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Ben Affleck’s Air is the next great American sports movie

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Ben Affleck’s Air is the next great American sports movie

One of many extra traditional American sensibilities is our persistent stubbornness to surrender on one thing after we consider in it.

You possibly can monitor all of it the way in which again to the Revolutionary Warfare to discover a bunch of scrappy, powdered-wig sporting forefathers who had been so in opposition to paying these ridiculous taxes on their items that they’d go to battle for freedom.

For all the flaws that engulf the thought of “American exceptionalism,” we’re an exceptionally headstrong folks after we need one thing.

Ben Affleck’s Air walks the wonderful line in extolling these virtues. On one hand, there’s a direct thrill in watching Affleck’s dramatization of how once-underdog shoe firm Nike usurped the basketball competitors giants of Adidas and Converse to land Michael Jordan’s sponsorship.

Affleck’s as gifted behind the digicam as he’s in entrance of it, and he is aware of the way to ring from historical past a quick, monologue-filled headrush of racing in opposition to the clock and defying the chances on the sheer energy of perception and savvy company maneuvering.

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You get all of the archetypes of the underdog story: the man we root for who powers himself on good-faith tenets (Matt Damon’s Sonny Vaccaro), the benevolent authority determine who pushes our protagonist when essential (Affleck’s Phil Knight), the supporting gamers who gas our protagonist’s efforts (Jason Bateman’s Rob Strasser, Chris Tucker’s Howard White, Matthew Maher’s Peter Moore) and the ethical heart who makes every thing occur (Viola Davis’ Deloris Jordan).

Ben Affleck as Phil Knight in Air Picture: COURTESY OF AMAZON STUDIOS © AMAZON CONTENT SERVICES LLC

The villain is extra of an obelisk, a system that seeks to make use of sponsorship to construct up product reasonably than the opposite manner round. Vaccaro’s genius in seeing Michael Jordan’s potential was understanding that he was the marquee occasion, not the sneaker he was sporting. As a few our predominant gamers notice all through the movie, it’s not concerning the shoe as a lot as the one that was sporting it.

As your sneaker closet might spoil for you, Nike succeeded in courting Jordan in opposition to the agency pushes of Adidas and Converse. The Air Jordan completely modified the basketball shoe world. The deal revolutionized the way in which we market merchandise round athletes and eternally altered the technique of compensation on sponsorship offers to construct up the person as a lot as the corporate. In a little bit boardroom in Oregon, sports activities shifted for good.

Affleck’s movie efficiently rallies across the underdog narrative with the identical gleeful disruption of sports activities motion pictures like Jerry Maguire and Moneyball. These pillars of sporting movies – the previous fictional, the latter impressed by actual life – dealt instantly with merry marauders who pushed in opposition to the outdated guard of athletics and located a brand new manner ahead.

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Air is an excellent instance of the way to execute that story with sufficient gravitas to get you cheering in your seat when a billion-dollar firm is ready to schedule a gathering with an NBA participant for a advertising pitch.

It’s a hair-raising, chest-pumping dash to the end, constructed on inspirational platitudes and fiercely written exchanges about beliefs. Alex Convery’s script would make Aaron Sorkin proud, and its entertainingly medical dismantling of energy constructions would have Steven Soderbergh foaming on the mouth.

Matthew Maher as Peter Moore, Matt Damon as Sonny Vaccaro and Jason Bateman as Rob Strasser in AIR Picture: ANA CARBALLOSA © AMAZON CONTENT SERVICES LLC

Damon is the proper fixture level, with he and Affleck’s scenes collectively channeling that uncanny chemistry that they’ll all the time have. They’re the closest factor we’ve got to a Jack Lemmon/Walter Matthau partnership. Tucker, Bateman and Maher, all large, additional humanize Vaccaro’s quest, and Davis turns in one in all her higher performances because the Jordan household’s steely, empathetic matriarch who’s hellbent on ensuring her son’s generational potential is realized on essentially the most simply path.

Throw in Affleck’s quirky tackle Knight and Chris Messina’s smarmy, full-throated imagining of sports activities superagent David Falk, and also you’ve obtained one of many most interesting ensembles we’ve had in ages. This movie can’t work with out its forged.

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Affleck’s course is as exact and energetic because it was with Argo, one other story about decided People racing in opposition to the clock to defy the chances. Nevertheless, his movie isn’t shallow sufficient to not tackle the Nike-wearing elephant within the room.

Certainly, whereas there’s clear inspiration to the Jordan/Nike story, there’s additionally the finicky hassle with hyping up a billion-dollar company’s quest to make a crap ton of more cash. The technique of manufacturing so typically leaves behind the employee who makes it attainable, and Air savvily takes the Air Jordan deal and provides very important context within the third act concerning the thankless system that largely governs our financial groundswells.

Matt Damon as Sonny Vaccaro and Viola Davis as Deloris Jordan in AIR Picture: COURTESY OF AMAZON STUDIOS © AMAZON CONTENT SERVICES LLC

The movie exhibits that Deloris Jordan wished her son to get a minimize of the Air Jordan shoe gross sales as a result of she knew Michael was going to be a megastar, and he or she didn’t need him to get misplaced within the tidal wave of unpredictable American commerce. Jordan is without doubt one of the richest athletes to ever play due to the phrases of the Nike shoe deal, and lots of athletes have benefitted from that over time.

Affleck’s movie tries to indicate the significance of what the Air Jordan deal gave athletes all whereas making the search to safe that sponsorship as thrilling as extra time in a Sport 7 of an NBA Finals. The movie is just too good to disregard the company greed and dangerous optimism that may gas our largest company achievements, however it’s additionally nuanced sufficient to have fun the wedding of good-faith economics and pure perception.

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The Air Jordan deal left loads of winners, and it’s simple to root for the victory. You must keep in mind that this can be a story instructed by Hollywood’s purview, one that may’t absolutely unpack the complexities of Nike and its enterprise dealings. Nevertheless, Air can unpack the brazen basis that builds all of our aggressive successes, and Affleck’s movie does so masterfully. It’s a movie that evokes you to fly all whereas reminding you what it takes to have wings.

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Movie Reviews

Atlas: Jennifer Lopez learns to trust AI in Netflix sci-fi thriller

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Atlas: Jennifer Lopez learns to trust AI in Netflix sci-fi thriller

2/5 stars

Mere months after Hollywood’s actors and writers reached an agreement with studios to protect their likenesses and creative output, it appears Netflix is already doubling down on its advocacy of artificial intelligence.

The streaming platform’s new science fiction thriller, Atlas, starring Jennifer Lopez and Simu Liu, might as well bear the tagline, “How I learned to stop worrying and love AI”.

It is set in a near future when Earth is at the mercy of the world’s first “AI terrorist”. Lopez’s jaded heroine must overcome her distrust of technology and put her life in the hands of a sentient machine to save the planet from Armageddon.

Humanity’s relationship with technology has been a fertile topic for sci-fi writers since the dawn of the genre, with the fear of artificial intelligence eclipsing our own at the heart of some of its best works, from 2001: A Space Odyssey to The Matrix.

Atlas adopts a decidedly more positive stance, suggesting that humanity’s continued survival relies on achieving synergy between man and machine.

Directed by Brad Peyton, responsible for the forgettable Dwayne Johnson vehicles San Andreas and Rampage, Atlas takes its narrative cues most obviously from James Cameron’s 1986 classic Aliens.

As in that film, a female protagonist with prior experience of a non-human threat accompanies a squad of heavily armed marines on an off-world combat mission.

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Simu Liu as Harlan in a still from Atlas. Photo: Netflix

Rather than extraterrestrial xenomorphs, the antagonist is rogue android Harlan (Liu), who has vowed to stop humanity destroying the Earth by any means at his disposable. When the rest of the squad is wiped out upon arrival, it falls to Lopez’s data analyst Atlas Shepherd to take up arms herself.

Her survival relies upon forming a successful neural link with an AI-powered mech suit named Smith (voiced by Gregory James Cohan), something she is initially loath to do because of her innate distrust of technology – the result of a tragedy from her past.

Lopez has built a career playing mature, feisty women navigating a male-dominated world, and is absolutely in her element here.

Despite appearances from Sterling K. Brown and Mark Strong in supporting roles, it is Shepherd’s frosty banter with Smith that provides the film’s strongest relationship in an otherwise effects-heavy, overlong action thriller offering few surprises.

A still from Atlas. Photo: Netflix

One could argue that the film is allegorical, addressing society’s attitudes towards any number of marginalised demographics.

At a time when AI is becoming frighteningly ubiquitous in daily life, however, Atlas perhaps should be taken at face value, while its overwhelmingly positive stance is cause for genuine concern.

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Atlas is streaming on Netflix.

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‘The Village Next to Paradise’ Review: Somali Family Drama Doubles as a Potent Portrait of Life in the Shadow of War

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‘The Village Next to Paradise’ Review: Somali Family Drama Doubles as a Potent Portrait of Life in the Shadow of War

Mo Harawe’s debut feature The Village Next to Paradise is a haunting offering. The film, which premiered at Cannes in the Un Certain Regard section and is the first Somali film to ever screen on the Croisette, presents a compelling narrative of one family’s survival in a sleepy Somali town. But it’s the devastating backdrop against which their drama plays out that lingers long after the credits roll. 

The siren wails of drones soundtrack each scene of Harawe’s film, which opens with footage of a real-life report of a United States drone strike on Somalia. Since the U.S. began using drones in the East African country in the early 2000s, Somalis have suffered at the hands of an enveloping and ravenous counterterrorism operation. According to data from the New America foundation, there have been more than 300 documented uses of drones resulting in hundreds of known civilian deaths.

The Village Next to Paradise

The Bottom Line

Uneven but affecting.

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Venue: Cannes Film Festival (Un Certain Regard)
Cast: Ahmed Ali Farah, Ahmed Mohamud Saleban, Anab Ahmed Ibrahim
Director-screenwriter: Mo Harawe

2 hours 13 minutes

The fatal impact of contemporary warfare organizes life in Paradise village, a locale whose name seems more melancholic with time. Marmargade (Ahmed Ali Farah), a principal character in Harawe’s languorous film, makes money doing odd jobs, but one of his most lucrative gigs involves burying the dead. Some of the people for whom he finds a place in the sandy terrain died of natural causes, but many of them are victims of foreign airstrikes. When this business slows, Marmargade reluctantly smuggles a truck full of goods — the contents of which play a pivotal role later — to a nearby city. 

Because Marmargade knows the realities of living in a place shrouded by the shadow of death, he strives for a better life for his son Cigaal (Ahmed Mohamud Saleban), a buoyant kid who thinks nothing of the constant buzzing coming from the sky. When the local school cancels classes for the year because of chronic absenteeism among the teachers, Marmargade works to send Cigaal to a school in the city, where safety is more than an illusion. But Cigaal doesn’t want to leave his family, friends or his life in the village. When Marmargade proposes this new life to him, the child rejects the idea. 

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The main narrative of The Village Next to Paradise revolves around the conflicting desires within this makeshift family. Marmargade lives with his sister Araweelo (Anab Ahmed Ibrahim), a recently divorced woman who wants to build her own tailoring shop. The two have the kind of fractious relationship resulting from years of mistrust. She thinks her brother should be honest with Cigaal instead of trying to trick the young one into going to school. Marmargade wants his sister’s financial support more than her advice. After she refuses to lend him the money for tuition, Marmargade makes a series of decisions that threatens all their livelihoods. 

Harawe’s film contains many admirable elements. With its unhurried pacing and tender focus on a single family, The Village Next to Paradise recalls Gabriel Martins’ 2022 feature Mars One. And the way Harawe structures the film around a broader geopolitical conflict resembles the role the Chadian civil war played in Mahamet Saleh Haroun’s  2010 film A Screaming Man, which also premiered at Cannes. The cinematography (by Mostafa El Kashef) offers truly striking images that conjure up the ghostly atmosphere of this village without turning its people into caricatures for a Western gaze hungry for a particular kind of poverty porn. 

But The Village Next to Paradise is also hobbled in places by its meandering narrative and occasionally wooden performances from Harawe’s cast of local nonprofessional actors. The sharpness of Harawe’s vision is dulled by a story that takes one too many detours before settling into itself. Characters with dubious relevance are introduced and then dropped, while ones who come to play crucial roles don’t get an appropriate amount of screen time.

The film becomes more dynamic in its latter half, when Marmargade’s desperation leads him to questionable decisions that clash with Araweelo’s desires. Indeed, it’s also during these parts of the film that Harawe pulls the strongest performances from his actors, who otherwise struggle to shake off an understandable stiffness. 

Despite these flaws, Harawe’s film does have a real staying power. The Village Next to Paradise orients itself around a quiet optimism and surprising humor that mirror real life. There are moments throughout that serve as a reminder that even in places where death feels close, hope for tomorrow is still alive.

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Short Film Review: Karita (2023) by Virginia de Witt and Koji Ueda

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Short Film Review: Karita (2023) by Virginia de Witt and Koji Ueda

“So I came here…”

Headed by actress-turned-director Virginia de Witt and Koji Ueda, a Kyoto-born Tokyo-based director, photographer, and filmmaker, “Karita” is a film inspired by the manga series “Nana”, while trying to answer the question, what if “Lost in Translation” was cast with the “Fleabag” character. The 17-minute short will be premiering at the Dances With Films Festival on June 22nd in Los Angeles.

The film begins with a series of impressive images from nighttime Tokyo, while the ominous music suggests that something dangerous is about to happen. The next scene has two women walking in the streets during the day, as Nico, an American, is shown around Tokyo by her friend
and supervisor at a local record store, Rumi. The camera is shaky and the cuts frantic, while there is a different dialogue heard in the background. The next, dominated by neon pink lights scene, brings us to the location the dialogue is taking place, inside a bar, where the two girls are talking to two boys and one girl, with Nico asking them if they have ever done anything dangerous. One of the boys, Ren, starts talking about people stealing cars. Nico shares her own experience in the US, which makes everyone in the table rather amused.

The night continues with a lot of drinking and eventually, Rumi decides to go home, cautioning her friend not to do anything stupid, before she goes. The next scene takes place in a garage with a sports car, which belongs to the uncle of the second of the boys in the company, Kenji. Suki, the other girl, who is quite drunk, insists they take the car for a drive, despite the yakuza-like uncle having specifically cautioned his nephew otherwise. In the end, with Ren in the driver’s seat, they take a drive around Tokyo.

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Unfolding much like a road-movie/music video, “Karita” will definitely stand out due to its impressive visuals, with Koi Ueda’s cinematography, in combination with the impressive lighting and coloring, capturing night time Tokyo in the most impressive fashion. Curtis Anthony Williams’s frequently frantic editing also adds to this sense, while the rather fast pace definitely suits the overall aesthetics here.

At the same time, there is a part of the movie that is quite realistic as the group visit various locations, as a pier, a convenience store, the record store, and the aftermaths of getting drunk and doing stupid things is also highlighted. A pinch of humor, as in the whole concept of the uncle and Suki’s actions, and some notions of romance, cement the rather entertaining narrative here.

Virginia de Witt plays the foreigner that tries to appear cool in order to fit in with gusto, while Haruka Hirata as Rumi is quite convincing as the “cautious” friend, with the chemistry of the two also being on a very high level, presenting a rather kawaii relationship between them. The other actress that stands out here is Mika Ushiko, who is quite convincing as the drunk Suki.

As mentioned before though, the aspect that makes “Karita” stand out is definitely its production values, which are on a level very rarely met in short films, while being the main reason the movie definitely deserves a watch. All in all, a very appealing film, in an effort that intrigues on what the filmmakers could do with a bigger budget in their hands, that would allow them to explore the script and the characters more.

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