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The Art of Getting By

About two thirds through this film I began to recall The Graduate, the 1967 Dustin Hoffman classic, which was a key artistic moment for my generation. I believe that The Art of Getting By, a Fox Searchlight film which opens in limited release Friday, June 17, 2011, can be of equal significance for this generation and to the careers of young actor Freddie Highmore (Charlie and The Chocolate Factory, Finding Neverland, August Rush) and writer/director Gavin Wiesen.

Highmore plays George, a senior at an expensive, private high school in New York, in possession of enough angst and depression to make a roomful of beatniks look like a multi-level marketing pep-rally. His biggest problem with life is that it ends. What good is trying, if you’re just going to die eventually?

George lives out his dark world view by just getting by. As the story begins, he has managed to make it almost all the way through high school without actually doing any work. Even in art class, the one subject that interests him, he doodles instead of completing the assignments. Highmore plays what could have been a totally unsympathetic character with a charm and vulnerability that makes it impossible not to root for him. George’s self-pitying life takes an unexpected turn when he takes the blame for one of the school’s prettiest and most popular girls, Sally, when she is about to be caught smoking on the roof.

Sally, played by Emma Roberts (Scream 4, Valentine’s Day, Nancy Drew), whisks George into her life of hip parties. As they skip school together to go to galleries and museums, they become best friends. George begins to fall for the flirtatious Sally, but is clueless about how to let her know.

A second wild card comes into George’s hand when he meets a school alumnus on career day, Dustin, played by Michael Angarano (One Last Thing, The Forbidden Kingdom). Dustin is making it in the trendy New York art scene. He mentors George about careers and girls and serves as an inspirational, if often inebriated, role model.

George begins to envision himself as an artist with Sally as his muse, and then things start to go wrong. He discovers it’s hard to deal with this new reality, when your life has been based on just getting by.

The Art of Getting By is the first feature film for writer/director Gavin Wiesen. It is a remarkable film on many levels, including story, acting, and cinematography. Not only do the main characters – George, Sally and Dustin – feel real, but so do nearly all the supporting characters. Writers are told to give all their characters personality, but sometimes try to do this with an eye-patch or a Southern accent. In this case, however, with remarkably efficient use of dialog and action we meet a group of supporting characters who possess almost the same depth as the leads.

We meet George’s mom, Vivian, played by Rita Wilson (It’s Complicated), a New York business woman who struggles, unsuccessfully, to understand her son, while trying to protect him from the problems she is having with his step-father.

Sally’s mother, Charlotte, played by Elizabeth Reaser (the Twilight series), is a mirror image of George’s mom, having turned her teenage daughter into her best friend and being almost totally focused on her own future, rather than her daughter’s.

At George’s school, he is both championed and prodded by dedicated educators. His principal, played by Blair Underwood (Full Frontal, Rules Of Engagement, Gattaca), uses a carrot and stick approach to keep George moving. His art instructor, played by Broadway staple Jarlath Conroy (True Grit, Kinsey, Heaven’s Gate) sees George’s real talent and gives him an artistic challenge that leads to one of the climatic moments of the film. They both confront him about his lack of initiative and its consequences.

Underwood and Conroy take what could have been cliché “dedicated teacher” roles and bring to them to life in totally convincing ways. Another important character in the film was New York. Director Wiesen brought his own experiences growing up in New York City to the film, illustrating how New York’s melting-pot milieu trickles down to high school, providing good and bad distractions. The city’s energy permeates everything and capturing that was the job of Director of Photography Ben Kutchins.

Kutchins got the job because of his experience in the New York indie world. “When I’m not shooting, I’m wandering around the city looking for things that I haven’t seen in movies,” he said.. “Everyone knows what the Empire State Building looks like and what Times Square look like, but I’m always looking for that obscure corner that gives you a new feeling. Gavin and I shared a lot of secret locations that we had been storing away over the years.” Seinfeld fans will recognize “the restaurant”.

As the ending of the film approached, I feared that like many recent films, it would leave us hanging. I believe that G.K. Chesterson’s famous quip, “The purpose of an open mind is like that of an open mouth, which is to close it down on something solid,” also applies to film. I was not disappointed, and the ending again reminded me of The Graduate.

I believe in writing balanced reviews. I saw this film with my daughter, who was born more than a decade after The Graduate premiered, so I had a youthful perspective to add to my old-guy ranting. Both of us tried to find something wrong with this film that I could include in this review. Neither of us could. It’s close to perfect. I’m looking forward to seeing more work by writer/director Gavin Wiesen.

The Art of Getting By does a lot more than just get by, it delivers.

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City of Life and Death Movies Review

Since I am not Chinese, or of Chinese extraction, City of Life and Death has a different resonance for me. I know of the Nanking massacre (for which, it has to be said, the Japanese have yet to apologise or even properly acknowledge) from my own interest in history, as well as the John Rabe story (the Nazi who helped save thousands of Chinese civilians, until recalled to Germany since Hitler did not wish to upset his Japanese allies).

Therefore, for me, City of Life and Death retells a fearful part of history, but not one with which I have any direct connection. So while this film may resonate a certain way for Chinese viewers, be they from the mainland, Hong Kong or overseas Chinese, I can tell you that I, as a European, have seldom seen a film so powerful, gripping, dramatic and moving.

City of Life and Death is not nationalistic propaganda or a reversioning for the screen: no punches are pulled. The woman next to me was in tears. So be warned, this is not easy viewing. But by featuring on a few characters, allowing them to become fully three-dimensional human beings (not Chinese, not Asian, but human beings who live, love and feel) director Lu Chuan makes his audience feel and share their fear and terror as the Japanese invaders commit atrocity after atrocity on the fallen city’s inhabitants. Never forget, this actually happened.

If anything, Lu Chuan soft pedals on the horrors. They are depicted, but are not front and centre. This is not a horror film so gore hounds and ghouls should seek their thrills elsewhere. Rather, it is the arbitrariness with which the Japanese went about their murderous work that scares. Wrong place, wrong time: rape, torture, murder. This wasn’t the efficient, methodical murder the Nazis introduced, but rather cold brutality, as a cat toys with a helpless mouse. Unthinking, unreasoning, just because.

Filmed in black and white, City has so many images and scenes that remain fixed in you mind long after the final credits have rolled. Lu Chuan even selects the grain and grading according to the action. The use of colour would, in this case, have weakened the film.

But if City of Life and Death were just two hours of suffering it would be unworthy of an audience. So Lu Chuan gives us the central characters of Mr. Tang (John Rabe’s secretary), Miss Jiang (a schoolteacher) and Kadokawa (a sensitive Japanese soldier who witness but cannot delay the unspeakable). All of them are helplessly swept up in the maelstrom, which Lu Chuan leavens with scenes of (attempts at) normal life, normal human interaction and naked attempts at survival. These are people with whom one can identify and empathise.

Yet, at heart, City of Life and Death is extremely uplifting. The message, at the end, is positive and optimistic. In writing this review, the film is coming back to me again. What I once read, black and white on a page, has been made real for me and, yes, I’m emotionally moved by it.

If you believe in the power of film, want a break from popcorn entertainment, are looking for a film that can make you feel (as opposed to having your emotions manipulated) then please go see this one. It’s rare when I think a film should be seen, deserves to be seen, but City of Life and Death belong in that very rare category.

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Bill Cunningham New York (2010)

I had very little idea of who Bill Cunningham was other that he is a photographer, works for the New York Times and that’s about it. This documentary is a stunning insight into a man who is really an unknown. At 80 years old Cunningham stills works for the Times, he cycles around the streets of NYC taking photos of everything and anything, but his real passion is fashion. The images that get into the Times are of everyday people in NYC, who for what ever reasons, perhaps a unusual coat, or pair of shoes, stand out from the rest. As he himself says, he’s not interested in celebrities, the everyday is more beautiful.

His passion for what he does is immense and consuming, he admits he had no time to do very little else, but has no interest in the glamour side of fashion and lives incredibly humbly, prefers cheap sandwiches to fancy dinners or repairing a cheap rain mac with tape to save buying a new one ‘that will eventually tear anyway’.

He is a wonderful character with a seemingly endless joy for his work and the world around him. A career spanning decades has lead to him meeting an array of people and photography thousands more, his work fills endless filing cabinets in his tiny studio apartment above Carnegie Hall (which sadly came to an end, after the Carnegie artist director kicked out the last remaining tenants) much of which will never be published. His passion for his work shows clearly when he is awarded a medal by the French government.

Not only his acceptance speech wonderful and moving, before hand he is busy working, snapping guests, which as one woman describes, ‘You are working at your own party?!’ The film follows Cunningham as he goes on his daily journeys, as well as a trip to Paris for fashion week and we also get to see him putting his column together, remarkably he still uses old film cameras and choices to get them developed at a small shop. He has absolute perfection for his column, ensuring the photos are in the right order.

We also see a handful of Cunningham’s subjects from over the years, an array of wonderful if not eccentric New Yorkers, all individual and delightful in their own way. The excitement they have for appearing in Cunningham’s column is great to see and shows what a wonderful job he does. As he is never rude or horrid about what he sees, it’s almost a stamp of approval, Anna Wintour, editor of Vogue, even says that Cunningham foresees fashion well before desingers do and suddenly next season, an idea is everywhere.

Cunningham remains an unknown in the sense that the film reveals very little about him. Nor does it seem that those who have known him for years, know much about him. When near the end of the film he is asked if he has ever had a relationship, he laughs and says no, he never has had time. He opens up briefly about family and desire. It is a fascinating moment, one that becomes ultimately sad as Cunningham breaks down momentarily, for what reason we can only guess.

This film is a fantastic insight into one person and their passion, one that is simply told but is uplifting and often funny and if anything inspiring. It shows that some people lead the most simplistic life and yet achieve so much happiness and that is a glorious thing.

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