Review: ANOTHER YEAR

ANOTHER YEAR is a quiet and thoughtful film.  If you like to people watch then this is the film for you.  The film is about now and not how or why. There are no car chases, explosions or special effects.  The film is slow to start and in the beginning it is difficult to figure out who the main characters are: people come and go for no apparent reason. The film is a glimpse into the life of Tom (Jim Broadbent) and Geri (Ruth Sheen), a happily married couple, and their friends, co-workers and family.

Tom and Geri are delightful to watch, and the interplay between them is warm and comfortable and it is juxtaposed against the unhappiness of the other characters. Geri works with Mary (Lesley Manville), a middle aged divorcee who is unable to except her age or her status in life.  Ken (Peter Wight), a boyhood friend of Tom’s, is unhappy both professionally and personally.  Friends of Joe (Oliver Maltman), Tom and Geri’s thirty something son, are all getting married and Joe has yet to find someone special. The acting is superb; the awkwardness of the situations that the characters find themselves is beautifully portrayed in their body language and facial expressions. Some situations are resolved in the year while others are left hanging but the film is a gentle reminder that life goes on no matter what. The film is beautiful in its use of the garden as a metaphor for the passing of time. Tom, Geri and company are a welcome visit to a friend’s home.

ANOTHER YEAR was written and directed by Michael Leigh.  Lesley Manville won Best Actress from the National Board of Review USA.  Jim Broadbent was nominated for Best Actor by The British Independent Film Awards, as was Ruth Sheen for Best Actress, Lesley Manville for Best Supporting Actress and Michael Leigh for Best Director.   Another Year is a Landmark Theater exclusive and will be shown at Plaza Frontenac starting February 4.

Overall Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars

Cinema St. Louis Announces Lineup for 19th Annual Stella Artois St. Louis International Film Festival (Nov. 11-21, 2010)

The stars are getting ready to shine at the 19th Annual Stella Artois St. Louis International Film Festival (SLIFF) next month – November 11th throught the 21st. SLIFF will screen nearly 340 films: 200 shorts, 90 features and 48 documentaries. This year’s festival features a record 162 programs, with 44 countries represented. The fest will host more than 100 filmmakers and related guests.

The festival opens with the St. Louis premiere of CASINO JACK, directed by native son George Hickenlooper, a former Cinema St. Louis Award winner. Featuring a buzz-generating performance by two-time Oscar winner Kevin Spacey, the film chronicles the rise and fall of disgraced super-lobbyist Jack Abramoff.

 

Other prominent films featured in the festival include:

BLUE VALENTINE

 

THE BLACK SWAN

THE ILLUSIONIST

RABBIT HOLE

ANOTHER YEAR

THE DEBT

MADE IN DAGENHAM

127 HOURS

WINTER’S BONE

The fest schedule and a complete list of films (with descriptions) is now available at the Cinema St. Louis Web site (www.cinemastlouis.org).

Major awards to significant filmmakers:

  • Lifetime Achievement Award: Stacy Keach (star of “Fat City,” “The Long Riders,” “Imbued,” “Mike Hammer”). Sun, Nov 14th at 1:00 PM – Lindenwood U./Young Hall Auditorium AND Sun, Nov 14th at 4:30 PM – Lindenwood U./Young Hall Auditorium
  • Lifetime Achievement Award: Rob Nilsson (director of “Imbued,” “Stroke,” “Northern Lights,” “Heat and Sunlight”). Sat, Nov 13th at 10:30 AM – Webster U./Sverdrup Room 123
  • Lifetime Achievement Award in Comedy: Harry Shearer (director of “The Big Uneasy” and star of “This Is Spinal Tap,” “Saturday Night Live,” “The Simpsons”). Fri., Nov. 12 at 9:30pm – Hi Pointe
  • Contemporary Cinema Award: Stanley Nelson (director of “Freedom Riders,” “Wounded Knee”).
  • Charles Guggenheim Cinema St. Louis Award: Jenna Fischer (star of “A Little Help,” “The Office,” “Walk Hard”).

SLIFF’s primary venues are the following theaters:

  • Hi-Pointe Theatre, 1005 McCausland Ave.
  • Tivoli Theatre, 6350 Delmar Blvd.
  • Plaza Frontenac Cinema, Plaza Frontenac, Lindbergh Boulevard and Clayton Road
  • Webster University, Winifred Moore Auditorium, 470 East Lockwood Ave.
  • Washington University, Brown Hall Auditorium, Forsyth and Skinker boulevards

For ticket information click here or visit www.cinemastlouis.org or call 314-289-4150. Follow them on Facebook here.

Leigh’s ANOTHER YEAR Trailer Debuts

Rope of Silicon gives us the heads-up to The Guardian who has debuted the first trailer for Mike Leigh’s drama ANOTHER YEAR starring Jim Broadbent, Ruth Sheen and Lesley Manville. Leigh, director of such films as SECRETS & LIES, VERA DRAKE, TOPSY-TURVY, HAPPY-GO-LUCKY = Oscar. Always has, always will.

I like what Sasha Stone at Awards Daily had to say about ANOTHER YEAR:

“…The meaning of life? Other people. The point of life? Living for others, not for yourself. And if you can make it through another year you’re already a winner.”

Synopsis:

Using his trademark production method of improvisation, Leigh will once again deliver a moving and detailed portrait of his characters’ inner lives. This process has yielded some of the finest performances ever put on film, and it has generated an Oscar-nominated screenplay for four of his previous films: Happy Go Lucky, Vera Drake, Topsy Turvy, and Secrets and Lies.

ANOTHER YEAR is scheduled for a December 29, 2010 release.