FORD Rangers

The Ford Ranger is a nameplate that has been utilized on two distinct model lines of pickup trucks sold by the Ford Motor Company.

Fire CAR

Fire Car game, Fire Car games were prepared for you in our Truck Games site. Fire Car Game in Truck Games category.

Lamborghini

Automobili Lamborghini S.p.A., commonly referred to as Lamborghini is an Italian car manufacturer.

Sedan

The Black Sedan (or the Family Sedan) is one of two automobiles that belong to the Simpson family.

Ferarri Car

Ferrari S.p.A. is an Italian sports car manufacturer based in Maranello, Italy. Founded by Enzo Ferrari in 1929.

Monday, April 30, 2012

Jackpot: Tribeca Review

Jack Pot

NEW YORK The kind of quick-witted, high-toned genre flick programs like Cinemania were made for, Magnus Martens's Jackpot is a black-comic ride once again demonstrating that sudden windfalls of cash aren't all they're cracked up to be. Though likely to attract remake-rights attention, the pic's success with such worn-out tropes would be tough to replicate, especially considering how much entertainment value comes via idiosyncratic performances from its Norwegian cast.

PHOTOS: Tribeca Film Festival 2012: THR's Red Carpet Interviews

In a twisty, flashback-reliant structure recalling The Usual Suspects, we slowly learn how Oscar (Kyrre Hellum) came to be in police custody as the sole survivor of a massacre in a strip club. The manager of a recycling company that employs ex-cons, he had the misfortune of joining a betting pool with killers, only to win a sum so large nobody would want to share it. But the double-crosses don't arrive predictably, and attempts to hide evidence of each betrayal lead to increasingly outlandish violence.

Director/screenwriter Martens handles the wild implausibilities spinning out from this premise more effectively than the makers of the current arthouse release Headhunters, also based on a story by Norwegian crime novelist Jo Nesbo. He moves things along briskly and gets a wry, skeptical performance out of Henrik Mestad (as the detective investigating the murders) that's so off-kilter we don't need Fargo allusions -- a gag with the recycling plant's plastic-shredder one-ups that film's wood-chipper scene -- to tell us how seriously, or not, to take the action.

Venue: Tribeca Film Festival, Cinemania
Production Company: Fantefilm fiksjon as
Cast: Kyrre Hellum, Mads Ousdal, Henrik Mestad, Arthur Berning, Andreas Capellen, Peter Andersson
Director-Screenwriter: Magnus Martens
Producers: Are Heidenstrm, Martin Sundland
Director of photography: Trond Hines
Production designer: Lina Nordqvist
Music: Magnus Beite
Editor: Jon Endre Mrk
Sales: TrustNordisk
No rating, 82 minutes

Jackpot: Tribeca Review

Jack Pot

NEW YORK The kind of quick-witted, high-toned genre flick programs like Cinemania were made for, Magnus Martens's Jackpot is a black-comic ride once again demonstrating that sudden windfalls of cash aren't all they're cracked up to be. Though likely to attract remake-rights attention, the pic's success with such worn-out tropes would be tough to replicate, especially considering how much entertainment value comes via idiosyncratic performances from its Norwegian cast.

PHOTOS: Tribeca Film Festival 2012: THR's Red Carpet Interviews

In a twisty, flashback-reliant structure recalling The Usual Suspects, we slowly learn how Oscar (Kyrre Hellum) came to be in police custody as the sole survivor of a massacre in a strip club. The manager of a recycling company that employs ex-cons, he had the misfortune of joining a betting pool with killers, only to win a sum so large nobody would want to share it. But the double-crosses don't arrive predictably, and attempts to hide evidence of each betrayal lead to increasingly outlandish violence.

Director/screenwriter Martens handles the wild implausibilities spinning out from this premise more effectively than the makers of the current arthouse release Headhunters, also based on a story by Norwegian crime novelist Jo Nesbo. He moves things along briskly and gets a wry, skeptical performance out of Henrik Mestad (as the detective investigating the murders) that's so off-kilter we don't need Fargo allusions -- a gag with the recycling plant's plastic-shredder one-ups that film's wood-chipper scene -- to tell us how seriously, or not, to take the action.

Venue: Tribeca Film Festival, Cinemania
Production Company: Fantefilm fiksjon as
Cast: Kyrre Hellum, Mads Ousdal, Henrik Mestad, Arthur Berning, Andreas Capellen, Peter Andersson
Director-Screenwriter: Magnus Martens
Producers: Are Heidenstrm, Martin Sundland
Director of photography: Trond Hines
Production designer: Lina Nordqvist
Music: Magnus Beite
Editor: Jon Endre Mrk
Sales: TrustNordisk
No rating, 82 minutes

Free Samples: Tribeca Review

Free Samples

NEW YORK A showcase for up-and-comer Jess Weixler, Free Samples lets the sweet-faced actress play sour, bouncing off a score of costars while her character endures heat and hangover in a desolate parking lot. Jay Gamill's feature debut may get some commercial play from supporting players Jesse Eisenberg and Jason Ritter but, with neither onscreen for long, relies entirely on Weixler's ability to win viewers over.

PHOTOS: Tribeca Film Festival 2012: THR's Red Carpet Interviews

Weixler plays Jillian, a law student who has taken a semester off from both Stanford and her fianc Danny -- intending to pursue something artistic but spending most of her time drinking and sleeping around. Awakening at her friend Nancy's house after a blackout drunk, she's coerced to repay the hospitality by filling in for Nancy at work: Spending the long day alone in a beat-up food truck, giving free ice cream to anyone wandering this forsaken neighborhood.

Most of those encounters are snarky, one-joke interactions, but a loose arc finds Jillian starting to see the need to escape her rut. Ritter and Eisenberg notwithstanding, the real highlight in the supporting cast is Tippi Hedren, playing a long-retired actress who refuses to be seen by old colleagues now that her looks have gone. (Never mind that Hedren's a beauty even in her 80s.) Hedren's poignant recollections of love and regret lend some weight to Jillian's petty grousing, setting the stage for an encounter that brings this very bad day to a head.

Venue: Tribeca Film Festival, Spotlight
Production Companies: Film Harvest, New Forum Films
Cast: Jess Weixler, Jesse Eisenberg, Jason Ritter, Halley Feiffer, Jocelin Donahue, Whitney Able, Tippi Hedren
Director: Jay Gammill
Screenwriter: Jim Beggarly
Producers: Eben Kostbar, Joseph McKelheer
Executive producers: Michael Potts, Nick Mystrom, Kevin Iwashina
Director of photography: Reed Morano
Production designer: Jeffery Givens
Music: Eric Elbogen
Costume designer: Alisha Silverstein
Editors: Franklin Peterson, Jay Gammill
Sales: Preferred Content
No rating, 80 minutes

Free Samples: Tribeca Review

Free Samples

NEW YORK A showcase for up-and-comer Jess Weixler, Free Samples lets the sweet-faced actress play sour, bouncing off a score of costars while her character endures heat and hangover in a desolate parking lot. Jay Gamill's feature debut may get some commercial play from supporting players Jesse Eisenberg and Jason Ritter but, with neither onscreen for long, relies entirely on Weixler's ability to win viewers over.

PHOTOS: Tribeca Film Festival 2012: THR's Red Carpet Interviews

Weixler plays Jillian, a law student who has taken a semester off from both Stanford and her fianc Danny -- intending to pursue something artistic but spending most of her time drinking and sleeping around. Awakening at her friend Nancy's house after a blackout drunk, she's coerced to repay the hospitality by filling in for Nancy at work: Spending the long day alone in a beat-up food truck, giving free ice cream to anyone wandering this forsaken neighborhood.

Most of those encounters are snarky, one-joke interactions, but a loose arc finds Jillian starting to see the need to escape her rut. Ritter and Eisenberg notwithstanding, the real highlight in the supporting cast is Tippi Hedren, playing a long-retired actress who refuses to be seen by old colleagues now that her looks have gone. (Never mind that Hedren's a beauty even in her 80s.) Hedren's poignant recollections of love and regret lend some weight to Jillian's petty grousing, setting the stage for an encounter that brings this very bad day to a head.

Venue: Tribeca Film Festival, Spotlight
Production Companies: Film Harvest, New Forum Films
Cast: Jess Weixler, Jesse Eisenberg, Jason Ritter, Halley Feiffer, Jocelin Donahue, Whitney Able, Tippi Hedren
Director: Jay Gammill
Screenwriter: Jim Beggarly
Producers: Eben Kostbar, Joseph McKelheer
Executive producers: Michael Potts, Nick Mystrom, Kevin Iwashina
Director of photography: Reed Morano
Production designer: Jeffery Givens
Music: Eric Elbogen
Costume designer: Alisha Silverstein
Editors: Franklin Peterson, Jay Gammill
Sales: Preferred Content
No rating, 80 minutes

Joe Papp in Five Acts: Tribeca Review

Joe Papp in Five Minutes

NEW YORK An admiring portrait of a transformative figure in the New York theater, Joe Papp in Five Acts shows how much of what this city takes for granted was pioneered by a poor, tough kid from Brooklyn who hid his immigrant roots until well into his career. Stuffed with testimonials from famous collaborators, it will have no trouble attracting and pleasing viewers on public TV.

PHOTOS: Tribeca Film Festival 2012: THR's Red Carpet Interviews

The story starts with the kind of utopian project nobody could have expected to last: After mounting free, outdoor Shakespeare plays for working-class audiences in the East Village (one production drew a New York Times rave despite being rained out after the first act), Papp built a portable stage and brought shows to outer boroughs, determined to replicate the literature-democratizing experience he'd had as a child. But it did work, and when that portable stage broke down in Central Park, an institution was born.

Filmmakers Tracie Holder and Karen Thorsen trace Papp's political tendencies from his youth, when he and friends would watch for evictions and then move families back into their apartments after sundown, through his defiance of HUAC in the '50s. It seems only natural, then (if only in retrospect) that he'd be involved with the emergence of counterculture plays like Hair, restage Hamlet with female and black actors in the lead, and foster the careers of playwrights Ntozake Shange and Larry Kramer.

PHOTOS: 12 International Films Debuting at Tribeca Film Festival 2012

Some of those playwrights pay Papp homage here, as do actors including Meryl Streep, Kevin Kline, and James Earl Jones. Roscoe Lee Browne encapsulates Papp's democratic impulse when he recalls being embraced by the impresario a mere 12 hours after deciding to become an actor.

The interviews, clearly conducted over a long time span, chronicle colorful skirmishes with establishment villains like Robert Moses and Jesse Helms. A section on Papp's more personal feuds, which led to bad blood with collaborators and a few divorces, is underplayed -- not surprising for a film that clearly idolizes its subject.

Venue: Tribeca Film Festival, Special Screening
Production Companies: The Papp Project, Thirteen's American Masters, ITVS, WNET
Directors-Producers: Tracie Holder, Karen Thorsen
Executive producers: Susan Lacy, Sally Jo Fifer
Directors of photography: Toshiaki Ozawa, Jem Cohen
Music: Don Byron
Editors: Brad Fuller, Deborah Peretz, Sam Pollard
Sales: Tracie Holder, pappproject@gmail.com
No rating, 82 minutes

Joe Papp in Five Acts: Tribeca Review

Joe Papp in Five Minutes

NEW YORK An admiring portrait of a transformative figure in the New York theater, Joe Papp in Five Acts shows how much of what this city takes for granted was pioneered by a poor, tough kid from Brooklyn who hid his immigrant roots until well into his career. Stuffed with testimonials from famous collaborators, it will have no trouble attracting and pleasing viewers on public TV.

PHOTOS: Tribeca Film Festival 2012: THR's Red Carpet Interviews

The story starts with the kind of utopian project nobody could have expected to last: After mounting free, outdoor Shakespeare plays for working-class audiences in the East Village (one production drew a New York Times rave despite being rained out after the first act), Papp built a portable stage and brought shows to outer boroughs, determined to replicate the literature-democratizing experience he'd had as a child. But it did work, and when that portable stage broke down in Central Park, an institution was born.

Filmmakers Tracie Holder and Karen Thorsen trace Papp's political tendencies from his youth, when he and friends would watch for evictions and then move families back into their apartments after sundown, through his defiance of HUAC in the '50s. It seems only natural, then (if only in retrospect) that he'd be involved with the emergence of counterculture plays like Hair, restage Hamlet with female and black actors in the lead, and foster the careers of playwrights Ntozake Shange and Larry Kramer.

PHOTOS: 12 International Films Debuting at Tribeca Film Festival 2012

Some of those playwrights pay Papp homage here, as do actors including Meryl Streep, Kevin Kline, and James Earl Jones. Roscoe Lee Browne encapsulates Papp's democratic impulse when he recalls being embraced by the impresario a mere 12 hours after deciding to become an actor.

The interviews, clearly conducted over a long time span, chronicle colorful skirmishes with establishment villains like Robert Moses and Jesse Helms. A section on Papp's more personal feuds, which led to bad blood with collaborators and a few divorces, is underplayed -- not surprising for a film that clearly idolizes its subject.

Venue: Tribeca Film Festival, Special Screening
Production Companies: The Papp Project, Thirteen's American Masters, ITVS, WNET
Directors-Producers: Tracie Holder, Karen Thorsen
Executive producers: Susan Lacy, Sally Jo Fifer
Directors of photography: Toshiaki Ozawa, Jem Cohen
Music: Don Byron
Editors: Brad Fuller, Deborah Peretz, Sam Pollard
Sales: Tracie Holder, pappproject@gmail.com
No rating, 82 minutes

The Flat: Tribeca Review

The Flat

NEW YORK An astonishing trip into buried history and the human capacity for self-delusion, The Flat follows filmmaker Arnon Goldfinger as he stumbles across a remarkable bit of history and slowly becomes a part of its thorny psychological terrain. Prospects at the arthouse are strong, assuming marketers can convey what an unusual take on the Holocaust is being offered here.

PHOTOS: 12 International Films Debuting at Tribeca Film Festival 2012

When his grandmother dies, Goldfinger is the only relative with much interest in the ancient ephemera piled up in her Tel Aviv apartment -- which, since his grandparents held on to their German identity for decades after their pre-WWII emigration, is so full of German culture it feels like "Berlin in Tel Aviv."

In the clutter he finds newspapers that appear to be Nazi propaganda, all revolving around one man's "Nazi travelogues." In them, a pro-Zionist Nazi named Leopold von Mildenstein travels the world, including a stint in Palestine; bizarrely, the articles are accompanied by a commemorative coin featuring a swastika on one side and a Star of David on the other. Shockingly, Goldfinger learns that both his grandparents accompanied Mildenstein on these trips.

Realizing that no one else in his family has any knowledge of this -- Goldfinger's mother doesn't even know, as he soon learns, that her grandmother was killed in a concentration camp -- the filmmaker travels to Berlin to meet Mildenstein's daughter Edda, who greets him warmly and reveals that his grandparents were actually close friends with the family, traveling together and becoming close again after the war ended.

From here, the film's detective work -- both in terms of historical documents and the memories of surviving family members -- should be left for viewers to discover, but suffice to say that Goldfinger is forced to decide for others what they should know about their own loved ones. The answers don't come easily, but on camera the director remains an impassive presence, courteous but surprisingly unanimated -- refusing to make himself the center of this drama, which rightly belongs to the vaporous connections between one generation and the next.

Venue: Tribeca Film Festival, World Documentary Competition
Production Company: Zero One Film
Director-Screenwriter: Arnon Goldfinger
Producers: Arnon Goldfinger, Thomas Kufus
Directors of photography: Philippe Bellaiche, Talia Galon
Music: Yoni Rechter
Editor: Tali Halter Shenkar
Sales: Ruth Diskin Films
No rating, 97 minutes

The Flat: Tribeca Review

The Flat

NEW YORK An astonishing trip into buried history and the human capacity for self-delusion, The Flat follows filmmaker Arnon Goldfinger as he stumbles across a remarkable bit of history and slowly becomes a part of its thorny psychological terrain. Prospects at the arthouse are strong, assuming marketers can convey what an unusual take on the Holocaust is being offered here.

PHOTOS: 12 International Films Debuting at Tribeca Film Festival 2012

When his grandmother dies, Goldfinger is the only relative with much interest in the ancient ephemera piled up in her Tel Aviv apartment -- which, since his grandparents held on to their German identity for decades after their pre-WWII emigration, is so full of German culture it feels like "Berlin in Tel Aviv."

In the clutter he finds newspapers that appear to be Nazi propaganda, all revolving around one man's "Nazi travelogues." In them, a pro-Zionist Nazi named Leopold von Mildenstein travels the world, including a stint in Palestine; bizarrely, the articles are accompanied by a commemorative coin featuring a swastika on one side and a Star of David on the other. Shockingly, Goldfinger learns that both his grandparents accompanied Mildenstein on these trips.

Realizing that no one else in his family has any knowledge of this -- Goldfinger's mother doesn't even know, as he soon learns, that her grandmother was killed in a concentration camp -- the filmmaker travels to Berlin to meet Mildenstein's daughter Edda, who greets him warmly and reveals that his grandparents were actually close friends with the family, traveling together and becoming close again after the war ended.

From here, the film's detective work -- both in terms of historical documents and the memories of surviving family members -- should be left for viewers to discover, but suffice to say that Goldfinger is forced to decide for others what they should know about their own loved ones. The answers don't come easily, but on camera the director remains an impassive presence, courteous but surprisingly unanimated -- refusing to make himself the center of this drama, which rightly belongs to the vaporous connections between one generation and the next.

Venue: Tribeca Film Festival, World Documentary Competition
Production Company: Zero One Film
Director-Screenwriter: Arnon Goldfinger
Producers: Arnon Goldfinger, Thomas Kufus
Directors of photography: Philippe Bellaiche, Talia Galon
Music: Yoni Rechter
Editor: Tali Halter Shenkar
Sales: Ruth Diskin Films
No rating, 97 minutes

Journey to Planet X: Tribeca Review

Journey to Planet X

NEW YORK Journey to Planet X is certainly not the first film to document the quixotic ambitions of filmmakers whose visions far exceed their skills. But it does so with a refreshing empathy for its subjects, two men motivated by sheer love of make-believe. Some of the footage presented here would have been far more novel in a pre-YouTube world, but even so, Journey is a well put-together crowd pleaser.

PHOTOS: 12 International Films Debuting at Tribeca Film Festival 2012

Florida geologist Eric Swain has been making DIY versions of Hollywood epics for years -- a short but tremendously entertaining montage shows the not-so-special effects he's used to make himself a fighter pilot, astronaut and sword-and-sorcery hero. Then he met Troy Bernier, an eager collaborator with a scientist's eye for detail. Intent on raising the production values of their output -- "I don't want to make anything that is sub-standard," he says with endearing confidence -- Bernier sets out to make Swain's next sci-fi opus festival-worthy.

Documentarians Josh Koury and Myles Kane have enough film-world experience to see that Swain and Bernier are unlikely to produce anything releasable in the forseeable future, but there's never a sense of mockery in their film: Even as we see the auteurs auditioning ridiculously untalented actors (Bowfinger comes to mind here and elsewhere) and struggling with their own mishmash of a script, the tone is one of bemused admiration.

Swain and Bernier do, after all, take some steps to produce better work. They wisely hire a comic-book artist to storyboard their project (a read-through of that storyboard, complete with sound effects, suggests what Planet X could become), they procure a refrigerated warehouse to film scenes set in the freezing depths of outer space, and they even bring a little Zenith TV to their green-screen soundstage, so they can see what they're shooting as they go.

Most viewers will conclude that, if making a career of filmmaking is their goal (as the pair's wooing of film-fest organizers seems to suggest), these guys are throwing their money away. But they're having so much fun doing it, you have to hope they don't let failure make them stop.

Venue: Tribeca Film Festival, Viewpoints
Production Company: Brooklyn Underground Films
Directors-Editors-Directors of Photography: Josh Koury, Myles Kane
Producer: Trisha Barkman
Music: Jonah Rapino
Sales: Steven Beckman, Cinetic FilmBuff
No rating, 77 minutes

Journey to Planet X: Tribeca Review

Journey to Planet X

NEW YORK Journey to Planet X is certainly not the first film to document the quixotic ambitions of filmmakers whose visions far exceed their skills. But it does so with a refreshing empathy for its subjects, two men motivated by sheer love of make-believe. Some of the footage presented here would have been far more novel in a pre-YouTube world, but even so, Journey is a well put-together crowd pleaser.

PHOTOS: 12 International Films Debuting at Tribeca Film Festival 2012

Florida geologist Eric Swain has been making DIY versions of Hollywood epics for years -- a short but tremendously entertaining montage shows the not-so-special effects he's used to make himself a fighter pilot, astronaut and sword-and-sorcery hero. Then he met Troy Bernier, an eager collaborator with a scientist's eye for detail. Intent on raising the production values of their output -- "I don't want to make anything that is sub-standard," he says with endearing confidence -- Bernier sets out to make Swain's next sci-fi opus festival-worthy.

Documentarians Josh Koury and Myles Kane have enough film-world experience to see that Swain and Bernier are unlikely to produce anything releasable in the forseeable future, but there's never a sense of mockery in their film: Even as we see the auteurs auditioning ridiculously untalented actors (Bowfinger comes to mind here and elsewhere) and struggling with their own mishmash of a script, the tone is one of bemused admiration.

Swain and Bernier do, after all, take some steps to produce better work. They wisely hire a comic-book artist to storyboard their project (a read-through of that storyboard, complete with sound effects, suggests what Planet X could become), they procure a refrigerated warehouse to film scenes set in the freezing depths of outer space, and they even bring a little Zenith TV to their green-screen soundstage, so they can see what they're shooting as they go.

Most viewers will conclude that, if making a career of filmmaking is their goal (as the pair's wooing of film-fest organizers seems to suggest), these guys are throwing their money away. But they're having so much fun doing it, you have to hope they don't let failure make them stop.

Venue: Tribeca Film Festival, Viewpoints
Production Company: Brooklyn Underground Films
Directors-Editors-Directors of Photography: Josh Koury, Myles Kane
Producer: Trisha Barkman
Music: Jonah Rapino
Sales: Steven Beckman, Cinetic FilmBuff
No rating, 77 minutes

Sunday, April 29, 2012

Wavumba: Tribeca Review

Wavumba film still

NEW YORK Steeped in legends of spirits but ultimately dominated by the most tangible fact of life, Jeroen van Velzen's Wavumba casts a quiet spell as it follows an old fisherman whose strength has left him. Persuasively atmospheric, the doc -- which earned van Velzen Tribeca's Best New Documentary Director award -- will be well liked on the fest circuit but may have trouble in the commercial arena.

The director, who lived in Kenya as a child before attending English boarding school, returns to a fishing village there and meets Masoud, a grizzled old man known in his heyday as The Commander. Though reportedly able to catch huge sharks single-handedly in his youth, Masoud now appears to eke out a living wading the shallow waters and stabbing small octopi and ugly fish out of holes in reef formations.

We follow as Masoud and his put-upon assistant Juma set out to see if the old man, who freely and often remarks on his fading strength, can still catch a shark. Van Velzen (making his feature-length debut) follows his subject in long, unhurried takes accompanied by almost solemn voiceover. Lennart Verstegen's photography is vividly moody, evoking the spirit world constantly alluded to here -- a world whose disappearance mirrors the fading of Masoud's vigor -- while also attending to physical details like the creases and scars transforming the old man's hands.

Some viewers may balk at the Dutch filmmaker's use of a local shaman and his romanticization of local myths; the movie does flirt with exotica for its own sake. But a climactic midnight sequence, in which Masoud hunts sea snakes to use as bait and clubs them violently by torchlight, is otherworldly enough to justify much of the narration's reverent mood.

Bottom Line: Kenya-set doc adds the spirit world to a poignant old-man-and-the-sea tale
Venue: Tribeca Film Festival, World Documentary Competition
Production Company: SNG Film
Director: Jeroen van Velzen
Screenwriters: Jeroen van Velzen, Sara Kee
Producer: Digna Sinke
Director of photography: Lennart Verstegen
Music: Jeroen Schmohl
Editor: Stefan Kamp
Sales: Sasha Wieser, EastWest Filmdistribution
No rating, 80 minutes

Primary Cast: Mohammed Masoud Muyongo, Juma Lonya Mwapitu

Wavumba: Tribeca Review

Wavumba film still

NEW YORK Steeped in legends of spirits but ultimately dominated by the most tangible fact of life, Jeroen van Velzen's Wavumba casts a quiet spell as it follows an old fisherman whose strength has left him. Persuasively atmospheric, the doc -- which earned van Velzen Tribeca's Best New Documentary Director award -- will be well liked on the fest circuit but may have trouble in the commercial arena.

The director, who lived in Kenya as a child before attending English boarding school, returns to a fishing village there and meets Masoud, a grizzled old man known in his heyday as The Commander. Though reportedly able to catch huge sharks single-handedly in his youth, Masoud now appears to eke out a living wading the shallow waters and stabbing small octopi and ugly fish out of holes in reef formations.

We follow as Masoud and his put-upon assistant Juma set out to see if the old man, who freely and often remarks on his fading strength, can still catch a shark. Van Velzen (making his feature-length debut) follows his subject in long, unhurried takes accompanied by almost solemn voiceover. Lennart Verstegen's photography is vividly moody, evoking the spirit world constantly alluded to here -- a world whose disappearance mirrors the fading of Masoud's vigor -- while also attending to physical details like the creases and scars transforming the old man's hands.

Some viewers may balk at the Dutch filmmaker's use of a local shaman and his romanticization of local myths; the movie does flirt with exotica for its own sake. But a climactic midnight sequence, in which Masoud hunts sea snakes to use as bait and clubs them violently by torchlight, is otherworldly enough to justify much of the narration's reverent mood.

Bottom Line: Kenya-set doc adds the spirit world to a poignant old-man-and-the-sea tale
Venue: Tribeca Film Festival, World Documentary Competition
Production Company: SNG Film
Director: Jeroen van Velzen
Screenwriters: Jeroen van Velzen, Sara Kee
Producer: Digna Sinke
Director of photography: Lennart Verstegen
Music: Jeroen Schmohl
Editor: Stefan Kamp
Sales: Sasha Wieser, EastWest Filmdistribution
No rating, 80 minutes

Primary Cast: Mohammed Masoud Muyongo, Juma Lonya Mwapitu

Whole Lotta Sole: Tribeca Review

Whole Lotta Sole

NEW YORK In both his own films and his collaborations with Jim Sheridan, screenwriter-turned-director Terry George has invariably been drawn to serious subject matter, covering the Troubles in Northern Ireland (In the Name of the Father, The Boxer), the corrosive aftermath of family tragedy (Reservation Road), and true stories of an IRA hunger striker (Some Mothers Son) or heroism in the midst of genocide (Hotel Rwanda). He takes an abrupt turn toward the light in Whole Lotta Sole. The calculatedly charming crime comedy could use a tad more vitality in its central character, played by Brendan Fraser, but nonetheless packs enough pleasing elements to ensure a respectable commercial path.

Written by George with Thomas Gallagher, who hatched the elaborately plotted original story, the movie angles for the quirky buoyancy of the Roddy Doyle Barrytown Trilogy adaptations (The Commitments, The Snapper, The Van), with the darker edges of Guy Ritchie and Martin McDonagh. And while the hostage-crisis narrative is burdened by a few too many colorful characters and a creeping case of the cutes, the plotting is sufficiently tight to pull off the combination.

A quick flash of pre-titles action in Massachusetts shows Joe Maguire (Fraser) fleeing from his wife, a screaming banshee later revealed to be the daughter of a South Boston Mafia kingpin. Fearing repercussions, Joe hides out by minding his absent cousins antiques shop in Belfast. His paranoia is fueled by Jimbo (Martin McCann), a shifty-looking youth who appears to be stalking him, and by a cryptic visit from local gangland boss Mad Dog Flynn (David OHara).

While shyly courting beautiful Ethiopian refugee Sophie (Yaya DaCosta), Joe takes a backseat for much of the story. Focus shifts to underemployed Jimbo and the inflated gambling debt he incurred after he and his wife recently had a child. He owes Mad Dog $5,000, but since the gangsters girlfriend wants a baby and he shoots blanks, he offers to take Jimbos kid and call it even. (This exchange is negotiated in a torture scene lifted directly from McDonaghs play The Lieutenant of Inishmore.)

Reasoning that seafood vendors rake it in on Fridays in Catholic towns, JImbo holds up the fish market using an ancient hair-trigger submachine gun retrieved from an IRA stash. Hes unaware that the market, which gives the film its title, serves as a front for Mad Dogs illegal operations. In his haste to get away with a meager cash haul, he grabs a bag with compromising contents for the gangster.

All that is merely a painstaking setup for the main action, an extended siege in which Jimbo, who is saddled with his baby while fleeing the crime scene, holes up in the antiques shop, with Joe, Sophie and a couple of surprise stowaways as hostages.

Hitting familiar notes of cranky, gruff and profane, Colm Meaney is the detective managing the crisis. That escalates when the Ministry of Defense (represented by Tom Hollander in an unbilled cameo) starts fretting about maintaining fragile peacetime equilibrium and sends in an SAS swat team. Meanwhile, Mad Dog and his flunkies dig up another piece of old IRA hardware, planning to blow away the evidence, and inside the store, Jimbo enlightens Joe about a possible connection in their pasts.

George who won a live-action short film Oscar this year for The Shore, produced with his daughter hasa firmer handle as a director on character-driven scenes than on the jaunty action stretches. But the botched fish market robbery amusingly recalls 1960s screen capers, and the resolution pushes the requisite buttons of emotional uplift while tidily untangling the multiple plot strands. The film is visually undistinguished, but ably employs local accents, flavorful language, specific character types and quaint storefronts to define its milieu. Droll references to the Troubles serve as a humorous reminder that memories of the conflict endure.

Frasers performance is a little sleepy but otherwise likeable enough. Meaney and OHara sparkle in roles that dont stretch their range; McCann conveys the touching vulnerability of a truly desperate and confused young man; and the lovely DaCosta brings welcome delicacy and warmth.

Leaning to the twee side,Whole Lotta Sole is not going to sway audiences expecting gangster turf to yield grit. But a packed house at the Tribeca Film Festival, where the film world-premiered, seemed tickled, suggesting that it should find a niche at the undemanding end of the specialized market.

Venue: Tribeca Film Festival

Production companies: Menlo Park and Seamus, in association with Limelight Media, Premiere Picture, Northern Ireland Screen, Archer City Film Group, Molinare, Jeff Steen Enterprises

Cast: Brendan Fraser, Colm Meaney, Martin McCann, Yaya DaCosta, David OHara, Michael Legge, Colin MacNeill

Director: Terry George

Screenwriters: Thomas Gallagher, Terry George

Producers: Simon Bosanquet, Terry George, David Gorder, Jay Russell

Executive producers: David Rogers, Jason Garrett, Barrie Osbourne, Anand Tiwari, Brendan Fraser, Mark Huffam, Robert Lewis, Jeff Steen, Michael Henry, Chris Hunt

Director of photography: Des Whelan

Production designer: David Craig

Music: Foy Vance

Costume designer: Hazel Webb-Crozier

Editor: Nick Emerson

Sales: Essential Entertainment

No rating, 89minutes

Whole Lotta Sole: Tribeca Review

Whole Lotta Sole

NEW YORK In both his own films and his collaborations with Jim Sheridan, screenwriter-turned-director Terry George has invariably been drawn to serious subject matter, covering the Troubles in Northern Ireland (In the Name of the Father, The Boxer), the corrosive aftermath of family tragedy (Reservation Road), and true stories of an IRA hunger striker (Some Mothers Son) or heroism in the midst of genocide (Hotel Rwanda). He takes an abrupt turn toward the light in Whole Lotta Sole. The calculatedly charming crime comedy could use a tad more vitality in its central character, played by Brendan Fraser, but nonetheless packs enough pleasing elements to ensure a respectable commercial path.

Written by George with Thomas Gallagher, who hatched the elaborately plotted original story, the movie angles for the quirky buoyancy of the Roddy Doyle Barrytown Trilogy adaptations (The Commitments, The Snapper, The Van), with the darker edges of Guy Ritchie and Martin McDonagh. And while the hostage-crisis narrative is burdened by a few too many colorful characters and a creeping case of the cutes, the plotting is sufficiently tight to pull off the combination.

A quick flash of pre-titles action in Massachusetts shows Joe Maguire (Fraser) fleeing from his wife, a screaming banshee later revealed to be the daughter of a South Boston Mafia kingpin. Fearing repercussions, Joe hides out by minding his absent cousins antiques shop in Belfast. His paranoia is fueled by Jimbo (Martin McCann), a shifty-looking youth who appears to be stalking him, and by a cryptic visit from local gangland boss Mad Dog Flynn (David OHara).

While shyly courting beautiful Ethiopian refugee Sophie (Yaya DaCosta), Joe takes a backseat for much of the story. Focus shifts to underemployed Jimbo and the inflated gambling debt he incurred after he and his wife recently had a child. He owes Mad Dog $5,000, but since the gangsters girlfriend wants a baby and he shoots blanks, he offers to take Jimbos kid and call it even. (This exchange is negotiated in a torture scene lifted directly from McDonaghs play The Lieutenant of Inishmore.)

Reasoning that seafood vendors rake it in on Fridays in Catholic towns, JImbo holds up the fish market using an ancient hair-trigger submachine gun retrieved from an IRA stash. Hes unaware that the market, which gives the film its title, serves as a front for Mad Dogs illegal operations. In his haste to get away with a meager cash haul, he grabs a bag with compromising contents for the gangster.

All that is merely a painstaking setup for the main action, an extended siege in which Jimbo, who is saddled with his baby while fleeing the crime scene, holes up in the antiques shop, with Joe, Sophie and a couple of surprise stowaways as hostages.

Hitting familiar notes of cranky, gruff and profane, Colm Meaney is the detective managing the crisis. That escalates when the Ministry of Defense (represented by Tom Hollander in an unbilled cameo) starts fretting about maintaining fragile peacetime equilibrium and sends in an SAS swat team. Meanwhile, Mad Dog and his flunkies dig up another piece of old IRA hardware, planning to blow away the evidence, and inside the store, Jimbo enlightens Joe about a possible connection in their pasts.

George who won a live-action short film Oscar this year for The Shore, produced with his daughter hasa firmer handle as a director on character-driven scenes than on the jaunty action stretches. But the botched fish market robbery amusingly recalls 1960s screen capers, and the resolution pushes the requisite buttons of emotional uplift while tidily untangling the multiple plot strands. The film is visually undistinguished, but ably employs local accents, flavorful language, specific character types and quaint storefronts to define its milieu. Droll references to the Troubles serve as a humorous reminder that memories of the conflict endure.

Frasers performance is a little sleepy but otherwise likeable enough. Meaney and OHara sparkle in roles that dont stretch their range; McCann conveys the touching vulnerability of a truly desperate and confused young man; and the lovely DaCosta brings welcome delicacy and warmth.

Leaning to the twee side,Whole Lotta Sole is not going to sway audiences expecting gangster turf to yield grit. But a packed house at the Tribeca Film Festival, where the film world-premiered, seemed tickled, suggesting that it should find a niche at the undemanding end of the specialized market.

Venue: Tribeca Film Festival

Production companies: Menlo Park and Seamus, in association with Limelight Media, Premiere Picture, Northern Ireland Screen, Archer City Film Group, Molinare, Jeff Steen Enterprises

Cast: Brendan Fraser, Colm Meaney, Martin McCann, Yaya DaCosta, David OHara, Michael Legge, Colin MacNeill

Director: Terry George

Screenwriters: Thomas Gallagher, Terry George

Producers: Simon Bosanquet, Terry George, David Gorder, Jay Russell

Executive producers: David Rogers, Jason Garrett, Barrie Osbourne, Anand Tiwari, Brendan Fraser, Mark Huffam, Robert Lewis, Jeff Steen, Michael Henry, Chris Hunt

Director of photography: Des Whelan

Production designer: David Craig

Music: Foy Vance

Costume designer: Hazel Webb-Crozier

Editor: Nick Emerson

Sales: Essential Entertainment

No rating, 89minutes

Saturday, April 28, 2012

The Hives Unleash 'Lex Hives' in New York: Concert Review

The Hives performing at Webster Hall - H 2012

Witnessing a concert by The Hives is to witness The Pelle Almqvist Show: the 33-year-old frontman, whose stage persona combines the peacocky swagger of Mick Jagger and the theatrics of a manic, 19th-century circus ringleader, commands -- no, demands -- full attention from his audience.

"This stage might not be big enough for my ego," he snarled during Thursday's "secret" show at New York City's Webster Hall, which reserved its 300-capacity "Studio" for the occasion.

"Feel my hand, ladies and gentleman," quoth Almqvist, offering his sweaty palm to the crowd, his Swedish accent shrill and Schwarzenegger-ish, as if amplified for comic effect. "I want to see you sweat and naked!"

The audience howled in return, soaking up the showman's antics: he is undeniably charismatic, engagingly obnoxioius, handsome-prep-gone-bad, a retro rock star. Coming on the heels of an acclaimed, buzzy performance at the Coachella Music Festival, Almquvist and his fellow hives -- including brother Nicholaus Arson (backup vocal, guitar) and bassist Dr. Matt Destruction -- collectively delivered another energetic performance to promote the cult Swedish garage-rock band's fifth studio album, Lex Hives, which drops June 4.

The group, sporting top hats and Victorian-era black-and-white suits, opened with "Come On!" -- a call to arms, get-up-and-dance track from the record, their first in five years. They also played new material including "Wait a Minute," which has an irresistibly catch refrain, and "Patrolling Days," wherein Almquist belts, "My patrolling days are over, and I've shot nobody since!" Also: "Go Right Ahead," where he repeatedly whacked himself on the head.

"Do you love our new album?!?!?" he intoned, announcing he would "dedicate it to myself because I am, but none of you is ... Pelle Almqvist!"

Meanwhile, sibling Arson, during the band's early-aughts hit "Hate to Say I Told You So," strutted out to the front of the stage, where he proceeded to make creepily intense eye contact with ecstatic concertgoers, at one point licking his lips and shooting a guitar pick out of his mouth in a fans' direction.

Hey, when it's The Pelle Almqvist Show, you gotta stand out somehow.

Jack and Diane: Tribeca Review

Jack and Diane

Imagine a teenage lesbian love story directed by David Cronenberg and youll have some sense of the weirdness of Jack and Diane. Bradley Rust Grays attempt to weave horror elements into a fairly conventional narrative yields diminishing returns in this overly stylized effort receiving its world premiere at the Tribeca Film Festival.

The title characters -- not to be confused with the subjects of John Mellencamps hit tune -- are Diane (Juno Temple), a waif-like British teen spending the summer in New York City with her no-nonsense aunt (Cara Seymour), and Jack (Riley Keough), a tomboyish local with whom she forms an instant attraction.

VIDEO: Tribeca Film Festival 2012: THR's Red Carpet Interviews

The romance encounters various roadblocks, although their respective inarticulateness is less a problem for them than for bored viewers. Rather, its that both seem to be emotionally damaged, which results in bizarre physical manifestations. Diane suffers from a series of torrential nosebleeds and has a habit of turning into a fearsome, werewolf-like monster. Both traits eventually transmute to Jack, who also suffers severe cuts to her face when shes hit by a cab while bicycle riding.

Gray throws some half-hearted comic relief into the mix, such as Dianes gagging when fed Jacks favorite snack of sushi with ketchup, and her disastrous attempt to shave her pubic area which, judging by the amount of shaving cream she uses, apparently forms most of her body.

PHOTOS: 12 International Films Debuting at Tribeca Film Festival 2012

But the animated opening credits and intertitles and bizarre creature manifestations signal that the filmmaker is going for something deeper and more phantasmagorical. While these sequences superbly created by the Quay Brothers are certainly visually arresting, theyre neither scary enough to interest horror fans nor sufficiently symbolically resonant to give the film the depth to which it obviously aspires.

The young leads fulfill their roles perfectly, with Temple effortlessly projecting adolescent anxiety and Keough displaying real charisma as her tough-talking butch lover. But their striking efforts are not enough to lift this languidly paced, pretentious effort above the level of bizarre curiosity.

Venue: Tribeca Film Festival (Magnolia Pictures)
Production: Deerjen Films, RCR Media Group
Cast: Juno Temple, Riley Keough, Cara Seymour, Kylie Minogue, Dane DeHaan, Michael Chernus
Director/screenwriter: Bradley Rust Gray
Producers: Jen Gatien, Karin Chien, So Young Kim, Bradley Rust Gray
Executive producers: Ricardo Costa Reis, Rui Costa Reis, Eliad Josephson, Leonardo Guerra Seragnoli, Riaz Tyab
Director of photography: Anne Misawa
Editors: Bradley Rust Gray, So Yong Kim
Production: Chris Trujilo
Costume design: Audrey Louise Reynolds
No rating, 110 min.

The Hives Unleash 'Lex Hives' in New York: Concert Review

The Hives performing at Webster Hall - H 2012

Witnessing a concert by The Hives is to witness The Pelle Almqvist Show: the 33-year-old frontman, whose stage persona combines the peacocky swagger of Mick Jagger and the theatrics of a manic, 19th-century circus ringleader, commands -- no, demands -- full attention from his audience.

"This stage might not be big enough for my ego," he snarled during Thursday's "secret" show at New York City's Webster Hall, which reserved its 300-capacity "Studio" for the occasion.

"Feel my hand, ladies and gentleman," quoth Almqvist, offering his sweaty palm to the crowd, his Swedish accent shrill and Schwarzenegger-ish, as if amplified for comic effect. "I want to see you sweat and naked!"

The audience howled in return, soaking up the showman's antics: he is undeniably charismatic, engagingly obnoxioius, handsome-prep-gone-bad, a retro rock star. Coming on the heels of an acclaimed, buzzy performance at the Coachella Music Festival, Almquvist and his fellow hives -- including brother Nicholaus Arson (backup vocal, guitar) and bassist Dr. Matt Destruction -- collectively delivered another energetic performance to promote the cult Swedish garage-rock band's fifth studio album, Lex Hives, which drops June 4.

The group, sporting top hats and Victorian-era black-and-white suits, opened with "Come On!" -- a call to arms, get-up-and-dance track from the record, their first in five years. They also played new material including "Wait a Minute," which has an irresistibly catch refrain, and "Patrolling Days," wherein Almquist belts, "My patrolling days are over, and I've shot nobody since!" Also: "Go Right Ahead," where he repeatedly whacked himself on the head.

"Do you love our new album?!?!?" he intoned, announcing he would "dedicate it to myself because I am, but none of you is ... Pelle Almqvist!"

Meanwhile, sibling Arson, during the band's early-aughts hit "Hate to Say I Told You So," strutted out to the front of the stage, where he proceeded to make creepily intense eye contact with ecstatic concertgoers, at one point licking his lips and shooting a guitar pick out of his mouth in a fans' direction.

Hey, when it's The Pelle Almqvist Show, you gotta stand out somehow.

While We Were Here: Tribeca Review

While We Were Here

Kate Bosworth looks even more gorgeous in black and white as evidenced by While We Were Here, an Italy-set relationship drama that makes the most of the luminous beauty of both its star and the locations of Naples and the island of Ischia off the Amalfi coast. Unfortunately, this tale of an illicit romance between an unhappily married woman and a younger man traffics in far too many genre clichs, beginning with its idyllic locale. If one were to judge solely by the movies, no one is having affairs in, say, Detroit.

PHOTOS: Tribeca Film Festival 2012: THR's Red Carpet Interviews

The film written and directed by Kat Coiro (who previously collaborated with Boswoth on Life Happens) begins with the arrival in Italy of Leonardo (Iddo Goldberg), a classical musician preparing for an important orchestral concert, and his writer wife Jane (Bosworth). Although they dutifully make love upon getting to their hotel, its quickly apparent that the relationship is suffering.

Despite his rarified profession, Leonardo is a meat-and-potatoes man (literally -- at one point disparaging Italian food in favor of steak and kidney pie) who is, gasp, unable to express his feelings. Whenever Jane attempts to bring up deep philosophical questions -- such as, for instance, why author David Foster Wallace killed himself -- he brings the conversation to a screeching halt.

PHOTOS: 12 International Films Debuting at Tribeca Film Festival 2012

Jane, depressed over a miscarriage and her subsequent inability to have children, is working on a book about her British grandmothers wartime remembrances, heard in interview recordings (voiced by Claire Bloom, who manages to steal the film without even appearing in it).

When Jane is hit on by footloose 19-year-old American Caleb (Jamie Blackley), shes initially resistant to his charms. But he quickly wins over with such impulsive gestures as reciting a poem in Italian and skipping out on their restaurant bill. Later, after a typical evening with her husband in which he foregoes going out on the town in favor of a nice cup of tea, she tracks Caleb down and informs him, I think I need to be less serious.

And so the affair begins, with sequences depicting the rapturous lovers frolicking on the beach as Jane signals her renewed lust for life by literally letting down her hair.

Its all familiar stuff, but it works to a certain extent thanks to Bosworths sensitive performance and Goldbergs nuanced turn as the cuckolded husband.

And, of course, there are the stunning locations, which should prompt viewers to immediate book vacation tickets to Italy, even if it might provoke anxiety in insecure spouses. Although shot in color, the film is presented in black and white, which both adds romanticism to the visuals and recalls the Italian neo-realist films to which this effort harkens.

Venue: Tribeca Film Festival (1821 Pictures, Dead Serious Films)
Cast: Kate Bosworth, Iddo Goldberg, Jamie Blackley, Claire Bloom
Director/screenwriter: Kat Coiro
Producer: Lauren Bratman
Executive producers: Terry Dougas, Paris Kasidokostas Latsis
Director of photography: Doug Chamberlian
Editor: Adam Catino
Music: Mateo Messina
No rating, 83 min.

While We Were Here: Tribeca Review

While We Were Here

Kate Bosworth looks even more gorgeous in black and white as evidenced by While We Were Here, an Italy-set relationship drama that makes the most of the luminous beauty of both its star and the locations of Naples and the island of Ischia off the Amalfi coast. Unfortunately, this tale of an illicit romance between an unhappily married woman and a younger man traffics in far too many genre clichs, beginning with its idyllic locale. If one were to judge solely by the movies, no one is having affairs in, say, Detroit.

PHOTOS: Tribeca Film Festival 2012: THR's Red Carpet Interviews

The film written and directed by Kat Coiro (who previously collaborated with Boswoth on Life Happens) begins with the arrival in Italy of Leonardo (Iddo Goldberg), a classical musician preparing for an important orchestral concert, and his writer wife Jane (Bosworth). Although they dutifully make love upon getting to their hotel, its quickly apparent that the relationship is suffering.

Despite his rarified profession, Leonardo is a meat-and-potatoes man (literally -- at one point disparaging Italian food in favor of steak and kidney pie) who is, gasp, unable to express his feelings. Whenever Jane attempts to bring up deep philosophical questions -- such as, for instance, why author David Foster Wallace killed himself -- he brings the conversation to a screeching halt.

PHOTOS: 12 International Films Debuting at Tribeca Film Festival 2012

Jane, depressed over a miscarriage and her subsequent inability to have children, is working on a book about her British grandmothers wartime remembrances, heard in interview recordings (voiced by Claire Bloom, who manages to steal the film without even appearing in it).

When Jane is hit on by footloose 19-year-old American Caleb (Jamie Blackley), shes initially resistant to his charms. But he quickly wins over with such impulsive gestures as reciting a poem in Italian and skipping out on their restaurant bill. Later, after a typical evening with her husband in which he foregoes going out on the town in favor of a nice cup of tea, she tracks Caleb down and informs him, I think I need to be less serious.

And so the affair begins, with sequences depicting the rapturous lovers frolicking on the beach as Jane signals her renewed lust for life by literally letting down her hair.

Its all familiar stuff, but it works to a certain extent thanks to Bosworths sensitive performance and Goldbergs nuanced turn as the cuckolded husband.

And, of course, there are the stunning locations, which should prompt viewers to immediate book vacation tickets to Italy, even if it might provoke anxiety in insecure spouses. Although shot in color, the film is presented in black and white, which both adds romanticism to the visuals and recalls the Italian neo-realist films to which this effort harkens.

Venue: Tribeca Film Festival (1821 Pictures, Dead Serious Films)
Cast: Kate Bosworth, Iddo Goldberg, Jamie Blackley, Claire Bloom
Director/screenwriter: Kat Coiro
Producer: Lauren Bratman
Executive producers: Terry Dougas, Paris Kasidokostas Latsis
Director of photography: Doug Chamberlian
Editor: Adam Catino
Music: Mateo Messina
No rating, 83 min.

Friday, April 27, 2012

Deadfall: Tribeca Review

Tribeca Deadfall Still - H 2012

NEW YORK A modern outlaw Western that brings Southern Gothic flavor to the wintry North, Deadfall is slicker and more compelling than its overdetermined script has any right to expect. Headlining Eric Bana in wryly subdued psycho mode, the sinewy genre piece builds to a bloody Thanksgiving dinner faceoff over roast goose and pumpkin pie. Magnolia might want to consider ditching the title for something less generic and positioning this as a nasty slice of holiday counter-programming.

PHOTOS: Tribeca Film Festival 2012: THR's Red Carpet Interviews

Shot by Shane Hurlbut with an atmospheric feel for the snowbound landscapes (Quebec locations stand in for Michigan's Upper Peninsula), the film is directed with a deft balance of action scenes, explosive violence and intimate character interludes by Stefan Ruzowitzy, best known for the Austrian 2008 foreign-language Oscar winner The Counterfeiters. First-time screenwriter Zach Dean elevates the story a notch above simple crime pulp by interweaving the strands of three troubled families, all with their own bruised relationships and painful histories.

The punchy opening has Addison (Bana) and his sister Liza (Olivia Wilde) speeding into an oncoming blizzard with a car full of cash from a casino heist when an accident takes out their driver and totals the vehicle. First casualty of Addisons killing spree is the state trooper who arrives at the scene. Somewhat improbably, Addison decides they should split up on foot and try to get to Canada, tossing sis a few lingering looks that suggest the borderline-incestuous ties that bind them.

Meanwhile, in Detroit, former Olympic boxer Jay (Charlie Hunnam) is fresh out of prison and already getting into trouble in a clash with his shifty trainer. Hotfooting it out of town, he heads for the farmhouse of his caring mother June (Sissy Spacek) and unforgiving retired lawman father Chet (Kris Kristofferson). Dodging cops, he picks up Liza along the way, just as weather conditions hit whiteout. (She appears about to slip into a hypothermic coma, but her makeup is flawless.) The two fugitives spend the night at a motel, where some hot sex and a little tenderness leave conflicted Liza for the first time contemplating a life away from Addison.

Also bound to turn up at June and Chets dinner table is their family friend, marginalized local deputy Hanna (Kate Mara). Her hard-ass dad, Sheriff Becker (Treat Williams), whom we assume has driven her mother away, treats Hanna as a girly liability on the force, shutting her out of the manhunt for the casino robbers.

PHOTOS: 12 International Films Debuting at Tribeca Film Festival 2012

Addisons path of crime across the snowy wilderness gets a bit preposterous, but theres an enjoyable throwback frontier-action feel in his vicious encounter with a Native American hunter, during which he loses a finger. However, its stretching plausibility to have him wander along at precisely the right time to witness an abusive drunkard maltreating his family in an isolated cabin. Dean employs this incident with eye-rolling obviousness to cue the ugly revelations from Addison and Lizas Alabama upbringing that forged their unhealthy attachment. But strained as it is, the detour does yield an exciting chase sequence on snowmobiles, with more blood spilled.

Even when the writing gets clunky or takes lazy shortcuts (how did the roads get cleared so quickly after a major blizzard?), Ruzowitzky does a solid job of keeping the parallel plot strands in play. With his dark intensity and quite convincing sinister Southern drawl, Banas nuanced performance keeps us glued, tempering remorseless Addisons menacing behavior with deadpan humor. A little more of that knowingness from the other actors might have given the material the edge its missing.

Tonally, Deadfall seems to be aiming somewhere between Sam Raimi's A Simple Plan and the brilliant Pine Barrens episode of The Sopranos, with a classic Western showdown at its climax. But the pedestrian writing holds it back.

STORY: Tribeca Film Festival 2012 Award Winners: 'War Witch,' 'Una Noche,' Win Top Prizes

Its more than a touch schematic to have June and Chet represent exactly the kind of loving family Addison and Liza never had. But Spacek and Kristofferson bring such iconic Americana screen presences that they can dignify just about anything. Wilde looks gorgeous but struggles to graft much psychological complexity onto messed-up Liza. Hunnam does buff-and-brooding capably enough, but Williams is wasted in a one-dimensional role. Better use is made of Mara, whose quiet, observant Hanna shows resourcefulness while nursing her own wounds.

Venue: Tribeca Film Festival (Magnolia Pictures)
Production companies: Mutual Film Company, 2929 Productions, StudioCanal
Cast: Eric Bana, Olivia Wilde, Charlie Hunnam, Kate Mara, Treat Williams, Kris Kristofferson, Sissy Spacek
Director: Stefan Ruzowitzky
Screenwriter: Zach Dean
Producers: Gary Levinsohn, Shelly Clippard, Ben Cosgrove, Todd Wagner
Executive producer: Mark Cuban, Josette Perrotta, Adam Kolbrenner, Winfried Hammacher, Olivier Courson, Ron Halpern
Director of photography: Shane Hurlbut
Production designer: Paul Denham Austerberry
Music: Marco Beltrami
Costume designer: Odette Gadoury
Editors: Arthur Tarnowski, Dan Zimmerman
No rating, 95minutes

Deadfall: Tribeca Review

Tribeca Deadfall Still - H 2012

NEW YORK A modern outlaw Western that brings Southern Gothic flavor to the wintry North, Deadfall is slicker and more compelling than its overdetermined script has any right to expect. Headlining Eric Bana in wryly subdued psycho mode, the sinewy genre piece builds to a bloody Thanksgiving dinner faceoff over roast goose and pumpkin pie. Magnolia might want to consider ditching the title for something less generic and positioning this as a nasty slice of holiday counter-programming.

PHOTOS: Tribeca Film Festival 2012: THR's Red Carpet Interviews

Shot by Shane Hurlbut with an atmospheric feel for the snowbound landscapes (Quebec locations stand in for Michigan's Upper Peninsula), the film is directed with a deft balance of action scenes, explosive violence and intimate character interludes by Stefan Ruzowitzy, best known for the Austrian 2008 foreign-language Oscar winner The Counterfeiters. First-time screenwriter Zach Dean elevates the story a notch above simple crime pulp by interweaving the strands of three troubled families, all with their own bruised relationships and painful histories.

The punchy opening has Addison (Bana) and his sister Liza (Olivia Wilde) speeding into an oncoming blizzard with a car full of cash from a casino heist when an accident takes out their driver and totals the vehicle. First casualty of Addisons killing spree is the state trooper who arrives at the scene. Somewhat improbably, Addison decides they should split up on foot and try to get to Canada, tossing sis a few lingering looks that suggest the borderline-incestuous ties that bind them.

Meanwhile, in Detroit, former Olympic boxer Jay (Charlie Hunnam) is fresh out of prison and already getting into trouble in a clash with his shifty trainer. Hotfooting it out of town, he heads for the farmhouse of his caring mother June (Sissy Spacek) and unforgiving retired lawman father Chet (Kris Kristofferson). Dodging cops, he picks up Liza along the way, just as weather conditions hit whiteout. (She appears about to slip into a hypothermic coma, but her makeup is flawless.) The two fugitives spend the night at a motel, where some hot sex and a little tenderness leave conflicted Liza for the first time contemplating a life away from Addison.

Also bound to turn up at June and Chets dinner table is their family friend, marginalized local deputy Hanna (Kate Mara). Her hard-ass dad, Sheriff Becker (Treat Williams), whom we assume has driven her mother away, treats Hanna as a girly liability on the force, shutting her out of the manhunt for the casino robbers.

PHOTOS: 12 International Films Debuting at Tribeca Film Festival 2012

Addisons path of crime across the snowy wilderness gets a bit preposterous, but theres an enjoyable throwback frontier-action feel in his vicious encounter with a Native American hunter, during which he loses a finger. However, its stretching plausibility to have him wander along at precisely the right time to witness an abusive drunkard maltreating his family in an isolated cabin. Dean employs this incident with eye-rolling obviousness to cue the ugly revelations from Addison and Lizas Alabama upbringing that forged their unhealthy attachment. But strained as it is, the detour does yield an exciting chase sequence on snowmobiles, with more blood spilled.

Even when the writing gets clunky or takes lazy shortcuts (how did the roads get cleared so quickly after a major blizzard?), Ruzowitzky does a solid job of keeping the parallel plot strands in play. With his dark intensity and quite convincing sinister Southern drawl, Banas nuanced performance keeps us glued, tempering remorseless Addisons menacing behavior with deadpan humor. A little more of that knowingness from the other actors might have given the material the edge its missing.

Tonally, Deadfall seems to be aiming somewhere between Sam Raimi's A Simple Plan and the brilliant Pine Barrens episode of The Sopranos, with a classic Western showdown at its climax. But the pedestrian writing holds it back.

STORY: Tribeca Film Festival 2012 Award Winners: 'War Witch,' 'Una Noche,' Win Top Prizes

Its more than a touch schematic to have June and Chet represent exactly the kind of loving family Addison and Liza never had. But Spacek and Kristofferson bring such iconic Americana screen presences that they can dignify just about anything. Wilde looks gorgeous but struggles to graft much psychological complexity onto messed-up Liza. Hunnam does buff-and-brooding capably enough, but Williams is wasted in a one-dimensional role. Better use is made of Mara, whose quiet, observant Hanna shows resourcefulness while nursing her own wounds.

Venue: Tribeca Film Festival (Magnolia Pictures)
Production companies: Mutual Film Company, 2929 Productions, StudioCanal
Cast: Eric Bana, Olivia Wilde, Charlie Hunnam, Kate Mara, Treat Williams, Kris Kristofferson, Sissy Spacek
Director: Stefan Ruzowitzky
Screenwriter: Zach Dean
Producers: Gary Levinsohn, Shelly Clippard, Ben Cosgrove, Todd Wagner
Executive producer: Mark Cuban, Josette Perrotta, Adam Kolbrenner, Winfried Hammacher, Olivier Courson, Ron Halpern
Director of photography: Shane Hurlbut
Production designer: Paul Denham Austerberry
Music: Marco Beltrami
Costume designer: Odette Gadoury
Editors: Arthur Tarnowski, Dan Zimmerman
No rating, 95minutes

The Playroom: Tribeca Review

The Playroom

A rare example of a grown-up story compellingly told from the perspective of children, The Playroom is a modest gem. This 70s-set drama depicting one tumultuous night in a suburban familys lives benefits from the admirably subtle approach by director Julia Dyer, working from a sensitive screenplay penned by her late sister Gretchen, with their brother Stephen serving as one of the producers. Unlike the dysfunctional one depicted onscreen, this family unit works together perfectly.

The title refers to the where the Cantwell children -- teenage Maggie (Olivia Harris) and younger siblings Christian (Jonathon McClendon), Janie (Alexandra Doke) and Sam (Ian Veteto) -- gather to tell each other stories by candlelight.

PHOTOS: Tribeca Film Festival 2012: THR's Red Carpet Interviews

When their parents return home one night, it soon becomes apparent that the family dynamics are frayed, with the mother Donna (Molly Parker) clearly a heavy drinker and father Martin (John Hawkes) affectionate but distracted. Still, everything seems normal enough, with Martin even conducting an impromptu spelling bee during dinner.

It isnt until the arrival of another couple (Jonathan Brooks, Lydia Mackay) for a night of cards and drinks that things begin to unravel, with Maggie catching her mother passionately kissing the family friend and the evening devolving into loud drunken arguments and a physical altercation.

These events are mostly fleetingly observed through the eyes of the children, who are otherwise preoccupying themselves with games and horseplay, including Christian accidentally falling off the roof into the pool, an event his oblivious parents fail to notice.

PHOTOS: 12 International Films Debuting at Tribeca Film Festival 2012

The film beautifully captures both the innocent bafflement of the younger children about the adults behavior and the cynical teenage perspective of Maggie, who has just lost her virginity that day.

There are a couple of too clever ironic touches. The film is set on the day of Patty Hearts capture, with Maggie obviously relating to the fugitive heiress. And when she has sex with her boyfriend in the family garage, theres a cut to a shot of one of the children threading a needle. What, no tunnel going through a train?

But these are small quibbles about an otherwise quietly moving and well-wrought drama marked by superb performances, including newcomer Harris in her screen acting debut. And its a pleasure, especially after his recent standout turns in Winters Bone and Martha Marcy May Marlene, to watch Hawkes solidly deliver the goods in a non-villainous role.

Venue: Tribeca Film Festival (Red Mountain Entertainment, Ten96 Films)
Cast: John Hawkes, Molly Parker, Olivia Harris, Jonathon McClendon, Alexandra Doke, Ian Veteto, Jonathan Brooks, Lydia Mackay, Cody Linley
Director: Julia Dyer
Screenwriter: Gretchen Dyer
Producers: Stephen Dyer, Angie Meyer
Executive producers: Don Stokes, Lawrence Mattis
Director of photography: Russell Blair
Editor: Michael Coleman
Production designer: Robert Winn
Costume designer: Jennifer Schossow
Music: Bruce Richardson
No rating, 83 min

The Playroom: Tribeca Review

The Playroom

A rare example of a grown-up story compellingly told from the perspective of children, The Playroom is a modest gem. This 70s-set drama depicting one tumultuous night in a suburban familys lives benefits from the admirably subtle approach by director Julia Dyer, working from a sensitive screenplay penned by her late sister Gretchen, with their brother Stephen serving as one of the producers. Unlike the dysfunctional one depicted onscreen, this family unit works together perfectly.

The title refers to the where the Cantwell children -- teenage Maggie (Olivia Harris) and younger siblings Christian (Jonathon McClendon), Janie (Alexandra Doke) and Sam (Ian Veteto) -- gather to tell each other stories by candlelight.

PHOTOS: Tribeca Film Festival 2012: THR's Red Carpet Interviews

When their parents return home one night, it soon becomes apparent that the family dynamics are frayed, with the mother Donna (Molly Parker) clearly a heavy drinker and father Martin (John Hawkes) affectionate but distracted. Still, everything seems normal enough, with Martin even conducting an impromptu spelling bee during dinner.

It isnt until the arrival of another couple (Jonathan Brooks, Lydia Mackay) for a night of cards and drinks that things begin to unravel, with Maggie catching her mother passionately kissing the family friend and the evening devolving into loud drunken arguments and a physical altercation.

These events are mostly fleetingly observed through the eyes of the children, who are otherwise preoccupying themselves with games and horseplay, including Christian accidentally falling off the roof into the pool, an event his oblivious parents fail to notice.

PHOTOS: 12 International Films Debuting at Tribeca Film Festival 2012

The film beautifully captures both the innocent bafflement of the younger children about the adults behavior and the cynical teenage perspective of Maggie, who has just lost her virginity that day.

There are a couple of too clever ironic touches. The film is set on the day of Patty Hearts capture, with Maggie obviously relating to the fugitive heiress. And when she has sex with her boyfriend in the family garage, theres a cut to a shot of one of the children threading a needle. What, no tunnel going through a train?

But these are small quibbles about an otherwise quietly moving and well-wrought drama marked by superb performances, including newcomer Harris in her screen acting debut. And its a pleasure, especially after his recent standout turns in Winters Bone and Martha Marcy May Marlene, to watch Hawkes solidly deliver the goods in a non-villainous role.

Venue: Tribeca Film Festival (Red Mountain Entertainment, Ten96 Films)
Cast: John Hawkes, Molly Parker, Olivia Harris, Jonathon McClendon, Alexandra Doke, Ian Veteto, Jonathan Brooks, Lydia Mackay, Cody Linley
Director: Julia Dyer
Screenwriter: Gretchen Dyer
Producers: Stephen Dyer, Angie Meyer
Executive producers: Don Stokes, Lawrence Mattis
Director of photography: Russell Blair
Editor: Michael Coleman
Production designer: Robert Winn
Costume designer: Jennifer Schossow
Music: Bruce Richardson
No rating, 83 min

Jack and Diane: Tribeca Review

Jack and Diane

Imagine a teenage lesbian love story directed by David Cronenberg and youll have some sense of the weirdness of Jack and Diane. Bradley Rust Grays attempt to weave horror elements into a fairly conventional narrative yields diminishing returns in this overly stylized effort receiving its world premiere at the Tribeca Film Festival.

The title characters -- not to be confused with the subjects of John Mellencamps hit tune -- are Diane (Juno Temple), a waif-like British teen spending the summer in New York City with her no-nonsense aunt (Cara Seymour), and Jack (Riley Keough), a tomboyish local with whom she forms an instant attraction.

VIDEO: Tribeca Film Festival 2012: THR's Red Carpet Interviews

The romance encounters various roadblocks, although their respective inarticulateness is less a problem for them than for bored viewers. Rather, its that both seem to be emotionally damaged, which results in bizarre physical manifestations. Diane suffers from a series of torrential nosebleeds and has a habit of turning into a fearsome, werewolf-like monster. Both traits eventually transmute to Jack, who also suffers severe cuts to her face when shes hit by a cab while bicycle riding.

Gray throws some half-hearted comic relief into the mix, such as Dianes gagging when fed Jacks favorite snack of sushi with ketchup, and her disastrous attempt to shave her pubic area which, judging by the amount of shaving cream she uses, apparently forms most of her body.

PHOTOS: 12 International Films Debuting at Tribeca Film Festival 2012

But the animated opening credits and intertitles and bizarre creature manifestations signal that the filmmaker is going for something deeper and more phantasmagorical. While these sequences superbly created by the Quay Brothers are certainly visually arresting, theyre neither scary enough to interest horror fans nor sufficiently symbolically resonant to give the film the depth to which it obviously aspires.

The young leads fulfill their roles perfectly, with Temple effortlessly projecting adolescent anxiety and Keough displaying real charisma as her tough-talking butch lover. But their striking efforts are not enough to lift this languidly paced, pretentious effort above the level of bizarre curiosity.

Venue: Tribeca Film Festival (Magnolia Pictures)
Production: Deerjen Films, RCR Media Group
Cast: Juno Temple, Riley Keough, Cara Seymour, Kylie Minogue, Dane DeHaan, Michael Chernus
Director/screenwriter: Bradley Rust Gray
Producers: Jen Gatien, Karin Chien, So Young Kim, Bradley Rust Gray
Executive producers: Ricardo Costa Reis, Rui Costa Reis, Eliad Josephson, Leonardo Guerra Seragnoli, Riaz Tyab
Director of photography: Anne Misawa
Editors: Bradley Rust Gray, So Yong Kim
Production: Chris Trujilo
Costume design: Audrey Louise Reynolds
No rating, 110 min.

Booker's Place: A Mississippi Story: Tribeca Review

Booker's Place

NEW YORK Building a surprisingly powerful portrait around a single, long-forgotten scrap of film, Raymond De Felitta's Booker's Place: A Mississippi Story combines present-day reporting with archival material to investigate an unsung hero of the Civil Rights era. Beautifully put together in just about every way, it will be potent stuff on the small screen but deserves its moment in theaters.

PHOTOS: 10 of Tribeca 2012's Films to Watch

De Felitta, maker of modest charmers like Two Family House and City Island, is the son of TV veteran Frank De Felitta, who made docs for NBC News in the 60s. After posting some of his father's work on YouTube in an effort to preserve it, he heard from Yvette Johnson, the granddaughter of one of Frank's subjects; together, the two explored the fascinating story of a black waiter named Booker Wright.

Wright's appearance in the 1966 report Mississippi: A Self Portrait almost didn't happen. The elder De Felitta had intended to depict only the white community of Greenwood, a town known for its hostility toward desegregation. But part of that white society revolved around a restaurant where black waiters recited a vast menu for the amusement of an all-white clientele, and Wright was among the place's most popular waiters.

He also, despite being illiterate, ran his own restaurant on the black side of town. The filmmakers met him there to film a recitation of the menu, and were surprised when Booker continued to talk once he was done -- cheerfully discussing his ways of handling the daily humiliations his job entailed. De Felitta knew this footage would be inflammatory when the program aired in Greenwood; he used it anyway.

That choice had consequences. But before revealing them, Raymond De Felitta greatly expands on his father's work, interviewing blacks and whites who survive from the time of its making (some of whom appear in the 1966 film) and, with the help of Yvette Johnson (who, poignantly, had never fully understood her grandfather's actions before discovering the film online), exploring the state of race relations in Greenwood today.

Crisp black-and-white photography underlines the doc's the-past-remains-with-us themes, and even viewers well versed in Civil Rights lore may marvel at the fresh perspectives it finds. Viewer involvement only deepens in the final third, as our assumptions about where this is all going prove wrong more than once.

Venue: Tribeca Film Festival, Spotlight
Opens: Friday, April 25 (Tribeca Film)
Production Company: Eyepatch Productions
Director: Raymond De Felitta
Producer: David Zellerford
Executive producers: Steven C. Beer, Lynn Roer
Director of photography: Joe Victorine
Music: David Cieri
Editor: George Gross
No rating, 91 minutes

What’s in a Name? (Le Prenom): Film Review

What’s in a Name? (Le Prenom) - H 2012

A bunch of forty-something buddies find their dinner date transformed into a dinner disaster in Whats in a Name? (Le Prenom), an amusing and well-acted French farce in the pure tradition of boulevard classics Le Diner de cons and Le Pere Noel est une ordure. Adapting their highly successful stage version to the screen with keen comic-timing but much less cinematic panache, Mathieu Delaporteand Alexandre de la Patelliereoffer up a lively take on love, friendship and baby-naming that should titillate Francophone audiences and upscale offshore distributors.

Released on French screens opposite Marvels The Avengers, the Pathe title placed second on opening day and should continue scoring solid numbers during the annual pre-Cannes dearth of bankable Gallic fare. Certainly, the filmmakers already a successful screenwriting duo (Renaissance, The Prodigies) have taken little risks with their hit 2010 play, bringing back four of the five cast members and sticking to their guns by more or less confining the story to a single Parisian apartment.

After a Jean-Pierre Jeunet-style prologue introduces the players via quick vignettes, archive footage and a tongue-in-cheek voiceover, we land at the home of Sorbonne professor, Pierre (Charles Berling, the only non-member of the original cast) and his schoolteacher wife, Elisabeth (Valerie Benguigui) as they scramble to get dinner ready for their guests: Elizabeths brother, the suave real estate agent, Vincent (Patrick Bruel) and long-time friend and classical trombonist, Claude (Guillaume de Tonquedec).

Although the gang seems to hang out often, this particular soiree is the occasion for Vincent to announce the name of his upcoming baby to his sister and friends. Without giving it away lets just say that it wouldnt make Elisabeths Jewish mother, Francoise (Francois Fabian), very proud the name provokes an uproar among the group, and by the time Vincents pregnant gal, Anna (Judith El Zein) shows up, everyones panties are in a bundle.

The bickering continues as a series of shocking revelations boil to the surface, and soon enough blood is spilled, couscous is thrown and someone is accused of adultery. As in many such a farce inspired by the genres godfather, Georges Feydeau, the twists and quid pro quos ultimately force the various characters to face truths about themselves and one another, and nothing is ever quite as bad as it seems.

With plenty of rehearsal time on stage, the cast delivers all the zingers and insults with ease, and singer-actor Bruel (A Secret) is especially adept as the smooth-talking but vulnerable Vincent.

Cinematographer David Ungaro(Coco Chanel & Igor Stravinsky) does his best with such a limited setting, while the theatrical staging makes one long for a live performance instead of whats essentially a slickly crafted piece of filmed theatre.

Opens: In France (April 25)
Production companies: Chapter 2, Pathe, TF1 Films Production, M6 Films, Fargo Films, Nexus Factory, UFilm
Cast: Patrick Bruel, Valerie Benguigui, Charles Berling, Judith El Zein, Guillaume de Tonquedec, Francoise Fabian
Directors: Mathieu Delaporte, Alexandre de la Patelliere
Screenwriters: Mathieu Delaporte, Alexandre de la Patelliere, based on their stage play
Producers: Dimitri Rassam, Jerome Seydoux
Director of photography: David Ungaro
Production designer: Marie Cheminal
Music: Jerome Rebotier
Costume designer: Anne Schotte
Editor: Celia Lafitedupont
International sales: Pathe International
No rating, 109 minutes

What’s in a Name? (Le Prenom): Film Review

What’s in a Name? (Le Prenom) - H 2012

A bunch of forty-something buddies find their dinner date transformed into a dinner disaster in Whats in a Name? (Le Prenom), an amusing and well-acted French farce in the pure tradition of boulevard classics Le Diner de cons and Le Pere Noel est une ordure. Adapting their highly successful stage version to the screen with keen comic-timing but much less cinematic panache, Mathieu Delaporteand Alexandre de la Patelliereoffer up a lively take on love, friendship and baby-naming that should titillate Francophone audiences and upscale offshore distributors.

Released on French screens opposite Marvels The Avengers, the Pathe title placed second on opening day and should continue scoring solid numbers during the annual pre-Cannes dearth of bankable Gallic fare. Certainly, the filmmakers already a successful screenwriting duo (Renaissance, The Prodigies) have taken little risks with their hit 2010 play, bringing back four of the five cast members and sticking to their guns by more or less confining the story to a single Parisian apartment.

After a Jean-Pierre Jeunet-style prologue introduces the players via quick vignettes, archive footage and a tongue-in-cheek voiceover, we land at the home of Sorbonne professor, Pierre (Charles Berling, the only non-member of the original cast) and his schoolteacher wife, Elisabeth (Valerie Benguigui) as they scramble to get dinner ready for their guests: Elizabeths brother, the suave real estate agent, Vincent (Patrick Bruel) and long-time friend and classical trombonist, Claude (Guillaume de Tonquedec).

Although the gang seems to hang out often, this particular soiree is the occasion for Vincent to announce the name of his upcoming baby to his sister and friends. Without giving it away lets just say that it wouldnt make Elisabeths Jewish mother, Francoise (Francois Fabian), very proud the name provokes an uproar among the group, and by the time Vincents pregnant gal, Anna (Judith El Zein) shows up, everyones panties are in a bundle.

The bickering continues as a series of shocking revelations boil to the surface, and soon enough blood is spilled, couscous is thrown and someone is accused of adultery. As in many such a farce inspired by the genres godfather, Georges Feydeau, the twists and quid pro quos ultimately force the various characters to face truths about themselves and one another, and nothing is ever quite as bad as it seems.

With plenty of rehearsal time on stage, the cast delivers all the zingers and insults with ease, and singer-actor Bruel (A Secret) is especially adept as the smooth-talking but vulnerable Vincent.

Cinematographer David Ungaro(Coco Chanel & Igor Stravinsky) does his best with such a limited setting, while the theatrical staging makes one long for a live performance instead of whats essentially a slickly crafted piece of filmed theatre.

Opens: In France (April 25)
Production companies: Chapter 2, Pathe, TF1 Films Production, M6 Films, Fargo Films, Nexus Factory, UFilm
Cast: Patrick Bruel, Valerie Benguigui, Charles Berling, Judith El Zein, Guillaume de Tonquedec, Francoise Fabian
Directors: Mathieu Delaporte, Alexandre de la Patelliere
Screenwriters: Mathieu Delaporte, Alexandre de la Patelliere, based on their stage play
Producers: Dimitri Rassam, Jerome Seydoux
Director of photography: David Ungaro
Production designer: Marie Cheminal
Music: Jerome Rebotier
Costume designer: Anne Schotte
Editor: Celia Lafitedupont
International sales: Pathe International
No rating, 109 minutes

Lola Versus: Tribeca Review

Tribeca Film Festival Lola Versus Still - H 2012

NEW YORK A breakup-breakdown comedy providing a welcome showcase for Greta Gerwig, Daryl Wein's Lola Versus marks a strong step up for Wein and his returning Breaking Upwards co-writer Zoe Lister-Jones. Convincing in its depiction of late-20s romantic anxiety (if not of that age bracket's real estate realities), it is broadly appealing without bowing too deeply to formula.

On the morning of her 29th birthday, Lola (Gerwig) wakes from one dream (she's doing yoga on a beach strewn with high heels and sex toys) to find another: Her loft-dwelling, adoring and handsome boyfriend (Joel Kinnaman) wants to marry her.

Just as plans for the big day are made and paid for, though, the fianc gets cold feet, leaving Lola to flounder through a year of anxiety eating and poor decision-making. As the movie's title suggests, Lola has a hard time figuring out who exactly is standing between her and the "real life" she imagined for herself.

Gerwig is predictably charismatic in ambivalence, and viewers will find it easy to identify with her wounded slide into the arms of best friend Henry (Hamish Linklater, nicely cast as a good guy balancing friendships with both Lola and her ex). Describing him as not a rebound but a "layup," Lola leads Henry to believe they have a chance (an illusion Wein enhances with a happy montage through the streets of New York) but is simultaneously sabotaging herself.

The movie's humor is low-key throughout, less about hijinks than the kind of throw-your-hands-up attitude that might inspire a frustrated waitress (Lola helps at her mom's restaurant) to throw whole apples in a pitcher of wine and call it sangria when diners persist in ordering Spanish drinks in an Italian restaurant. Lister-Jones, playing Alice, offers a sharp-elbowed take on the familiar best-friend role, getting more than her share of laughs by refusing to pretend Lola's the only one with a troubled love life.

The script is particularly strong in its last act, avoiding easy fixes and new romance and instead allowing its heroine to act out just enough to finally get tired of herself. Its solitude-is-okay message is hardly novel, but Wein's comfortable way of reaching that point will resonate with viewers still trying to achieve that particular brand of enlightenment.

Venue: Tribeca Film Festival, Spotlight
Opens: Friday, June 8 (Fox Searchlight)
Production Company: Groundswell Productions, Fox Searchlight
Cast: Greta Gerwig, Joel Kinnaman, Zoe Lister-Jones, Hamish Linklater, Bill Pullman, Ebon Moss-Bachrach, Jay Pharoah, Debra Winger
Director: Daryl Wein
Screenwriters-Executive producers: Zoe Lister-Jones, Daryl Wein
Producers: Michael London, Jocelyn Hayes Simpson, Janice Williams
Director of photography: Jacob Ihre
Production designer: Teresa Mastropierro
Music: Fall On Your Sword
Costume designer: Jenny Gering
Editor: Suzy Elmiger, Susan Littenberg
R, 86 minutes

See video

Francophrenia: Tribeca Review

Francophenia

Like an art-school reimagining of the standard making-of featurette, the Frankensteined Francophrenia culls through 40 hours of mundane backstage material to produce something that looks and sounds like experimental cinema but feels more like one big inside joke. It's an inside joke we're all invited to enjoy, though, and the oddball pic makes a diverting cult object to slot alongside other unusual side projects by actor/student/artist/et cetera James Franco.

After having assistants shoot footage on the set of his well-publicized General Hospital episode at L.A.'s Museum of Contemporary Art, Franco handed the material over to documentarian Ian Olds with a carte-blanche assignment to do something avant-garde-y with it. Olds sliced and diced, ran scenes of the finished show through video-FX filters, and manhandled the sync sound; after achieving the desired aesthetic, he added another layer of meta by writing a stream-of-consciousness voiceover for the "James Franco" onscreen and voicing it himself.

The loose narrative implied in this voiceover (where Olds' "Franco" is occasionally taunted by other imaginary voices) is of an actor on the verge of a crackup: "I'm all alone in this machine," he says early on, in between less heady complaints about needing to get something to eat before he shoots his next scene.

There's a whiff of psychological horror here, with Franco making repeated comments about "losing it," and wondering if Franco the actor is becoming infected by Franco the General Hospital villain. Olds doesn't try too hard to sell this narrative, undercutting it with weird humor, but he does construct things such that a willing viewer might find other sorts of psychodrama: Other members of the show's cast, standing with blank stares or doing warm-up rituals while waiting for the cameras to roll, begin to look like automatons in a world constructed by unseen, possibly malevolent forces.

One suspects that Olds and Franco will be happy with any interpretation of Francophrenia -- that the point isn't so much to elicit a particular response as to produce one more artifact standing against the notion that the actor's just another dude whose remarkable looks were a ticket to easy fame and fortune.

Or, as Olds' version of Franco puts it here, "I went to graduate school for a reason, people."

Production Company: Rabbit Bandini Productions
Director: Ian Olds, James Franco
Screenwriter: Paul Felten, Ian Olds
Producers: Vince Jolivette, Miles Levy
Director of photography: Doug Chamberlain
Music: Joe Denardo & Kevin Doria
Editor: Ian Olds
Sales: Vince Jolivette, Rabbit Bandini Productions
No rating, 68 minutes