink of senior citizenship.

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and Chase Williamson

Rob Mayes and Chase Williamson

 “JOHN DIES AT THE END” My rating: C- (Opening March 1 at the Screenland Crossroads)

99 minutes | MPAA rating: R

“John Dies at the End” is about a mysterious drug called Soy Sauce that, once ingested, takes the user on an out-of-control mind/body trip that may result in transportation to another dimension.

At least I think that’s what it’s about. Hard to say, since the latest film from the idiosyncratic Don Coscarelli (the “Phantasm” series and the moderately enjoyable “Bubba Ho-Tep”) is so narratively convoluted and emotionally detached that I was unable to fully connect with it on any level.

The film  begins late at night in a seedy Chinese restaurant where a reporter for a local paper (Paul Giamatti, clearly slumming) attempts to interview the  twentysomething David Wong (Chase Williamson) – who is not Asian — about his partnership with John (Rob Mayes) and their business as psychic detectives.

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Rooney Mara...depressed

Rooney Mara…depressed

“SIDE EFFECTS” My rating: B

105 minutes | MPAA rating: R

For more than half its running time, Steven Soderbergh’s “Side Effects” keeps us guessing as to just what sort of movie it is.

It begins with a handsome young man, Martin (current “it” guy Channing Tatum), being released from prison.

So maybe it’s a gritty film about Martin trying to rebuild his life after years in stir?

But then we get to know his wife, Emily (the marvelous Rooney Mara, late of “The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo”),  an emotionally fragile individual coming apart at the seams. No sooner is her husband back home than she attempts suicide by driving her car into a wall.

So maybe it’s a hard-hitting film about depression?

Emily and Martin visit a shrink, Dr. Banks (Jude Law), who puts her on a powerful new antidepressant (he’s also a paid consultant for the drug’s manufacturer). Then Emily begins having bizarre sleepwalking episodes and does something really horrible and criminal.

So maybe it’s a socially-conscious film about our prevalent drug culture and an industry that tries to peddle dangerous side effects-heavy pharmaceuticals as if they were soda pop?

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Maggie Simpson in "The Longest Daycare"

Maggie Simpson in “The Longest Daycare”

OSCAR-NOMINATED ANIMATED SHORTS My rating: A- (Opens February 1 at the Tivoli)

No MPAA rating

 Maybe it’s fallout from the silent film “The Artist” cleaning up last year.

In any case, all of the nominees in the Oscar’s current animated shorts competition are wordless. No dialogue at all.

This makes for rather intense (but highly enjoyable) viewing. These stories are told almost entirely through their visuals, which actually requires more dedication on the part of the viewer. With most movies you can close your eyes and figure out what’s going on through the dialogue.  Not here.

MAGGIE SIMPSON IN “THE LONGEST DAYCARE”’ (David Silverman/ USA/ 5 minutes)

Maggie, the pacifier-sucking youngest member of the cartoon Simpson clan, stars in her own short film.

The film follows Maggie’s day at the Ayn Rand School for Tots, where right off the bat infants have to endure a TSA-style frisking (a sign advises that “Your freedom is assured by our probing”).

Maggie is then led past the area for gifted kids (they have their own art studio and orchestra) and left in the “Nothing Special” area where the fingerpaint comes in two colors: “gray” and “bleakest black.”

Mostly the film is about Maggie’s efforts to protect from a violence-crazed kid a caterpillar who during the course of the day forms a cocoon and finally emerges as a gorgeous butterfly.

As you’d expect from a Simpson-inspired effort, “The Longest Daycare” packs a good deal of biting social commentary into its five minutes.  What you might not anticipate is the uncharacteristic sweetness of its central message.

"Adam & Dog"

“Adam & Dog”

“ADAM & DOG” (Minkyu Lee,/USA/16 minutes)

A playful dog and a naked man explore an environment of lush green forests and sweeping savannas of golden grass. They play fetch. They curl up together to sleep.

Then a naked woman appears and the dog finds he is no longer man’s best friend.

Minkyu Lee’s take on the Biblical Book of Genesis is visually gorgeous and a bit sad.

"Head Over Heels"

“Head Over Heels”

HEAD OVER HEELS” (Timothy Reckart and Fodhla Cronin O’Reilly/ UK/ 11 minutes)

Here’s a nifty allegorical fantasy rendered in first-rate Claymation-type animation.

A married couple live in a house floating in the sky. But the emotional distance in their relationship now manifests itself in a strange way.

The laws of gravity have been suspended. One walks on the floor, one on the ceiling.

The two don’t speak to each other. They live their lives just feet apart (key appliances like the refridgerator are rigged to a system of pulleys that allow them to be lifted/dropped from above to below) but for all intents and purposes, they reside in different worlds.

“Head Over Heels” depicts these two slowly rekindling the affection they once shared. Their reconciliation is quietly

compelling.

"The Paperman"

“The Paperman”

PAPERMAN” (John Kahrs / USA/  7 minutes)

This Disney offering, rendered in gorgeous black and white, is both a romantic comedy and a Kafkaesque look at the American workplace.

A young man waiting for the el notices a gorgeous girl. He’s so stunned by her beauty that he forgets to board his train.

Once behind his desk in a high rise office filled with fellow clerical drones (all living in fear of a looming supervisor), our hero notices the girl in a building across the street. Desperate to contact her, he turns the papers on his desk into airplanes, which he sends soaring between their buildings.

But he’s a lousy shot and eventually it’s up to the hundreds of paper airplanes to develop a life of their own and bring this long-distance romance to fruition.

"Fresh Guacamole"

“Fresh Guacamole”

Though a cartoon, “Paperman” has some spectacularly cinematic camera angles…it could easily have been shot as live action. Indeed, its vision of a big city (I’m thinking Chicago) is astonishingly detailed.

“FRESH GUACAMOLE” (PES / USA/ 2 minutes)

This stop-motion effort shows how to prepare guacamole from various household items.

Human hands (that’s all we see of the cook…hands) slice and dice hand grenades (in lieu of avocados). A baseball is chopped like an onion. A red pincushion is diced like a tomato.  A green golf ball is squeezed like a lime.  Green lightbulbs are opened and the filaments removed as if they were peppers.

Finally the ingredients are all mashed together and served with poker chips (standing in for nachos).

Palyful and inventive. Yum.

| Robert W. Butler

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"Death of a Shadow"

“Death of a Shadow”

OSCAR NOMINATED LIVE ACTION SHORTS My rating: B+ (Opening Feb. 1 at the Tivoli)

No MPAA rating
 
There’s a thematic consistency to this  year’s Academy Award-nominated slate of short live action films.
Children. Old people. Death.
Not many smiles in this collection, but lots of heart-wrenching substance.
 
“DEATH OF A SHADOW”  (Tom Van Avermaet and Ellen De Waele / France and Belgium / 20 minutes)
Wow. Here’s a visually splendid, morally gnarly bit of sci fi/fantasy with a big dose of steampunk sensibility.

Rijckx (Matthias Schoenaerts) is a young man who roams the city streets in a khaki World War I-era greatcoat while toting a bizarre camera.  His job is to take pictures of shadows. More specifically, his work involves going to the locale of strange and bizarre deaths, waiting until through his camera lens he can see the death re-enacted by…well, ghosts, I guess…and then take his “photos” to a Collector of Shadows (Peter Van Den Eede) who lives in a mansion with an endless hallway lined by thousands of shadowy portraits of individuals at the moment of their deaths.

Apparently Rijckx has been doing this for decades. Long enough, anyway, to have captured 10,000 of these images. The Collector notes that having reached this magic number, Rijckx can either return to normal life or continue his work with the camera.

Tom Van Avermaet and Ellen DCe Waele’s film takes our moody hero back to an encounter with a madwoman (Laura Verlinden); now he will try to undo the tragedy which drove her over the edge.

Okay, that’s a clumsy explanation of an eerie, weirdly poetic film. But this haunting short will stick with you.

"Henry"

“Henry”

HENRY” (Yan England / Canada / 21 minutes)

We first see the aged Henry (Gerard Poirier) sitting at a piano, playing a beautiful piece. He then calls out to his wife (she must be in another room) that he’s going out.  At a sidewalk cafe Henry encounters a woman (Marie Tifo) and suddenly finds himself abducted by men in black.

He awakens strapped to a bed in some sort of prison or hospital. The woman is there, probing his memories, particularly his memories of life with his wife, a fellow musician whom Henry met while serving in World War II.

Our protagonist is confused, alarmed, yet determined to escape and get to the bottom of this mystery.

Savvy viewers will probably figure out early on what Henry’s dilemma is all about, but that hardly matters, given the achingly emotional coda on which Yan England’s French-language concludes. Devastating.

** and ** in "Curfew"

Shawn Christensen and Fatima Ptacek in “Curfew”

“CURFEW” (Shawn Christensen / USA / 19 minutes)

A black comedy with achingly delicate undercurrents, “Curfew” begins with Richie (Shawn Christensen) opening up his wrist in a bathtub.  His suicide is interrupted by a phone call from his estranged sister Maggie, who says she has an emergency and needs Richie to look after his niece.  She’s exhausted all other possibilities…Richie is her last chance.
 
Figuring that dying can wait another day, Richie bandages up his wrist and soon finds himself on a night out with little Sofia (Fatima Ptacek), a precocious seven-year-old whom he hasn’t seen since she was a baby. Over an evening spent mostly in a hip bowling alley, the two move from wary suspicion to something like genuine affection. It’s a connection of blood that manages finally even to soften Maggie (Kim Allen), a victim of spousal abuse who finally sees in her brother an ally rather than an antagonist.
 
“Curfew” is a slight thing, but the three central performances are hugely effective.
 
Mahammadeen in "Buzkashi Boys"

Fawad Mohammadi in “Buzkashi Boys”

“BUZKASHI BOYS” (Sam French and Ariel Nasr / Afghanistan /  28 minutes)

Rafi (Fawad Mohammadi) works in his father’s blacksmith shop in wintry Kabul, Afghanistan. He hates the drudgery and would much prefer to hang out with his orphaned pal  Ahmad (Jawanmard Paiz), a street urchin who lives by his wits.

Both friends are obsessed with Buzkashi, the Afghan national sport, a sort of tribal version of polo in which skilled riders try to make a goal not with a ball, but with the headless corpse of a freshly-killed goat. Ahmad, a born risk taker, swears he’ll find a way to get his own horse so that he, too, can be a Buzkashi player.

Shot on the streets of Kabul (the footage of a real Buzkashi contest, played out in a snowstorm, is spectacular), “Buzkashi Boys” feels absolutely authentic. And the performances of the two boys are remarkable, with Paiz perfectly capturing a sort of Artful Dodger eagerness and Mohammadi employing his soulful, haunted eyes to suggest Rafi’s desperation at being caught between romantic dreams of escape and his far more sobering reality.

"Asad"

“Asad”

“ASAD” (Brian Buckley / South Africa / 18 minutes)

Asad (Harun Mohammed) lives in a coastal Somali village and dreams of being a pirate.

Literally. His older friends go out to sea each day with rifles and rocket launchers, stopping passing ships and holding the crews for ransom.

Though he protests that he’s ready for action, Asad is too small and too young for these adventures. Instead he is apprenticed to an aged fisherman (Ibrahim Moallim) who predicts that someday Asad will return with a catch unlike anything anyone in the village has ever before seen.

Meanwhile our young hero must try to negotiate his way around the armed and triggerhappy rebels that frequent the village.

“Asad” finds tragedy and absurdity in a loose riff on “The Old Man and the Sea.” The players are nonprofessionals, and it sometimes shows.

But technically “Asad” is a small wonder, with cinematography and editing that captures an off-the-cuff, captured-on-the-fly feel reeking of authenticity. And the musical score by Lebanese oud virtuoso Marcel Khalife (the oud is a sort of Middle Eastern guitar) is nothing short of spectacular.

| Robert W. Butler

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zero 3“ZERO DARK THIRTY”  My rating: A- (Opens wide on January 11)

157 minutes | MPAA rating: R

Kathryn Bigelow’s “Zero Dark Thirty” opens to a black screen and real sound recordings from 9/11: Desperate people trapped in the twin towers and telephoning out, police and fire department radio chatter. It’s eerie and sad and scary, and it sets the tone for a real-life drama that is also by turns eerie, sad and scary.

Bigelow’s film is, of course, the story of the hunt for Osama bin Laden, the mastermind of the 2001 attacks. It’s a sort of intimate epic, one that spans a decade during which our government’s search for the terrorist figurehead flagged and would probably have been dropped if not for the driven efforts of one particular CIA analyst.

This agent, a woman who has never been identified, doggedly kept at it even when her superiors were telling her to apply her efforts elsewhere. She finally got her man.

“Zero Dark Thirty” reminds me very much of David Fincher’s “Zodiac.” Both films chronicle over many years one individual’s obsession (possibly self-destructive) with solving a crime and obtaining justice (or revenge). In both cases the search becomes almost more important than the outcome.

The woman who cracked the case – here she is called Maya – is played by Jessica Chastain with a quiet intensity and a general lack of anything like movie glamor. The film’s first 40 minutes find Maya in a foreign country – probably Pakistan – where she teams with a  CIA interrogator named Dan (Jason Clarke) working to break the resolve of a captured Al Qaeda member.

As determined as she is to get answers, the “enhanced” interrogation of Ammar (Reda Kateb) is almost more than the cubicle-dwelling Maya can handle. Dan – a nice enough guy when he’s not being a torturer – is a ruthless psychological manipulator. And when pure intimidation, logic, and bribes of food and water don’t bring results, there’s always physical pain – waterboarding, confinement in a box only half the size of a coffin. The idea is to convince Ammar that there will be no comfort, no relief until he cooperates.

“In the end everybody breaks,” Dan says. “It’s biology.”

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Kacey Mottet Klein and Lea Seydoux

Kacey Mottet Klein and Lea Seydoux

“SISTER”  My rating: B (Opens Jan. 18 at the Tivoli)

97 minutes | No MPAA rating.

What is it about French movies and children?

In film after film the French give us bare-bones, soberly non-manipulative portraits of children at risk who end up quietly breaking our hearts.

“Sister” isn’t French, but it’s Swiss, and that’s close enough. Ursula Meier’s unforced character study was Switzerland’s nomination for this year’s foreign language Oscar (it didn’t make the cut to the final five).

In this lean narrative, we meet young Simon (Kacey Mottet Klein) at a posh ski resort. Suited up for a downhill slalom and carrying a backpack and skis, this 12-year-old moves comfortably among the vacationing families and well-heeled snow bunnies (do they still call them that?), deftly picking out the most expensive equipment and walking off with it.

He hides these pilfered treasures beneath a building housing a restaurant and ski-lift machinery and, in mid-afternoon when the trams are empty, he descends the mountain to an ugly highrise apartment building where he resells his ill-gotten gains to the local kids. Sometimes he even stands beside a highway proffering his wares.

Simon lives with Louise (Lea Seydoux), whom he introduces as his older sister. Not that she takes care of him…quite the opposite, in fact.

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Hyde Park Banner“HYDE PARK ON HUDSON” My rating: B (Opens wide on Jan. 4)

94 minutes | MPAA rating: R

The natural reaction upon learning that comedy legend Bill Murray is portraying Franklin Roosevelt is to expect some sort of farce, perhaps a feature-length version of a “Saturday Night Live” skit.

Nope. Murray’s carefully-contained performance in “Hyde Park on Hudson” is the real deal, an attempt to present an historically plausible FDR. This does not mean that Murray and the film are solemn and humorless; merely that they story they tell is bigger than one star turn.

Actually, this piece of history from director Roger Michell (“Notting Hill,” “Changing Lanes”) is several stories mashed together (not unpleasantly).

It begins with Daisy Suckley (the ever-superb Laura Linney), spinsterish sixth cousin of the President, receiving an invitation – a plea, actually – to leave her wooded rural home in upstate New York and visit the summer Presidential compound in nearby Hyde Park.

Franklin, she is told, is restless (actually he’s driving his staff nuts) and could use some fresh companionship.

Through Daisy’s eyes we are introduced to the President’s near and dear. Most of them are very strong women: The First Lady, Eleanor (Olivia Williams, looking very horsey with a mouthful of prosthetic teeth), who spends most of her time at a sort of all-woman commune. Also FDR’s assistant Missy LeHand (Elizabeth Marvel), who knows her boss so well she can anticipate his whims. And the President’s mother (Elizabeth Wilson), whose main job is to serve as official hostess (Eleanor’s rarely around) and nag her son about drinking and his health.

Though surrounded by women devoted to him, Franklin makes Daisy feel like a co-conspirator in defying their dictates. He proudly shows off his stamp collection (he has found it useful in repelling blowhards). He engages Daisy in long conversations. He takes her racing down country roads in an open-air touring car equipped with hand controls (the president was paralyzed from the waist down after a bout with polio).

And, on one such ride, after ditching his Secret Service escort, Franklin parks in a flower-dappled meadow and places Daisy’s hand on his crotch.  Evidently he’s not entirely paralyzed.

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Rosemary DeWitt and Matt Damon in "Promised Land"

Rosemary DeWitt and Matt Damon in “Promised Land”

“PROMISED LAND”  My rating: B+ (Opening Jan. 4 at the AMC Studio 30 and Barrywoods 24)

120 minutes | MPAA rating: R

Matt Damon is this generation’s Jimmy Stewart. The guy rarely looks like he’s acting and yet we believe everything that comes out of his mouth, every gesture his characters make.

Certainly it’s hard to imagine any other contemporary actor pulling off what Damon accomplishes in “Promised Land,” a film that could easily have become a shrill pro-environmental screed but which, in Damon’s capable hands, becomes something far more challenging and subtle — a character study of an individual who may have convinced himself that wrong is right.

In the latest from director Gus Van Sant, Damon plays Steve Butler, a hotshot aquisitions man for a natural gas company. Steve’s job involves traveling around the country to purchase drilling rights from farmers and other property owners. He can take a failing ranch or a economically-strapped town and turn it into a cash cow.

As he unassumingly notes, he makes people millionaires. Clearly, Steve loves his job. He gets to hand out big chunks of money, turn around lives, leaves the world a better place.

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