The 15th Annual QFest St. Louis — presented by Cinema St. Louis (CSL) — will take place from April 29-May 5 at the Galleria 6 Cinemas, with a selection of programs also available online. The online programs can be streamed at any time during the festival’s dates.
The St. Louis-based LGBTQ film festival, QFest will present an eclectic array of 35 films from 13 countries (20 shorts, nine narrative features, and six documentary features). The participating filmmakers represent a wide variety of voices in contemporary queer world cinema. The mission of the film festival is to use the art of contemporary gay cinema to spotlight the lives of LGBTQ people and to celebrate queer culture.
The fest is especially pleased to host the St. Louis premiere of “The Depths,” a rarely seen 2001 work by internationally acclaimed filmmaker Ryûsuke Hamaguchi, and a reprise from SLIFF of Sebastian Meiser’s prison drama “Great Freedom.” Another highlight is this year’s Q Classic, Todd Hayne’s 1991 “Poison,” which was a part of the dawn of the New Queer Cinema movement of the early ’90s.
A special event, a two-film mini-festival and a panel discussion focused on Harvey Milk, takes place before QFest on the weekend of April 22-23 at Webster University. The event is presented in partnership with Opera Theatre of St. Louis in conjunction with its upcoming premiere of “Milk” in June. In addition, QFest features a “Poison”-themed dance party at Handlebar on Saturday, April 30.
QFest St. Louis begins on Friday, April 29, and runs through Thursday, May 5. Tickets are on sale now. Tickets are $15 general, $12 for Cinema St. Louis members and students with valid and current IDs. Passes are also available: Five-Film Passes are $65, and All-Access Passes are $200 ($50 and $150 for CSL members). Virtual screenings — limited to residents of Missouri and Illinois — will be offered through Eventive, CSL’s online presentation partner. Direct ticket links are available on the QFest website.
QFest St. Louis is sponsored by AARP St. Louis, Arts & Education Council, Grizzell & Co., Missouri Arts Council, Bob Pohrer & Donnie Engle, CALOP, Just John Nightclub, Opera Theatre of St. Louis, Regional Arts Commission, Deb Salls, St. Louis LGBTQ Chamber of Commerce, St. Louis Public Radio, Cindy Walker, Webster U. Film Series, and Ted Wight.
For the full schedule of screenings, including trailers and descriptions of the films, visit the festival website at www.cinemastlouis.org/qfest. Advance digital screeners of the features and some of the shorts are available for press review on request. Please inquire with QFest St. Louis artistic director Chris Clark.
FILM PROGRAMS
Cut!
Marc Ferrer, Spain, 2021, 79 min., Spanish, narrative
The Depths
Ryûsuke Hamaguchi, Japan/Korea, 2010, 121 min., Japanese & Korean, narrative
Great Freedom(Grosse Freiheit)
Sebastian Meise, Germany, 2021, 116 min., German, narrative
Mama Bears
Daresha Kyi, U.S., 2022, 90 min., documentary
Poison
Todd Haynes, U.S., 1991, 85 min., narrative
Queer Shorts Programs 1-4
Multiple countries, program runtimes range between 79 and 99 minutes
Rebel Dykes
Harri Shanahan & Siân A. Williams, U.K., 2021, 89 min., documentary
Marvel Studios has released a new TV spot for DOCTOR STRANGE IN THE MULTIVERSE OF MADNESS. The film takes place following the events of Marvel Studios’ WandaVision and SPIDERMAN NO WAY HOME.
Tickets for the Sam Raimi film go onsale this Wednesday, April 6.
In Marvel Studios’ “Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness,” the MCU unlocks the Multiverse and pushes its boundaries further than ever before. Journey into the unknown with Doctor Strange, who, with the help of mystical allies both old and new, traverses the mind-bending and dangerous alternate realities of the Multiverse to confront a mysterious new adversary.
“Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness” stars Benedict Cumberbatch, Chiwetel Ejiofor, Elizabeth Olsen, Benedict Wong, Xochitl Gomez, with Michael Stühlbarg, and Rachel McAdams. The film is directed by Sam Raimi, and Kevin Feige is the producer. Louis D’Esposito, Victoria Alonso, Eric Hauserman Carroll, Scott Derrickson and Jamie Christopher serve as executive producers.
The screenplay was written by Michael Waldron. “Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness” releases in U.S. theaters on May 6, 2022.
MARVEL STUDIOS’ DOCTOR STRANGE IN THE MULTIVERSE OF MADNESS FAN ART CONTEST
Prepare to enter the Multiverse — however you see it! In Marvel Studios’ Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness, the MCU unlocks the Multiverse and pushes its boundaries further than ever before. The Fan Art Contest gives participants the opportunity to showcase their own mysterious and mystical artwork for a chance to win a variety of prizes, including a trip for 2 to the world premiere of the movie. Entries will be judged by a panel from inside Marvel Studios with an emphasis on style, originality/creativity and technical ability.
Find official contest rules HERE, and prepare to enter a new dimension of Strange, only in theaters on May 6!
Dates:
April 4th – April 15th
How To Enter:
Post your original artwork on Twitter and/or Instagram with #DoctorStrangeContest for a chance to win.
1 entry per platform.
Contest will be judged under the criteria of style, originality/creativity and technical ability.
Must Be Following Marvel Studios and Doctor Strange Twitter and Instagram Accounts
Grand Prize Winner receives a trip for 2 to the Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness World Premiere!
First Prize Winner receives Signed Doctor Strange Art from Ian Joyner (Marvel Studios’ Visual Development & Sr. Illustrator) and a signed Scarlet Witch piece of art from Andy Park (Marvel Studios’ Visual Development & Production Illustrator)
2nd Place Prize Winner receives a gift card and Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness Swag
In what can be called movie geek comfort food, BATTLE: LOS ANGELES and KRULL have become cult favorites over the years. Why? You can watch either movie while doing other things keeping an extra eye on the screen, have devout fans who can recite the dialogue verbatim and will defend both movies to the end. Guilty pleasures, yes, cult status, definitely.
Even HBO Max has it listed as such.
The 2011 sci-fi and 1982 fantasy films have come to HBO Max and are available to stream now.
“Marines don’t quit.”
BATTLE: LOS ANGELES, starring Aaron Eckhart, and from director Jonathan Liebesman (WRATH OF THE TITANS), is the exciting story of a squad of U.S. Marines who become the last line of defense against a global invasion. It gets the military right than most war movies. Numerous Marine units assisted in filming (some scenes filmed at Camp Pendleton in San Diego, California) and the movie contains some awesome scenes with Black Hawks, Chinook, Osprey and Apache helicopters. Combined with a fantastic and emotional score (one that tears the heart and shows the brotherhood of Marines) from Brian Tyler (FAST & FURIOUS, THOR: THE DARK WORLD, IRON MAN 3), BATTLE: LOS ANGELES makes for a tension filled and thrilling entry into the sci-fi genre.
“That was some new John Wayne shit, Staff Sgt.”
“Only the king and his lord marshall have the keys to these manicles. You don’t look like the lord marshall.”
KRULL has achieved a passionate fanbase, marks the early screen performances of Liam Neeson and Robbie Coltrane and is one of the first scores of composer James Horner, who prior to this film, composed the scores to BATTLE BEYOND THE STARS and WOLFEN. Horner is best known for STAR TREK II: THE WRATH OF KHAN, ALIENS, APOLLO 13 and eventually won an Oscar for Best Score for his majestic work on TITANIC.
“A girl of ancient name shall become queen. And she shall choose a king. Together they will rule the world. And their son will rule the galaxy.”
If you are fan of film scores, check out Horner’s music on Spotify plus some of the great present day composers such as Jon Ekstrand (MORBIUS, LIFE), Steven Price (GRAVITY, FURY), Ramin Djawadi (PACIFIC RIM, ETERNALS, HBO’s Game of Thrones) and Sean Callery (HALO Series on Paramount +, THE MARKSMAN and the Marvel Netflix series “Jessica Jones”).
Here’a full list of what’s coming on and what’s leaving during the month of April.
April 1:
10, 1979
Annabelle, 2014 (HBO)
Armed and Dangerous, 1986
Balls Out: Gary the Tennis Coach, 2009
Battle Los Angeles, 2011
Beetlejuice, 1988
Bells Are Ringing, 1960
Black Gold, 1947
Blood Ties, 2014 (HBO)
Boys’ Night Out, 1962
Brewster McCloud, 1970
Brie’s Bake Off Challenge, 2022
Capote, 2005 (HBO)
Captains Courageous, 1937
Chicago, 2002 (HBO)
Children of the Damned, 1964
Czech It Out!, Max Original Premiere
Dances With Wolves, 1990 (HBO) (Extended Version)
Erased, 2013 (HBO)
Fantastic Beasts: A Natural History, 2022
Five Easy Pieces, 1970
Ghosts of Girlfriends Past, 2009
Girl Most Likely, 2013 (HBO)
Graffiti Bridge, 1990
Hugo, 2011 (HBO)
Insidious, 2010
Iron Eagle, 1986
Iron Eagle II, 1988
Kin, 2018 (HBO)
Krull, 1983 (HBO)
Larry Crowne, 2011
Les Miserables, 1998
Limitless, 2011 (HBO)
Moon, 2009 (HBO)
Moscow on the Hudson, 1984
Nobody’s Fool, 1994 (HBO)
Odd Man Out, 1947
On the Waterfront, 1954
One True Singer, Max Original Season 1 Premiere
Only Lovers Left Alive, 2014 (HBO)
Original Sin, 2001 (HBO) (Extended Version)
Peggy Sue Got Married, 1986
Point Break, 2015 (HBO)
Rain Man, 1988 (HBO)
Red, 2010 (HBO)
Rendez-Vous, 2020 (HBO)
Revolver, 2007 (HBO)
Salt, 2010
Seven Brides for Seven Brothers, 1954
Sex Drive, 2008 (HBO) (Extended Version)
She Wore a Yellow Ribbon, 1949
Show Boat, 1936
Six Degrees Of Separation, 1993 (HBO)
Slc Punk!, 1999 (HBO)
Spartan, 2004 (HBO)
Special Agent, 1935
Summer of ’42, 1971
Surf’s Up 2: WaveMania, 2017
Sweet Bird of Youth, 1962
The Asphalt Jungle, 1950
The Big Chill, 1983
The Big House, 1930
The Boondock Saints II: All Saints Day, 2009 (HBO) (Director’s Cut)
The Break-Up, 2006 (HBO)
The Brothers Solomon, 2007 (HBO)
The Chosen, 1982 (HBO)
The Freshman, 1990 (HBO)
The Heartbreak Kid, 2007 (HBO)
The Incredible Hulk, 2008 (HBO)
The Informant (aka A Besugo), Max Original Season 1 Premiere
The Ladies Man, 2000 (HBO)
The Last Airbender, 2010 (HBO)
The Last Detail, 1973
The Last Dragon, 1985
The Raid: Redemption, 2012 (HBO) (Extended Version)
The Relic, 1997 (HBO)
The Secret In Their Eyes, 2010 (HBO)
The Secret Life Of Walter Mitty, 2013 (HBO)
The Thaw (aka Odwilz), Max Original Season 1 Premiere
The Thirteenth Floor, 1999
The Toy, 1982
The Wackness, 2008 (HBO)
Tootsie, 1982 (HBO)
Under the Cherry Moon, 1986
Universal Soldier: The Return, 1999
Vice Versa, 1988
Welcome To Collinwood, 2002 (HBO)
Who’s Harry CRUMB?, 1989 (HBO)
William Shakespeare’s Romeo + Juliet, 1996 (HBO)
Winter Meeting, 1948
Wrath Of The Titans, 2012
April 2:
Batwoman, Season 3
Chad
April 4:
The Invisible Pilot, Documentary Series Premiere (HBO)
April 5:
Man of Steel, 2013 (HBO)
Tony Hawk: Until the Wheels Fall Off, Documentary Premiere (HBO)
We’re The Millers, 2013 (HBO)
April 7:
Close Enough, Max Original Season 3
Queen Stars, Max Original Season 1 Premiere
Tokyo Vice, Max Original Season 1 Premiere
Trinity of Shadows, Max Original Season 1 Premiere
April 8:
A Black Lady Sketch Show, Season 3 Premiere (HBO)
Crabs In A Barrel, 2022 (HBO)
Mi Casa, 2022 (HBO)
The Night House, 2021 (HBO)
When You Clean A Stranger’s Home, 2022 (HBO)
April 12:
Black Mass, 2015
April 14:
The Garcias, Max Original Season 1 Premiere
Gensan Punch, Max Original Premiere
The Great Pottery Throw Down, Max Original Season 5 Premiere
Not So Pretty, Max Original Season 1 Premiere
April 17:
The House, 2017
April 21:
Amsterdam, Max Original Season 1 Premiere
Marlon Wayans Presents: The Headliners, Max Original Special Premiere
The Flight Attendant, Max Original Season 2 Premiere
April 22:
A Tiny Audience, Season 3 Premiere (HBO)
Toy Aficiao, 2021 (HBO)
April 24:
Barry, Season 3 Premiere (HBO)
The Baby Limited Series Premiere (HBO)
April 25:
We Own This City, Limited Series Premiere (HBO)
April 27:
The Survivor, 2022 (HBO)
April 28:
Ana Emilia Show (aka Desafío Influencer con Ana Emilia), Max Original Premiere
DoDo, Max Original Season 1 Premiere
Lamput, Season 1-3
Made for Love, Max Original Season 2 Premiere
Up Close with Ana Emilia, Max Original Special Premiere
The Way Down: God, Greed, And The Cult Of Gwen Shamblin, Max Original Season 1 Part B Premiere
April 29:
Snowpiercer, Season 3
April 30:
The Blair Witch Project, 1999
House of 1,000 Corpses, 2003
The Devil’s Rejects, 2005
TITLES LEAVING HBO MAX IN APRIL:
April 3:
Life’s Too Short, 2012 (HBO)
April 30:
2 Fast 2 Furious, 2003 (HBO)
A Good Day to Die Hard, 2013 (HBO) (Extended Version)
Aftermath, 2017 (HBO)
Anna to the Infinite Power, 1982 (HBO)
Bloodsport, 1988 (HBO)
Cake, 2005 (HBO)
Cursed, 2005 (HBO)
Darkness, 2004 (HBO) (Unrated Version)
Executive Decision, 1996 (HBO)
Extremely Loud & Incredibly Close, 2011 (HBO)
Firehouse Dog, 2007 (HBO)
For Greater Glory: the True Story of Cristiada, 2012 (HBO)
To celebrate the Digital release of Moonfall, check out the a clip from the special features on how they made the moon!
Legendary action-adventure director Roland Emmerich returns when Moonfall arrives on Digital April 1 and on 4K Ultra HDCombo Pack (plus Blu-ray and Digital), Blu-ray Combo Pack (plus DVD and Digital), DVD, and On Demand April 26 from Lionsgate.
Legendary action-adventure director Roland Emmerich returns when Moonfall arrives on Digital April 1 and on 4K Ultra HD Combo Pack (plus Blu-ray and Digital), Blu-ray Combo Pack (plus DVD and Digital), DVD, and On Demand April 26 from Lionsgate. From director Roland Emmerich (Midway, IndependenceDay franchise) and writers Roland Emmerich, Harald Kloser & Spenser Cohen, the film stars Academy Award® winner Halle Berry (Monsters Ball, John Wick: Chapter 3 – Parabellum) , Patrick Wilson (Midway, The Conjuring franchise) , John Bradley (TV’s “Game of Thrones,” “Marry Me”), Michael Peña (TV’s “Narcos,” Fantasy Island), Charlie Plummer (Lean on Pete, Spontaneous), Kelly Yu (TV’s “Lost Promise”), Eme Ikwuakor (TV’s “On My Block,” “Inhumans”), Carolina Bartczak (TV’s upcoming “Painkiller”), and Donald Sutherland (The Hunger Games franchise, TV’s “The Undoing”).
In Moonfall, a mysterious force knocks the Moon from its orbit around Earth and sends it hurtling on a collision course with life as we know it. With mere weeks before impact and the world on the brink of annihilation, NASA executive and former astronaut Jo Fowler (Academy Award® winner Halle Berry) is convinced she has the key to saving us all – but only one astronaut from her past, Brian Harper (Patrick Wilson, “Midway”) and a conspiracy theorist K.C. Houseman (John Bradley, “Game of Thrones”) believes her. These unlikely heroes will mount an impossible last-ditch mission into space, leaving behind everyone they love, only to find out that our Moon is not what we think it is.
Moonfall 4K Ultra HD Combo Pack, Blu-ray Combo Pack, and DVD will be available for the suggested retail price of $42.99, $39.99, and $29.96, respectively. 4K ULTRA HD / BLU-RAY / DVD / DIGITAL SPECIAL FEATURES
Audio Commentary by writer/producer/director Roland Emmerich and writer/producer/composer Harald Kloser Listen to audio commentary by writer/producer/director Roland Emmerich and writer/producer/composer Harald Kloser.
Against Impossible Odds: Making Moonfall Filmmakers and actors offer an insider’s view of the genesis of the film, a look at the epic action scenes, and a deep dive into the most groundbreaking moments of the film.
Exploring the Moon: Past, Present, and Future What have we learned about the Moon through the ages and where is human exploration of our nearest celestial neighbor going next? Scientists, historians and astronauts reveal all!
KC Houseman Speaks the Truth! Unearth recent viral videos from Megastructurist KC Houseman.
Sounds of the Moon Discover how the filmmakers utilized a palette of unique sound effects to bring the world inside of the Moon to life.
Synopsis: The world’s favorite blue hedgehog is back for a next-level adventure in SONIC THE HEDGEHOG 2. After settling in Green Hills, Sonic is eager to prove he has what it takes to be a true hero. His test comes when Dr. Robotnik returns, this time with a new partner, Knuckles, in search for an emerald that has the power to destroy civilizations. Sonic teams up with his own sidekick, Tails, and together they embark on a globe-trotting journey to find the emerald before it falls into the wrong hands. SONIC THE HEDGEHOG 2 stars James Marsden, Ben Schwartz as the voice of Sonic, Tika Sumpter, Natasha Rothwell, Adam Pally, Lee Majdoub and Jim Carrey returning, alongside new additions Shemar Moore, with Idris Elba as the voice of Knuckles and Colleen O’Shaughnessey as the voice of Tails.
Emilia Jones as Ruby in “CODA,” premiering globally on Apple TV+ on August 13, 2021. Photo courtesy of Apple TV+
CODA is writer/director Sian Heder’s charming coming of age comedy/drama about the daughter of a family of scrappy, independent fishermen, who all happen to be deaf except her. CODA means “child of deaf adults” but it also has a musical meaning, making it the perfect title for a film about a teen with a passion for singing, something her family neither hears nor comprehends.
With deaf actors in the roles of the girl’s brother and parents, including Oscar-winner Marlee Matlin as her feisty mother, and wonderful performances all around, writer/director Sian Heder’s often-funny, warm tale of a family, different from the ordinary and yet not, is sure to bring smiles and delight audiences.
CODA has been praised by deaf communities both for casting deaf actors in the roles and for its realistic depiction of a deaf family. The film won the Grand Jury Prize at Sundance, along with other awards, and is a true crowd-pleaser that also impresses with its authenticity. Shot on location in Gloucester, Massachusetts, it is an American remake of the 2014 French film LA FAMILLE BÉLIER with a strong, and surprisingly international, cast.
CODA certainly does feel authentic, but the film’s appeal goes beyond that, with its focus on believable family dynamics and distinctive personalities, where the parents’ deafness is just a part of the picture. CODA is, at its heart, a coming-of-age story more than anything, with a delightful performance by English actress Emilia Jones as a girl who loves her quirky family but has ambitions that are just different from family tradition.
Ruby Rossi (Emilia Jones) is a 17-year-old living in the coastal Massachusetts town of Gloucester, where she is the only hearing member of her fishing family. Every morning before school, Ruby joins her father Frank (Troy Kotsur) and older brother Leo (Daniel Durant) on their fishing boat. Having Ruby on the boat allows them to monitor the radio for alerts and communicate with hearing fisherman and those who buy the catch on the dock when they return. At home, her mother (Marlee Matlin) does the bookkeeping for the family business. At school, Ruby faces some bullying but having best friend Gertie (Canadian actress Amy Forsyth) to count on helps.
As the film works through the family dynamics, it also explores Ruby’s budding interest in singing when she impulsively signs up for choir. The choir teacher Bernardo Villalobos (Mexican actor/comedian Eugenio Derbez), also know as Mr. V, is a quirky character but despite Ruby’s shyness, he recognizes her talent. Mr. V suggests she apply to a music college in Boston, even offering to coach her for the audition. Suiting the interests of his students in this fishing village, he picks a classic pop ballad to prepare for Ruby’s audition. For the upcoming school concert, the teacher also pairs her with Miles (Irish actor/musician Ferdia Walsh-Peelo), a boy Ruby is interested in.
Ultimately, a crisis in the family business arises and Ruby is faced with a choice between her own ambitions and her family.
Writer/director Sian Heder hails from Massachusetts, although not from Gloucester, so she understands the strong family fishing tradition in this part of New England. The Rossi family has done this for generations, as dad Frank tells us, and they are counting on Ruby to help continue the family business, and even more so as the only hearing one in the family. That the rest of her family can’t hear the singing Ruby loves doing, just makes it all the more difficult for them to understand her passion.
In many ways, it is just like any family business, where a child develops an interest far outside its expectations and traditions. But Ruby’s ability to hear is a particularly useful skill for her deaf family, enabling them to keep more of their aloofness from the hearing community around them than they might otherwise. Her parents’ dependence on Ruby to do these things puts pressure on her and frustrates their son Leo, who reads lips, and wants to do more to help them deal with the hearing community the surrounds them.
While some elements of the story are familiar, the script handles them very well. But the real appeal of the film is its characters and the performances. All the actors are terrific, especially Emilia Jones as Ruby, who is a complete charmer, and completely believable, beaming with energy and high spirits, and bouncing back from set-backs with determination, despite her shyness and normal teen self-doubts. She is perfect in the ensemble scenes with the family, and both cute and self-possessed in the ones with love-interest Ferdia Walsh-Peelo as Miles.
The scenes with the family are delightful, as they joke and tease. The use of sign language and Ruby’s combination of signing and speaking is handled so well that we never are confused about what is going on, and the snappy banter and warm quirky family scenes move smoothly at a brisk but clear pace.
By casting deaf actors, the film goes a long way towards getting things right from the start. As her parents, Marlee Matlin and Troy Kotsur are perfectly cast as a couple, and completely delightful, funny and loving and with a nice together-we-can -do-anything feeling. As Ruby’s older brother, Daniel Durant is excellent as well, presenting his struggle to assert himself as an asset to the family and his own independence, while engaging in playful sibling teasing with his sister.
Some of the funniest, most appealing scenes are with this lively family. Humor dominates the family scenes, along with a sassy, thumbing-their-noses-at-the-world independence. The family scenes are the film’s highlights, and the ensemble acting is wonderful. Marlee Matlin, unsurprisingly, shines as the still-sexy mom and Troy is appealing as Ruby’s rebellious but loving dad. The sibling squabbling between Ruby and Leo is spot on as well.
Unlike some deaf families, the Rossis do not live in a community of deaf people but of hearing ones, and see their deaf friends infrequently. The family lives apart from the rest of the community, in an appealing kind of close-knit, defiant independence. Dad comes from a long line of New England fishermen, mom was a model in her youth, and despite years of marriage, they can’t keep their hands off each other. Although their older child Leo, played well by Daniel Durant, is also deaf, he reads lips and feels much more comfortable interacting with the hearing community than his parents do. He would like to have a more active role in helping them but they continually turn to their hearing daughter for that role, much to Leo’s frustration.
As the film works through the family dynamics, it also explores Ruby’s growing ambitions and passion for singing, and her budding romantic interest in Miles.
Ruby’s quirky music teacher Mr. V, provides a big dose of humor. Mr. V is a bit of a character as well as an immigrant, in a town that seems to have few of them, and Eugenio Derbez creates one of the film’s funniest, most memorable characters who as much as outsider as Ruby feels she is in her small town. His outsider status and his skill as a teacher help her see beyond the fishing boat and her life with her loving but inward-looking family.
There are a lot of parallels to the immigrant experience to Ruby’s “outsider” family in CODA. One can see echos of stories of second-generation children, who have a foot in both worlds, the “new” and the “old” with Ruby, among them that she says that when she started school, kids teased her for her “deaf accent,” referring to the distinctive speech style of deaf people who are taught to speak, a nice detail which reveals that her loving parents did their best for their hearing daughter by speaking to her.
Subtle insights like that are woven smoothly into Heder’s well-written script. Heder’s script is well-crafted, effective, warm and entertaining, the direction is seamless and skillful, and the characters are memorable, particularly Ruby and her charmingly quirky family.
CODA’s characters are so appealing in their feisty quirkiness and family warmth, that it is the kind of film you will want to revisit. The story is both universal and unique to these characters, and that is a combination that is hard to beat.
CODA, the winner of the 2022 Oscars for Best Picture and Best Adapted Screenplay and with Troy Kotsur winning for Best Supporting Actor, re-opens Friday, April 1, at Landmark’s Plaza Frontenac Cinema and is streaming on Apple TV+.
Noomi Rapace stars as “Bosilka” in director Goran Stolevski’s YOU WON’T BE ALONE, a Focus Features release. Photo credit: Branko Starcevic / Focus Features
With a story built around witches, the East European-set YOU WON’T BE ALONE certainly starts out like a horror film set in a medieval-ish rural Eastern European world. The location brings to mind a host of classic horror films and legends, and the time period setting and other elements are reminiscent of 2015’s THE WITCH. But the film soon turns in a somewhat different direction, towards fairy-tale. The Brothers Grimm variety, not Disney.
If you’ll remember, those original tales are often dark and even horror-like but also have elements of kindness and hope along with the terror and gruesomeness, in their good versus evil struggles. The fairy tale/folk tale of YOU WON’T BE ALONE leans more into the human side of the story of its villain and its young heroine, and also has a feminist viewpoint, making this tale much more layered and complex. There is a reason behind the older witch’s unquenchable anger, which we learn mid-way through, but the young witch is not always good or kind either, like heroes and heroines in fairy tales sometimes can be.
The tale opens in a rural, medieval-ish Macedonia (although it is supposedly the 19th century), with a cat walking across a grass field. As the cat walks off screen, we hear a terrible cry, but then the cat walks back on screen. We follow the cat to a village, where a woman tending her baby, leaves briefly to shoo away mischievous playing neighboring children. Returning inside her home, she finds a strange, disfigured woman standing over her baby.
The woman is covered in scars from burns (in an impressive feat of make-up) yet she has a powerful presence about her. It is clear the mother recognizes her, and the terrified woman immediately begins to beg for the life of her child, telling the burnt woman (Anamaria Marinca, 4 MONTHS, 3 WEEKS AND 2 DAYS) how sorry she is about what happened to her. Specifics are not spoken but we know immediately the strange woman was burned as a witch. The mother starts bargaining, telling the witch that “babies are such a bother” and saying she can raise her until she is sixteen and then bring her to the witch. “So you won’t be alone in your old age,” the desperate mother says. A bargain of sorts is stuck with the witch, but it is not what the mother hopes for, and the baby is both marked by the witch and struck mute.
The mother hides her child in a cave, where the girl grows up alone except for visits by her fearful mother. Despite the mother’s efforts, the witch still comes for her daughter Nevena (Sara Klimoska) when she turns 16, takes her away, and turns her into a witch like herself.
That has a familiar ring to it, doesn’t it? While there are elements of classic fairy-tales here, as well as mythology and folk tales, this engrossing tale also is full of twists we don’t see coming and deeper human meaning. The film’s Macedonian-Australian director/writer Goran Stolevski was inspired by the Macedonian folk tales he grew up with for his script, which also has something timeless to say. The film is an Australian production but it is in Macedonian with subtitles and was shot in Serbia. YOU WON’T BE ALONE is Goran Stolevski’s first feature film, and it is an impressive debut.
The witch that Anamaria Marinca plays with impressive power is known as Old Maid Maria and she is actually a mythical creature called a Wolf-Eateress, a combination witch, vampire, werewolf and skin-walker/zombie that stalks the countryside drinking the blood of peasants. Far from a mindless monster, Maria is a cunning, and angry, creature, more human than we expect, with a real, understandable reason for her rage. The witch is able to take the form of any person or animal but it must die for her to assume its form, leaving a bloody smear behind.
There are moments of blood and violence that the more-squeamish should be warned about but this film is also not typical horror film fare. This film is not non-stop horror action, and the scary or bloody moments are interspersed with long contemplative moments, as the young woman promised to the witch struggles to understand the world and herself. The story is steeped in elements of fairy-tale and folk tale but it all unfolds at a more contemplative pace that brings Terrence Malick’s films to mind, as do the scenes of fields of waving wheat and the stream-of-conscious voice-over by the mute main character. However, those dreamy sequences are punctuated by confrontations, dramatic twists and sometime bloody violence. Both Maria’s story and Nevena’s experiences with the rural folk, as the young witch adopts various people’s lives, have a feminist bent, focusing on the historic treatment of women, patriarchy, and witch-burning hysteria. It is a film that is hard to categorize but one that draws you in.
Shot on location in rural Serbia, the photography by cinematographer Matthew Chuang is lush and grounded in the natural, and the film’s contemplative tone is supported by a score that includes Macedonian folk tunes, gentle classical, and a couple of pieces by composer Arvo Part.
Anamaria Marinca’s Old Maid Maria is a cunning, angry being who wants to see everyone suffer, including her young charge. But she despairs of Sara Klimoska’s soft-hearted young Nevena, and the older witch is frustrated in her attempts to mold the gentle teen into a cold-hearted witch like herself. There is always tension and foreboding present in this film, and a longing by the girl, for a childhood and human life she missed out on, fueling a curiosity about the ordinary farm folk around her.
The young witch watches the older witch, her mentor/adopted mother, as she takes various forms and feeds on the villagers from time to time. When the young witch accidentally kills a young farm woman, Bosilka (Noomi Rapace, GIRL WITH THE DRAGON TATOO), the young witch adopts her identity, by using what she has learned from the Wolf-Eateress, as a way to escape.
Nevena has an air of innocence as we see her move through various forms, with several actors, including Noomi Rapace, Carloto Cotta, Anastasija Karanovich and Alice Englert, playing the main character. In these forms, she tries out various roles in the human rural society, with indirect commentary on the structure of that society. Often the young witch’s lack of experience with normal human life leads to trouble and forces her to move on, but the changes are also her attempts to find her place in the world, to have the experience she needs to understand human life.
Details on the plot are likely to be spoilers but there are plenty of twists, just at a slower place than would be in a typical horror movie. The voice-over is philosophical more than something providing exposition for the story, which largely is told visually. That can make the film challenging at times, but director Goren Stolevski trusts the audience to look closely, think and figure things out, relying on the strong cast to convey any needed information.
Fortunately, the acting is consistently strong from all the cast, which adds greatly to a story that is more often told through what we see than what we hear.
The hard-to-categorize YOU WON’T BE ALONE isn’t for every audience, but for those approaching it with an opening mind, it has rewards as it makes its way through its deeply human folk tale.
YOU WON’T BE ALONE, in Macedonian with English subtitles, opens Friday, April 1, at Landmark’s Plaza Frontenac Cinema.