LFM Reviews Mother, I Love You @ The 2014 Palms Springs International Film Festival

By Joe Bendel. Quality musical instruments are expensive, even for middle class professionals in Riga. That is one reason Raimonds Krasts is reluctant to tell his perennially stressed out OBGYN mother he lost his saxophone, particularly since it happened during a bit of misdemeanor mischief. Each lie and evasion only makes matters worse for Krasts in Jānis Nords’ Mother, I Love You, a Dostoyevskian middle school morality play that screens as part of the 2014 Palm Springs International Film Festival’s focus on official Academy Award submissions for best foreign language film.

There is already tension between Krasts and his single mother, Silvia Krasta. She has been secretly dating a colleague while supposedly working the late shift. Frankly, it is unclear how Krasts feels about this, but there is no question Krasta is displeased with his behavioral issues at school. She is also none too thrilled about his friend from the wrong side of the tracks, Peteris Cepurnieks. The son of a cleaning lady, Cepurnieks has swiped his mother’s key to a dodgy playboy’s often vacant apartment, where they often hang out and steal pocket money.

When things get particularly heated at home, Krasts runs off to the bachelor pad, but cuts short his stay when the owner arrives with a prostitute. Unfortunately, the woman in question filches his saxophone along with several other portable items from the flat. Predictably, his attempts to retrieve it lead to even more serious problems, because Krasts is still just a kid—one with particularly bad judgment.

Even though MILY did not make the Academy’s nine film short list, it was a smart choice for Latvia. As the winner of the Jury Award at this year’s LA Film Festival, it would have had more credibility and perhaps recognition among left coast Academy members than the average submission. Nords’ brand of sensitive naturalism is also perfectly compatible with Academy tastes and preferences. Evidently it was not to be, but it is still an accomplished film. The work of cinematographer Tobias Datum is particularly noteworthy for the way it captures the moody elegance and loneliness of late night Riga.

Front-and-center throughout the film, thirteen year old lead-actor Kristofers Konovalovs holds up to the scrutiny remarkably well. As problematic as Krasts might be, he never comes across as a caricature. Instead, we can understand why he makes each compounding mistake. Never overly showy, he could teach a thing or two to some of this year’s supposed Oscar contenders.

Likewise, the performance of Vita Varpina (one of two established screen actors in MILY) is smartly balanced and acutely believable. Haralds Barzdins, the real life conductor for the Latvian Song and Dance Festival adds some color as Krasts’ band director, but it is debatable whether the film will do much to spur youthful enthusiasm for orchestral music.

There is indeed a lot of messy humanity in MILY. Everyone makes mistakes, but nobody is irredeemable. It should be interesting for festival patrons to watch the film in close dialogue with Kang Yi-kwan’s somewhat thematically related Juvenile Offender. Nords never takes the easy way out, yet his film is still considerably more optimistic. Small but potent, Mother, I Love You is recommended for those who appreciate coming-of-age character studies. It screens this coming Sunday (1/5), Monday (1/6), and the following Saturday (1/11) during the 2014 Palm Springs International Film Festival.

LFM GRADE: B

Posted on January 2nd, 2014 at 11:03pm.

LFM Reviews Of Horses and Men @ The 2014 Palms Springs International Film Festival

From "Of Horses and Men."

By Joe Bendel. This is not a film for little girls who love horses. Not every equine creature will live to see the final credits, but at least some will share some hanky panky along the way. Still, the emphasis is on eccentricity rather than zoology when writer-director Benedikt Erlingsson explores the relationship between man and beast in Of Horses and Men, Iceland’s official foreign language Academy submission, which screens during the 2014 Palms Springs International Film Festival.

Frost wrote “good fences make good neighbors.” Well, the barbed wire fences in this Icelandic highland village are quite flimsy. Stately bachelor Kolbeinn is quite the sight on his white mare, or at least single mother Solveig thinks so. Unfortunately, one of her stallions crashes the party (see one-sheet for details). To make matters worse, as various men of the village start dying in sundry cinematic ways, the new widows become rivals for Solveig.

Much to everyone’s surprise, young Swedish rancher Johanna proves to be quite the handler of wild horses, catching the eye of Spanish tourist Juan Camillo. Determined to make a connection, he signs up for an intensive horseback riding tour. It ends badly. Remember The Empire Strikes Back? You will during his excursion.

From "Of Horses and Men."

That might sound like a fair amount of plot, but it’s really not. Erlingsson is sparing in his use of dialogue, relying more on telling looks. This is a quiet film, but miscommunication often plays a pivotal role. It looks incredible, though. Erlingsson and cinematographer Bergsteinn Bjoergulfsson work the coastal vistas for all they are worth. Viewers can easily understand how such a craggy environment would produce these rugged, taciturn characters.

Despite their Scandinavian Calvinist reserve, Ingvar E. Sigurdsson and Charlotte Boving have some nice chemistry as Kolbeinn and Solveig, respectively. The entire ensemble feels right in their roles, convincingly looking like an uncomfortably tight knit community. Of course, Sigridur Maria Egilsdottir stands out in a good way, as the dynamic Johanna.

For a (sort of) rom-com, Horses boasts a seriously impressive body count. Despite its easy going vibe, it is definitely not for younger viewers. Its blend of quiet meditation and macabre humor was obviously not to the Academy’s tastes either, considering it did not make the cut for the nine film short list, but it is quite distinctive. Recommended for those who like striking scenery and a dose of fatalism in their movie romances, Of Horses and Men screens this coming Wednesday (1/8), Thursday (1/9), and the following Saturday (1/11) as part of the 2014 PSIFF.

LFM GRADE: B+

Posted on January 2nd, 2014 at 10:58pm.