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About Dry Grasses Review: Everyone Wants to Matter

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About Dry Grasses Review: Everyone Wants to Matter

Nuri Bilge Ceylan’s About Dry Grasses centers on a village unknown to the outside world with a lead character unable to see beyond his own sense of self-importance. 


I’ve often wondered about the lives that are lived in the places we never see on big screens. Towns you get a glimpse of while on a road trip, places you notice while driving from the airport to your final destination, the towns and villages in between where you came from and where you planned to go. Seeing these towns I’ll never know firsthand even implores me to think about all the places I’ll never get to see. They’re not along a path I’d travel or perhaps a destination I’d never even know to set as a goal to see one day. About Dry Grasses (Kuru Otlar Üstüne)  is a film that takes place in a village in Eastern Turkey far off the path of anywhere that someone may desire to travel. 

Nuri Bilge Ceylan’s film leans into the desolate area as a character of its own. It’s a village with only two seasons, winter and summer, and this story takes place during the long, unforgiving winter. With a desolate backdrop and a genuinely unlikable main character, the film stands as an interesting character study about those who want a better hand than what life has dealt them

The film opens in pure whiteness, caused by the unrelenting snow. From the nothingness comes our main character, Samet (Deniz Celiloglu). He has just returned to his small village in eastern Anatolia from school break to his home he shares with fellow teacher and housemate Kenan (Musab Ekici). Samet is known around the village as “Teacher” and has settled into the community as he works as an art teacher at the local school. He is contracted to work at this particular school under a four-year mandatory service, but his time to transfer schools is on the horizon and he has big aspirations of being moved to a school in Istanbul. 

While unhappy with where he is in life, he finds hope in a young student named Sevim (Ece Bagci) who seems to embody all the things Samet lacks: unbridled potential, natural kindness and easy popularity. Samet’s adoration begins to cross over to a hyper-fixation and after stealing a love note that Sevim wrote to another student, Samet clearly wishing it was about him, their relationship quickly turns sour. Soon after, both Samet and Kenan are called to the school district’s main office to be told they have been accused of inappropriate conduct by two students. 

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About Dry Grasses is a film about a man who believes he is owed more than what life has given him. Samet is a disgruntled, even hateful man who harbors the weight of a massive chip on his shoulder, desperate to mean something to somebody. He is a truly dislikable character who takes his anger carelessly out on others. After being accused, he lashes out at his class, telling his young pupils they would be nothing but beat farmers, and physically intimidates Sevim and tells the other students to isolate her completely as punishment. 

a man looks at a lake surrounded by nature in the film About Dry Grasses
About Dry Grasses (Janus Films)

It comes across that Samet is jealous of his students, even if he won’t admit to it. He is jealous that these children are at the very beginning of their lives: even though they come from this remote, rural town, they do have a future of endless possibilities ahead of them. Sevim serves as the cumulation of all the potential that Samet lacks. Samet blames this village on his lack of opportunity and the fact he feels stuck in life, but in truth, it feels that Samet wouldn’t even know what to do with the potential he so desperately desires. 

Samet is set up with a fellow teacher, Nuray (Merve Dizdar) a young woman who lost her leg in a terrorist attack who chooses to teach in this village as it’s close to her family who stands as the only character able to call Samet out on his self-pitying ways. Nuray points out that he blames all his problems on his environment, but that is not what is making him miserable: it’s his outlook on life. She acknowledges his selfishness and brings into perspective that he is not a victim of circumstance as he believes but rather a victim of his own selfishness. 

Samet is such an unlikable character that it makes the film hard to watch. His motives are so thinly veiled, his entitlement is so aggressively arrogant and his hatred and disdain towards his life in this small village is proof of his inability to see beyond himself. The best part of the film is when Nuray tells him exactly the kind of man he is, but this moment is frustratingly ruined by Samet’s inability to grasp her incredibly spot-on points. 

Nurary and Sevim are the two characters able to see Samet for who he truly is. Merve Dizdar and Ece Bagci play these roles with a subtlety and ease that speaks volumes to their talent. They are able to convey so much without having to really say anything. While Deniz Celiloglu’s performance is impressive, as he is able to relay his character’s inferiority complex in a way that truly infuriates the viewer, these two women steal every scene they are in. They exude a level of comfort in these characters, really selling the concept that Nuray and Sevim are just comfortable in their own skin, that is enough to understand why Samet finds them characters worthy of such envy and admiration.  

Nuri Bilge Ceylan has created a film that stands as a truly intricate study of an unlikable character. However, Samet is not a character an audience needs a three-hour runtime to dislike and understand why. There are some worlds built in film that are so intriguing and so complex, you feel almost saddened when the credits roll and you have to return to reality. About Dry Grasses is not one of those films, it feels more so that it overstays its welcome. 

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About Dry Grasses: Trailer (Janus Films)

While there are certain creative decisions Ceylan takes that really utilize the environment the story takes place in, there are also some decisions he makes that seem hard to justify. At one point, Samet walks through a door revealing a sound stage, full of working crew members, and takes a walk to a different indoor set. Not only does this moment feel completely out of place with the themes and premise of the film, but stylistically it does not make sense either. The film imposes on itself at times, reproving points that felt sufficiently made earlier on, and drags on seemingly not knowing what is completely necessary to keep and what scenes are not needed to prove the points the film wants to make. 

About Dry Grasses is not a comfortable viewing experience. It’s a film that wants to make you uncomfortable from its subject matter to the lack of a character arc Samet has (if he has any growth throughout the film it is virtually undetectable). The treatment of Sevim and the other students throughout the film is deplorable, not to mention the complete hatred he has for the village he has called home for the past four years. It is interesting, however, how all this animosity Samet has for his surroundings really stands as a reflection of his hatred for himself. He is unable to act, almost cowardly in his approach to life. He is surrounded by children who have their youth and their full lives ahead of them while he withers away in a village unknown to the outside world, helplessly longing to be someone more than who he is.


About Dry Grasses will be released at at Film Forum (LA) and in select US cities on February 23, 2024.

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Movie Reviews

Movie Review: Paul Feig’s ‘The Housemaid’ is a twisty horror-thriller with nudity and empowerment – Sentinel Colorado

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Movie Review: Paul Feig’s ‘The Housemaid’ is a twisty horror-thriller with nudity and empowerment – Sentinel Colorado

Santa left us a present this holiday season and it is exactly what we didn’t know we needed: A twisty, psychological horror-thriller with nudity that’s all wrapped up in an empowerment message.

“The Housemaid” is Paul Feig’s delicious, satirical look at the secret depravity of the ultra-rich, but it’s so well constructed that’s it’s not clear who’s naughty or nice. Halfway through, the movie zigs and everything you expected zags.

It’s almost impossible to thread the line between self-winking campy — “That’s a lot of bacon. Are you trying to kill us?” — and carving someone’s stomach with a broken piece of fine china, yet Feig and screenwriter Rebecca Sonnenshine do.

Sydney Sweeney stars as a down-on-her luck Millie Calloway, a gal with a troubled past living out of her car who answers an ad for a live-in housekeeper in a tony suburb of New York City. Her resume is fraudulent, as are her references.

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Somehow, the madam of the mansion, Nina Winchester played with frosty excellence by Amanda Seyfried in pearls and creamy knits, takes a shine to this young soul. “I have a really good feeling about this, Millie,” she says in that perky, slightly crazed clipped way that Seyfried always slays with. “This is going to be fun, Millie.”

Maybe not for Millie, but definitely for us. The young housekeeper gets her own room in the attic — weird that it closes with a deadbolt from the outside, but no matter — and we’re off. Mille gets a smartphone with the family’s credit card preloaded and a key for that deadbolt. “What kind of monsters are we?” asks Nina. Indeed.

The next day, the house is a mess when the housekeeper comes down and Seyfried is in a wide-eyed, crashing-plates, full-on psychotic rage. The sweet, supportive woman we met the day before is gone. But her hunky husband (Brandon Sklenar) is helpful and apologetic. And smoldering. Uh-oh. Did we mention he’s hunky?

If at first we understand that the housekeeper is being a little manipulative — lying to get the job, for instance, or wearing glasses to seem more serious — we soon realize that all kinds of gaslighting games are being played behind these gates, and they’re much more impactful.

Based on Freida McFadden’s novel, “The Housemaid” rides waves of manipulation and then turns the tables on what we think we’ve just seen, looking at male-female power structures and how privilege can trap people without it.

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The film is as good looking as the actors, with nifty touches like having the main house spare, well-lit and bright, while the husband’s private screening room in the basement is done in a hellish red. There are little jokes throughout, like the husband and the housemaid bonding over old episodes of “Family Feud,” with the name saying it all.

Feig and his team also have fun with horror movie conventions, like having a silent, foreboding groundskeeper, adding a creepy dollhouse and placing lightning and thunder during a pivotal scene. They surround the mansion with fussy, aristocratic PTA moms who have tea parties and say things like “You know what yoga means to me.”

Feig’s fascinating combination of gore, torture and hot sex ends happily, capped off with Taylor Swift’s perfectly conjured “I Did Something Bad” playing over the end credits. Not at all: This naughty movie is definitely on the nice list.

“The Housemaid,” a Lionsgate release that’s in theaters Friday, is rated R by the Motion Picture Association for strong bloody violence, gore, language, sexuality/nudity and drug use. Running time: 131 minutes. Three and a half stars out of four.

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‘The Spongebob Movie: Search for Squarepants’ Review: Adventure Romp Soaks up a Good Time for SpongeBob Fans of All Ages

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‘The Spongebob Movie: Search for Squarepants’ Review: Adventure Romp Soaks up a Good Time for SpongeBob Fans of All Ages

I’m convinced that each SpongeBob movie released on the big screen serves as a testament to the current state of the series. The 2004 film was a send-off for the early series run. Sponge Out of Water symbolized the Paul Tibbitt era, and Sponge on the Run served as a major transitional period between soft reboot and spin-off setup. The team responsible for Search for SquarePants, which consists of current showrunners Marc Ceccarelli and Vince Waller, as well as the seasoned Kaz, is showcasing their comedic and absurdist abilities. The sole purpose of the film is to elicit laughter with its distinctively silly and irreverent, whimsical humor. More so than its predecessor, it creates a mindless romp. Granted, there are far too many butt-related jokes, to a weird degree.

Truthfully, I am apprehensive about the insistence of each SpongeBob movie being CG-animated. However, Drymon, who directed the final Hotel Transylvania film, Transformania, brings the series’ quirky, outrageous 2D-influenced poses and expressive style into a 3D space. Its CG execution, done by Texas-based Reel FX (Book of Life, Rumble, Scoob), is far superior to Mikros Animation’s Sponge on the Run, which, despite its polish, has experimental frame rate issues with the comic timing and is influenced by The Spider-Verse. FX encapsulates the same fast, frenetic pace in its absurdist humor, which enables a significant number of the jokes to be effective and feel like classic SpongeBob.

With lovely touches like gorgeous 2D artwork in flashback scenes and mosaic backgrounds during multiple action shots, Drymon and co expand the cinematic scope, enhancing its theatrical space. Taking on a darker, if not more obscene, tone in the main underworld setting, the film’s purple- and green-infused visual palette adds a unique shine that sets it apart from other Sponge-features. Its strong visual aesthetic preserves the SpongeBob identity while capturing the spirit of swashbuckling and satisfying a Pirates of the Caribbean void in the heart.

The film’s slapstick energy is evident throughout, as it’s purposefully played as a romp. The animators’ hilarious antics, which make the most of each set piece to a comical degree, feel like the ideal old-fashioned love letter to the new adults who grew up with SpongeBob and are now introducing it to their kids. This is a perfect bridge. There’s a “Twelfth Street Rag” needle drop in a standout montage sequence that will have older viewers astral projecting with joy. 

Search for SquarePants retreads water but with a charming swashbuckling freshness.

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Movie Review: ‘The SpongeBob Movie: Search for SquarePants’ – Catholic Review

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Movie Review: ‘The SpongeBob Movie: Search for SquarePants’ – Catholic Review

NEW YORK (OSV News) – Cartoon characters can devolve into dullards over time. But some are more enduringly appealing than others, as the adventure “The SpongeBob Movie: Search for SquarePants” (Paramount) proves.

Yellow, absorbent and porous on the outside, unflaggingly upbeat SpongeBob (voice of Tom Kenny) is childlike and anxious to please within. He also displays the kind of eagerness for grown-up experiences that is often found in real-life youngsters but that gets him into trouble in this fourth big-screen outing for his character.

Initially, his yearning for maturity takes a relatively harmless form. Having learned that he is now exactly 36 clams tall, the requisite height to ride the immense roller coaster at Captain Booty Beard’s Fun Park, he determines to do so.

Predictably, perhaps, he finds the ride too scary for him. This prompts Mr. Krabs (voice of Clancy Brown), the owner of the Krusty Krab — the fast-food restaurant where SpongeBob works as a cook — to inform his chef that he is still an immature bubble-blowing boy who needs to be tested as a swashbuckling adventurer.

The opportunity for such a trial soon arises with the appearance of the ghostly green Flying Dutchman (voice of Mark Hamill), a pirate whose elaborately spooky lair, the Underworld, is adjacent to SpongeBob’s friendly neighborhood, Bikini Bottom. Subject to a curse, the Dutchman longs to lift it and return to human status.

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To do so, he needs to find someone both innocent and gullible to whom he can transfer the spell. SpongeBob, of course, fits the bill.

So the buccaneer lures SpongeBob, accompanied by his naive starfish pal Patrick (voice of Bill Fagerbakke), into a series of challenges designed to prove that the lad has what it takes. Mr. Krabs, the restaurateur’s ill-tempered other employee, Squidward (voice of Rodger Bumpass), and SpongeBob’s pet snail, Gary, all follow in pursuit.

Along the way, SpongeBob and Patrick’s ingenuity and love of carefree play usually succeed in thwarting the Dutchman’s plans.

As with most episodes of the TV series, which premiered on Nickelodeon in 1999, there are sight gags intended either for adults or savvy older children. This time out, though, director Derek Drymon and screenwriters Pam Brady and Matt Lieberman produce mostly misfires.

These include an elaborate gag about Davy Jones’ legendary locker — which, after much buildup, turns out to be an ordinary gym locker. Additionally, in moments of high stress, SpongeBob expels what he calls “my lucky brick.” As euphemistic poop gags go, it’s more peculiar than naughty.

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True to form, SpongeBob emerges from his latest escapades smarter, wiser, pleased with his newly acquired skills and with increased loyalty to his friends. So, although the script’s humor may often fall short, the franchise’s beguiling charm remains.

The film contains characters in cartoonish peril and occasional scatological humor. The OSV News classification is A-I – general patronage. The Motion Picture Association rating is PG — parental guidance suggested. Some material may not be suitable for children.

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