ISLE OF DOGS: 4 ½ STARS
Ever wondered what would happen if stop motion master Ray Harryhausen and Japanese auteur Akira Kurosawa went to see âBenjiâ and then decided to make a movie? With the release of âIsle of Dogsâ Wes Anderson, director of live action wonders like âRushmoreâ and âMoonrise Kingdomâ and the stop motion hit âFantastic Mr. Fox,â offers up an idea of what that might have been like.
Once again working in stop motion, Anderson creates a fictional world, the Japanese city of Megasaki, twenty years from now. An epidemic of dog flu prompts the fear mongering Mayor Kobayashi (Kunichi Nomura) to forewarn that snout fever is about to spread to humans and order all dogs deported to a toxic wasteland called Trash Island.
Dog-zero is Spots (voiced by Liev Schreiber), the beloved pet of the mayorâs orphaned ward 12-year-old Atari (Koyu Rankin). When he is deported, the boy makes the dangerous journey across the river in a prop plane to look for his dog. With the help of newfound mongrel pals, including the good-natured Rex (Edward Norton), former baseball mascot Boss (Bill Murray), King (Bob Balaban), the gossipy Duke (Jeff Goldblum), Chief (Bryan Cranston) and Nutmeg (Scarlett Johansson), Atari takes on the corrupt government.
âIsle of Dogsâ is a fairy tale with a bite. Anderson, one of the most distinctive directors working today (or any day for that matter), brings a child-like wonder and unfettered imagination to bring this boy-and-his-dog story to vivid life. Gorgeous, soulful stop motion animation and Andersonâs trademarked banter combined with a timely story of deportation and exile makes for an unforgettable film.
The usual complaints about Andersonâs work, that itâs too detailed, too eccentric, will be levelled at this movie but Iâd argue it is his obsessiveness that brings the creative magic. Subplots and flashbacks take the viewer on a wild journey but Andersonâs attention to every element, visual and narrative, guarantees the rambunctious story never loses itself in its own elaborate style.
There jokes throughoutâeven the title is a playful take on âI love dogsââbut just as important are the messages of tolerance. You will not see another film like âIsle of Dogsâ this year. So effortlessly cinematic and inventive, itâs best in show.
UNSANE: 4 STARS
Steven Soderbergh's new movie asks a simple question, Is Sawyer Valentiniâs greatest fear real or a delusion? Starring Claire Foy and Jay Pharoah, it takes the legendary director back to basics. Shot entirely with an iPhone camera, it only cost $1.2 million to make.
Foy plays Valentini, a businesswoman with an unhappy life. After a bad one-night stand leads to a panic attack, she consults a head-shrinker at a facility called Highland Creek Behavioural Health Facility. In their meeting she divulges something that has been plaguing her, a former stalker. Even though she moved 450 miles away he still haunts her mind. âRationally I know this is my imagination, but Iâm alone in a big city and I never feel safe,â she says, ânot for one minute.â Tricked into committing herselfââThereâs some more forms you need to fill out, itâs just routineââshe is thrust into a house of horrors, surrounded by troubled patientsâlike the belligerent Violet (Juno Temple)âmany, like her, who are there against their will. Her pleas for release fall on deaf ears. Worse, her stalker David (Joshua Leonard) works in the psychiatric ward as an orderly. Or does he? âThis man, heâs followed me all the way here from Boston. Iâm calling the cops and I want him arrested!â
âUnsaneâ is a nightmare that stems from not reading the fine print. âThey got meds,â says fellow inmate Nate (a terrific Jay Pharoah). âYou got insurance. You talk, they find a way to get you committed and you stay as long as your insurance will pay. When they stop paying, youâre cured!â Sawyerâs situation is a political comment on insurance scams and locking up people for profit. Itâs a #MeToo thrillerâno one believes her stories of stalkingâbut really, at its heart, âUnsaneâ is a Gothic b-movie that owes a debt to âThe Snakepitâ and âShock Corridorâ with some âGaslightâ thrown in for good measure. Itâs an examination of womenâs voices not being heard of a crumbling medical infrastructure but mostly itâs about Sawyerâs world falling apart and her frustration at not being able to do diddly-squat to put it back together.
Foy is in almost every frame, bringing a frail yet steely presence to the role. She is more than a damsel in distress. By turning charming, cunning, ruthless and jittery, sheâs a character designed to keep us guessing. Does she belong in the facility or not? âThe Queenâ star navigates Sawyerâs personality shifts, zigging and zagging, keeping the audience tantalizingly in the dark as to the truth of her mental state.
âUnsaneâ has a few clunky moments that detract from the overall feeling of paranoia Soderbergh builds throughout. Beautifully composed and edited âUnsaneâ still looks like it was shot on an iPhone. Often blown out or bathed in inky blacks itâs an aesthetic weâve become used to from Instagram and social media videos and it brings and naturalism to the surreal story.
âUnsaneâ may be low tech but itâs not amateurish. Soderberg expertly builds tension to the point where Sawyerâs frustration is palpable.
FLOWER: 2 ½ STARS
âFlowerâ is a coming of age story in reverse. When we first meet the adolescent main character Erica (Zoey Deutch) she is already jaded by life. Her father is in jail and she is involved in a very dubious plan to earn his bail money. Over the course of time, she regains her innocence, flip flopping the usual teen movie formula.
Erica lives with her mom (Kathryn Hahn) and the latest of momâs new boyfriends-turned-fiancées (Tim Heidecker) in the San Fernando Valley. A hellraiser, Erica and her pals Kala (Dylan Gelula) and Claudine (Maya Eshet) target older men to blackmail. When she has enough cash she hopes to buy dad his freedom. Her rebel-with-a-cause life is turned upside down by the arrival of Luke (Joey Morgan), her troubled soon-to-be stepbrother. Luke brings with him a dark secret that could change everything in Ericaâs life for better and for worse.
No spoilers here.
The beauty of âFlowerâ is less in its wonky storyline and more in its effervescent performances. The down ân dirty indieâit was shot in just 16 days by Henry âThe Fonzâ Winklerâs son Maxâfocuses on Ericaâs journey which rests comfortably in Deutchâs capable arms. The actress, best known for turns in âBefore I Fallâ and âWhy Him?â navigates the filmâs uneven tonality, hurtling over its implicit quirkiness to find the qualities that make us feel for Erica. Do we care about Erica the blackmailer? Not particularly. But we can care about why she resorts to blackmail and thatâs where Deutch shines.
âFlowerâ is all over the place. In its quest to be unconventional it covers a lot of ground. Itâs part quirky family drama, part rebellious teen comedy and even part âBonnie and Clydeâ but Deutch and cast, including Morgan as sad sack Luke and the always fantastic Hahn, breathe life into it.