Monthly Archives: October 2021

ROY’S WORLD at the Chicago Critics Film Fest

I couldn’t be more excited that a film I produced, Rob Christopher’s documentary ROY’S WORLD: BARRY GIFFORD’S CHICAGO, is receiving its Illinois premiere at the Music Box Theatre as part of the great Chicago Critics Film Festival next month. The film is narrated by Willem Dafoe, Matt Dillon and Lili Taylor and consists almost entirely of never-before-seen archival footage of Chicago in the mid-20th century and a couple of animated sequences. The film’s subject, master writer Barry Gifford (WILD AT HEART), will be there in person for a Q&A! You can buy tickets on the Music Box website here.

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The Last Ten Movies I Saw


1. In the Cut* (Campion) – A-
2. In Front of Your Face* (Hong) – A-
3. Memoria* (Weerashethakul) – B+
4. Rear Window (Hitchcock) – A+
5. Saint Maud* (Glass) – C
6. Devil in a Blue Dress (Franklin) – A-
7. Bicycle Thieves (De Sica) – A+
8. The Power of the Dog* (Campion) – A
9. Bad Luck Banging or Loony Porn* (Jade) – B-
10. Drive My Car* (Hamaguchi) – A

* – first-time watch


Microbudget Masterclass at the Lake County Film Fest

I’ll be giving a presentation on microbudget filmmaking at the Lake County Film Festival on Saturday, 11/13 at 1pm. I’ll be showing clips from all of my features (including a sneak peak of RELATIVE) and admission is FREE. Hope to see you there! More info on the Lake County Film Fest site.


The Last Ten Movies I Saw

1. Bicycle Thieves (Kremer) – A+
2. Out of the Past (Tourneur) – A+
3. Devil in a Blue Dress (Franklin) – A-
4. Wheel of Fortune and Fantasy (Hamaguchi) – A
5. Devil in a Blue Dress (Franklin) – A-
6. Bergman Island (Hansen-Love) – C
7. Citizen Kane (Welles) – A+
8. The Many Saints of Newark* (Taylor) – D+
9. Citizen Kane (Welles) – A+
10. Citizen Kane (Welles) – A+


Ryusuke Hamaguchi’s WHEEL OF FORTUNE AND FANTASY

My favorite film of 2021, Ryusuke Hamaguchi’s WHEEL OF FORTUNE AND FANTASY, opens for a theatrical run in NY and LA today and will screen at the Chicago International Film Festival (live and online) over the next week. I reviewed it for https://www.cinefile.info/:

Ryûsuke Hamaguchi’s WHEEL OF FORTUNE AND FANTASY(Japan)
AMC River East 21 – Monday, 8:15pm

HAPPY HOUR, the intimate epic that established Ryûsuke Hamaguchi’s international reputation, achieves a novelistic density through the uncommonly detailed way it plumbs the emotional lives of its quartet of lead characters. WHEEL OF FORTUNE AND FANTASY, the first of two 2021 releases by the director (followed by DRIVE MY CAR), resembles a short-story collection in how it depicts three narratively unrelated vignettes that are formally separated by their own chapter headings and credit sequences. Hamaguchi proves to be equally adept at the short-film format as he was with a 5-hour-plus run time: the mini romantic dramas that comprise WHEEL are gratifying to watch as self-contained episodes, but when one contemplates how they might be linked on a thematic level, the entire project attains a profound resonance (it wasn’t until the morning after my first viewing that I realized the magnitude of Hamaguchi’s deceptively modest approach). The first section, “Magic (Or Something Less Assuring),” begins with an extended Rohmerian dialogue between two female friends, one of whom regales the other about a “magical” date with a man she has fallen in love with, unaware that he is also her friend’s ex-lover. It ends with a chance encounter between all three characters, punctuated by a brief but daring fantasy sequence. The title of the second section, “Door Wide Open,” refers to a literature professor’s policy of avoiding scandal by always keeping his office door open when meeting with students. One day he receives an unexpected visitor, a woman who is attempting to ensnare him in a trap. Or is she? The final section, “Once Again,” is the best: two women who haven’t seen each other in 20 years meet providentially on a train-station escalator before spending the day together and eventually realizing that neither is whom the other had thought. Hamaguchi himself has said that “coincidence and imagination” are the movie’s main themes and, indeed, as the title indicates, each of the stories involves the intersection of the free will of the individual and the fickle nature of fate. But WHEEL is also about the inexorable pull of the past and how the characters’ regrets over roads not taken have keenly shaped who they are. This latter aspect is the key to understanding how a film so charming on the surface can also contain such a melancholy undertow and how characters with only a small amount of screen time can seem so fascinatingly complex and believable. Hamaguchi shows the psychological underpinnings of everyday human behavior in a manner rarely seen in the movies. He knows how to pierce your heart. (2021, 121 min, DCP Digital) [Michael Glover Smith]


RELATIVE is a Chicago Film Project Production

Big RELATIVE news: My new movie is an official Newcity/Chicago Film Project production. I am so excited to be working with Executive Producers Brian and Jan Hieggelke to bring this film to theaters next year. Congrats to the entire RELATIVE team! Check out the full story in SCREEN Magazine (with quotes from Brian, Jan and yours truly): https://screenmag.com/brian-and-jan-hieggelke-and-chicago-film-project-announce-next-feature/


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