First of all, the most important thing was that I loved being able to stay seated after the film and hear Q&A sessions with many of the actors, directors, producers, etc. Really made the films more human.
Second of all, the films were astonishing compared with everyday blockbuster films because the themes weren't readily apparent, or easily digested. Many times during and after the film, we'd discuss who was really the 'good guy' or 'bad guy' -- a theme you can easily find in most 'normal' films simply by the color of clothes the actors wear. It was refreshing to be so engaged.
Here are a few quick reviews and scores of movies that I saw with Meagan in Park City!
Position Among the Stars
Incredible shots and camera work of Jakarta slums. In the style of cinéma vérité (cross between documentary (sans commentary) and reality TV (without the dictated drama and lines)). Shows off modernization issues within a three generation family, and then the idea of concentrating your daily efforts on "stuff" vs "people". Also touches on religion in the country with the largest Islamic population in the world. The director and cinematographer Leonard Retel Helmrich was incredible. We loved it. Hoping it gets bought!
Made by Morgan Spurlock (the guy from "SuperSize Me"), this is a very positive film about the state of product placement and advertising in films. Documentary. Hugely hilarious portions, thought provoking portions, generally enjoyable. Sold to Sony Pictures Classics 2 days before we saw it, so you'll have an opportunity to see it.
Score: 6.5/10
Circumstance
Very strong film about living in Tehran, Iran, and how families, and specifically women face challenges with corruption, sexuality, and culture. Featuring a couple of beautiful and talented girls and an amazing actor (the "brother"), good soundtrack, political relevance, and the struggle between freedom of choice and traditional, cultural "good". Betting it'll get bought! (intense themes, probably rated R or more)
Score: 8.5/10
Submarine
A hilariously, awesomely, awkwardly British film about a boy growing up in Wales, struggling with adolescence. Really enjoyed the director's (Richard Ayoade) humor before and after the show during the Q&A.
Score: 7/10
Resurrect Dead: The Mystery of the Toynbee Tiles
A gripping mystery documentary about a two decade old unsolved phenomenon in the US and South America, about tiles laid in the cement on the streets, a conspiracy, and the future of humanity. AMAZING soundtrack, done by the director (self-taught, for this movie). (Not actually about dead people).
Score: 7.5/10
Connected
Didn't care for this one too much. Idea was great, after 4 years of work that they spent on it, I thought content was sparse. Lots of conjecture in scientific realm (regarding honey bees, health effects of cell phones, and healing via miracles vs. medicine), coming from an artistic-type.
Score: 4/10
The Bengali Detective
Another cinéma vérité film showcasing the thriving profession of private detective in India. Real cases are investigated, as are the main character's dance aspirations as he tries out for a televised national talent show! Very realistic and fun!
Score: 8/10
Notable movies that others saw, in approximate order of "you really should see this movie":
My Idiot Brother
Happy Happy
The Future
The Kids Are Alright
The Ledge
Higher Ground
The Flaw
(All images are copyright of their respective film makers and whatnot, and I'm just hoping to help their viewership by providing reviews!)
After my week in Spain, I flew to Belgium to hang out with some friends - two from Florida, and one who had lived in California, but was born in Belgium. Having a tour guide is the best, thanks JB(K)C! We all arrived and beat jetlag in Antwerp.
Tintin’s rocket in the Comic museum in Brussels
Antwerp museum of Fine Art
"Blue Steel” on the Grote Markt Foosball embraced as a real bar game!
After exploring Antwerp a bit, we set off on bikes to ride the country -- we used the awesome bikepaths that are in (and between) every town, often along quaint rivers or canals. It was bliss. Here are a few photos:
Bike routes!
Who paid the ferryman?
Bikepath to Temse along Scheldt RiverAnother tasty roadside snackKasteel van Laarne
We took a long ride (90km) to Gent, along the Scheldt River, and enjoyed an awesome city concert that night (Odegand 2010). Here's a 7 minute video that captures the mood (My favorite part was at 1:08, I wish I could find more footage - it was modern electronic audio synced with projected images of clocks):
My cousin organized a fireworks display for our arrival in Ghent Ghent’s three towers by nighta retired (the original) Gulden Draak — Holden’s impressedGent looking toward St. Baafs Cathedral from the BelfryGravensteen (Castle of Counts) by night
From Gent we rode along canals to Brugge, where we played tourist for a day. Just a small, quaint, tourist town. Sadly, didn't make time for any exhibits on lace-making or anything.
Then we continued by train to Ypres, a WWI memorial town.
Ypres Lakenhallen by night =======================================================
The remainder of this post brought to you courtesy of the 21st Century Hobo, a local I visited in Belgium. Read his full blog here!
September can be one of the best months of the year to visit Belgium — the weather for some curious reason tends to be better than in August, the Belgians are back to work and still in a good mood from the summer vacation, and everything is nice and green. The perfect time for a little bicycling tour of my country of birth.
Enter three amigos from the USA, and we have a party. I had been wanting to share some of the treasures of this small country with my friends for a while. Americans often don’t see more than Brussels passing through or perhaps Bruges if they really extend their stay, but Belgium is much more than those two cities. We started off by doing a four-day bike trip from Antwerp to Ypres, covering around 200 kilometers in the process using the special bike touring routes that cover the entire country. We particularly enjoyed Ghent where we stayed with my cousin, and happened upon a city-wide music festival.
a common theme — need lots of fuel for biking
In the second phase of the beer and waffle offensive we visited the Ardennes and followed some of the footsteps made by American soldiers 55 years ago in the area around Bastogne where they bravely defeated the German counteroffensive (Battle of the Bulge) at the end of the war.
Holden’s wishing he hadden’t chosen the Rochefort 12. Backgammon gets confusing quickly after a trappist or two…
Dinant
Bastogne
trying to clean up the messy Luxembourg forests
Grand-Duchy of Luxembourg
Belgium is full of war memorials, as in both WWI and WWII fierce battles were fought here. In Ypres, we visited Flanders’ fields and the Menin gate, where every night at 2000h the last post is blown to commemorate the many fallen soldiers. The sound of the bugle combined with the names inscribed on the walls of nearly 55,000 commonwealth soldiers who died without a grave makes for sad introspections.
“In Flanders fields the poppies blow Between the crosses, row on row, That mark our place; and in the sky The larks, still bravely singing, fly Scarce heard amid the guns below.
We are the Dead. Short days ago We lived, felt dawn, saw sunset glow, Loved and were loved, and now we lie, In Flanders fields.
Take up our quarrel with the foe: To you from failing hands we throw The torch; be yours to hold it high. If ye break faith with us who die We shall not sleep, though poppies grow In Flanders fields.”
At the beginning of September, I visited a small town called Los Alcázares, on the Mar Menor, in south west Spain.
Some friends and I had rented an apartment -- which was incredibly cheap, as it wasn't the high season of August (even in the first week of September, there were hardly any tourists around, and thus, rates were very low). We ended up speaking almost no English and entirely in Spanish, which was great. The tourists that were around were mostly retired Spaniards.
There are many old windmills still around which are pretty picturesque. We also visited the healing mud baths up in Lo Pagan, on the north end of Mar Menor. Most of the other visitors were older and using the mud's healing powers on their joints, but we figured we could use a whole body medicinal boost. :-) At the extreme south west of the Mar Menor, there is the Cabo de Palo, a peninsula with a light house on the Mediteranean, which has great snorkeling. It was a truly beautiful area and we made the most of our visit. Finally, just up the beach from our apartment was a Kiteboarding area which was fantastic to relax at and watch, when there was wind! The kiteboard school / shop also had an awesome lounge area to stay out of the sun, have a drink, and enjoy tunes. It was really inviting and relaxing, here's a quick video I shot when nobody was around: