It Could Happen to You: cop gives waitress $2 million tip

 

In It Could Happen to You, a cop and a waitress find love and good fortune. Nicholas Cage and Bridget Fonda star in the romantic dramedy.

Director Andrew Bergman (Honeymoon in Vegas; The Freshman) has made an irresistible populist heart warmer worthy of Frank Capra. It Could Happen to You is now streaming at Netflix and Amazon.

A promise is a promise

Charlie Lang (Cage) plays a cop with a heart of gold who can’t please his money grubbing wife Muriel    (Rosie Perez). He walks the beat in Queens, New York with his partner Bo (Wendell Pierce).

An everyday hero, Charlie is content with his modest fortune. The consummate do-gooder foils a neighborhood robbery one day. He even carries a blind man across a busy street.

It Could Happen to You is filled with Charlie’s rare gratitude and open-heartedness. One day he meets Yvonne (Fonda), a struggling waitress at a local diner.

Yvonne is good and decent even on her worst day. When Charlie discovers he doesn’t have tip money, he promises to split his lottery prize with her should he win. “Yeah, right,” Yvonne replies.

A promise is a promise

Yet Charlie does things because they’re right, not because they’re easy. Even after he wins the lottery, he feels honor-bound to keep his word. “A promise is a promise,” he says.

Perez is uproarious because she’s so familiar. She could be that inner voice in each of us, always demanding: “Show me the money!” Muriel takes love for granted. Only money will make her happy, she believes.

Jealousy and greed possess Muriel even more after the jackpot. Finally, she thinks she can do better than her too-honest hubby. Seymour Cassel plays the suave Jack Gross.

The late Isaac Hayes is enigmatic and soulful as Angel, the narrator who figures in the tale’s surprise ending. Virtue and generosity never die in this uplifting gem.

If you like It Could Happen to You, you might enjoy:  Moonstruck; Sleepless in Seattle; The American President.

 

It Could Happen to You  /   1994  /  PG  /  1 hour, 41 min

Cast Overview:  Nicholas Cage, Bridget Fonda, Rosie Perez, Wendell Pierce, Isaac Hayes, Victor Rojas, Seymour Cassel, Stanley Tucci, J. E. Freeman, Red Buttons, Richard Jenkins

Director: Andrew Bergman

Genres:  Romance, Dramedy

Crazy Sexy Cancer: Kris Carr thrives despite cancer

Cancer thriver Kris Carr makes Crazy Sexy Cancer an affirmation of her life and spirit. Kris directs this uplifting documentary about claiming your vitality. It’s now available at Netflix and the Crazy Sexy Life website.

Wellness warrior steps up

On Valentine’s Day of 2003, Kris is diagnosed with Stage 4 of a rare, untreatable cancer. Her liver and lungs reveal 24 tumors. She shows you the x-rays.

Doctors tell Kris to “watch and wait.” This type of cancer may lie dormant for years.

“Wait for what?” Kris exclaims. She decides to find a cure and live. Really live.

Cowgirl with attitude

Kris sells her possessions and takes to the road, becoming a healing junkie. She begins directing Crazy Sexy Cancer, enlisting the help of cameraman Brian Fassett.

As CEO of The Office of Healing, she proactively calls doctors and health centers. They are her consultants. Her mom helps run the company. She perseveres with humor and sass.

Kris goes to bookstores and health expos. She receives acupuncture, chakra cleansing, Reiki and Chinese herbs. She tries visualization, anger and dance therapies.

Finding her “tribe,” other cancer survivors who live fully, reminds Kris that everyone has challenges in life. She is not alone.

Cancer as teacher

A professional actor, Kris brings an optimism that can inspire anyone facing a disease. Despair and depression don’t last long.

Kris discovers that the vegetable market is her pharmacy. Since this film was made, she has written several books, including the New York Times bestseller Crazy Sexy Diet.

Raw foods turning point

Kris’ meeting with Dr. Robert Young, the author of Sick and Tired?, becomes a turning point. All sickness stems from over acidity in the body, he tells her. “You’re only as healthy as the fluids you’re bathed in.” She embarks on a 21-day raw foods diet.

There are dark days. Kris craves her old, “normal” diet. “I want to go do bad things with bad people.” Nothing looks very appetizing. She finds ways to appreciate a whole new level of “delicious.”

Healthy body, healthy mind

Nutrient-rich vegetable juices and a vegetable-based diet, along with a daily power walk, give her lots of stamina. Yoga and lifestyle changes help her reduce stress.

Health is “everything that you eat, drink and think,” she says. Her friend Bhagavan Das tells her, “your confrontation with death is your spiritual turning point.” Shed “stinking thinking,” he advises.

Fun and romance

Kris’ life is a whirlwind of meetings with cancer survivors and luminaries like Dr. Mehmet Oz. Her Crazy Sexy Wellness business is booming. Vegetable juices, she says, are “the medicine, the muse, the best frickin’ beauty regime going.”

The heroine’s story includes a romance and a wedding. (4 out of 5 stars)

If you like Crazy Sexy Cancer, you might enjoy:  50/50; Hungry for Change.

 

Crazy, Sexy Cancer  /   2007  /  NR  /  1 hour, 29 min

Cast Overview:  Aura Carr, Kenneth Carr, Kris Carr, Leslie Carr, Anna Maria Clement, Brian Clement, Bhagavan Das, George Demetri, Jackie Farry, Yogeswari, Oni Faida Lampley, Brian Fassett

Directors:  Kris Carr

Genres:  Documentary, Health, Healing

In Time: Timberlake, Seyfried buck time, injustice

Time rules as Justin Timberlake and Amanda Seyfried rebel in the science fiction thriller In Time. Andrew Niccol (Gattaca; Lord of War) directs. In Time is now available on Netflix.

Time is the new currency

Everyone in this world is engineered to stop aging at 25, but “times out” one year later unless they can beg, borrow or steal more time. This embroils most in a struggle to survive. Everyone’s left forearm shows exactly how much they have left in glowing, green numbers.

Will Salas (Timberlake) is the upstart who knows that the system is unjust. Meanwhile he works in a blue collar town, sharing what he has with desperate friends and family. Will manages to reach age 28. His mother (Olivia Wilde in a heartfelt, brief appearance) looks as young as her son.

Casting perfect in futuristic flick

When a weary elder Henry Hamilton (Matt Bomer) gives Will a century before he commits suicide, Will escapes to wealthy New Greenwich. There he meets lovely Sylvia (Seyfried), daughter of powerful banker Philippe Weis (Mad Men’s Vincent Kartheiser).

Casting by Denise Chamian is perfect throughout. Timberlake (The Social Network) and Seyfried (Mamma Mia!; Red Riding Hood) are coolly effective, stylish and low key, yet hampered by a script that dwells on time alone.

Gambling for time

Will beats Weis in high stakes poker at a casino. Weis is philosophical about his higher station in life. “Hasn’t evolution always been unfair? It’s always been survival of the fittest,” he opines.

Kartheiser is smooth as a wily yet sentimental fool of a father. When Sylvia is “kidnapped,” it’s unclear whether Weis will pay the ransom for his own daughter.

Heroic couple on the run

In Time rivals The Adjustment Bureau for acting and chase scenes. It suffers from a similar lack of depth. Niccol, who wrote the script, doesn’t take you very far into a bold future.

Will nabs Sylvia to protect himself, because the Timekeepers (hip detectives) suspect him of killing Hamilton. The young upstarts begin to fall in love.

More originality was shown in Duncan Jones’ Source Code, and in Vincenzo Natali’s arch science fiction sleeper Splice.

“Is it stealing if it’s already stolen?”

“How can you live with yourself watching people die right next to you?” Will asks Sylvia. “You don’t watch,” she replies. “You close your eyes.”

The two race around posh New Greenwich in a futuristic sports car. They rob her daddy’s banks and distribute time to people who need it.

Timekeepers give chase

Cillian Murphy (Inception) plays the relentless yet complex Raymond Leon. Charged with keeping the social order, Leon pursues Will. When Leon’s true roots are revealed, he replies, “I’m a Timekeeper. I don’t concern myself with justice.”

The Minute Men (led by Alex Pettyfer) are scruffy muggers who rob time from others. They too keep ambitious citizens from owning too much time. Existence continues.

 “The truth is, there’s more than enough”

Running out of time (and life) is a set up, Will discovers. It’s up to you to imagine what wealth for all looks like. (3 out of 5 stars)

If you like In Time, you might enjoy:  Source Code; The Adjustment Bureau; The Social Network; Splice; Red Riding Hood.

 

In Time  /   2011  /  PG-13  /  1 hour, 50 min

Cast Overview:  Amanda Seyfried, Justin Timberlake, Cillian Murphy, Vincent Kartheiser, Olivia Wilde, Matt Bomer, Johnny Galecki, Collins Pennie, Toby Hemingway, Brendan Miller, Yaya DaCosta, Alex Pettyfer

Director: Andrew Niccol

Genres:  Action, Science Fiction, Thriller

Renegade: Wild West meets shaman in psychedelic adventure

 

A must-see mindbender, Renegade transforms Wild West adventure into a shamanic journey. Vincent Cassel stars as Mike Donovan, a U.S. Marshal who must face the devil to redeem himself and preserve a sacred Native American secret.

Loosely based on the Franco-Belgian comic book series Blueberry, Jan Kounen’s film combines psychedelic visuals with artistic cinema and deep perception. Renegade is now available at Netflix.

Native mysticism

Young Mike is sent to his Uncle to develop good character. Mike sneaks off to a saloon that night. Wally (Michael Madsen) shoots Mike’s first love Madeleine, and a huge fire erupts. Mike retreats to the desert, filled with sorrow.

Nearly dead in the hot sun, Mike is rescued by a Chiricahua (Apache) shaman and “snake whisperer” who coaxes the slithering creatures away. Mike stays with the natives and grows into a man.

“The spirit of the plants can teach you the secrets of life,” the shaman tells him. Mike befriends young Runi (Temuera Morrison).

The devil returns

When the shaman dies, Mike returns to town. He never loses his native gifts of sensing and seeing. Drinking heavily, he dallies with saloon girls while ignoring smart, lovely Maria (Juliette Lewis), who is smitten with him.

Back from the dead, Wally is determined to find gold and more in the natives’ sacred mountains. He is the white man the natives fear most.

Cassel’s fascination with shamanism comes through in this intense performance. Lewis gives an absorbing character study of Maria, strong and free as any woman of her era could be.

The warrior’s path

Pyrotechnics and a shootout follow. Mike begs Runi to share the natives’ secret. This will enable him to confront Wally. Mike becomes the first white man to drink a powerful potion.

Mike must face his true nature and his fears. He shape shifts. Exhaling snakes, he becomes a body of snakes. His spine, a black centipede, breaks in two. Mike’s showdown with Wally is a phantasm more frightening than any gun battle. Reviewing his life, Mike discovers a horrible secret.

Tetsuo Nagata’s cinematography is stunning. Aerial and wide-range shots make you feel expansive and free. Reyes Abades supervises impressive special effects. Rich, evocative visuals come from Rodolphe Chabrier and his team.

“Welcome to the other world”

Kounen told Filmmaker Magazine that he spent months with the Shipibo-Conibos in Peru, participating in ayahuasca ceremonies. “There is a tremendous knowledge that we cannot imagine in our culture. You have to make the bridge to make people consider. Just consider. The culture protects itself from these concepts,” said Kounen.

“Cinema is a great tool to deal with a modified state of consciousness and different perceptions,” the director said. “Shamanism, or meditation, or other ways, help us to understand how the creatures that we are work.” A Shipibo ayahuasca guide performs a sacred chant in Renegade.

Kounen told The Guardian that “for 4,000 years shamans have used these plants to heal. They guide those in need through a journey of self-examination, in which they perceive themselves differently, and hopefully re-establish a balance. Is this metaphysical medicine?” (4.5 out of 5 stars)

If you like Renegade, you might enjoy: 2012: Time for Change; Wind Journeys.

 

Renegade /   2004  /  R  /  2 hours, 4 min

Cast Overview:  Vincent Cassel, Juliette Lewis, Michael Madsen, Temuera Morrison, Ernest Borgnine, Djimon Hounsou, Hugh O’Conor, Geoffrey Lewis, Kateri Walker, Vahina Giocante, Kestenbetsa, Tcheky Karyo, Eddie Izzard, Colm Meaney

Director: Jan Kounen

Genres:  Western, Advenure

Samsara: Shawn Ku stars in spiritual love story

 

Shawn Ku plays a Tibetan Buddhist lama who explores spiritual and sensual love in Samsara. Tashi (Ku) changes his life when he meets beautiful Pema (Christy Chung).

Siddhartha story updated

Director Pan Nalin brings the Siddhartha tale full circle. Siddhartha Gautama, the founder of Buddhism, abandoned great wealth and his family to meditate in poverty. In this way he found enlightenment. Tashi decides to travel the path to Buddhahood by returning to everyday life.

Nalin told IndiaGlitz that this “simple love story about choices” derives its power from more silence and less dialogue.

Tashi’s great longing

In Samsara’s dramatic opening, Tashi is retrieved by the lamas after meditating in solitude for three years, three months and three days. The devotee is covered with dirt. With long hair and nails grown into talons, Tashi can’t move or open his eyes.

Slowly regaining his strength, Tashi finds that his heart has grown. He longs to leave the lamasery, to become fully human in samsara, the cycle of birth, death and rebirth.

Tashi pleads with his superior Apo (Sherab Sangey): “Even Lord Gautama was permitted to live as an ordinary man for his first 29 years!” The lamas try to dissuade him. Nevertheless he sets out to experience love, sexuality and fatherhood.

World and spirit meet

Samsara reveals how our souls grow through both spiritual and worldly experience. We are souls having a human experience, always connected with the Divine.

Sensitive performances by Ku, an independent film director (Beautiful Boy), and Chung, a Chinese actor (Bruce Lee, My Brother) complete this gorgeous film about inner growth and life meaning.

The Ladakh region of the Himalayas comes alive in Rali Raltchev’s cinematography. Serenity and drama unfold in colorful scenes of prayer, meditation, devotional dance and rural farming.

 

Love and destiny

Tashi and Pema make love in a field. When Pema’s family finds out, they beat Tashi until they realize who he is. An astrologer is called in to decide Pema’s destiny.

The two marry and have children, including a son Karma (Tenzin Tashi). Tashi prospers as a farmer, bringing the harvest to town himself rather than yielding to a dishonest middle man Dawa (Lhakpa Tsering). In retaliation, the family field is set ablaze.

Satisfy 1,000 desires or just one?

Neighbors help the family extinguish the fire. Tashi lusts after a field worker Sujata (Neelesha BaVora). He betrays Pema.

Learning that Apo has died, Tashi reads a message from the teacher: “What is more important: satisfying one thousand desires or conquering just one.” He decides to leave Pema and return to the lamasery.

Paradox of enlightenment

Pema confronts her fleeing husband. Chung gives a memorable speech, comparing herself to Siddhartha’s abandoned wife Yashodhara.

Pema lives in every moment. She pursues Buddhahood as a devout wife and mother, very much like Mary, Christ’s mother.

Tashi has the luxury of walking out on his family. Pema does not. Lamaseries were only open to men at that time, so the path to enlightenment seemed closed to women.

All paths lead to the Divine

Pema argues eloquently for the marriage of everyday life and devotional practice. She loves the Divine as much as he does.

Tashi sees a question inscribed on a rock: “How can one prevent a drop of water from ever drying up?” He learns the answer. Poised in time and timelessness, he looks to the sky. (5 out of 5 stars)

If you like Samsara, you might enjoy:  Dalai Lama: Renaissance.

 

Samsara   2001  /  R  /  2 hours, 18 min

Cast Overview: Shawn Ku, Christy Chung, Naleesha BaVora, Lhakpa Tsering, Tenzin Tashi, Jamayang Jinpa, Sherab Sangey, Kelsang Tashi, Tsepak Tsangpo

Director:  Pan Nalin

Language: Tibetan, Ladakhi with English subtitles

Genre:  Drama, Spirituality

Top 25 Films that Change Us 2011 reflect a new world

Moviespirit presents the Top 25 Films that Change Us 2011. Each one can open your heart and change your mind in unique, subtle ways.

Films represent a powerful medium for learning about yourself and others. Most of us have access to great movies, making them a very democratic art form, a “dance of light” for our time. Found within are compassion, authenticity and integrity. High quality and technical excellence are demonstrated.

Families, nature and culture

Cave of Forgotten Dreams. New wave German filmmaker Werner Herzog reveals a protocinema of Paleolithic drawings in this unprecedented filming of Chauvet Cave in southern France. Herzog believes that the ancients held their torches aloft and danced, their shadows moving with the animal drawings in an ancient cinema. Here Earth’s earliest known drawings, about 32,000 years old, were discovered in 1994. Cinematographer Peter Zeitlinger’s exquisite 3-D images show horses gallop, and now-extinct cave bears and cave lions stalk. Woolly mammoths and spotted panthers prowl undulating walls glittering with calcite. Herzog’s offbeat narration and signature metaphysical musings keep the film lively.

The Tree of Life. When her son dies at war, Mrs. O’Brien (Jessica Chastain) asks why. Director Terrence Malick answers with a return to the beginning of time. Galaxies and the Earth form. A couple meets. A child is born. Hundreds of beautifully composed images shape a quiet, elegant whole. Upheavals take on a stately grace. Sparse dialogue and interior monologues become poetry. Brad Pitt impresses as strict, troubled Mr. O’Brien. Jack is played as a youth by Hunter McCracken, and later by Sean Penn.

The Descendants. George Clooney stars as Matt King, a real estate lawyer in Hawaii whose wife Liz lies in a coma after a waterskiing accident. Matt must transform his own pain and sorrow as he guides his daughters through impending loss. Shailene Woodley plays rebellious Alex. Amara Miller stars as tender Scottie. The family learns to live more from the heart and less from the mind in Alexander Payne’s sensitive drama about honor and letting go.

The Way. Martin Sheen and Emilio Estevez travel the Way of St. James (Camino de Santiago) from France to Spain in this sensitive drama about men’s hearts. Sheen’s son Estevez directs and appears as a ghostly muse. The most powerful movie is sometimes the simplest. Sheen’s deep, rousing performance and Estevez’s minimalist, mood-centered direction fill The Way with meaning. Cinematographer Juanmi Azpiroz captures inner and outer adventures along the breathtaking pilgrimage route. Tom Avery (Sheen) loses his son Daniel (Estevez) in a freak accident in the Pyrenees. He begins to retrace Daniel’s steps, intending to complete the journey. Deborah Kara Unger, Yorick van Wageningen and James Nesbitt also star.

Tough love

Everything Must Go. Nick Halsey (Will Ferrell) is having a very bad day. He’s been fired. His wife dumps him.  He’s marooned on his own front yard. Nick is forced to face his alcoholism and take stock of his life in this deadpan comedy. A smart, enterprising neighborhood kid who lost his dad shows up. Kenny (Christopher Jordan Wallace) cares about his neighbor, and helps Nick care about others again. Nick and Kenny help each other rise above despair. Laura Dern also appears. Dan Rush writes and directs.

Moneyball tells the true story of sports rebel and Oakland Athletics general manager Billy Beane. Brad Pitt brings Beane to life in this exciting drama about professional baseball, valuing others and bold change. Fast-talking Beane uses saber metrics to recruit a winning team on a tiny budget. The fantastic script was penned by Oscar winners Steven Zaillian (Schindler’s List) and Aaron Sorkin (The Social Network). Jonah Hill co-stars as economics whiz kid Peter Brand. After 11 losses, the team sets a major league record during the 2002 season. Actual game footage from the A’s 20-game win streak adds excitement. Bennett Miller (Capote, Doubt) directs.

Terri. John C. Reilly and Jacob Wysocki give standout performances in the best coming-of-age dramedy of the year. Azazel Jacobs directs. Mr. Fitzgerald (Reilly), a vice principal, begins to counsel Terri, a huge oddball with a confused, hungry heart. Reilly’s straightforward, unforgettable character walks his talk. Mr. Fitzgerald doesn’t pretend to have it all together, but helping troubled kids is his life calling. Jacobs captures strange beauty as Terri hangs out with two outcast friends. Creed Bratton also stars.

 

 

Truth and romance

Another Earth. What if we could start over, erase our most painful mistakes and move forward? Brit Marling stars in this moving indie. Rhoda Williams (Marling) has just won a scholarship to MIT’s astrophysics program. Partying herself into a stupor, she decides to drive home. Another Earth blends science fiction, art and emotional truth. It’s stark and understated, a contemplation of regret and human possibility. William Mapother and Marling are remarkable alone and together. The characters don’t interact so much as they revolve around each other. There’s a sense of vast eternity, a lonely hum. Director Mike Cahill co-wrote the mesmerizing, imaginative script with Marling, drawing upon the theoretical physics of parallel worlds. Cahill’s feature debut won the Alfred P. Sloan Feature Film Prize and a Special Jury Prize at Sundance 2011.

Beginners. He may be late for the party, but Hal celebrates like it’s 1955. Christopher Plummer’s Golden Globe winning performance reveals a man who married for love while hiding his sexual orientation. After his wife dies, Hal comes out to his adult son Oliver (Ewan McGregor), a romantic idealist. Parallel love stories unfold. Melanie Laurent stars as Oliver’s new sweetheart Anna. Goran Visnjic plays Hal’s lover Andy. Beginners is masterfully directed and written by Mike Mills, whose own father came out late in life. Art and whimsy add delight. Oliver sketches the many faces of sadness as he converses with his dog Arthur. McGregor brings a sensitive, vulnerable and thoughtful quality.

Missing Pieces. The most intriguing indie of the year from director-to-watch Kenton Bartlett explores longing and true love. Mark Boone Junior stars as David Lindale. Recovering from a head injury and the loss of his girlfriend Delia (Melora Walters), David’s obsession takes a disturbing turn. Richly imagined with deep compassion, this psychological drama also stars Taylor Engel and Daniel Hassel as a virtual couple. Stark and oddly hopeful, Missing Pieces listens to the ancient cry of the heart with contemporary verve. Jonathan Arturo’s artistic cinematography is notable.

Midnight in Paris. A charming, erudite frolic through Paris and the heart of an idealistic Hollywood screenwriter, Midnight in Paris lightheartedly explores past and present. Woody Allen’s newest film savors life and literature in the City of Light. It’s Allen at his searching, sarcastic best. Owen Wilson plays Gil Pender, a shambling, successful screenwriter who daydreams about fleeing Malibu, moving to Paris and finishing his novel. Rachel McAdams protests as his gold digger fiancée Inez.

 

Movies as art

The Artist. Even if you aren’t a fan of black and white films, The Artist likely will enchant you. Jean Dujardin smolders as prideful George Valentin, and Berenice Bejo shines as Peppy Miller, all spark and warmth. They are stars of the silent film era. George soon falls for Peppy, the newcomer he discovered. Acting then was pantomime and passion, a larger-than-life tribute to everyman and woman. Michel Hazanavicius writes and directs this film which swept the Academy Awards and Golden Globes. The Artist is mostly silent but filled with music, dance and superb acting. John Goodman and Uggie the dog also star.

Hugo. Martin Scorsese’s first children’s fantasy is a tribute to the cinema. Asa Butterfield stars as an orphan who lives above a Paris train station in the 1930s. A Station Inspector (Sacha Baron Cohen) chases the 12-year-old who lifts croissants and toys. Ben Kingsley is masterful as brooding, heartbroken Pappa Georges. Chloe Grace Moretz is engaging as Isabelle. Impeccable cinematography by Robert Richardson and fabulous sets from Dante Ferretti create an intricate world of wonder. You’ll see the Lumiere Brothers’ 1895 short The Arrival of a Train at La Ciotat Station and Georges Melies’ 1902 classic A Trip to the Moon. The making of these movies is reenacted. It’s a deep appreciation for early films and filmmakers.

Existential dread

Martha Marcy May Marlene. Elizabeth Olsen bursts into stardom in writer-director Sean Durkin’s astounding feature debut. Olsen’s dynamic, restrained performance is striking as Martha struggles to reclaim herself after escaping from a cult in upstate New York. Place and time blur as she relives her old life. Cult leader Patrick (John Hawkes) requires psychic surrender and bizarre acts. This indie psychological thriller disturbed and fascinated me as much as The Exorcist. Silkwood-like ending is deeply unsettling.

Melancholia. Lars von Trier casts a spell over you in this visual masterpiece about apocalypse and humanity. Kirsten Dunst stars as a Justine, a runaway bride. Plagued by depression, Justine confronts her gentle groom (Alexander Skarsgard), her man-hating mother (Charlotte Rampling) and her pound-of-flesh boss (Stellan Skarsgard). It’s a landscape of inner devastation made manifest. Melancholia joins a flurry of “end times” films. Unlike The Tree of Lifeit focuses on destruction. The writer-director examines our shortcomings and how we face death. This is a masterful, artistic interpretation of von Trier’s own battle with depression. You might see him as cynical. Then again, simply making a film is an act of faith.

Take Shelter is a fever dream of a thriller. It dwells on anxiety and hope, prophecy and mental illness. Jeff Nichols directs. Michael Shannon brilliantly plays sensitive everyman Curtis LaForche. Gangly, enigmatic and tortured, Curtis is plagued by hallucinations and nightmares. In an age of uncertainty, his dark night of the soul feels universal. Suspenseful from start to finish, Take Shelter portends the end. It sweeps you away with dread and faith. Jessica Chastain stars as Curtis’ wife Samantha. Tova Stewart is sweetly perceptive as their hearing impaired daughter Hannah.

Danger and redemption

The Debt. A team of young Israeli Massad agents captures the surgeon of Birkenau, but hides a dark secret. Helen Mirren and Jessica Chastain star in John Madden’s classy and exciting exploration of truth and honor. Non-stop suspense and an all-star cast distinguish this smart thriller. Romance and regret sharpen intrigue. Atonement is impossible in The Debt’s bloody conclusion, with a character who can’t forgive herself. Sam Worthington, Marton Csokas, Tom Wilkinson and Ciaran Hinds also star.

The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo. David Fincher’s classy remake of the 2009 Swedish-language thriller stars Rooney Mara as Lisbeth Salander, an abused heroine. Mikael Blomqvist (Daniel Craig) and Lisbeth track a serial killer implicated in the murder of Harriet Vanger 40 years ago. This is Mara’s breakout role as a fierce, determined computer hacker and survivor. Violent scenes, and a family of nefarious suspects, add grit. Jeff Cronenweth’s extraordinary cinematography highlights the play of good and evil. When the mystery is solved, a way to transcend violence is revealed.

Incendies. A daughter investigates her mother’s life and her own roots. Denis Villeneuve writes and directs this suspenseful family drama. Jeanne (Melissa Desoreaux-Poulin) travels to the Middle East to solve mysteries about her mother Nawal (Lubna Azabal, incredible). Politics, religion, identity and passion are explored. Best Movie Quote: “Death is never the end of the story. There are always details.”

Teachable moments

In a Better World. Danish filmmaker Susanne Bier explores violence, courage and responsibility in this Oscar and Golden Globe winner. Anton (Mikael Persbrandt) is a surgeon working far from home in a Kenyan field hospital. When his 10-year-old son Elias (Markus Rygaard) is bullied at school, he steps in as a peacemaker. Seeking his wife’s forgiveness after an affair, Anton lives in a state of love and surrender. His humility, gentleness and willingness to look like a fool are unique. Trine Dyrholm, Ulrich Thomsen and William Johnk Nielsen also star.

Win Win. Paul Giamatti is tremendous as Mike Flaherty, a storefront lawyer and sports coach who learns about honesty from a teen wrestling prodigy. Alex Shaffer plays Kyle, a deadpan runaway with a mom in drug rehab. Mike shows a great capacity to care for a kid in need even though he’s cash-strapped. Kyle demands a higher level of integrity from Mike. Shaffer was a high school champion wrestler in New Jersey. Amy Ryan, Bobby Cannavale and Burt Young also star. Director Tom McCarthy (The Station Agent; The Visitor) develops characters you will care about.

A new world

Happy. Roko Belic shows you how to find deep and lasting joy in this globe-trotting documentary. Belic travels to 14 countries to meet positive, optimistic individuals both rich and poor. He interviews “Dr. Happiness” Ed Diener, a scholar of happiness for over 35 years, and Richard Davidson, a neuroscientist at the University of Wisconsin-Madison who studies meditation’s effects. Sharing insights from psychology, neuroscience and multicultural wisdom, Happy finds that community and family are key. Once basic human needs are met, researchers say, $50K and $5 million look very much the same to our brains. Adversity can even kick start happiness, giving you the biochemical contrast needed to create new, better realities.

Everyone can Thrive, according to a leading edge documentary from visionary Foster Gamble. Steve Gagne directs. A wake-up call with a plan, Thrive casts world crisis as an evolutionary turning point. Daring to follow the money, Gamble analyzes underlying causes of scarcity and suffering worldwide. Free energy, abundant food and prosperity for all are within reach, experts say. The Thrive Movement website includes detailed information and ways to participate. Among those interviewed are Nassim Haramein, cosmologist and inventor, and Paul Hawken, environmentalist and entrepreneur. A masterpiece of impeccable research and heart, Thrive is among the most important documentaries ever made.

Miss Representation. Women speak out as the mainstream media trivializes and sexualizes women for profit. This disturbing eye-opener from Jennifer Siebel Newsom was featured at Sundance 2011. In-depth interviews and images from print, television, the internet, rock, rap and hip hop videos abound. Miss Representation is among the most important documentaries ever made. It reveals a rising tide of female leaders, and the tremendous integrity and wisdom that women offer society. Many scholars and activists speak, including Jennifer Pozner, Geena Davis and Rosario Dawson.

Compassion

Of Gods and Men. Trappist monks serving in the Algerian highlands face death in this stirring drama based on true events. As violence spreads, the government orders the monks to leave the country. Devoted to the impoverished locals, they debate whether to flee. Like Jesus, they live simple lives of prayer and service. Christian and Islamic people can coexist, they believe. Xavier Beauvois directs this winner of the Cannes Grand Jury Prize, and a Cesar Award for Best Film. Lambert Wilson and Michael Lonsdale star.

You might also enjoy: Top 12 Family Films of 2011; Top 10 Thrillers  of 2011.

Rooney Mara rocks The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo

Rooney Mara fights violence against women in The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo, David Fincher’s rousing remake of Niels Arden Oplev’s 2009 original.

Hacker meets disgraced journalist

Based on Stieg Larsson’s trilogy, the plot unfolds as 23-year-old Lisbeth Salander (Mara), a viciously abused ward of the state, is hired to hack into the background of journalist Mikael Blomqvist (Daniel Craig, quietly determined). Lisbeth senses Mikael is innocent of the libel charges against him.

Mikael is publicly disgraced when he loses the lawsuit filed by a corrupt businessman he exposed. He resigns as publisher of the Millenium magazine, only to receive an urgent call from the retired CEO of Vanger Industries.

Henrik Vanger (Christopher Plummer, heartbroken) hires Mikael to investigate the mysterious death of his grand-niece Harriet some 40 years earlier. Her killer torments Vanger by sending him a framed, pressed wild flower each year on his birthday, as Harriet used to do. Mikael seeks out Lisbeth to help him investigate.

Mara’s breakout role

You won’t forget Mara’s fierce intensity and pain. As feminist hero, Lisbeth survives on Happy Meals, brilliance and daring. She takes revenge on a social services guardian (Yorick van Wageningen) who rapes her, making a devil’s bargain for her independence.

Lisbeth’s harrowing life takes on added purpose when Mikael enlists her. “I want you to help me catch a killer of women,” he says. They begin to investigate a serial killer who has brutalized other women in the region with Old Testament zeal. Harriet’s body was never found. Lisbeth is hooked.

Mara also played Mark Zuckerberg’s girlfriend in Fincher’s The Social Network.

Remake rivals original

Fincher’s remake rivals the original. Still gritty, it stands out with beautiful cinema and smooth transitions. The sound is sleek and evocative. Trent Reznor and Atticus Ross composed the edgy score.

Cinematographer Jeff Cronenweth gives you a sweeping view of northern Sweden, frosty and bleak. There’s creeping dread as Mikael meets the feuding members of the Vanger clan, which includes Nazis, rapists and deviants.

Violence, beauty mingle

Many scenes are stunning. Lisbeth’s careening motorbike roars. Mikael confronts a suspect. A fiery explosion illuminates the night sky. Violent scenes, including two rapes and a torture sequence, are ugly and terrifying but less protracted than in the 2009 Swedish language film.

Ace actors add drama

Spot on performances include Stellan Skarsgard as nefarious Martin Vanger; Robin Wright as Erika, Mikael’s lover at Millenium, and Goran Visnjic as a social services exec who tries to protect Lisbeth.

Controversial affair

Fincher’s decision to include an affair between Lisbeth and Mikael has drawn criticism. The affair seems a device to tame Lisbeth, portraying her as a woman who wants to date a “nice man” after all. The goth, bisexual heroine is more complex than that.

In the original film, sexual tension between Lisbeth and Mikael is wisely left to simmer beneath the surface.

Fincher’s meditation

Fincher, who has practiced Transcendental Meditation for over 35 years, sets a calm, relentless tone. You get the feeling that good will triumph.

The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo remains true to the novel but doesn’t bog down in complexity, thanks to an excellent screenplay from Steven Zaillian (Schindler’s List).

Women transcend violence

The resolution of the mystery circles back to women escaping violence. It’s possible to forgive an find peace. Lisbeth still searches for love, but at least she has found a purpose. (4.5 out of 5 stars)

If you like The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo, you might enjoy:  The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo (2009).

 

The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo    2011  /  R  /  2 hours, 38 min

Cast Overview: Daniel Craig, Rooney Mara, Christopher Plummer, Stellan Skarsgard, Steven Berkoff, Robin Wright, Yorick van Wageningen, Joely Richardson, Geraldine James, Goran Visnjic, Donald Sumpter, Ulf Friburg

Director:  David Fincher

Genre:  Crime, Drama, Mystery, Thriller