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THE WINNING SEASON Review, Sundance 2009

THE WINNING SEASON Review, Sundance 2009

peterdebruge
By Peter Debruge posted 10 months ago
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Critics had every reason to object when Billy Bob Thornton remade The Bad News Bears a few years back. After all, Walter Matthau had already defined the role of foul-mouthed Coach Buttermaker, a cranky alcoholic who oversees a team of misfit little leaguers, in the perfectly serviceable 1976 original. Now we get yet another variation on the formula, this time starring Sam Rockwell as the last man you’d want coaching a varsity girls basketball team, in The Winning Season.

Strange that this second film from Grace Is Gone writer-director James C. Strouse could be so different from his debut (in which John Cusack played an emasculated widower who refuses to cope with the death of his wife in Iraq), and yet so similar to an entire subcategory of the underdog sports comedy. Some would argue that the girls basketball angle sets The Winning Season apart, but what little originality the film has going for it is the element it shares with the largely unseen (and widely unloved) Grace Is Gone –– namely, its observant yet underplayed attention to a fragile father figure.

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Teen Screams: High School Horror Stories

Teen Screams: High School Horror Stories

Kevin Kelly
By Kevin Kelly posted 1 year ago
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As if the run-of-the-mill high school movie wasn’t scary enough (cough–High School Musical 3), Hollywood has been upping the ante for years by tossing unsuspecting teens into horrific situations. Audiences seem to enjoy watching vulnerable characters having the hormones scared out of them — or else they just enjoy seeing annoying teens get tortured.

Every high school teen horror flick has a stereotypical cast of characters straight out of cliche-ville: the jock/hot guy, the cheerleader/hot girl, the know-it-all nerd (male or female), the misunderstood girl, the new student, and a slew of others who normally end up as a victim for the killer/monster/plague at the heart of the movie. Maybe this is one of the reasons why the acclaimed Swedish preteen vampire film Let the Right One In (which comes out in limited release tomorrow) has been so successful at festivals: it finds ways to rework the nerd/bully/bad guy constructs that Hollywood has been regurgitating in teen movies for fifty years. After the jump, we take a look at the prototypical high school horror stories that make Right One feel so fresh.

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Finding the movie of me

Paul Moore
By Paul Moore posted 3 years ago
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Since SXSW 2005 I’ve been hearing about the Duplass brothers and this film I’ve got to see, The Puffy Chair. What I hadn’t heard until recently was the story of the Duplass brothers and their near abandonment of filmmaking.

In an interview with Erik Davis at Cinematical, Jay Duplass, director of The Puffy Chair, tells the story of the night he and his brother made a short film that became the darling of the Sundance Film Festival.

“Well, we had been making really bad movies all through our 20s and we were just depressed, sitting in our apartment, thinking we’re gonna have to quit because it was draining money and, well, we felt it just wasn’t going to happen. We’re obviously not cut out to make movies. And Mark, who is sort of like the bully and pusher in our relationship, gets up and is like, “Screw it, we’re making a movie today. We’re not leaving this apartment until we make a movie.” All we had was our parents home video camera and, uh, I came up with this idea of a guy who tries to put back the personal greeting on his answering machine. So Mark said, “That’s it!” He walked out the door–we didn’t write a script, we didn’t do anything–he came back in and tried to perform this scene. He ended up crying and falling to the ground–it was all out of our own fears of desperation and being failures–and it all happened in one take. It was the first time I was on set and felt I was capturing something unique and beautiful.”

I imagine these “bad movies” the Duplasses were making. They can be found everywhere (I’ve got a few of my own attempts sitting in a box somewhere) and the scenario around making them reminds me of the making of a high school play. The theater teacher decides to do To Kill a Mockingbird because the kids will be able to picture themselves acting out great performances like Gregory Peck and Robert Duvall. Over the months, they rehearse, bond, get artsy and have a great time. Then opening night comes and all the parents proudly watch their kids’ work. But the parents have seen Gregory Peck and Robert Duvall in the film version and the high school performance is a mimicry of a classic. The parents, luckily, are mostly entertained anyway because these are their kids and the kids are learning.

The Duplasses (along with the rest of us) are learning. We’ve all made films with wedged-in dialogue explaining unnecessary plot points, and actors trying to muster up interest in what they’re saying, offering long, contemplative looks to convey depth. They were just little films that seemed so glorious until the outside world watched them. What I love about the Duplass brothers is that, in a moment of desperation, they stopped mimicking their favorite films and found the film about themselves–the film only they could make. Maybe I’ll get there myself someday.