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TIFF 2016 – Day #8

September 17, 2016 By Jonathan McNeal

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img_1615Hello Loyal TIFF Followers,

Unfortunately, MostMetro has been experiencing quite a bit of trouble with their website…and that’s why you haven’t heard from me for a couple days.  They’re working hard to iron out all the kinks, and I appreciate you coming back for more (some of you with multiple attempts).

My first film on Thursday was John Butler’s HANDSOME DEVIL.  Though a little light, there’s certainly an audience for this crowd-pleasing film about an outcast with bright red hair at a boarding school in Ireland.  The unlikely friendship he strikes up with his handsome roommate has them eventually entered in a talent night where they’ll sing and play guitar together…and it’s really charming.  However, the focus at this school is rugby, and the behaviors of the new guy don’t fit in with the agenda of his rugby coach.  DEAD POETS’ SOCIETY meets SCHOOL TIES meets SING STREET.  If it doesn’t get released sooner, you can certainly look for this film at next year’s PRIDE screening in June.  There is no trailer for this film, so you only get a still at this time.

handsomedevil_03

Next up was THE UNKOWN GIRL – a film by the Dardenne Brothers (KID WITH A BIKE, TWO DAYS ONE NIGHT).  The Dardennes are known for this social-realist style of filmmaking.  Always commenting on class as well as economic and social justice, this film still fills that role…but goes in a bit of different direction. This is the story of a doctor who doesn’t answer the buzzer at her office door.  It’s after hours, and she figures a person would buzz multiple times if it was an emergency.  The next day, she finds out that the girl who buzzed has been found dead across the street…she was a prostitute who buzzed the door in a panic – looking for help.  Driven by guilt, the doctor begins her own investigation to find the name of the unknown girl.  Without any scoring to trigger emotions, this mystery feels all the more real.  Though not embraced by critics like their previous two films, I found it very satisfying.

SOUVENIR, starring Isabelle Huppert and directed by Babo Defurne, this is the story of a woman who works in a pate factory.  She used to be a famous singer, but her star faded early  after coming in 2nd place during a televised European singing contest (ABBA took home first place that year).  The opening titles for the film are beautiful bubbles floating through water.  Bubbles, bubbles, more bubbles. It’s pretty and hypnotizing.  It’s light, it’s airy, it’s effervescent…it’s alka-seltzer.  Thus we get a joke right from the opening credits. This French gem – which becomes a December/May romance, won’t be embraced by everyone.  But I really like it!  There’s no trailer for this film, but here’s a clip.

After my three films, I met up with an old friend for dinner.  Then I met up with a few more friends (film programmers, PR folks, etc.) for cocktails.  This was by far the latest I stayed out…and I paid for it the next morning.  (But it was worth it.)

Thanks for reading,

Jonathan

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Filed Under: Community Tagged With: Dardenne, Dayton, handsome devil, isabelle huppert, The Neon, TIFF, unknown girl

About Jonathan McNeal

Jonathan McNeal, a graduate of Wright State's Motion Picture Production program, has been managing THE NEON in downtown Dayton since the Fall of 2001. Having grown up in a small town in northeast Ohio, the idea of an independent movie theater that showed hard-to-find films seemed like something that could only be found in a major metropolis. Upon moving to Dayton in the early 1990's, finding THE NEON was a was like finding a new home.
McNeal's film work includes the documentary of Dayton's beloved drag troupe - THE RUBI GIRLS. The doc premiered in San Francisco in 2003 and played across the country and as far away as Australia. The film continues to be played at night clubs and on college campuses as an educational and outreach tool.
McNeal himself has been a part of the performance troupe since 1997.


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