All posts by Dennis Hartley

SIFF 2025: Monarch City (**)

By Dennis Hartley

(Originally posted on Digby’s Hullabaloo on May 17, 2025)

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Set in an economically depressed small town in Washington State, writer-director Titus Richard’s network narrative drama serves up a dollop of family angst and sprinkles it with lives of quiet desperation. Hovering somewhere between Peter Bogdanovch’s The Last Picture Show in its aspirations and Larry Clark’s Kids in its vibe, Monarch City suggests both; but due to an uneven script and scattershot approach, it unfortunately achieves neither. Richard does capture and sustain a “nowheresville” mood, and there are some earnest performances, but at 70 minutes and with this many players, there’s barely enough time for any kind of meaningful character development.

SIFF 2025: By the Stream (***)

By Dennis Hartley

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I was surprised to learn that South Korean writer-director Hong Sang-soo has made 33 feature films over the last 20 years (which by my estimation makes him one of the most prolific filmmakers this side of Fassbinder). I also felt a bit ashamed that I didn’t discover him until  I saw In Our Day at the 2024 SIFF.

With By the Stream, I may now have only two Sang-soo joints under my belt, but I think I “get” his rhythms. Like In Our Day, this is a languidly paced and understated character study about people involved in the arts; there’s lots of eating and drinking and walking and talking (with exchanges that frequently feel improvised).

Melancholic Jeonim (Kim Minhee) is a textile artist and university lecturer who coaxes her famous Uncle Chu Sieon (Kwon Haehyo) out of retirement to rewrite and and take over direction of a play that some of her students have been working on after the production hits a snag.

While Uncle Chu seems genuinely flattered and more than happy to get back on the boards, you sense that he mostly sees this as an opportunity to reconnect with his niece, with whom he’s been out of contact with for a number of years. This could be Jeonim’s motivation as well, although she is a more of a cypher in the emotional department.

It turns out that Jeonim’s supervisor is a Chu super-fan; when she begins a relationship with him, it triggers a dynamic shift in Jeonim’s interactions with her uncle that suggest some unresolved family business may be at play.

The film’s deliberate pacing may not be for all tastes, but the naturalistic performances and gentle rhythms makes this rumination on life, love, art and family ties relatable on all fronts and easy to digest.

SIFF 2025: Jean Cocteau (***)

By Dennis Hartley

(Originally posted on Digby’s Hullabaloo on  May 17, 2025)

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Director Lisa Immordino Vreeland utilizes a non-linear collage of film clips, archival interviews, and a present-day actor reading from letters and diary entries to create a vivid portrait of the avant-garde poet/visual artist/playwright/film director. It’s an enlightening study; I picked up a number of new tidbits on his life and work (I was familiar with him mostly from his films – e.g. Blood of a Poet, Orpheus, and Beauty and the Beast). The address he made in 1960 “to the youth of the future” is a mind-blower. I found it particularly interesting how his “apolitical” stance made him a pariah to both the Left and the Right at various junctures. Absorbing and rewarding.

SIFF 2025: Sanatorium Under the Sign of the Hourglass (***)

By Dennis Hartley

(Originally posted on Digby’s Hulllabaloo on May 17, 2025)

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How do I describe the weird micro-universe Stephen and Timothy Quay have created through their stop-motion/live action films? They’re pieces of dreams; a screen capture of that nanosecond of Jungian twilight between nodding off and jerking awake. Their latest film explores grief and memory through the eyes of a man who travels to a sanatorium where his father has died. Or that’s what he believes…until he arrives. The “reality” is left up to the viewer.

SIFF 2025: Transfers (***)

By Dennis Hartley

(Originally posted on Digby’s Hullabaloo on May 17, 2025)

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There were many horrors endured by the citizens of Argentina in the course of that country’s  “Dirty War” period (1974-1983). Nicolás Gil Lavedra’s documentary primarily focuses on just one them: the methodical, State-sponsored extermination of dissidents (or those accused of being such) wherein people were kidnapped, tortured, drugged, and thrown to their deaths from airplanes.

These “death flights” included the kidnapping and murder of the “twelve of Santa Cruz,” a group of Mothers of Plaza de Mayo, human rights activists and two French nuns captured in December 1977, which Lavedra covers in detail, mixing archival and present-day testimonials from former detainees, eyewitnesses, and journalists.

There is some redemption when you learn how a few (if not enough) of the perpetrators were eventually brought to justice. Interestingly, this was precipitated by the fact that, not unlike the Nazis, they kept meticulous records of their crimes (in this case, vis a vis dated flight logs that notated passenger counts).

Chilling and moving, this relatively understated film brings the human cost to the fore; making it a good companion piece to Luis Puenzo’s 1985 political drama The Official Story.

This is also a cautionary tale. When you consider that the term “Dirty War” was coined by the military junta, which one would assume was its way of self-justifying its atrocities, recent statements by government officials in our own country suggesting that habeas corpus “may” be suspended under the umbrella of “war powers” (what ‘war’?) should raise a red flag.

SIFF 2025: Free Leonard Peltier ***1/2

By Dennis Hartley

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“Free Leonard Peltier!” has been a rallying cry by Native American rights activists for decades; in fact so many years have passed since his trial, conviction and sentence for the murder of two FBI agents that the circumstances surrounding his case have become obfuscated to the general public. Even those who have lobbied 50 years for his release (predicated on the government’s arguably flimsy evidence and dubious witness testimonies) didn’t see Joe Biden’s January 2025 commutation of Peltier’s life sentence coming. It wasn’t the full pardon his advocates had wished for, but they certainly welcomed it with joy and relief.

It’s been a long road for Peltier (now 80), with many twists and turns, but co-directors Jesse Short Bull (Oglala Sioux) and David France do a yeoman’s job of telling not only his story, but putting it in context with the activities of the American Indian Movement that flourished in the 1970s.

The filmmakers recount the Mt. Rushmore, Alcatraz, and Wounded Knee occupations, takeover of the BIA headquarters in Washington D.C., the Trail of Broken Treaties march, et.al., culminating with the 1975 incident at Pine Ridge Reservation involving the execution-style murders of the two FBI agents.

This is the most comprehensive study I’ve seen on Peltier’s case and the history of the A.I.M. movement. What you learn from this film is by turns enlightening and maddening, but ultimately inspiring and moving.

SIFF 2025: Blue Road: The Edna O’Brien Story (***1/2)

By Dennis Hartley

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Never heard about Oscar Wilde
Don’t know about Brendan Behan
Know anything about Sean O’Casey
Or care about George Bernard Shaw
Or Samuel Beckett
Won’t talk about Eugene O’Neill
He won’t talk about Edna O’Brien
Or know anything about Lawrence Stern

Being the proud middlebrow that I am, I will freely admit that the only two things I previously knew about Irish writer Edna O’Brien was 1) she was name-checked in my favorite Dexy Midnight Runners song (“Dance Stance”), and 2) that the 1964 UK kitchen sink drama Girl With Green Eyes was adapted from her novel “The Lonely Girl” (which I haven’t read).

However, I’m happy to report that Sinéad O’Shea’s engaging documentary portrait of the outspoken novelist, playwright, poet and short-story writer (who died in 2024 at the ripe age of 93) has set me straight. Now I want to read everything she wrote.

What a life. She was raised by an abusive father; left home and married writer Ernest Gébler when she was 24 (he was 40), and was garnering universal critical acclaim for her debut novel (“The Country Girls”) by age 30.

That book (and several of her subsequent works) were banned in Ireland, due to their sexual frankness (and anti-patriarchal stance, no doubt). Undaunted, she pushed onward with her career,  becoming the toast of the town in London, and eventually selling her work to Hollywood (in the film, the nonagenarian O’Brien bemusedly recounts escapades with Robert Mitchum and Marlon Brando). A film as provocative and uncompromising as its subject.

SIFF 2025: Chain Reactions (***)

By Dennis Hartley

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Patton Oswalt, Takashi Miike, Alexandra Heller-Nicholas, Stephen King, and Karyn Kusama walk into a rundown farmhouse…and their lives change forever. At least according to the idiosyncratic appraisals by those luminaries regarding Tobe Hooper’s no-budget 1974 cult classic The Texas Chainsaw Massacre. Alexandre O. Philippe’s documentary transcends its subject to not only become a treatise on what defines “horror”, but illuminates the sometimes elusive elements that constitute a great work of cinema-regardless of genre (or budget).

SIFF 2025: Four Mothers (***1/2)

By Dennis Hartley

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SIFF’s Opening Night Gala selection is the latest from writer-director Darren Thornton (A Date For Mad Mary). James McArdle stars as a gay novelist about to embark on an important American book tour. While he is excited about the prospect, he is torn about what to do about his mother while he is away (he’s her caregiver).

Adding to his stress level, he is unexpectedly saddled with taking care of three additional elderly women when several of his friends drop their mams off with him before heading off to a Pride festival for a weekend (he’s too nice a fellow to say no).

A delightful dramedy inspired by the Italian film Mid-August Lunch (my 2009 SIFF review). Bolstered by crackling dialog (co-written by the director and Colin Thornton) and endearing performances all round (particularly by Fionnula Flanagan as the writer’s mother, who steals all her scenes without uttering a word).

The 2025 SIFF Preview

By Dennis Hartley

(Originally posted on Digby’s Hullabaloo on May 10, 2025)

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The 51st annual Seattle International Film Festival opens May 15th and runs through May 25th. This year’s SIFF features a total of 245 shorts, documentaries, and narrative films in 63 languages. The brick-and-mortar event will be immediately followed by a week of select virtual screenings from this year’s catalog (May 26th to June 1st) on the SIFF Channel.

SIFF has certainly grown exponentially since its first incarnation in 1976 (in case the math is making you crazy, festival organizers “skipped” the 13th event; you know how superstitious show people get about Scottish kings and such). Compare the numbers: In 1976, the Festival boasted a whopping 19 films from 9 countries, with one lone venue. Then again, there were only 13 people on the staff in 1976.

Regardless of how large or small the staff, the one constant over the decades has been the quality of the curation. Long before “sharing files” (or even making mix tapes) was a thing, SIFF’s annual lineup reflected that sense of joy in turning friends on to something new and exciting; instilling the sense there was a tangible film lover’s community (others who enjoyed being alone together, out there in the dark).

From a joint statement by Excecutive Director Tom Mara and Artistic Director Beth Barrett:

More than ever, the power of thoughtfully crafted stories is necessary as we face a quickening influx of distressing and bewildering news that distracts us from pausing, discerning, and perhaps gaining greater understanding of our world and each other. Films inspire us, invigorate us, and buoy us while we struggle with the heightened emotions and uncertainty of our time. At SIFF, you don’t have to face these challenges alone. The Festival is designed to not only connect us with films but also with one another. Each year during the Festival, the two of us find ourselves taking a step back to appreciate how each screening spurs new connections among the film lovers in the audience. These connections and the stories told on screen help us to understand each other’s adversities and joys, which is crucial with the world so divided. […]

A society without an arts landscape rich in beauty, diversity, and critical thought is a society that leaves little room for personal and collective flourishing. SIFF is dedicated to the creation of vibrant experiences and spaces that champion film discovery and arts education so that we can all continue to grow as individuals, neighbors, and global citizens.

Amen, and please pass the popcorn.

This will be the 33rd SIFF I’ve attended (in one guise or the other). As (an alleged) film critic, I have been covering SIFF for Hullabaloo now for 19 years (since 2007), but as always, the looming question is – where to begin? The trick to navigating festivals is developing a 6th sense for films in your wheelhouse (I embrace my OCD and channel it like a cinematic dowser).

Let’s dive in!

This years Opening Night Gala selection is an Irish import. Four Mothers is the latest from writer-director Darren Thornton (A Date For Mad Mary). James McArdle stars as a gay novelist about to embark on an important American book tour. However, he is unexpectedly sidelined by having to take care of four elderly women (including his mam) for a week. A delightful dramedy/road movie inspired by the Italian film Mid-August Lunch (my 2009 SIFF review).

Politics, politics. I’m intrigued by two 1960s period pieces: Waves (Czech Republic) promises to be a “nerve-wracking journalism thriller” set in 1967 Czechoslovakia; and The Safe House (Switzerland) is a comedy-drama about a 9 year-old boy and his eccentric family grappling with political unrest in the streets of 1968 Paris.

The documentary Suburban Fury (USA) profiles FBI informant Sara Jane Moore, who attempted to assassinate President Ford in 1975. The timely doc Free Leonard Peltier (USA) “…outlines the decades-long efforts to free the Indigenous activist from prison through the commutation of his sentence at the age of 80 in January 2025.” And Transfers (Argentina) is billed as “a poignant documentary about Argentina’s onetime military dictatorship’s use of the infamous and brutal Death Flights.”

No people like show people: Chain Reactions (USA) features five horror luminaries discussing how Tobe Hooper’s no-budget classic The Texas Chainsaw Massacre impacted their life and work (no…Elon Musk is not among them). Jean Cocteau (USA) utilizes Cocteau’s journals, letters and artistic works to assemble an intimate portrait of the filmmaker/playwright/poet. By the Stream (South Korea) is a drama about a lecturer who coaxes her famous uncle out of retirement to write and direct a play for her students after the production hits a snag.

In the comedy Dancing Queen in Hollywood (Norway), a hip-hop dancing duo travels to L.A. with hopes of starring in a music video. Scarecrow in a Garden of Cucumbers (USA) is a 1972 film starring the legendary Holly Woodlawn (immortalized in Lou Reed’s “Walk on the Wild Side”) as “a small-town girl hoping to make it big in New York City”. This is a revival presentation, via a newly-restored print by the Academy Film Archive (this “lost” film has never been available in any home video format).

Speaking of midnight movies…Fucktoys (USA) is described as a “…campy, vividly pastel-colored romp about a woman who embarks upon a sex worker odyssey through Trashtown with her nonbinary friend to break a terrible curse that has befallen her.” OK then. Since I’m already going down this road: The animated adult musical Spermageddon (Norway) follows the adventures of “sperm cells Simon and Cumilla as they attempt to defeat the nefarious Jizzmo” (I just report the news, folks). I’m eager to see Sanatorium Under the Sign of the Hourglass (UK/Poland/Germany) – the latest stop-motion animation from the enigmatic Brothers Quay (I wrote about their work here).

Crime and punishment: Sons (Denmark) is a drama about a prison guard (Sidse Babett Knudsen of Borgen fame) who faces deep moral and ethical dilemmas when she learns that a dark figure from her past has been transferred to her facility. Cloud (Japan) is billed as a “genre-bending potboiler about a craven opportunist who finds success as an internet reseller, only for revenge-seeking vigilantes to come calling”.

Set in the mid-90s, The Kingdom (France) concerns a Corsican mobster and his daughter who are forced to go on the run when an underground war breaks out between nationalist groups and crime syndicates. And here’s a special treat for noiristas: The Glass Web in 3-D (USA)…Jack Arnold’s 1953 crime drama has been newly restored by the 3-D Film Archive from the original 35mm camera negatives. Sounds like fun!

I always look forward to SIFF’s music-related fare. There are 3 promising documentaries on my radar:1-800-ON-HER-OWN documents the making of alt-folk singer-songwriter Ani DiFranco ‘s 2021 album “Revolutionary Love”, Paul Anka: His Way (USA) covers the life and career of the Canadian-born pop idol and songwriter, and Salsa Lives (Columbia) features genre legends like Rubén Blades and Henry Fiol and “…shows how entire generations have celebrated their common identity through music and dance.”

There’s always room on my checklist for some fantasy and sci-fi. Time Travel is Dangerous (UK) is a comedy-adventure about a pair of North London antique shop owners who stumble across a working bumper car time machine (shades of Time Bandits). U Are the Universe (Ukraine) concerns “… a space trucker [who] thinks he’s the last living person in the universe…until a call from a distant space station sets him on a course across the cosmos.” Right in my wheelhouse. And for a one-time-only event, SIFF will be presenting a screening of The Dark Crystal, wih DJ NicFit providing a live soundtrack to accompany Jim Henson and Frank Oz’s cult 1982 fantasy adventure.

Always with the drama: Boong (India) is a coming-of-age/class warfare tale of a 9 year-old schoolboy who hits the road with his best friend to investigate whether or not his absentee father really has passed away as rumored. Shot in black and white, Color Book (USA) is a “day in the life” story about a recently-widowed Black father in Atlanta who takes his young disabled son to his first professional baseball game. Souleymane’s Story (France) is a timely tale about the travails of a Guinean immigrant who is trying to apply for asylum.

Sorry, Baby (this year’s Closing Night Gala selection) was written and directed by its star Eva Victor (who you may recognize from Showtime’s Billions). The film is described as a “…nonlinear, seriocomic story about a melancholic English professor’s complicated path toward healing in the aftermath of an all-too-common tragedy.”

Obviously, I’ve barely scratched the surface. I’ll be plowing through the catalog and sharing reviews with you beginning next Saturday. In the meantime, visit the SIFF site for full details on the films, event screenings, special guests, and more.