|
Kaffeine Buzz
reviews independent and foreign films,
in addition to reporting the latest buzz behind
Colorado's film festivals.
STARZ DENVER FILM FESTIVAL
OPENING NIGHT - BREAKING AND ENTERING (Anthony
Minghella)
(November 9, 2006)--It’s the opening night
of the 29th Annual Starz Denver Film Festival
at the Denver Center for Performing Arts’
stunning Ellie Caulkins Opera House. I suddenly
feel quite short as I’ve forgotten my high
heels and large women in even larger dresses barrel
over me as we fought our way to the best seats.
Lacking in fervor, I end up in the second row---which
at a rock concert rules but at a movie premiere,
not so much.
The opening night film, Breaking
and Entering, boasts a star-studded
cast: Jude Law, Juliette
Binoche, Martin Freeman,
Ray Winstone, and Robin
Wright Penn. And perhaps an even bigger
writer/director, Anthony Minghella
whose films (The English Patient, The Talented
Mr. Ripley, and Cold Mountain) have been nominated
for 23 Academy Awards.
Mayor Hickenlooper presented Minghella with the
Mayor’s Career Achievement Award. “I
didn’t know Denver was so posh,” Minghella
said looking out over the black-tie clad audience.
“All I can think is, ‘Thank god I
brought a suit!’”
And all I could think is, “I didn’t
know Denver was so posh either.” As the
intoxicated woman behind me slithered her bare
feet in and out of the narrow space found on the
top of the chair next to me jarring my seat with
each slide, in and out, in and out. Toes wiggled
in my periphery.
Minghella introduced, or in his words “apologized
for,” the first showing of his film in the
states. “When you’re making a film
you have integrity and when you release one you
have none.” “I wish I was showing
you the Borat film,” he laughed.
Minghella described Breaking and Entering as
a story about a city, London, which depends on
an invisible class of people. This invisible class
refers to the many impoverished immigrants that
keep the city running. A city that, in Minghella’s
words, “is awkward about its immigration
policy.” (Hmm, sounds familiar).
The theme, breaking and entering, occurs repeatedly
on many different literal and metaphorical levels
in the film. Will (Law) finds himself among and
often between different worlds. One of his worlds
occurs in his strained home-life with long-term
girlfriend Liv (Wright Penn) and her manic-obsessive-compulsive
12-year old daughter who doesn’t sleep,
but instead practices gymnastics all night. Then
there’s his work as a landscape architect
where he’s undertaken a time consuming new
project in King’s Cross, an area which is
undergoing what we would call in the states, “gentrification”
on a grand scale.
After his office in King’s Cross repeatedly
gets broken into, Will begins a nightly stakeout,
taking matters into his own hands. His worlds
continue to cleave into a web of sketchy strands
as he befriends a prostitute (Vera Farmiga) and
finds himself intimately drawn into the life of
the very teenage boy who robbed him.
Minghella’s invisible class come unveiled
as these many worlds intertwine and each character
faces a separate dilemma wrought of ethics, morals,
truth, loyalty, and justice. The story poses a
series of questions, none of which have easy,
Hollywood answers. The characters are complex.
Minghella, who also wrote the screenplay, carefully
considers each character’s history and future
avoiding stereotypes and predictability.
The young actors in the film, Poppy Rogers who
played the eccentric daughter, Bea and Rafi Gavron
who played Miro, the juvenile delinquent that
burglarized Will’s office, gave particularly
impressive performances. This was Gavron’s
cinematic debut.
The moral of this story is that sometimes everything
must break and come crashing down all around us
so that we can see all of the pieces of our lives
and then carefully put them back together.
After the film we all headed to the Seawell Ballroom
for the opening night party in all of our posh
glory. The most impressive feature of which was
the raised circular stage that DJ played on in
the center of the room with billowing sheer fabric
draped all around it from the ceiling to the floor.
At the end of the night I was looking forward
to getting down and dirty with the common folk
and seeing as many films as humanly possible in
the next 10 days.
Lara Catone, November 16, 2006
|