London 2009: THE ROAD, MEN ON THE BRIDGE

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A handful of Friday highlights at the 2009 The Times-BFI London Film Festival:

Kodi Smit-McPhee, Viggo Mortensen in The Road

The Road, based on Cormac McCarthy’s Pulitzer Prize-winning novel, sounds like the perfect Thanksgiving movie:

"An unnamed man (Viggo Mortensen) and his young son (Kodi Smit-McPhee) travel alone through a post-apocalyptic landscape, ravaged by an unspecified catastrophe. Ash and soot hang in the air, it is cold enough to crack stones, and when the snow falls it is grey. The sky is dark, the cities abandoned and empty, the roads littered with corpses, the countryside deserted save for marauding gangs eating human flesh to survive."

Appropriately enough, The Road opens in the US on Nov. 25. Mortensen, I should add, is a potential Oscar contender for best actor.

The Ferrari Dino Girl by Jan Nemec

Jan Nemec’s "auto documentary" The Ferrari Dino Girl. As per the festival’s website, "in 1968, [Nemec] filmed the first footage of the Soviet invasion of Czechoslovakia to be smuggled out of the country. It subsequently appeared in television coverage throughout the world as well as in his own film Oratorio for Prague and the Hollywood adaptation of The Unbearable Lightness of Being. Here he recounts how he filmed the material and smuggled it to Austria with the help of a girl called Jana, ‘the Ferrari Dino girl.’"

Jorge Drexler in This Very Instant

This Very Instant is described as "a stylish documentary from Spanish filmmaker Manuel Huerga [that] follows Oscar-winning Uruguayan singer-composer Jorge Drexler as he undertakes a short tour in late 2007."

Drexler won an Oscar for composing the song "Al otro lado del rio" from The Motorcycle Diaries.

Fay Wray, Jack Holt in Dirigible

Dirigible, Frank Capra’s 1931 adventure melodrama, stars Ralph Graves and Jack Holt as two aviators competing to plant the US flag at the South Pole. A pre-King Kong Fay Wray (above, with Holt) is the girl between. I’ve never seen this one, but if it’s on a par with Flight, then Wray is the extra wheel that should be discarded so Holt and Graves can live happily ever after. (By the way, the extra wheel in Flight was Lila Lee, who deserved more than what she got in talking pictures.)

Print restored by Grover Crisp at Sony-Columbia "as part of a programme to revive all Capra’s forgotten oeuvre at the studio which nurtured him."

Men on the Bridge by Asli Ozge

Asli Özge’s Men on the Bridge is "a prize-winning portrait of life in the rapidly changing sprawl of today’s Istanbul, offering resonant and affecting insights in a pacy, punchy, multi-strand narrative."

According to the festival’s website, "Özge’s wonderfully fresh, insightful portrait of life in today’s Istanbul is equally relevant to London or any rapidly changing metropolis in its reflections on how economics, family, the media, sex, race, tradition and globalisation affect our lives."

Photos: Courtesy of the London Film Festival


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Text © 2004-2009 Alternative Film Guide and/or author(s). Not to be reproduced without prior written consent.

Comments

One Response to “London 2009: THE ROAD, MEN ON THE BRIDGE”

  1. Greta de Groat on October 16th, 2009

    In Dirigible, Hobart Bosworth totally steals the movie. What a grand old fellow! I found i was pretty much uninterested in everything else that went on, including Fay Wray’s part. I didn’t even remember who the stars were!

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