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To see a simple English version of reviews about some of the movies, click on the  ESL section of Midnight Oil.

Monsoon Wedding (2001)

“Monsoon Wedding (2001) gives a glimpse of  a wedding day in modern-day India that has lots to say about the institution of marriage, families and India as it is today. Director Mira Nair lovingly constructs a multi-layered picture of an extended middle class family as it goes through the Hindu ritual. The gathering of the clan and the awkward introduction of two strangers who are soon to be husband and wife present the perfect opportunity for both flamboyant display and clandestine concealment. moviescreenshots.blogspot.comMultiple revelations take place during the course of the film. Some are funny and fun and some stumble upon the great tragedies and imperfections of life as it really is. Nair’s film is enjoyable because it captures “the way things really are” today in a specific state in India. The movie reaches beyond the frivolous and the cliché because it simultaneously reveals “the way things have always been” on a universal level. Who’s to say that the torrential downpour of a monsoon would not be the perfect ending of a grand celebration of a very imperfect life? It’s a different way of looking at things. It might just be a very lucky thing.

Be sure that you don’t miss the SNAM Interview dedicated to examining the intricacies of “Monsoon Wedding”.

Also shown on Saturday Night at the Movies was Father of the Bride” (1950) , another movie along the wedding theme previously reviewed on Midnight Oil.

 >>More to see: Looking for more out of life?

>>Real Life Story: Shawna went from the fairytale wedding to disappointment in her marriage to real happiness.

 See the official trailer for “Monsoon Wedding” (2001). I decided some words of explanation (in English) were necessary to tell the story even though this video clip does an great job of capturing the visual story of the film through colour, texture, song and dance.

 

Dear Frankie (2004)

“Dear Frankie” (2004) IMDb is a real gem starring Jack McElhone as a young deaf boy and Emily Mortimer as his mom. Gerard Butler is the stranger who is brought into the picture in order to play the role of Frankie’s “dad” for a day. Things have a way of getting kind of complicated when the adults involved find they have to bend over backwards in order to maintain the charade for Frankie’s benefit. It’s a lovely tale told with much care and compassion for the plight of the single mom who tries to do her best with a very difficult dilemma.

TVO producer, Thom Ernst talks on his blog. about how this unusual and charming film came to be screened on SNAM.

See the TVO interview related to "Dear Frankie", in which the issue of telling lies in order to protect children is examined.

Also screened on on the same evening was another film reviewed on Midnight Oil, "East of Eden" (1955).

>>Real Life Story: Shannon deals with her fatherless childhood and leaves an abusive relationship.

>>More to see: Looking for more out of life?

See the video trailer for "Dear Frankie" (2004).

 

Posted on Sunday, August 23, 2009 at 08:00AM by Registered CommenterCatherine Savard | CommentsPost a Comment

The Snake Pit (1948)

The%20Snake%20Pit%20De%20Havilland%20Stevens.jpgThe Snake Pit” (1948) IMDb has Olivia de Havilland play the part of Virginia Cunningham, a young woman who finds herself locked up in a mental asylum. The film, taken from a novel by Mary Jane Ward and directed by Anotole Litvak, combines the point of view of the disoriented and harassed patient, Virginia, with external elements that keep the film firmly grounded in reality. In spite of the efforts of her loving husband (Mark Stevens) and Dr. Mark Kik (Leo Genn) to reach her, The%20Snake%20Pit%20de%20Havilland.jpgthe harrowing experiences of the mental patient continue for a full two hours. “The Snake Pit” is an unusually honest film about mental illness for 1948 even if it does enter the realms of the melodramatic and over the top psycho-analysis at times.

Also reviewed on this blog was another film about mental illness shown on SNAM, "Shine" (1996).

>>More to see: Looking for more out of life?

Catch the TVO video trailer for "The Snake Pit" (1948)

See a segment of "The Snake Pit" (1948) with Olivia de Havilland.


Posted on Sunday, August 16, 2009 at 12:23PM by Registered CommenterCatherine Savard | CommentsPost a Comment

Clean and Sober (1988)

“Clean and Sober” (1988) with Michael Keaton, Kathy Baker and Morgan Freeman makes for a hard-hitting onscreen drama about addiction that has seldom been surpassed. Keaton’s performance as the self-absorbed Daryl Poynter, real estate agent, coke addict and all around jerk, is simply excellent. The façade of the high roller slowly unravels. The action of the film takes place over the course of one calendar month in the life of the addict. Instead of being the guy pulling the strings behind the scenes, Daryl Poynter comes to see that he is not in control. His life is one big, tangled mess. It’s a hard pill to swallow.

Through the unintended help of people like his rehab counselor (Morgan Freeman), his A.A. sponsor (M. Emmet Walsh ) and others, Daryl Poynter gets a major dose of reality therapy just in time. We see him actually undergo a step of evolution and graduate from the level of “pond scum” (the scene where he cons his old mother on the phone) to semi-human status (the scene where he tries to help his fellow addict, Charlie, make the phone call to exit her abusive relationship). It’s not easy. It’s not meant to be an easy film. Keaton’s masterful closing scene at the A.A. meeting is painful to watch – a man so uneasy in his own skin that you think he might just crawl out of it. In the end, the film helps one to understand that the uneasiness of it all is necessary if there is to be a hope in hell of recovery.

Also reviewed on this blog is another feature screened on TVO's Saturday Night at the Movies "Days of Wine and Roses" (1962) with Jack Lemmon and Lee Remick.

>>More to see: Looking for more out of life?

>> Real life story, Brian Welch: finding a way out of addiction.

See the video trailer for "Clean and Sober" (1988).

The Bicycle Thief (1948)

The Bicycle Thief” (1948), is a small masterpiece on celluloid that captures the human drama of a family man struggling to maintain his livelihood and his dignity by recovering a stolen bicycle in post-war Rome. This Italian language film by Vittorio de Sica maintained my interest even with the English subtitles. Taking in a film through translation may be akin to listening to a symphony orchestra through a tin can telephone. One is sure to miss something in the translation. However, the acting on the part of the father and son duo (played by Lamberto Maggiorani and Enzo Staiolo respectively) is so convincing both through dialogue and the non-verbal, that one can forgive the ongoing necessity of the subtitles. Following the everyman character about the streets of Rome in his desperate search for his bicycle gives us the full range of an emotional workout and a depth of sociological analysis that the “official bus tour” of the famous Eternal City would never afford.

>>More to see: Looking for more out of life?

See a trailer for "The Bicycle Thief" (1948)