Coincoin and the Extra-Humans (Bruno Dumont, 2018): Director Bruno Dumont brought back pretty much the entire cast of 2014's Li'l Quinquin for this made-for-television sequel. Although only four years passed between productions, the kids from the first one all look unrecognizably older here. Coincoin (nee Quinquin) (Alane Delhaye) has given up the worst of his childish antics in favor of a job on a local farm along with his longtime friend Eve (Lucy Caron) and her lesbian girlfriend Jenny (Alexia Depret). The bumbling Captain Van der Weyden (Bernard Pruvost) is back with his constant facial tics and strange inflections too, as he and Carpentier (Philippe Jore) investigate a strange black oil that falls from the sky, and usually on someone's head. Soon duplicates of the town's residents begin popping out of their host's anuses, and wacky hijinks ensue. Playing like one of The X-Files comedy episodes, the gang eventually realize that they're battling an alien invasion with the potential to wipe out the human race. Every episode is full of highly repetitive absurd humor that
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Goodbye to Language (Jean-Luc Godard, 2014): Aside from a number of shorts, Parisian provocateur Jean-Luc Godard released three features in the last decade. After catching up with 2014's Goodbye to Language, I've now seen them all, and like the other two, find them to defy description. As best as I can discern, the film tells the story of a dog as it wanders in and out of the countryside. There's also a couple of humans here. Played by Héloïse Godet and Kamel Abdelli, the two spend almost the entirety of their screen time naked. They also discussion how the fact that everyone shits makes us equals. Other things happen, but I'm not going to pretend to comprehend them. Defying any classic approach to film criticism, the movie exists as a kind of abstract artifact to Godard's embrace of his reputation as cinema's enfant terrible. Many of the reviews I've read praise the film's use of 3D technology. Sadly, the stream I watched it on was very much two dimensional. I'd love to catch it the way that it was meant to be seen, but I doubt it'd aid my comprehension of it.
Monrovia, Indiana (Frederick Wiseman, 2018): The press surrounding this film states that it was made in an attempt to understand Donald Trump's 2016 win. I've lived in Illinois for the vast majority of my life, and have spent a lot of time with relatives in rural Indiana. I currently reside a short distance from the titular city, and its world of pancake breakfast fundraisers and public prayers is about as familiar as my own backyard. While the Midwest's small-town conservatism may have befuddled those unfamiliar with the terrain, there's much that they can learn from the film. As the camera pans from rustic houses to dilapidated store fronts, Wiseman captures the community's commitment to traditionalist Protestantism and communitarian politics. Whether its tracing the city's meat from farm to slaughter house to grocery store, or showing a city council meeting that blurs the line between church and state, everything here recalls the summers I spent along the Kentucky border.
Rat Film (Theo Anthony, 2016): Opening with a creation myth about a rat releasing the universe by nibbling into an egg, Theo Anthony's penetrative documentary is one of the most insightful looks at modern urban racial dynamics ever made. Ostensibly about the city of Baltimore's war against the titular pest, the film does spend a large amount of its time recounting the history of rat poison, following around city employed exterminators, and showcasing residents that seem far too gleeful in killing them. Some time is even spent on those that keep rats as pets. However, the main thrust of the piece revolves around the redlining that maintains racial and economic boundaries to this day. Perhaps the most powerful moment in the film comes when Maureen Jones narration explains the overlay of maps showcasing the parallel between rat infestation in Baltimore, decreased life expectancy, and other injustices that the city's poor live with. The film should be essential viewing for anyone working on economic and racial history.
See You Next Tuesday (Drew Tobia, 2013): Featuring a cast composed of mostly indy unknowns, writer/director Drew Tobia's first foray into feature filmmaking tries to find the humor in miserable people living miserable lives. The film's main protagonist, the emotionally stunted and socially awkward Mona (Eleanore Pienta), lacks not only a plan for what to do after her late third-term pregnancy ends, but also basic hygiene (at least year-old used tampons are found on her bedroom floor when she moves out of her apartment). After an attempt to move in with her recovering alcoholic mother (Dana Eskelson) ends in public histrionics, Mona attempts to insert herself into the living space of her sister Jordan (Molly Plunk). Jordan, an equally incompetent and unemployed loser, engages in drunken hipster racism and leeches off of her more successful girlfriend Sylve (Keisha Zollar). Sylve is the only remotely competent or likable character in the entire film, but it fits in well with the loser NYC zeitgeist that pop culture endlessly recycled in the early 2010s. The film does an excellent job at making us cringe at Mona's personality disorder driven antics, but has little else to say beyond "look at how fucked up these people are".
Synchronic (Justin Benson and Aaron Moorhead, 2019): With the modest success of The Endless bringing some attention to the filmmaking duo of Justin Benson and Aaron Moorhead, the two finally get a chance to make a movie with a known star on a modest budget. Steve (Anthony Mackie), who has an inoperable tumor on his pituitary gland, spends his nights responding to emergency calls with fellow paramedic Dennis (Jamie Dornan). Their normal routine is soon interrupted, however, by a series of strange calls: a junkie with a sword wound clutching a gold doubloon in his hand; a woman on the second story of a hotel bitten by a snake that was driven out of their home base of New Orleans a century ago. In each of their stops they find a synthetic drug called Synchronic. After experimenting with the drug, Dennis's teenage daughter Brianna (Ally Ioannides) disappears, sending Steve on a quest to figure out what happens. The film has a fairly inventive take on time travel that makes for some interesting cinematics. Watching Steve experiment with the drug and deduce the rules of its seven-minute effects is compelling, but
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The Untamed (Amat Escalante, 2016): Amat Escalante's erotic sci-fi/horror mashup begins with Verónica (Simone Bucio) moaning in ecstasy as a tentacle from an unseen creature penetrates her vagina. The weirdness ends there, and doesn't pick back up until we're about 2/3 of the way through the film. Instead, we're treated to a rather traditional melodrama about a failed marriage and repressed homosexuality. Alejandra (Ruth Ramos) lives with her machismo driven husband Ángel (Jesús Meza) and her openly bisexual nurse brother Fabián (Eden Villavicencio). Unbeknownst to her, Ángel and Fabián have sex with one another when the rest of the family is not around. However, when Verónica falls for Fabián, Ángel's jealousy becomes unbearable. Eventually their fates collide with the alien being that exists in a remote forest cabin, bringing release to some and death the others. Dedicated to director Andrzej Zulawski, the film bears an undeniable debt to his Possession. Like that film, once the weirdness begins, it transforms into a dreamy horror film that defies logic. It's an interesting journey, but I felt kind of lost during the final third of the film.