54th Berlinale: Made in the USA
Jesse (Ethan Hawke) and Celine (Julie Delpy) met in Vienna and spent fourteen hours roaming the streets, getting to know each other. They promised to meet again in six months. This unforgettable night together takes place in the film Before Sunrise, which won director Richard Linklater the Silver Bear at the Berlinale in 1995. Linklater, with the same actors, continues their story in Berlinale competition entry Before Sunset, when the two meet again, but not as planned. Now it is almost ten years later, and the city is Paris. Jesse is a writer on tour promoting his latest novel, which happens to have a lot in common with that night in Vienna. As he talks about his book in a quaint Paris shop, he realizes Celine is actually there. Jesse has less than two hours before he must be at the airport for his flight back to the U.S. He and Celine decide to have a coffee at a nearby café, leaving instructions for the limo to pick him up later.
Before Sunset stands on its own as a charming film that is beautiful in its simplicity. Hawke and Delpy are absolutely wonderful. They flawlessly keep the momentum going so that the end of the film, like many a return flight, comes too soon, leaving everyone breathless with possibilities.
As a fictional work based on a true story, Jenkins appears to be trying to dispel the “monster” image that Wuornos held in the press by detailing the circumstances under which Wuornos kills. The story begins with Wuornos (Charlize Theron), who walks and talks like a man, arriving in a bar soaking wet. While getting drunk on beer, she is approached by a young girl, Selby Wall (Christina Ricci), who offers to buy her drinks. Wall refuses the brush off and over a few pitchers of beer, they bond. And right at the start, the film takes an unusual turn away from a film about a monster serial killer, instead becoming a love story between Aileen and her “baby” Selby. Selby was sent by her parents in Ohio to live with her aunt in Florida so that she could get over her homosexuality like a good Christian should. When Selby brings Aileen home to spend the night, her aunt warns her not to bring that kind of woman around. But Selby and Aileen have already agreed to meet again. They go roller skating. Outside the arena, kids giggle as they pass the lesbian couple getting dirty just outside. Too soon Selby must return to her family in Ohio, so Aileen promises to give her the night of her life before she leaves.Partying hard requires cash, and Ai-leen sets out on the streets determined to get some. Quickly picked up, she is ready to get down to business, but the john turns out to want more than just sex, and in a brutal battle for her life, Aileen shoots him dead. Back from her first kill, Aileen apologizes to Selby for missing their date, promising to make everything up to her if only given a chance. Selby agrees, packs up and runs away with Aileen, not realizing that the car belongs to a dead man. Aileen believes she has found true happiness and tells Selby that she is giving up streetwalking and is going to find real work. Selby seems a bit skeptical, apparently more worried about money than Aileen’s sex with strange men. Unfortunately, no one is willing to give a decent job to a woman with no job history and no apparent job skills. As Selby goes hungry and starts hanging out with other gals, Aileen goes back to the oldest profession. In a panic, however, Aileen kills again. Is Aileen actually a real monster? Is she just a screwed up victim of circumstance that causes her to kill again and again? Eventually Selby realizes what is really going on, and Aileen is inevitably captured by the police. Theron is explosive as Wuornos. Ricci is convincingly part little girl, part lesbian lover. Together they tell a very disturbing tale of love and death. Meet the Press: Since this was the first feature film for Patty Jenkins, I was curious why she chose the true life story of a serial killer as her subject and why she wanted to present it in such a dramatic way. Jenkins explained that she was intrigued by the way in which people like ourselves can end up in circumstances we could never dream about. And she realized there was an overwhelming interest in the stories of serial killers. Once she learned about Wuornos, the first female serial killer, she became “sucked in” and was overtaken by how devastating the story was. Then while working on the screenplay, unable to sleep one night, she happened to catch a rerun of Devil’s Advocate starring Charlize Theron, and she thought to herself, “She could do it!” From that moment Jenkins wanted Theron to play the part of Wuornos.
“Cut” in competition film The Final Cut refers to film jargon. In this science fiction film, mini chip cameras called Zoë implants are put into babies’ brains. The camera films their lives, and upon their death, there are mountains of film material to be sorted and spliced and shown at the funeral. Professionals who do this job are more important than morticians. They must be morally impeccable and skilled at working with the families of the deceased, choosing only complimentary segments. These films, called rememories, are wiped clean of trysts with mistresses, incestuous acts, or criminal business deals. Too bad the deceased can’t see his own rememory. Alan Hackman (Robin Williams) is the best in the profession. One day he sees a person he thought long dead in a client’s film. He learns that he, too, has a chip. Although this is the end of his cutter career (as cutters cannot have chips), it opens new avenues to his girlfriend Delila (Mira Sorvino), who long ago was repulsed by his hypocrisy.
Robin Williams’ stand-up comedy during the press conference was hilarious, even if it did upstage the director. Among his comments: “President Bush is rewriting the U.S. Constitution on an Etch A Sketch;” “people who have been treated with Botox feel great – they just can’t show it;” and “method acting is when the actor is wearing brown corduroy pants and relieves himself in them – he feels immensely better but the audience doesn’t know the difference.” (BT)
The Machinist kept me on the edge of my seat for about the first hour, but then I grew tired of its many twists and turns. Perhaps that was partially due to the fact that it was my 40th and last film of the festival, but I also think that the plot just got too convoluted. Bale does a great job in the role, especially given that he was completely emaciated, having lost 62 pounds for it (in fact, one reporter asked at the press conference if the filmmakers were ever worried about Bale’s health; they said they had kept a watch on him). The cinematography and washed-out look of the production design are also effective, making the audience feel like Trevor feels. But overall, I felt that The Machinist just ran out of steam. (KG) For reviews of additional Made in the USA films shown at the Berlinale (such as Cold Mountain, The Missing, and Something’s Gotta Give), click here.
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