for something a little different.

I was reading the New York Times this morning, as I often do to pass the time at work, and I came across an article that re-affirmed a theory of mine; there is a small revolution going on in the film industry.


And who is to thank for this resolution? It just happens to be you, me and this little thing we call the internet. Thanks to the now ubiquitous Facebook, Twitter, Blogs, Texting, Forums, etc. etc., word of mouth is now lightning speed.


Now a days, for a film to do well it has to have one of two things: a successful internet marketing scheme with some sort of fan boy following. Usually this approach leads to a huge opening box office return, but a steep decline in attendance after the first week or so.
The other success is slower, and thus harder to catch. Often it goes like this, film opens at festival, receives rave reviews, and disappears for a few months. Those lucky enough to see it write, post, and tweet about it to all of their friends, and enough of a fan base is established that the film is picked up by a studio for distribution. It shows up at the multiplex and a few people see it the first week, love it, tell some friends and so on and so forth.
Many times these small movies that once saw distribution as an epic struggle are nominated for major awards- a la Slumdog Millionaire, which received so much hype from it's Oscar nod that it was actually re-released in theaters.
[speaking of Oscars, did you know they're going to have 10 Best Picture noms this year?]



So in the new tradition of the little movie that could, I present you these four movies that I watched-and loved this past week. [two are quite manly and two are French, this was not planned]


1. District 9
Perhaps you've heard of this little alien film produced by Peter Jackson?
At first glance it's just another Aliena/Explosian film, but there's omething a little different. Set in South Africa, this film borrows heavily from the countries history of racial segregation and Aperthied, extremely well written, well directed, with amazing special effects that actually help the story line, instead of just bedazzling it.










2. The Hurt Locker
Personally, I'm not big on war movies. Especially ones about Iraq, they always seem sort of romantisized, macho, and boated with explosions. The Hurt Locker however, was absolutely riveting. I was literally on the edge of my seat for a good deal of this movie about an American bomb squad in Iraq. Well written, well shot, and incredibly realistic. Oscar worthy in my opinion.
[Plus, the incredible lead -Jeremy Renner- is a local boy from Modesto.]





3. The Class [Entre le Murs]
Movies about school kids almost always play off the classroom as simply a backdrop for pubescnt drama. What this documentary-style French film does is create a drama that exsists entirely in the classroom, compounded by the small space. A teacher who desperatley wants his students to do well, and students who are- in middle school- already exhausted by the system.




4. Paris 36 [Faubourg 36]
If you like musicals, love stories, and don't mind subtitles, this movie is worth your time. It's about all sorts of love, a father for a son, and actor for the theater, a man for a woman. Plus it's visually stunning, set against a Hollywood-ized version of 1936 France that is just kitchsy enough without being distracting. I still have the "La Mer" tune stuck in my head...






So go see a movie someone recomended to you. Maybe you'll have to rent it, but good or bad, at least you'll have something to talk about.



"What is that you express in your eyes? It seems to me more than all the words I have read in my life." -Walt Whitman