This week in movies
What to watch: Apocalyptic visions, Johnny Depp, and financial collapse onAustin screens
For those not still exhausted from last weekend's plethora of activities or eight days of Austin Film Festival, there are many wonderful choices of things to see hitting Austin screens starting Friday, including a film that is surely to make many "best of 2011" lists this year. Now that the Fall "awards season" actually feels that way after a welcome dip in temperatures, considering going to see a spectacular paranoia drama, an island mystery from the mind of Hunter S. Thompson, or a star-laden thriller about the financial crisis.
This Weekend at the Drafthouse
Easily one of the best films I saw at Sundance (and still on my top films of the year) is Jeff Nichols' (Shotgun Stories) new film Take Shelter, opening Friday at Alamo Drafthouse South Lamar. In it, Curtis (Michael Shannon) begins to have apocalyptic dreams about an impending storm. He struggles with hiding his fears from his wife (Jessica Chastain) and his daughter as he tries to balance his need to shelter them from the forthcoming doom, with the knowledge that his family has a history of schizophrenia. Shannon is in top form and Chastain (who has had a spectacular year with this, The Tree of Life, The Help and more) is up to the task of carrying the film along with him. There are meaningful metaphors at work here but, more importantly, it's a stunningly human story filled with people to whom that audience will feel a deep, personal connection. I cannot recommend Take Shelter enough and, for an added bonus, the film has an Austin connection in that director Nichols lives here and local post-production house Stuck On On worked with the director on everything from editing to color correction to sound design. (Take Shelter also opens Friday at Violet Crown Cinema and Regal Arbor Cinema.)
Opening Friday at the Alamo Drafthouse Ritz is the The Rum Diary, the new film starring Johnny Depp who recently came to the Austin Film Festival. Based on a novel by Hunter S. Thompson and written/directed by Bruce Robinson (Withnail & I), the film follows Paul Kemp's (Depp) adventures as he escapes New York City to take a job at a newspaper in San Juan, Puerto Rico. There, he finds himself succumbing to the local pastime of rum drinking and falling in love with the fiancee of a businessman whose island dealings are less than honorable. This film also has an Austin connection—Chenault, Kemp's potential love interest, is played by the Austin-born Amber Heard (All the Boys Love Mandy Lane). (The Rum Diary also opens Friday at the Regal Arbor Cinema.)
This Weekend at Violet Crown Cinema
Margin Call, opening Friday at Violet Crown Cinema, opens chillingly with a mass layoff, indicative of the both the beginning and the effects of the financial crisis the film depicts. One of the unlucky newly-unemployed is risk analyst Eric Dale (Stanley Tucci), who manages to pass off his final work to a colleague—who soon comes to realize an impending shakeup in the real-estate market would destroy their company. The film chronicles the evolution of this information as it works its way up the chain until it reaches the CEO (Jeremy Irons) who must pull the trigger on a move that will ruin the lives of millions of Americans. What Margin Call aims to do is humanize a crisis that quite possibly has affected, is affecting or will be affecting almost all of those coming to see the film. It puts faces to and shows an identifiable series of decisions that caused the collapse, the fallout of which still looms heavily in the real world. Rounding out the impressive cast are Kevin Spacey, Paul Bettany, Zachary Quinto, Mary McDonnell, and Demi More. (Margin Call also opening Friday at Alamo Drafthouse South Lamar.)
Beyond the Weekend
Leading up to the November 11th opening of Pedro Almodóvar incredible new film The Skin I Live In, the wonderful programmers at the Alamo Drafthouse have decided to run some of the director's previous films beginning with nightly screenings of Women on the Verge of a Nervous Breakdown. The film is a criss-crossing comedy of characters all stemming from a desperate woman's reaction to her lover suddenly leaving her. Check it out next week at South Lamar (10/31 - 11/3).