Change Your Image
squiztrivia
Reviews
Strange Planet (1999)
Australia's best so far for 1999
Rating - 4 stars (out of 5)
Too many reviewers have tried to compare Emma-Kate Croghan's second feature with her first, Love and Other Catastrophes. Well you'd expect that, since they are relatively the same subject matter. I'm not though, because I have not seen it. But I will most definitely see it soon, because I was very impressed with "Strange Planet".
It's not often that directors play it straight off the bat. Most try to pull off something amazing and fail miserably, others go for the 'play it dumb' method to make it accessible for everyone, as Steven (Hugo Weaving) so rightly puts it in the film. Croghan as a director oozes class; she knows what she is doing. In other hands it could have been very messy.
The tagline is perhaps the best summary of the film one could put it. Three girls, three guys, 365 days to get it together. We follow the trials and tribulations of the two separate groups, who encounter the usual mid-twenties "What am I going to do with life?" crisis, fall in and out of love, rave parties etc etc. All told with amusing results. Though the material is far from original, I never felt as if I needed to scream out "I've seen it ALL before!!!". Croghan adds in her own dose of tricks along the way to make sure it definitely sets it apart from other films, for example watch out for the ongoing discussion of a lady's handbag!
Claudia Karvan wonderfully plays Judy who begins the film with so much assurance but begins to lose herself as her world starts falling apart. Naomi Watts (Alice) is great too and easy to watch. In fact all the actors gave first class performances. There is so much to like about the film, that the ending comes as a bit of a let down. It's the ending you want for the characters, but not exactly the right ending for you. A little too sentimental and over-done and way too predictable.
Australian films have come a long way since Gallipoli, Strictly Ballroom and even the recent Shine. No longer are we compelled to just one or two great films a year. We are producing them like never before. Strange Planet sits with the best of them this year - Two Hands and Siam Sunset. With Croghan, Karvan and Watts we have many good things to look forward to.
La vie rêvée des anges (1998)
Don't know what to say, except it was the best film I've seen in over a year!!!!
It should have be nominated at the very least for an Oscar. But I suppose the NC-17 rating doesn't help it. It is an incredible depiction of the life of ordinary human beings, it's so real, so honest in every way. Elodie Bouchez and Natacha Regnier were both great, Elodie being luminous as Isa, and Natacha giving one of the saddest performances I've seen. I wish I could give it more than 5 STARS. My fourth favourite film.
Les Misérables (1998)
Les Miserables = 5 stars out of 5
I had never seen Les Miserables before, or even heard of anything to do with it before I went to see the movie. When I came out, I got this trembling feeling, you know, the excited kind, where you just smile, and say, "Well, how good was that!?" It is just a sensational story, and even after 200 years it still feels fresh. Naturally I would give this film 5 stars. All the actors were brilliant, and Claire Danes is her usual beautiful self, although at times I felt she pouted a little too much. Neeson should get an Oscar Nomination but won't because this film received pretty average reviews in the media so it's a pity. Rush, is also great, and Thurman's first scene where she explains to her employer about her daughter is a triumph. This is the best movie I saw this year, actually a tie to Good Will Hunting.
P.S. - What annoys me most is there was so much talent is this film that went to waste, because nobody went to see it.