The 29th Annual Whitaker St. Louis International Film Festival concluded its epic 18 day run last night, culminating with their annual awards presentation.
And here are some of the winners:
Best Film Award: Asia, directed by Ruthy Pribar
TV5Monde Award for Best International Film: Beasts Clawing at Straws, directed by Kim Yong-Hoon (read Jim Batts‘ WAMG review HERE)
Leon Award for Best Documentary: God Save the Wings, directed by Adam Knapp & Kenneth Linn
Spotlight on Inspiration Award This juried competition awards a $5,000 prize to a feature documentary that focuses on people working to make the world a better place and that inspires audience members and leaves them with a sense of hope for the future. Sponsored by The Albrecht Family: The Road Up, directed by Greg Jacobs and Jon Siskel
NFF Emerging Director Award: The Bobbie The New Filmmakers Forum (NFF) annually presents the Emerging Director Award. Five works by first-time feature filmmakers compete for the prize, which includes a $500 cash award. Since its inception, NFF was co-curated by Bobbie Lautenschlager. Bobbie died in the summer of 2012, and SLIFF honors her memory by nicknaming the NFF Emerging Director Award as the Bobbie. New Filmmakers Forum sponsored by Barry & Jackie Albrecht and Pat Scallet: Small Time, directed by Niav Conty
Essy Awards for Best St. Louis Films: SLIFF inaugurates a new juried competition at this year’s festival: The Essy Award, which honors works either made in St. Louis or by a filmmaker with ties to the area. The award is accompanied by four $250 prizes — underwritten by the Chellappa-Vedavalli Foundation — for Best Narrative Feature, Best Narrative Short, Best Documentary Feature, and Best Documentary Short.
Best Narrative Short: Augustus, directed by Jon Alston
Best Documentary Short: I Want to Make a Film About Women, directed by Karen Pearlman
Best Narrative Feature: Test Pattern, directed by Shatara Michelle Ford
Best Documentary Feature: Zappa, directed by Alex Winter
BEASTS CLAWING AT STRAWSscreens as part of this year’s St. Louis International Film Festival November 5th – 22nd.Ticket information for the virtual screening can be found HERE
A wild, fast-paced crime thriller that deftly crosses the Coen Bros. with “The Grifters,” “Beasts Clawing at Straws” is a pitch-black neo-noir. When a cash-stuffed Louis Vuitton bag is left in a sauna, it sends a group of hard-luck lowlifes on a desperate chase for a fortune. Fish-mongering gangsters, a greasy cop, an “innocent” gym cleaner, and a prostitute and her trio of men (wife-beating husband, ruthless boss, and clueless boyfriend) all violently scheme to get their hands on the elusive bag. Starring Jung Woo-sung (“Asura: City of Madness”) and Jeon Do-yeon (award winner in Cannes for her lead role in “Secret Sunshine”), first-time director Kim Yong-hoon’s film is a beautifully constructed puzzle whose pieces snap perfectly into place with each double-cross. Screen Daily writes: “Stridently over the top in everything from the colour scheme to the performances to the violence, the film at first appears to be a fairly routine underworld black comedy. It’s not until the final act that first-time feature director Kim Yonghoon’s assured handling of the convoluted structure fully reveals itself. Following its win at Rotterdam, where it took the Jury prize in the Tiger Competition, ‘Beasts’’ pulpy appeal and dark humour should ensure that it will be well received at further festivals.”
Review of BEASTS CLAWING AT STRAWS
We seem to hear the phrase “hot spot” quite a lot lately, usually in referring to the global pandemic. But in the world of cinema, those words have a much different meaning, calling attention to the current critical and often box office success of a particular region )country, continent, etc.). In the early 1980s the “movie hot spot” was Australia which suddenly exploded with fresh new film “voices”. More recently India and Mexico have “made their mark”. Last year, however, was the year of South Korea with the unique “label-defying” (drama, comedy, thriller, parody, horror) PARASITE sweeping the Oscars (four major honors) and breaking through the “niche’ markets” to play in many multiplexes. For those who have developed a taste for this type of “film food” here’s a new Korean “movie meal” that covers many of that earlier work’s themes while blending the seasonings and spice of the Coen brothers, Tarantino, and a dash of Christopher Nolan. Let’s devour the delights of BEASTS CLAWING AT STRAWS.
After a chapter “title card” we’re introduced to a hard-working man in his early thirties who’s struggling to keep the family business, a modest general store with his home in the above floors, afloat. Customers are so sparse that his wife juggles cleaning jobs while she attempts to care for her senile and increasingly violent mother-in-law. Meantime, her hubby pedals countless miles to his early shift job as the custodian/clerk of a gym/sauna at a swanky Seoul high-rise hotel, all under the watchful eye of his bullying boss. Things change one dreary morning as he discovers a fancy Louis Vuitton bag left in one of the open lockers. Zipping it open, he’s shocked to find that it’s stuffed with cash, maybe several hundred thousand US bucks. But the boss spots him, so he quickly closes it up and tells him that he’ll place it with the lost and found items in the back room. Instead, he stashes it out of sight, hoping it will be hidden until he can sneak it out. Cut to another title card as we encounter a customs officer who enlists the aid of an old school pal in a scheme to pay off an affable but remorseless loan shark who is losing his patience and is eager to put his hulking mute sadistic goon (he adores fresh liver…from any source) to work. If only the customs guy’s girlfriend hadn’t vanished. Or has she? Then we cut to a new chapter as we meet a twenty-something “hostess” at a “gentleman’s club” who comes home at night to a cruel abusing spouse. Could her young smitten “client” be persuaded to rescue her from her soured marriage? What could these characters have in common with each other, besides the pursuit of filthy lucre?
Ah, but that’s the fun of this zany crime caper. Watching each segment unfold we wonder just how these “worlds” will collide. Or perhaps they won’t. It appears that lots of Hollywood’s Golden age film noirs made it to the Far East and inspired director Kim Yong-Hoon as he adapted Japanese writer Keisuke Sone’s novel. He’s loaded the film with terrific twists and turns to keep viewers riveted and more than a tad puzzled, shifting our rooting interests suddenly while indulging in the “blackest’ of comedic set pieces. There’s even a dim-witted stooge named “Carp” who seems to always be in the wrong place at the wrong time. And there’s just the right amount of gore and sex (what’s a caper with a femme fatale or two) as the principals scramble to deceive and deter with double and triple crosses galore. All the scheming pays off, as does the time-mixing from the talented filmmaker. You’ll be riveted as you observe these wild characters that can truly be called BEASTS CLAWING AT STRAWS