Tuesday, April 15, 2025

Film Fest Overview

The Minneapolis-St. Paul International Film festival has largely run its course, for the 44th time, and the Best of the Fest line-up has been announced. These are films that will be aired again because they were deemed the best by viewers, though I sometimes wonder if they’re simply the ones that are currently available to be shown again before moving on to festivals in Keokuk and Elephant Butte.

Hilary and I saw twelve films and we liked them all. Would we recommend them to friends? Maybe not.

Part of the buzz comes from showing up day after day at the theater, which sits across the river from downtown Minneapolis. It’s a vibrant scene, and it’s not uncommon for us to run into longtime friends, casual acquaintances, and film buffs with whom we’ve chatted at some festival years ago without ever learning their names. That adds to the fun.

The five-screen theater complex is only fifteen minutes from our house, and we adopted a new parking strategy this year that made the approach even easier. Rather the wasting time scouring the neighborhood for an open spot on the street and worrying about the two-hour time limit, we took to parking on Marshall Avenue, where there was always a spot available, and setting off on the ten-minute walk to the theater.

Among the films we saw, several were expertly made and one was actually gripping. These films might do well in a normal first-run setting. Others were classic “film-fest” movies: slow to develop, set in exotic locales, giving you the time to soak up the atmosphere and listen to the crickets chirp. And then there were the bio-pics and documentaries.

In the first category I would place a Czech film, Waves. It depicts a few episodes during the Prague Spring of 1968 and the struggles of the employees of the “official” radio station to broadcast honest news under the scrutiny of government officials who are always asking themselves, “What will Moscow think about this?” I won’t be giving away any secrets if I remind you that five Warsaw Pact countries under Russian leadership invaded Czechoslovakia in the fall of that year. The film captures the décor of the era, and also the Western music that had become so popular—for example, the Shirelles “Be My Baby.” There are plot twists and Russian tanks, heroism and loyalty and defeat on the streets of Prague. It’s a great mix.

When we got home, we pulled out a copy of A History in Fragments: Europe in the Twentieth Century,  by Richard Vinen, to fill in the details, but the focus wasn’t quite right. Milan Kundera’s Book of Laughter and Forgetting offered fewer historical details but was much better suited to the mood and complexity of the film. And after all, Kundera was there.

In Meet the Barbarians, a French comedy/drama directed by Julie Delpy, a small town in Brittany that’s expecting to welcome a refugee Ukrainian family is surprised to discover that in fact the family that’s arriving from Syria. It’s a strangely light-hearted film, considering the context, but it works none the less. I couldn't help thinking of darker films like Green Border and The Old Oak here and there along the way.

A third film in the “polished and ready for prime time” category, Mistura, was less effective. Here the daughter of the French ambassador to Peru is humiliated when her husband runs off with a beauty queen. Facing disgrace and financial ruin, she vents her emotions on the only people still close at hand—her devoted servants. In the course of the film she recovers her self-esteem, if not her social status, by means of the one thing she loved to do before her marriage: cooking. She opens a restaurant with the help of her father’s former chef (Asian), her trusted chauffeur (black), and a maid (Latino) who’s served the family for decades.

It's a food movie, among other thing, and the close-ups are appetizing. It’s also a fairy tale of ethnic sharing and cooperation, which is fine by me. But I didn’t get the sense that our protagonist had really changed all that much by the end of the film. She had cut back on the stylish clothes and the heavy make-up, but she was still the boss, and they were the servants.

We'd run into an old friend while waiting in line, and in the lobby after the film she told us, "I lived in Peru for three months when I was in college back in the 70s. It was really like that! Everyone was thinking all the time about what they wore, and what so-and-so would say if they did this or that. You can do this; you can't do that or be seen there."

One thing the chauffeur and the ambassador's daughter have in common is that they can both quote the poet Cesar Vallejo by heart. When we got home I pulled Trilce off the shelf and was soon fast asleep.

The Property follows an elderly woman and her granddaughter as they travel from Israel to Poland in hope of regaining ownership of an apartment that was confiscated during the war. Hidden at the root of this simple endeavor is a pre-war love affair between Jew and goy that everyone in the family knows about but no one talks about. The film consists of various appointments in Warsaw and also random meetings with strangers, some of whom become friends.

Grandmother and granddaughter are pursuing different strategies and are seldom in the same place at the same time, and their local cantor, who has ostensibly accompanied them to attend a conference, also figures in the plot. Several enigmatic elements come together nicely by the time we’re through. Do they get the apartment? I’m not telling.


The Last Journey details a son’s efforts to rekindle the spark in his aged father, who has somehow lost his “pep,” by taking him on a road trip from central Sweden to the French Riviera, where the family enjoyed some memorable holidays decades earlier. The father seems very feeble, but the son is bursting with energy and he recruits an old friend to help him make the trip memorable. Both of the younger men are highly skilled directors and producers in real life—a fact I only learned after seeing the film. That might explain how they succeed in cobbling together the funniest and most touching trip—and film—you can imagine, considering that the old man can hardly walk.

The other engaging comedy we saw, Fun Raiser, is set half a world way from the Riviera in the depressed mining town of Chisolm, Minnesota. Crafted by local filmmakers Wyatt McDill (director) and Megan Huber (producer) and almost obeying Aristotle’s unities of time, place, and action, it takes place in a single afternoon and evening during which an odd collection of small-town folk attempt to host a fund-raising event to keep their fledging art school afloat. A media star with local roots will be arriving from L.A. for the event, but the money to rent the hall and pay the caterers has fallen through. If these hapless educators did succeed in holding the event, and they did raise some money, everything might turn out differently, of course. The result is a madcap succession of frenzied conversations as we get the know the characters, none of whom seems to be sure what anyone else is doing. It’s a rocky start, but (spoiler alert) once the event is moved to a dilapidated warehouse nearby and the wealthy guests start arriving, the film reaches what chemists call “activation energy” and (with the help of a gummy bear or two) it starts to hum with an accelerating rhythm of absurd gags, hilarious pratfalls, and touching testimonials to the importance of arts education and its power to unite and inspire even the most down-at-heal community.

Among the “third-world” films we saw, Regretfully at Dawn stands out. Set in rural Thailand, it tells the simple story of a girl who’s being raised by her grandfather on a farm of some sort. They enjoy being together and get along well. But she’s very bright, and her teacher at the local school is convinced she should continue her education abroad. Her grandfather, meanwhile, is ailing a bit, and seems to be enmeshed in memories of the time he spent in combat years ago—memories that he cherishes. It’s a gentle film, slow-moving, full of rural expanses, but also punctuated here and there by sudden explosions.

The most unusual film we saw, I think, was Grand Tour. The story-line isn’t much: British functionary stationed in Burma (or somewhere) flees fiancée; woman follows. The fleeing man says almost nothing and has virtually no distinguishing characteristics. He’s less than a cypher; he’s merely a prop. He serves the purpose of providing a narrative thread with which Portuguese director Miguel Gomes can string together exotic footage of the Far East taken at various times during the twentieth century along with footage he shot himself, much of it in black and white.

The fiancée shows up halfway through the film, and she’s much more dynamic. She gives the film a lift. But the entire work carries the flavor of an old silent film, where the fascinating imagery trumps the odd and sometimes arbitrary way it’s juxtaposed, like the phrases in a good surrealist poem. It reminded me of the recent Gods of Mexico, and also a black-and-white film from Russia that I saw years ago, Bag of Bones. Similarly odd, yet strangely refreshing.

There are times when a film fest comes to an end, and you find that you’ve seen three or four films about farming, or arctic exploration, for no particular reason. This year, we happened to see three biopics. All good.

I have never read anything by the Irish novelist Edna O’Brien, but Hilary recently read The Country Girls, and friends told us Blue Road: The Edna O’Brien Story was well put together. It is. O’Brien comes across as sharp, honest, playful, curious. The men she associated with less so. Her two bright and articulate sons add a lot to the story. The petty and scathing remarks her husband wrote in her journal expose a narcissistic tyrant. In the course of the film we get to know her, and it’s fun to catch a few newsreel glimpses of the London party scene, but the film’s richness derives even more from the atmospheric home movies shot in Ireland.    

Flicka, a portrait of the opera singer Frederica von Stade, is hardly less appealing, and her life followed a similar trajectory, up to a point. She achieved surprising success at an early age, never took herself too seriously, and was capable of doing things for the sheer fun of it. The film takes us beyond the obvious talent and success to probe Flicka's irrepressible thoughtfulness and humanity.

Ai Wei Wei’s Turandot gave me a clearer idea of who this Chinese dissident is. It jumps back and forth from China, where Ai was imprisoned for his outspoken views, to Rome, where he’s been put in charge of designing a new production of Puccini’s opera Turandot. Wei envisions the work as a statement about free speech and repression, and there is undoubtedly an authoritarian element to the plot. Ai is in his element fashioning costumes of strange creatures to fill out the scenes, though he's never designed an opera before and admits that he doesn't really like opera. But I’m sure some viewers were eager to hear a bit more of the music. I know I was.    


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