Unfortunately my last day - boo.
Julie Keeps Quiet (Bel/Swe) (review)
A companion piece to Good One, Julie Keeps Quiet explores the theme of trust and boundaries between youngsters and the adults that they trust to take care of them. Julie is promising student in a Belgian school with a passion for tennis - and is good at it too. Her long-time coach, Jeremy is suddenly suspended for unknown reasons, but rumours abound it is for inappropriate behaviour around one of the players. Julie, clearly tightly bonded to her coach, seeing him as getting her to the star player status she currently holds, finds herself deeply conflicted between her loyalty to the person she idolizes and her own experiences with him which she now begins to question. As investigations begin and testimonies are requested from all involved, Julie's inner conflict begins to affect her work and her training; just how much can and should she be not speaking up about.
Though it handles the subject matter deftly and with a sensitive hand, Julie Keeps Quiet could have been tightened up a little; we see many many shots of Julie just practicing tennis, with the investigation happening almost as a secondary thing in the background - which I suppose from Julie's point of view is both her focus in life and exactly how she wants it to be. Still, there are only so many times you can see tennis practice before you start to think it's padding the runtime a bit.
But that's my only complaint about the film; it is otherwise a contemplative examination of what can - and probably does - happen many times over, and how that can set up a young life on the back foot, hesitant to trust where adults have previously let them down. 8
The Killers (S.Kor) (imdb)
To round things off, we have an anthology film, made up of four segments by different Korean directors, around the short story by Ernest Hemingway of the same name, and the Edward Hopper painting, Nighthawks.
Metamorphosis follows a low-level gangster who does wrong by his boss, and is earmarked for execution only to get away by the skin of his teeth. Wounded from the confrontation and with his ex-team on his trail he collapses at the door of a high-class drinks bar, only to wake up shortly afterwards bolt upright awaiting his first drink. The unassuming lady behind the bar is not all she seems and things begin to get weirder as other patrons arrive.
Contractors takes the ghoulish act of contract killing and gives it an absurd comedic twist, as the initial hit costing millions is subcontracted out further and further down the food chain (with the intermediaries taking a generous cut) until the bottom-feeders - a trio of not especially bright hustlers just trying to make some money until their real jobs come around - get some vague facsimile of the details of the hit, and a few hundred yuan each for their troubles. Naturally, the wrong wrong things happen to the wrong people.
Everyone is Waiting for the Man is a dark thriller perhaps closest to the original text; a pair of cops on a stakeout are convinced that a murderer will appear at the doors of a drinkery at the dead of midnight, but it seems there are others out there after his head. Who amongst the assembled crowd is the real killer?
Diaspora City, for me the weakest of the bunch is more of a bonus film where the filmmakers threw out the rules and just decided to have a bit of a laugh. Again the theme of two assassins awaiting a man at the door of a drinking establishment is explored; but through the lens mixing film-noir and Tarantino-like artsy fight sequences, and an absurdist, almost childlike acting by the bartender and her clownish employees. This juxtaposition between the deadly and the silly creates tension as the clock hits six, but it was just too out there and so jarring compared to the others.
As a whole, The Killers is a slick and enjoyable piece of cinema and there was definitely something there for everyone from the supernatural to comedy to thriller to the abstract and absurd, and didn't require any knowledge of the source material to appreciate (in fact, from other reviews I have read, familiarity of the original text may be a disadvantage). I enjoyed it a lot although I would have moved Diaspora City to somewhere in the middle so the anthology could have ended on a higher note. 8