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‘Wildflower’ Review: Kiernan Shipka Plays the Daughter of Neurodivergent Parents in an Endearing Coming-of-Age Film

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‘Wildflower’ Review: Kiernan Shipka Plays the Daughter of Neurodivergent Parents in an Endearing Coming-of-Age Film

Like a dutiful eldest baby, Matt Smukler’s debut characteristic, Wildflower, adheres to the conventions of its style. The high-spirited coming-of-age story, which follows Bea, a plainspoken teenager navigating life with neurodivergent dad and mom, has the tumultuous high-school drama, the cheeky romance with a bashful love curiosity, the combat with the spunky greatest good friend and the undulating moods of wonky family members in determined want of filters. These requisite beats are fulfilled by a gallery of distinctive characters. Wildflower, impressed by Smukler’s household, won’t be a radical departure from movies of its sort, nevertheless it does provide buoyant performances from each contemporary and acquainted faces.

Kiernan Shipka (of Mad Males and Chilling Adventures of Sabrina) leads an endearing troupe of actors together with her animated portrayal of Bea. We meet her character as she lies comatose in a hospital mattress, surrounded by nervous members of the family. How she ended up there’s a query that drives Smukler’s boisterous bildungsroman, which, through flashbacks, takes us by Bea’s life from childhood to the latest previous, making an attempt to piece collectively the moments earlier than her hospitalization. These jaunts down reminiscence lane are narrated by Bea’s omniscient unconscious in voiceover.

Wildflower

The Backside Line

A jam-packed however warmhearted debut.

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Earlier than it turns to the previous, Wildflower gives a glimpse of Bea’s intra-family relations, the percolating resentments, disjointed communication type and basic chaos that reigns. Her feuding grandmothers Loretta (a delightfully acerbic Jacki Weaver) and Peg (an equally sharp-edged Jean Good) received’t cease sniping at one another. Within the background of their bickering are Bea’s neurotic aunt Pleasure (Alexandra Daddario) and her equally anxious husband, Ben (Reid Scott), begging the household to remain optimistic. Compared to the remainder of the clan, Bea’s dad and mom, Sharon (Samantha Hyde) and Derek (Sprint Mihok), are calm and picked up, sustaining a gentle religion that their daughter will get up.

Bea (quick for Bambi, Sharon’s favourite cartoon character) grew up listening to different adults describe her dad and mom as “particular,” a euphemism, she later realized, for neurodivergent. She recounts how Sharon and Derek met, the push of their marriage and the fun of her beginning. Though Bea’s dad and mom have been by no means insecure about their capability to pursue their objectives (skilled and romantic), everybody else was and made that clear. Peg and Earl (All people Loves Raymond’s Brad Garrett), Sharon’s dad and mom, battle to belief their daughter to make her personal choices. Loretta, Derek’s mom, harbors animus for Sharon’s household however appears much less fazed. There may be an unacknowledged however suffocating assumption that the brand new dad and mom merely can’t do it.

However Sharon and Derek are a decided duo. They transfer out of their respective dad and mom’ houses in Van Nuys, California, and begin out on their very own with Bea in Las Vegas. Like Sian Heder’s CODA, Wildflower refracts the experiences of its disabled characters by a toddler turned caretaker. Though there are portrayals of underrepresented experiences, the movie prioritizes Bea’s perspective and our understanding of neurodivergence is filtered by her neurotypical lens. But whereas CODA stayed in easy sentimental territory, Wildflower is looser and extra self-aware.

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The early years of Bea’s life are jam-packed with journey and freedom. Her first actual house is in a cell group, the place Sharon and Derek make pals with individuals who assist babysit. Ultimately, they save sufficient cash to relocate to the suburbs, a transfer that initiates the friction between Bea and her dad and mom. Publicity to life exterior of her speedy household shifts Bea’s understanding and lowers her tolerance for Sharon and Derek. She reads their laid-back perspective as clumsy and finds their carefree way of living irritating. Ryan Kiera Armstrong is assured as younger Bea: There’s a quiet confidence in her actions,  which precisely replicate a toddler’s rising indignation at her dad and mom.

After a driving lesson gone improper and a go to from a social employee, Bea is shipped to stay together with her aunt Pleasure and Ben. Though the couple, who’ve two sons of their very own, educate Bea abilities she’s missed out on — swimming, for instance — and introduce her to completely different experiences, their neuroticism annoys her. The association is short-lived.

Wildflower quick forwards to Bea’s senior 12 months, when she is hawking faculty raffle tickets on the strip together with her greatest good friend Mia (Kannon) in hopes of profitable a free journey to Disney. We don’t get to see the years between Bea’s return and this latest previous, nevertheless it’s clear from her perspective that she has a renewed appreciation for and understanding of her dad and mom.

Wildflower covers a lot floor earlier than attending to the principle motion that elements of the introduction can’t assist however really feel like throat-clearing. The movie good points its footing as soon as it settles into Bea’s latest previous, chronicling her budding romance with the brand new boy at college, Ethan (Charlie Plummer); a rocky combat with Mia; her steering counselor’s insistence that she apply to varsity; and a petty feud with their highschool’s resident imply woman.

Hovering within the background of those interactions is Bea’s broader battle: overcoming her condescending relationship to her dad and mom and, by extension, everybody round her. When Smukler focuses on this stress, Wildflower’s core characters (Bea, Sharon and Derek) acquire an thrilling sharpness and dimension. It’s throughout these scenes that Shipka, Hyde and Mihok stretch past beleaguered archetypes, interacting with one another as an alternative of clichés.

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As a result of what’s in the end at stake is how Bea pertains to her dad and mom. When she begins to see them in the identical mild as the remainder of the world, she overcompensates by turning herself right into a caretaker. That unforced accountability resurfaces childhood resentments and divulges hard-to-swallow truths. The movie culminates in a tumultuous blow-up, nevertheless it’s no spoiler to say that relationships are repaired, amends made and Bea learns some priceless classes alongside the best way.

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Movie Reviews

Kinds of Kindness: Poor Things director at his most elusive

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Kinds of Kindness: Poor Things director at his most elusive

In the first, “The Death of R.M.F.”, Jesse Plemons plays Robert, a man who appears in thrall to Raymond (Willem Dafoe), who sets Robert’s agenda, from his diet to his sexual encounters.

In the second, “R.M.F. Is Flying”, Plemons plays Daniel, a cop whose wife Liz (Emma Stone) has gone missing; when she returns, he is convinced she is an imposter.

Finally, in “R.M.F. Eats a Sandwich”, Stone plays Emily, a woman who seeks out a cult leader (Dafoe) for a spiritual and sexual awakening.

Hong Chau in a still from Kinds of Kindness. Photo: Atsushi Nishijima

Inevitably, as is the case with most portmanteau films, one episode stands out – in this case “The Death of R.M.F.”, which has an unnerving quality to it.

The second instalment is the most shocking, featuring Liz and Daniel sitting around with friends (Mamoudou Athie and Margaret Qualley) watching a highly explicit sex tape the four of them made.

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Bringing up the rear is the final short, which rather drags with its depictions of sweat lodges, bodily contamination, and Stone skidding around in her cool-looking Dodge Challenger.

With Hong Chau (The Whale) and Joe Alwyn (who featured in Lanthimos’ The Favourite) also appearing, it is undoubtedly a fine cast, one led by Plemons, who truly understands how to perform in the Lanthimos style.

Stone, now on her third movie with the Greek director, seems to relish the extremes she gets to go to.

(From left) Willem Dafoe, Jesse Plemons and Hong Chau in a still from Kinds of Kindness. Photo: Atsushi Nishijima

Quite what it all means, however, is another thing entirely. The characters seem to be in states of crisis, with miscarriage a common theme.

Looking at humanity in all its weirdness, Kinds of Kindness is a baffling film to take in, as abrasive as its musical score from Jerskin Fendrix, who performed similar tricks on Poor Things.

Certainly, compared to his more accessible films, such as The Favourite and Poor Things, this feels like Lanthimos at his most elusive and frustrating.

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‘Elizabeth Taylor: The Lost Tapes’ Review: A Legend Opens Up in Nanette Burstein’s Engaging HBO Doc Based on Rediscovered Audio Recordings

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‘Elizabeth Taylor: The Lost Tapes’ Review: A Legend Opens Up in Nanette Burstein’s Engaging HBO Doc Based on Rediscovered Audio Recordings

A celebrity from the age of 11, Elizabeth Taylor was practiced at public relations for almost all her life, so there aren’t many personal revelations in Elizabeth Taylor: The Lost Tapes. But Nanette Burstein‘s elegantly constructed documentary, mostly in Taylor’s own words backed by illuminating archival images, works as a lively bit of film history about movie stardom in the volatile 1960s as the studio system was fading and the media exploding.

The film — which premiered at Cannes in the Cannes Classics sidebar — is based on 40 hours of recently rediscovered audiotapes, recordings Taylor made in the mid-1960s for a ghost-written memoir (long out of print). It was the most frenzied moment of her fame, when she was coming off the paparazzi-fueled scandal that was Cleopatra. Taylor, who died in 2011, recalls her many marriages — four when she made these recordings, since she was on the first of two to Richard Burton — and her career, from her start as a child in Lassie Come Home (1943) through her Oscar-winning performance in Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf? (1966).

Elizabeth Taylor: The Lost Tapes

The Bottom Line

An entertaining if unsurprising time capsule.

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Venue: Cannes Film Festival (Cannes Classics)
Cast: Elizabeth Taylor
Director: Nanette Burstein
Writers: Nanette Burstein, Tal Ben-David

1 hour 41 minutes

As she did in Hillary, about Hillary Clinton, and The Kid Stays in the Picture, based on Robert Evans’ autobiography, Burstein stays out of her celebrity subject’s way. Taylor’s voice is playful, almost girlish. Occasionally she is blunt, but more often seems cautiously aware of being recorded. Richard Meryman, the Life magazine reporter doing the interviews, is heard asking questions at times, but Taylor is firmly in control, at least on the surface.

Beneath that you can tell how beautifully Burstein and her editor and co-writer, Tal Ben-David, shaped the visuals. The archival photos and news clips offer a telling backdrop of images and sound bites, often more informative than what Taylor says — from shots of crowds filling the streets of London to see her on the day of her second wedding, to the actor Michael Wilding, to film of her in mourning black at the funeral of her beloved third husband, the producer Mike Todd, who died in a plane crash. The visual exceptions are the clichéd, recurring establishing shots of an old-fashioned reel-to-reel tape recorder, next to a martini glass.

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Moving chronologically, Taylor begins with her desire to act even as a child. Photos from that time offer a reminder that she was always astonishingly beautiful. These early sections are fine but bland. She was too young to be married the first time, to Nicky Hilton, she says, and the second marriage just didn’t work out. George Stevens gave her subtle direction and bolstered her confidence when she made A Place in the Sun (1951). When she made Giant with him five years later, he berated her, telling her she was just a movie star and not an actress, a charge that often dogged her.

Taylor becomes sporadically more biting as the film goes on, displaying a sharp-tongued wit and personality. That is particularly true when she talks about her marriage to Eddie Fisher, the first of her marital scandals, covered endlessly in tabloids. It was public knowledge that Fisher and his wife, Debbie Reynolds, were the Todds’ best friends. Shortly after Mike Todd’s death, Fisher left his wife, whose image was always cheery and wholesome, for Taylor. “I can’t say anything against Debbie,” Taylor sweetly says on the tape, and without taking a breath goes on, “But she put on such an act, with the pigtails and the diaper pins.” She says of Fisher, “I don’t remember too much about my marriage to him except it was one big frigging awful mistake.”

Burstein includes some enlightening sidelights from that period. A news clip of the recently married couple has them surrounded by journalists on the steps of a plane, with one reporter asking Fisher about his bride, “Can she cook?” Even as a tease, who would dare say that now?

That fuss was nothing next to Cleopatra (1963), now notorious as the film so over-budget it almost bankrupted 20th Century Fox, and the set on which Taylor and Burton, each married to other people, indiscreetly sparked to each other from the start. The Vatican newspaper weighed in on the affair, disapprovingly. Taylor says her own father called her “a whore.” In one of the film’s more telling scenes, she says of their affair, “Richard and I, we tried to be what is considered ‘good,’ but it didn’t work,” a comment that at once plays into the moralistic language of her day and resists it. These signs of Taylor’s savvy awareness of herself as a public personality are the film’s most intriguing, if scattershot, moments.

The film also shows how besieged the couple was by the paparazzi, at a turning point in celebrity culture. Occasionally other voices are heard in archival audio, and in this section George Hamilton says of the press, “They were not going for glamour anymore. They were going for the destruction of glamour,” suggesting a longing for the old pre-packaged studio publicity days. But Taylor herself is never heard complaining. A realist, she made hiding from the paparazzi into a game for her children so they wouldn’t be frightened.

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The recordings end at the point where she is assuring Meryman that she and Burton would be together for 50 years. The film then takes a quick trot through the rest of her days, including rehab at the Betty Ford Center and raising money for AIDS research. But the last word should have been Taylor’s. There is a private Elizabeth, she says. “The other Elizabeth, the famous one, really has no depth or meaning to me. It is a commodity that makes money.” The movie star Taylor is the one who most often comes through in the film, but that is engaging enough.

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Is Coppola’s $120M ‘Megalopolis’ ‘bafflingly shallow’ or ‘remarkably sincere’? Critics can’t tell

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Is Coppola’s $120M ‘Megalopolis’ ‘bafflingly shallow’ or ‘remarkably sincere’? Critics can’t tell
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Francis Ford Coppola’s 40-year passion project “Megalopolis” has finally arrived, but critics are divided on whether the science fiction epic was worth the wait.

The film, which premiered at Cannes Film Festival, has received mixed reviews from festivalgoers, with some calling the drama “staggeringly ambitious” and others dubbing the long-awaited movie “absolute madness.”

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Deadline and The Guardian report “Megalopolis” received a seven-minute standing ovation Thursday night. Coppola, 85, first conceived the film in the 1970s and development began in 1983. After several false starts and cancellations, the “Godfather” filmmaker revived the project in 2019 and used $120 million of his own money to fund it.

The ensemble cast includes Adam Driver, Giancarlo Esposito, Nathalie Emmanuel, Aubrey Plaza, Shia LaBeouf, Jon Voight, Jason Schwartzman, Laurence Fishburne, Kathryn Hunter and Dustin Hoffman.

The film follows an architect who “wants to rebuild New York City as a utopia following a devastating disaster,” according to IMDb. The movie is a “Roman Epic fable set in an imagined Modern America,” according to the film synopsis on the Cannes website.

Driver plays Cesar Catilina, a “genius artist who seeks to leap into a utopian, idealistic future,” but Mayor Franklyn Cicero, played by Esposito, “remains committed to a regressive status quo, perpetuating greed, special interests, and partisan warfare.” Emmanuel plays the mayor’s socialite daughter, Julia, “whose love for Cesar has divided her loyalties, forcing her to discover what she truly believes humanity deserves.”

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Francis Ford Coppola’s ‘Megalopolis’ trailer abuzz ahead of Cannes Film Festival debut

In the caption for the movie’s trailer on YouTube, Coppola said, “Our new film MEGALOPOLIS is the best work I’ve ever had the privilege to preside over.”

‘Megalopolis’ Rotten Tomatoes score matches critics’ split

Critics are split evenly down the middle on the star-studded film. On Rotten Tomatoes, 50% of 24 critics’ reviews were positive.

Cannes 2024 to feature Donald Trump drama, Francis Ford Coppola’s ‘Megalopolis’ and more

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Esther Zuckerman of The Daily Beast wrote that the film is a “laughingstock” and “stilted, earnest, over the top, CGI ridden, and utterly a mess.” The Guardian’s Peter Bradshaw wrote that the film was “megabloated and megaboring” and a “bafflingly shallow film, full of high-school-valedictorian verities about humanity’s future.”

Meanwhile, David Fear of Rolling Stone said the film is “uncompromising, uniquely intellectual, unabashedly romantic, broadly satirical yet remarkably sincere about wanting not just brave new worlds but better ones.” And Bilge Ebiri of Vulture said the movie “might be the craziest thing I’ve ever seen. And I’d be lying if I said I didn’t enjoy every single (expletive) second of it.”

Joshua Rothkopf of the Los Angeles Times called out fans and critics with expectations of the film being a “masterpiece,” saying there is “much to enjoy” from the “weird” and “juicy” film.

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Coppola has said his film “Apocalypse Now” suffered a similar fate, with polarizing criticisms upon its release at Cannes in 1979 before ascending to acclaim and becoming a New Hollywood classic.

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