Sunday, May 17, 2026

Blue Heron


BLUE HERON   ***1/2

Sophy Romvari
2025

























IDEA:  A Hungarian immigrant family in British Columbia struggles with how to manage the eldest son's erratic behavior.



*LIGHT SPOILERS AHEAD*



BLURB:  Through what means do we recall our childhoods? How much is pure memory, stories we’re told, keepsakes, or photographs and movies? With heartrending, metatextual specificity, Blue Heron shows that our pasts can’t be recovered but only partially reconstructed through multiple layers of mediation. Technology plays the primary role here, and throughout the first half of Blue Heron cameras appear regularly as mechanisms the family uses to record itself. Already framed as memories, these passages carry an understated but acutely felt nostalgia for bygone childhood pleasures: playing hopscotch with friends, family outings at the beach, watching Looney Tunes, doodling on MS Paint. Romvari subtly signals to us that there’s missing information, though, not just in relation to Jeremy’s enigmatic condition but within and between her images themselves, which are consistently being reframed through camera movement and obfuscated by windows, mirrors, and blurry foregrounds. The ultimate reframing — the masterstroke of Blue Heron — comes midway through, when the preceding fiction is recast as reality and Romvari steps in, via the proxy of a superb Amy Zimmer, as the creator-protagonist. With the kind of temporal sleight of hand only cinema can achieve, the film slips through time and perspective, evolving from a relatively standard memory piece into an investigation of technology’s capacity to preserve, reveal, and potentially even resolve past experiences. For Romvari, it’s the last point that is painfully ambiguous; even with her imagination and artistry, she still can’t fill the lacuna of her troubled late brother. In this inability, Blue Heron mournfully acknowledges the limits of knowing and representing, yet takes this not as a deterrent but a catalyst to keep remembering, and creating.

Sunday, May 10, 2026

La Pointe Courte


LA POINTE COURTE   ***1/2

Agnès Varda
1955
























IDEA:  After many years away, a man returns to the small fishing village where he grew up and converses with his Parisian wife about their declining marriage.




BLURB:  La Pointe Courte is a lovely demonstration of Agnès Varda’s formal ingenuity and boundless curiosity about people and their worlds, presaging yet more complex and adventurous works to come. From the first series of shots, her camera doesn’t so much record the environment from some privileged vantage as inhabit it, feeling around for textures and moods experienced from the inside. It glides patiently down empty streets, snakes through shipyards, and wanders across rooms bustling with children, picking up (or gleaning, to use a word that would later become very significant for Varda) the people and objects, big and small, that constitute a place. This sort of ethnographic observation aligns La Pointe Courte with documentary, allowing whole sequences, often of various kinds of labor, to unfold seemingly unstructured by an outside hand. But Varda counterpoints these scenes with the conspicuously choreographed ones between the two lovers, who strike poses in geometric compositions that make marvelous use of wooden poles, boat hulls, and the bodies of the actors themselves to fragment the frame. If the village-life portions feel neorealist, the self-consciously stylized duets between the lovers augur the coming French New Wave. La Pointe Courte could be watched simply as a ludic experiment in juxtaposing these modes, inviting us into a game of noticing how adventitious forces (animals, crowds, kids) push up against and mix with artistic control. This approach is not merely a matter of aesthetics but ethics, reflecting a democratic worldview of multitudinous subjects in which no thing and no one is beyond interest. 

Thursday, May 7, 2026

Power Ballad

Part of my coverage of the 13th Chicago Critics Film Festival


POWER BALLAD   ***

John Carney
2026

























IDEA:  Following a chance encounter and jam session with former boy-band idol Danny Wilson, wedding singer Rick Power discovers that Wilson has stolen his song and turned it into a massive hit.



BLURB:  “This song changed my life.” The line, spoken by resurgent pop star Danny Wilson, comes at a point in Power Ballad when it carries a few different meanings. All these meanings can be traced to the thesis found throughout John Carney’s films thus far: that music has incalculable emotional and social power. Even more, though, the polysemy of the line is a reflection of how songs change meaning depending on context — who plays them, where they play, and perhaps most importantly, who’s listening. “How to Write a Song (Without You),” the cleverly titled earworm at the center of Power Ballad, puts this to the test, raising questions about authorial intent versus audience reception that Carney leaves generously open. Although he draws a pretty clear dichotomy between family man Rick Power’s working-class Ireland and bachelor Danny’s glitzy LA (represented rather clumsily through stock footage), the film doesn’t take a stance on the tune that transports between these disparate worlds. “How to Write a Song” is alternately or simultaneously cheesy, banal, heartfelt, kitschy, stirring, and catchy as hell; it can be played to a mostly empty shopping mall, a small wedding crowd, or a sold-out arena. The poignancy of the song as created by Rick — and the immature opportunism of Danny’s plagiarism — snap into focus at the end of Power Ballad, but the truth doesn’t invalidate the meaning(s) Danny’s version holds for his legions of fans. When the default is to be cynical about the state of popular art, Carney remains a jubilant romantic who teaches us how to hear a song, not a commodity.

Wednesday, May 6, 2026

Loafers

Part of my coverage of the 13th Chicago Critics Film Festival


LOAFERS   **1/2

Zach Schnitzer
2025

























IDEA:  A group of friends in Chicago navigates the choppy waters of post-college life.




BLURB:  Each generation discovers on its own terms how to become adults, and each generation makes movies about itself doing it. Following in the footsteps of such post-college-malaise American indies as Slacker, Kicking and Screaming, and Hannah Takes the Stairs, Zach Schnitzer’s Loafers presents a group of mostly white, middle-class twenty-somethings who don’t know what they’re doing and self-medicate with a whole lot of weed and alcohol. Schnitzer’s loafers (of which he is one) are not dyspeptic eccentrics or academics but generally average, good-natured young folks struggling with the mundane problems of being an adult: romantic relationships, family, jobs, and friendships, and the strain put on these things by the caprices of everyday life. Made on a shoestring budget, Loafers has the warm lo-fi feel of a personal project put together by a bunch of close friends, and the cast — especially Dan Haller, Melissa Marie, and Ruby Sevcik — have real naturalism in front of the camera. An emotional outpouring in an alley late in the film, between Marie and Sevcik, is a highlight, the actresses showing formidable rawness in sustained close-ups. Elsewhere, Loafers is more scattershot or slapdash, as in the few-too-many boilerplate party scenes or the sequences on Chicago streets where camerawork, editing, and sound show their seams in patching up obvious production deficiencies. For a true DIY film, though, it’s easy to admire Schnitzer and crew’s go-for-it attitude, not to mention their emphasis on healthy male friendship, a rarity on screen in this or any generation.

Sunday, May 3, 2026

The Invite

Part of my coverage of the 13th Chicago Critics Film Festival


THE INVITE   ***

Olivia Wilde
2026


























IDEA:  The already shaky relationship of a married 40-something couple is further rocked when they invite over their enigmatic upstairs neighbors. 




BLURB:  As long as there are human relationships, there will be appeal to stories like The Invite, which turns our social foibles into uproarious theater and reflects back at us the desires, fears, and frustrations that are difficult to confront, or even acknowledge, outside the safe outlet of art. Which is to say that The Invite is not unique (if a remake of a film based on a play could ever be called that!), but it is terribly evergreen, and it’s deftly attuned to both how gratifying and discomfiting it can be to watch relationship drama roil under the proverbial microscope. And boy does this cast have a field day with it! Each actor chews voraciously into Rashida Jones and Will McCormack’s zesty script, lacing their deliveries and gestures with all manner of derision, passive aggression, or sexual desperation. Olivia Wilde nails the wild-eyed, fast-taking neuroticism and Seth Rogen the sarcastic, disillusioned surliness; as the disruptors, Penélope Cruz radiates sinuous, almost otherworldly sensuality while Edward Norton projects the calmly mysterious authority of a man’s man who’s also super into rugs. The near-constant interpersonal fracas is structured (literally) by the stylish production design, cinematography, and editing. The placement of an open window or a wall takes on heightened importance in a work so much about perspective, and how it often takes other people to show us different ways of looking at ourselves. This process results in quite the mess in The Invite, but the film poignantly suggests that sometimes it’s the mess that leads to the conversations that need to be had.

Friday, May 1, 2026

An Autumn Summer


AN AUTUMN SUMMER   **1/2

Jared Isaac
2025

























IDEA:  Alongside family and friends, teen couple Kevin and Cody spend the summer together in Michigan before they have to part for college.




BLURB:  For all its familiarity or triteness as yet another bittersweet summer-before-college story, An Autumn Summer is a pretty wonderful evocation of the latter titular season. Isaac and DP Brandon Somerhalder capture a Michigan summer by the lake with a loving eye and palpable sense for the pleasures of long, idle days. They convey as much blissful warmth through sun-soaked frolics in the sand as they do in cozy story-times tucked away inside a cabin, both aglow in gold and amber hues. One particular sequence, a languid six-minute tracking shot across the beach at sunrise, is simply magical, the low sun casting a pastel haze over the young lovers and their cheerful friends. The chemistry and esprit de corps between these actors — and particularly between leads Mark McKenna and Lukita Maxwell — is so believable, lived-in, and passionate it’s easy to look past the fairly thin characterizations, or the curious casting of a man pushing 30 as an 18-year-old. Mood can go a long way in carrying a film, and An Autumn Summer sustains its buzzy estival vibes for most of its runtime, at least until the inevitable parting of its teen lovebirds brings the lurking melancholy to the fore. At this point, the film arrives at exactly where you knew it would, but it doesn’t make the preceding soft, genial summertime amble any less pleasing.