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This
week's featured review & film archive
Sarah Jaffe reviews
independent and foreign films,
in addition to reporting the latest buzz behind
Colorado's film festivals.
The Dreamers (2003, Bernardo Bertolucci)
The NC-17 rating on this film may be deserved,
but it still makes me think that we're incorrigible
prudes in this country.
Set against the backdrop of the 1968 student
riots, The Dreamers
is the story of Matthew (Michael Pitt), an American
student learning French in Paris. Matthew meets
the beautiful Isabelle (Eva Green) and her dilettante
brother Theo (Louis Garrel) at the cinematheque,
where they bond over Marlene Dietrich and argue
over Chaplin vs. Keaton.
Much has been made over the incestuous-seeming
relationship between Theo and Isabelle in this
film, but their obsessive love for each other
(especially on Isabelle's part--Eva Green is heartwrenching
in the part) is a metaphor for the entire youth
culture of the time. Isabelle is unable to do
anything without Theo's permission, and though
she has an intense affair with Matthew, she is
lost without her brother. And yet, we see Theo's
inability to see beyond the nose on his face very
clearly.
This film is a gorgeous ode to classic cinema,
pasting in clips from the classics it references
for the less film-savvy among us. It is more sensual
than sexual--a scene where Matthew dips honey
from a jar with his fingers is more erotic than
most of the sex. It's the story of an age, a time,
and the shortsightedness of a group of people,
who prefer to disappear into art than deal with
the world. Don't be scared off by the NC-17 rating.
Now Playing at the Mayan Theater - go to www.landmarktheaters.com
for showtimes
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