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impossible tidal wave“THE IMPOSSIBLE” My rating: B+ (Opens Jan. 4 at the Glenwood Arts, Cinemark Palace, Palazzo 16 and Independence 20)114 minutes | MPAA rating: PG-13

It takes almost a determined act of will power to watch “The Impossible,” Juan Antonio Beyona’s hair-raising film about a vacationing family torn apart by the 2004 tsunami that ravaged Thailand’s resort-packed coast.

It’s that scary and painful.

A good thing, then, that “The Impossible” has been so beautifully acted, with Naomi Watts and Ewan McGregor giving what may be career-high performances as real-life couple separated by the disaster and, as their oldest son, young Tom Holland establishing himself as an actor of great promise.

Maria (Watts) and Henry (Ewan McGregor) live in Japan with their three boys. For Christmas they book a bungalow at an idyllic Thai resort where they take advantage of the snorkeling, sailing and swimming.

And then a wall of water 30 feet high roars in from the sea, toppling palm trees, flipping cars and tearing the family apart.

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not fade kiss“NOT FADE AWAY” My rating: B (Opens Jan. 4 at the Tivoli)

112 minutes | MPAA rating: R

To date, David Chase’s major contribution to American arts has been as creator/producer of the cable hit “The Sopranos,” which along with its excellent drama and characterizations was forever pushing the envelope on TV violence, language and nudity.

For his first outing as a solo writer/director Chase puts away the blood bags and turns to his own adolescence. “Not Fade Away” is less a novel than a series of not-quite-nostalgic snapshots taken between 1963 and 1968.

It begins with two teenagers in suburban New Jersey staring at a shiny electric guitar in a store window. Their every third word is some variation on the f-bomb — I’m pretty sure Chase is foolin’ with us, delivering in one scene enough smutty talk to fill an entire movie. Then, our expectations of Chase-ian profanity fully met, he proceeds to deliver a very personal, sweet and slightly sad reverie on the role of rock ‘n’ roll in a young man’s life.

Our protagonist is Doug (John Magaro), who in 1963 is a skinny, unathletic dweeb hanging with similarly un-studly pals. The lives of these losers are transformed by the one-two-three punch of the Kennedy assassination, the first appearance of the Beatles on Ed Sullivan just weeks later, and the subsequent ascension of the Rolling Stones, who forced American teens to reckon with their own ignored blues heritage.

(The film’s title, of course, is that of a Buddy Holly song famously covered by the Stones.)

Doug is immediately smitten. The girls may not give him a second glance, but he knows he has rock star potential. He bones up on the drums and teams with his guitar-playing buddies Eugene (Jack Huston) and Wells (Will Brill) to form a band.  They’re pretty bad — at least until they start to get good.

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This-Is-40-Banner“THIS IS 40” My rating: C- (Opens wide on Dec. 21)

134 minutes | MPAA rating: R

Being funny has never been a problem for Judd Apatow. And let’s be honest —  there are some good laughs in his latest, “This is 40.”

The problem is Apatow’s  increasing incompetence as an overall filmmaker.  His movies are obscenely long, slowly paced, meandering, and poorly laid out. I won’t say they have no point, only that they so quickly run out of dramatic steam and narrative focus that they seem to have no point.

“This is 40” follows Pete (KC native Paul Rudd) and his wife Debbie (Leslie Mann, Apatow’s Missus), two supporting characters from “Knocked Up,”

They live in an upscale LA neighborhood with their two daughters (Iris and Maude Apatow, the director’s kids). Debbie runs a boutique. Pete has started his own independent record label.

And like a lot of folks who hit 40 years of age, they’re getting jumpy.

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Members of the KC movie reviewing community gathered on Sunday, Dec. 16 to vote for the 46th annual Kansas City Film Critics Circle awards.

The Winners:

Best Film: “THE MASTER”

Best Director: Ang Lee “THE LIFE OF PI”

Best Actress: Jennifer Lawrence “SILVER LININGS PLAYBOOK”

Best Actor: Daniel Day-Lewis “LINCOLN”

Best Supporting Actress:   Anne Hathaway “LES MISERABLES”

Best Supporting Actor: Philip Seymour Hoffman “THE MASTER”

Best Screenplay Adaptation: Chris Terrio “ARGO”

Best Original Screenplay: Paul Thomas Anderson “THE MASTER”

Best Foreign Film: “AMOUR”

Best Animated Feature: “FRANKENWEENIE”

Best Documentary Feature: “THE IMPOSTER”

Vince Koehler Award for Best Science Fiction, Fantasy or Horror Feature: “CABIN IN THE WOODS”

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THE BEST OF 2012: My picks

Here are my Top 10 movies of the year (meaning they opened in KC during 2013, even if they were considered for the 2011 Oscars). They are presented in no particular order. Alas, “Zero Dark Thirty” won’t open  here until January. Otherwise it would definately be among the Top Ten.

PS  Late addition: Holy crap, how could I forget about “SEARCHING FOR SUGARMAN”?  That ought to be in the Top Ten, too. I’m beginning to think this was a very good year at the movies.

THE TOP  TEN:

HJ1 A190_C002_0601PJ_001.0002650.tif“The Sessions”

top pi 2“Life of Pi”

top argo“Argo” (more…)

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Filmmaker Arno Goldfinger...pondering a perplexing past

Filmmaker Arnon Goldfinger…pondering a perplexing past

“THE FLAT” My rating: B (Opening Dec. 9 at the Tivoli)

97 minutes | No MPAA rating

A real-life detective story with far-reaching implications, “The Flat” is a  worthy addition to the genre of Holocaust-related cinema.

But Arnon Goldfinger’s celebrated documentary – it’s been playing in theaters in Israel for more than a year  —  isn’t about cattle cars and gas chambers. It’s about human curiosity and human denial.

Five years ago filmmaker Goldfinger’s grandmother, Gerta Tuchler, died at age 98 in Tel Aviv. Born in Germany, Gerta left behind in her apartment more than 70 years’ worth of clothing (lots of creepy fox wraps and dozens of pairs of fancy ladies’ gloves) and evidence of her early life that her children and grandchildren knew nothing about.

The first clue was a yellowing Nazi newspaper, Der Angriff  (The Attack), with an article about a trip to Palestine in the mid-1930s taken by Goldfinger’s grandparents, accompanied by Baron Leopold von Mildenstein, a German “journalist,” and Mildenstein’s wife.

The trip, as described by Mildenstein in the article, was to evaluate the suitability of Palestine as a destination for German Jews.  The idea, at that time anyway, was that Jews could be shipped out of the Reich and relocated to another part of the world.

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Riley Keough and Juno Temple

“JACK AND DIANE” My rating: C (Opening Nov. 30 at the Screenland Crossroads)

110 minutes | MPAA rating: R

 “Jack and Diane” is a teenage lesbian love story.

And, no, it’s not hot.

Instead it’s…well, weird. Strange. Definitely pretentious.

Diane (Juno Temple…last seen as the trailer court white trash Lolita in “Killer Joe”) is a British teen spending the summer with her aunt in NYC. 

We first encounter Diane wandering around Greenwich Village, begging strangers to let her use their cell phones. With her unkempt blond mane she looks like the waif on a poster for the Broadway musical “Les Miserables.”  When she’s under pressure (which is often) her nose bleeds. She has a tendency to pass out in odd places – like on the floor of a bathroom in a noisy disco.

When she runs into the boyish Jack (Riley Keough, Elvis Presley’s granddaughter) it’s love at first sight. At least on Jack’s part (she has a mix tape she has long wanted to share with someone special). It takes Diane a bit longer to get on board (apparently she has had no prior sexual experience).

Bradley Rust Gray’s film follows the two young lovers as they come together, pull apart, party, and fight. There are confrontations with Diane’s disapproving aunt (Cara Seymour). On the rebound after a nasty spat, Jack has a fling with an older woman (Kylie Minogue).

And throughout Gray alternates the live action with disturbing stop-action animated sequences by the Brothers Quay. Here strands of hair, knots of viscera and rivulets of blood writhe sinuously and make squishy, slurping noises.

The girls watch an unsettling internet  web site on which college girls are drugged and sexually abused.

At one point Diane transforms into a werewolf and eats Jack … but apparently that’s only a dream.

Never mind.

“Jack and Diane” (no relation to the John Mellencamp song with the same title) has a queasy Cronenberg-ish feel to it, with allegory, fantasy, eroticism, and adolescent angst colliding.

There’s a lot going on here and the acting is okay…but then why does it feel as banal as a teenage slumber party?

 | Robert W. Butler

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“ANNA KARENINA” My rating: B (Opens wide on Nov. 30 )

130 minutes | MPAA rating: R

Georgeous to gaze upon but muted dramatically, Joe Wright’s “Anna Karenina” is an honorable adaptation of Leo Tolstoy’s great Russian novel.

But then  I don’t expect ever to see a movie that captures all the aspects of this monumental piece of literature, which contains within its pages not only a story of doomed love but a practically encyclopedic portrait of upper-class tsarist society.

In a way Wright (his resume includes “Pride and Prejudice,” “Hanna,” “Atonement” and “The Soloist”) has given us a  Cliff’s Notes version of the book that touches on most of the main themes without developing them with anywhere near the detail provided by Tolstoy.

Part of the problem is that most of us go to “Anna Karenina” expecting breathless, tragic romance. That was the main selling point of earlier movie versions with Greta Garbo and Vivien Leigh.

Tolstoy had no intention of writing a romance. In depicting the affair of the married Anna (Wright protégé Keira Knightley) and the handsome but shallow officer Vronsky (Aaron Taylor-Johnson), his goal was not to bathe in swooning emotion but to dissect – some would say clinically and cruelly – the flaws in human character and in society at large that will lead to his heroine’s eventual downfall.

To the extent that Wright’s approach to the material is also clinical, he emulates Tolstoy. The problem, of course, is that we want, nay, demand to be emotional voyeurs, and this film’s dour take doesn’t give us the kick we’re expecting.

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“KILLING THEM SOFTLY”  My rating: B

97 minutes | MPAA rating: R

“Killing Them Softly” has the grimmest world view of any film since Lars Von Trier’s “Melancholia.”

The difference is that despite destroying the Earth in the last scene, the pessimistic Von Trier found tremendous beauty on this spinning rock.

“Killing Them Softly,” on the other hand, is a jaundiced wallow in greed and corruption, a gritty and deliberately ugly tale of crime and consequences that evokes grim laughter but leaves behind the bitter taste of bile.

Based on a novel by prosecutor-turned-writer George V. Higgins (whose The Friends of Eddie Coyle became a brilliant crime film in 1973), this effort from Aussie auteur Andrew Dominik is so brutal as  to be shocking even to jaded contemporary sensibilities. Yet you can’t call it exploitative or cheap.

Our hero (the word is used advisedly) is Jackie Cogan (Brad Pitt), a mob enforcer  dispatched to post-Katrina New Orleans to clean up a mess.

Three oily (literally…they seem to sweat 10W-40) criminals (Scoot McNairy, Ben Mendelsohn, Vincent Curatola) have robbed an illegal poker game run by Markie Trattman (Ray Liotta).  A few years earlier Markie arranged the robbery of his own game, a bit of outside-the-box thinking that earned begrudging admiration from his fellow lowlifes.

Of course, you can only pull off that sort of thing once, and that’s what the three mooks behind  this new crime are counting on. In the wake of yet another robbery everyone will assume Markie is going for a perfecta. The presumption of guilt will fall on him, allowing a clean getaway for the true perps.

Except that the lethally laid-back Cogan isn’t falling for that. He knows that Markie is too smart to pull the same stunt again. Problem is, everybody else is thick as a brick.  All the gamblers in town assumes Markie is the bad guy, and to keep peace in the valley Markie – even if he’s innocent – must be made an example. (more…)

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Mads Mikkelsen and Alicia Vikander

“A ROYAL AFFAIR” My rating: C+ (Now at the Tivoli and the Rio)

137 minutes | MPAA rating: R

 It’s got no shortage of plush costumes and castles, not to mention an egalitarian sensibility that resonates with modern  audiences.

But I found Nikolaj Arcel’s “A Royal Affair” (Denmark’s submission to this year’s Oscar competition for foreign language film) dry and morose and not much fun.

Historically, at least, it seems to be pretty accurate.

In the mid 1700s an English princess (Alicia Vikander) is wedded to Denmark’s King Christian VII.  It is not a happy marriage for a variety of reasons.

For one thing, England seems positively liberal compared to repressive Denmark. Upon arriving in her new home, young Queen Caroline finds that much of her personal library has been seized for espousing the heretical ideas of the Enlightenment.

But that’s just a minor blip compared to the challenges posed by her husband. King Christian (Mikkel Boe Folsgaard) is flat out nuts. He drinks and whores to excess, is indifferent to his royal duties. The best education available has left him no better prepared to rule than a besotted frat boy at some Midwestern college.

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