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Indie
Flicks & Foreign Films Beat Summertime Blues
Bartleby, The Dinner Game Offer Some Surprises
After a summer filled with explosive blockbusters, special
effects wizardry and teen comedies, one might be hesitant
to rush out to the movies and plunk down seven bucks to
witness the new Ashton Kutcher comedy My Bosss Daughter.
At least I was. So, instead of going to a theatre to watch
one of the new summer films, it was off to the video store
to rent some of the films that never made it to Boone in
the first place. If you look hard enough, youll find
a wealth of independent and foreign films out now on videothe
perfect antidote for summer movie burnout.
The Dinner Game
French director and screenwriter Francis Veber is best known
for his comedy La Cage Aux Folles which was Americanized
into the Robin Williams-Nathan Lane farce, The Bird Cage.
His latest film is once again a humorous comedy of (table)
manners, this one poking fun at a bunch of upper crust Parisians
who get together every Wednesday for an Idiots
Dinner. Each member brings as a guest the most absurd
individual they can find, but tells the poor fools they
are there to discuss their lives and hobbies for a proposed
book.
Publisher Pierre Brochant (Thierry Lhermitte) discovers
tax clerk Francois Pignion (Jacques Villeret) on a train
and upon learning of his new acquaintances obsession
with making matchstick models of great feats of engineering
invites him to the cruel dinner.
Pignion has a puppys enthusiasm and a real need to
impress his new friend and possibly get a book published
about his matchstick marvels.
Needless
to say, things backfire for Brochant and he doesnt
even come close to winning the Idiots Dinner that
week. Sometimes comedy does not translate well in foreign
films, but The Dinner Games timing and situational
complexity is perfectly conveyed in the English subtitles.
The Dinner Game is rated PG-13 for language.
Bartleby
One of Herman Melvilles novellas, Bartleby the Scrivener,
is updated for an eerie comedy starring Hollywoods
most misanthropic leading man, Crispin Glover (Willard).
Called simply Bartleby, the movie is the directorial debut
by musician Jonathan Parker and follows the boss of a public
records company (David Paymer) as his life comes unglued
when he hires a new employee named Bartleby (Glover). Engrossed
with the art of filing and staring for hours at an air vent,
Bartleby refuses to do anything else for the company, stating
simply and repetitively that he would prefer not to.
Bartleby is an engrossing yet creepy comedy that explores
the paralyzing effect a man afflicted with a mysterious
nothingness can have on the people around him. The always-terrific
Paymer plays the exasperated yet humane boss with perfection
while Glover is at his bizarro best as the eccentric file
clerk. Bartleby also features fine performances by Joe Piscopo,
Glenne Headly and Maury Chaykin. While quite possibly a
little longer than it needs to be, the movie is offbeat,
interesting and occasionally very funny.
Bartleby is rated PG-13 for some sexual content.
Out Now on Video
If you find yourself in the video store waiting for someone
to return a copy of Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers, you
might want to consider renting one of the other films that
never came to High Country big screens.
New films on video include Raising Victor Vargas, the funny
and scarily realistic portrayal of a teenage Casanova in
New York City (rated R). Or how about Levity, the Billy
Bob Thornton-goes-to-jail flick starring Kirsten Dunst (rated
R)? No? Well then, youve got to have a look at Mule
Skinner Blues. Documentary filmmaker Stephen Earnhart goes
to the people populating a Florida trailer park and lets
them make their own movie, using their own hidden talents.
This is as funny and tragic and messy as real life gets.
And Ashton Kutcher is nowhere to be seen
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