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‘Flee’ animators draw a fine line between keeping secrets and keeping emotions

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Making “Flee” look so genuine that it’s earned an unprecedented trifecta of animation, documentary and worldwide function Oscar nominations was simply a part of the problem. The hand-drawn true story additionally needed to do emotional justice to its central character’s agonizing, five-year refugee journey from Nineteen Nineties Afghanistan to security in Denmark.

Whereas hiding his id.

It had taken many years for director Jonas Poher Rasmussen to get his childhood buddy to inform his story, however he nonetheless needed to keep up his privateness, to be identified solely by the pseudonym Amin. But watching Amin describe his nice traumas and hard-won victories for the primary time can be any film’s compelling core.

“Flee” director Jonas Poher Rasmussen.

(Morten Larsen)

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Solar Creature, a Danish-French animation studio that had by no means made a feature-length movie earlier than, offered the way in which. Animation director Kenneth Ladekjær, artwork director Jess Nicholls, chief government officer and government producer Charlotte de La Gournerie and their groups labored up a subtly real looking, graphic-novel-like 2-D fashion that appealed to Rasmussen’s documentarian sensibility, together with a extra summary, charcoal drawing method — which Simon Rouby storyboarded and Gilles Cuvelier animated — to evoke Amin’s frightful recollections of, nicely, fleeing.

“Once I approached Amin with this concept, he was actually intrigued by the truth that he could possibly be nameless behind animation,” Rasmussen says.

The director videotaped Amin. The artists didn’t meet their topic however had entry to the footage, they usually wanted to attract a high quality line between conserving secrets and techniques and registering correct expressions.

“It was vital that the animation by no means be rotoscoping,” Ladekjær notes. “It was all the time meant to be an interpretation. We have now designs of Amin that look totally different, after all, however nonetheless have some similarities. You possibly can nonetheless have a look at how he wipes his tears away, what he appears like when he begins to cry. Does his face type of contract, or is he extra calm? When he laughs, does his entire physique transfer, or is his physique language extra held again?”

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One overriding attribute the animators gave Amin could possibly be referred to as a resting unhappy face.

Amin in a scene from “Flee.”

Amin in a scene from “Flee.”

(Neon)

“It’s true that Amin’s eyebrows largely level upwards, so he has this fixed unhappy face,” Ladekjær notes. “It’s a approach to present that he’s carrying this burden of not with the ability to be himself. He can’t fairly loosen up at any level within the film.”

Though the animators needed to visualize various miserable and even terrifying situations, it wasn’t all sorrow. Younger Amin’s infatuation with Jean-Claude Van Damme, whose film posters adorned the boy’s Kabul bed room, offered some reduction.

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“We didn’t get the rights from Jean-Claude to invent scenes, so I needed to nearly step-frame ‘Bloodsport’ and replica it as shut as I might,” Ladekjær says. “However that’s simply enjoyable, once you get to animate somebody doing a flying roundhouse kick in tight pants.”

“Flee” animation director Kenneth Ladekjær.

“Flee” animation director Kenneth Ladekjær.

(From Kenneth Ladekjær)

On the opposite finish of the thematic spectrum, these scarier sequences had been terribly attempting — and never simply due to their material.

“Numerous this was, how can we present one thing that’s at night time and there must be nearly no mild supply aside from the moon?” Nicholls recollects composing a forest border-crossing the place the trafficker threatens more and more exhausted refugees. “We needed to work out how can we present sufficient to have the ability to see what’s occurring however not a lot that you simply really feel prefer it’s pretend lit, as a result of then it begins to really feel not like an actual story however like a story fiction. So we needed to set the scene after which use the digital camera to construct the strain slowly by reducing between folks.”

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"Flee" art director Jess Nicholls

“Flee” artwork director Jess Nicholls

(From Jess Nicholls)

For Australian Nicholls, although, the hardest sections to get proper had been Amin’s childhood recollections of Kabul. Since he left, the Afghan capital has been altered by extra wars, and few photographic data of the early ‘90s metropolis had been digitized. Visible sources for Kabul’s streets and buildings had been present in libraries round Copenhagen and previous newsreels the movie’s dwell footage archivists offered. Even books written by Russians who had been occupying Afghanistan on the time had been combed for descriptions of things offered by avenue distributors.
“And we had a gaggle of Afghans primarily based in Denmark who we had been in a position to present the Kabul sections,” she says. “It was fairly late within the course of, so thank God it was good; they only mentioned, ‘When you change the cooking ware to this specific model and add extra TV antennas, you’re just about there.’”

The one skilled all of them needed to please was impressed — more often than not.

"Flee" executive producer Charlotte de La Gournerie.

“Flee” government producer Charlotte de La Gournerie.

(From Charlotte de La Gournerie)

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“In the course of the character design, I did a choice of outfits,” Ladekjær says. “Amin appreciated most of them, however there was one particularly with this massive yellow stripe throughout the chest that he simply mentioned, ‘I might by no means put on that!’”

“Amin was very stunned by how issues actually appeared like his reminiscence,” Rasmussen provides. “He cherished how the home windows in Afghanistan are very specific, and we had these in there. Due to all of the analysis Jess had achieved, he might acknowledge his childhood house.”

And maybe acknowledge himself, even when nobody else can.

“We actually centered on the subtlety,” De La Gournerie factors out. “Generally animation might be very overacted, however right here it must be very delicate and depart area for the voice that’s there, and area for respiratory. Kenneth was very sensible about when it was an excessive amount of and when it was too little.”

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Movie Reviews

Woof Woof Daddy: Aaron Kwok plays a reincarnated mutt in doggy mess

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Woof Woof Daddy: Aaron Kwok plays a reincarnated mutt in doggy mess

1/5 stars

Filmmakers’ relationship with dogs over the years has proved just as rewarding as other people’s bond with their loyal, four-legged companions. They have produced classic weepies (Old Yeller), thrilling adventures (The Call of the Wild), uproarious comedies (Beethoven), and countless animated favourites.

Asian cinema has supplied many memorable entries, including Hachiko and Koreyoshi Kurahara’s Antarctica, both of which inspired Hollywood remakes.

The secret to a compelling canine caper is either brilliantly trained animal performers or engaging animated characters – whatever effectively brings a dog’s personality to the fore – and showing them having meaningful relationships with human characters around them.

Sadly, Aaron Kwok Fu-shing’s new movie Woof Woof Daddy accomplishes none of this; it is an underwhelming combination of lazy writing, unlikeable performances and woefully subpar visual effects.

There is so much wrong with the film it is difficult to know where to begin. Suffice to say that, even within the fuzzy lines of its own insultingly half-baked premise, the film does not make a lick of sense.

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Kwok plays single father Siwang, who moonlights as a rock star between shifts at a confectionery factory. His only fan is his nine-year-old daughter Lulu (Xing Yunjia), who is left to fend for herself when Siwang is killed in a freak accident.

Banished to the afterlife, the desperate dad rebels against his assigned fate and, 24 years later, is magically reincarnated as a puppy.

Xing Yunjia as a young Lulu (centre) in a still from Woof Woof Daddy.

With remarkable ease he tracks down Lulu (Lyric Lan Yingying), who is a failing pop singer trapped in a loveless engagement to her sleazebag manager (Darren Wang Da-lu).

Siwang muscles his way back into Lulu’s, determined to help his daughter get back on her feet, despite being trapped in a small furry body.

Chief among Woof Woof Daddy’s many failings is its visual effects; the dog looks absolutely rotten, even for a modestly budgeted mainland Chinese quickie like this.

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On the page, the film fares even worse. Siwang the dog is essentially magic: he walks on two legs, holds objects between his paws, and responds to literally anything said to him; he even plays the guitar. Yet nobody bats an eyelid.

Why Siwang does not make Lulu a millionaire simply by existing is never discussed. All director Kexin Lu Ke deems to be of value is Kwok’s immature father earning a redemptive reunion with his daughter; that, and the fact the dog lays a few scatological poop jokes along the way.

Lyric Lan (front) as the adult Lulu in a still from Woof Woof Daddy.

Laboured from start to finish, Woof Woof Daddy is one bad dog that deserves to go straight to the pound.

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Michael Kassan's defamation lawsuit against UTA's attorney dismissed by court

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Michael Kassan's defamation lawsuit against UTA's attorney dismissed by court

A judge on Tuesday dismissed a defamation lawsuit that former United Talent Agency partner Michael Kassan had filed against the Beverly Hills-based agency’s legal counsel.

Kassan sued UTA’s attorney Bryan Freedman in March over comments Freedman made in news outlet Deadline, in which he was quoted calling Kassan a “pathological liar.”

The remarks were made in context of a legal battle between Kassan and his former employer, UTA, who are in a dispute over whether he is allowed to compete with MediaLink, Kassan’s media and market advisory company that was sold to the talent agency in 2021 for $125 million.

Los Angeles Superior Court Judge Daniel S. Murphy said in his ruling that Freedman’s statement was made in the context of a heated dispute “wherein the participants were expected to use epithets and hyperbole which an average reader would not take as fact.”

“In sum, no reasonable trier of fact could interpret Freedman’s statement about Kassan as anything other than a nonactionable statement of opinion,” Murphy said. “Therefore, Kassan’s defamation claims fail as a matter of law and have no probability of success.”

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UTA declined to comment on the defamation lawsuit.

“Freedman’s defense was that everyone knows he is bluster and is not truthful therefore proving our point,” said Kassan attorney, Sanford Michelman.

Freedman said in a statement that Kassan’s lawsuit “was so transparently frivolous” that it took only 55 days for the court to dismiss it.

Freedman said he looks forward to recovering attorneys fees and costs and is considering filing a malicious prosecution action against Kassan and his lawyer.

UTA and Kassan have sued each other, with each leveling accusations of breach of contract. UTA said that Kassan’s spending was out of control, “wasting millions of UTA’s dollars on his lavish personal lifestyle,” which led to his termination.

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Kassan, for his part, said that UTA was well aware of his spending habits and that his firm has continued to be profitable during its tenure within UTA. He alleges that UTA did not follow the terms of their deal, including a promise that UTA‘s marketing group would report to him. Kassan said he quit the agency.

Earlier this month, a judge ruled that the lawsuit UTA filed would move to arbitration.

Staff writer Meg James and News researcher Scott Wilson contributed to this report.

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‘Motel Destino’ Review: Karim Aïnouz’s Tropical Noir Conjures a Potent Atmosphere of Heat, Desire and Danger Even if the Payoff Loses Steam

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‘Motel Destino’ Review: Karim Aïnouz’s Tropical Noir Conjures a Potent Atmosphere of Heat, Desire and Danger Even if the Payoff Loses Steam

Two young men fight playfully on a beach surrounded by rocky hills in the opening moments of Karim Aïnouz’s Motel Destino, their tanned bodies glistening under the scorching sun of Brazil’s northeastern coast. Before it’s revealed that the pair are brothers close in age, the scene sets up a torrid queer undercurrent that ripples throughout this erotic thriller even though the three principal characters enmeshed in a dark romantic triangle are all ostensibly straight.

Returning to his home country after last year’s English historical drama Firebrand, Aïnouz takes inspiration from classic noir, notably The Postman Always Rings Twice and Double Indemnity. That sets up expectations for a denouement involving some kind of twist or retribution, which the movie only sort of provides, segueing from violence to a kind of dreamy deliverance. If that ending makes it less satisfying than the sustained tension and intrigue that precede it, there’s still plenty to keep you glued.

Motel Destino

The Bottom Line

A visual knockout that doesn’t quite stick the landing.

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Venue: Cannes Film Festival (Competition)
Cast: Iago Xavier, Nataly Rocha, Fabio Assunção, Fabíola Líper, Renan Capivara, Yuri Yamamoto, David Santos, Isabela Catão, Jupyra Carvalho, Bertrand de Courville
Director: Karim Aïnouz
Screenwriter: Wislan Esmeraldo, in collaboration with Karim Aïnouz, Mauricio Zacharias

1 hour 55 minutes

At the top of that list are the intoxicating visuals of Hélène Louvart, giving the film palpable heat, physicality and danger that recall the rising-star French cinematographer’s work on Eliza Hittman’s Beach Rats. The striking compositions shot on 16mm have grainy textures pulsing with vitality and electrified by bold splashes of saturated color. The look is like neon even in daylight, adding considerably to the movie’s erotic charge.

The aforementioned beach boys are 21-year-old Heraldo (Iago Xavier) and his slightly older brother Jorge (Renan Capivara), who’s about to have his first child. Heraldo is eager to leave their small beach town in Ceará, move to the city and find work as a mechanic, eventually aiming to run his own garage. But the brothers are on the payroll of local loan shark and drug dealer Bambina (Fabíola Líper), who refuses to let Heraldo go before they do an important two-man job.

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That evening at a beach bar, Heraldo hooks up with a stranger (Isabela Catão) and takes her to Motel Destino for a wild night. But once he passes out, she makes off with his money, leaving him locked in the room with no way to pay. Dayana (Nataly Rocha), who runs the seedy roadside joint with her older husband Elias (Fabio Assunção), eventually releases him. But Heraldo makes it to town just in time to see Jorge’s dead body being carted off after his botched attempt to carry out the Bambina job solo.

Aïnouz and screenwriter Wislan Esmeraldo keep the set-up tight, dispensing with unnecessary exposition. The tragedy also serves to fuel Heraldo’s dreams of Jorge, adding the weight of guilt, while fear factors in via his terror of Bambina’s semiautomatic-toting goon Rafael (David Santos) coming after him. Heraldo gets lucky with a hideout when he returns to Motel Destino and Dayana takes him on as a handyman, putting his electrician skills to work.

Production designer Marcos Pedroso renders the sex hotel as a place so sordid you can practically smell it — and that’s even before you see the donkeys humping in the yard. (Nothing like the sight of a whopping mule penis to hammer home a movie’s fascination with lust.) The rooms are bathed in a lurid red glow, as is the central corridor from which staff secure payment through window hatches that allow for the occasional bit of voyeurism. Security cameras also play into that element, uncovering secrets later on.

Perhaps even more pungently descriptive than the look of the place is sound designer Waldir Xavier’s aural racket of moaning and grunting coming from the rooms, sometimes with the added accompaniment of porn channels. Aïnouz doesn’t hold back in his depiction of an environment in which sex and desire are as dirty, sweaty, whiffy and animalistic as it gets. Heraldo even has to remove a large snake that gets into a room, and it’s not one of the sex toys provided by management.

Naturally, Heraldo and Dayana soon start having clandestine trysts while boorish hothead Elias is elsewhere. He’s busy with plans to build an extension and add more rooms, but it doesn’t take him much time to figure out what’s going on. Elias has already threatened to kill Dayana when she tried to run off in the past, so there’s no telling what he’ll do once he discovers he’s being cheated on.

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Aïnouz teases out the possible scenarios, stirring in homoerotic tension when Elias starts getting drunk and handsy around Heraldo. It’s clear the older man is no stranger to crime, even before we witness his method of dealing with a motel guest’s inconvenient heart attack. The identity of that guest and his link back to an earlier event is one of the screenplay’s more schematic touches.

Even so, the movie’s overripe sensuality pairs well with the menace of isolated settings like a wind farm on a lonely stretch of beach at night. Likewise the simmering threat of violence or sexual abuse.

But the climactic action is somewhat wayward, with a too easy solution supplied by an unfortunate animal in the wrong place at the wrong time. Dayana talks about being treated like an animal by Elias, and with the donkeys and goat and chickens always around in the motel yard, that metaphor feels heavy-handed. The script’s other failing is its wishy-washy wrap-up of the Bambina business.

Despite its flaws, Motel Destino has mood, rawness and atmosphere to burn, fueled by Amine Bouhafa’s score, which becomes steadily more disquieting as it ratchets up the urgency.

Strong performances by the three leads motor along on the characters’ nervous energy, apprehension or anger, and screen newcomer Xavier keeps you invested in Heraldo’s ordeal. Aïnouz employs the central character as a stand-in for Brazilian youth, whose drive and desire are held back by a corrupt older generation intent on maintaining its power. It’s that kind of oppression that forces young men like Heraldo to bend their fates.

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