Archives for Park City

Sundance 2011—The Return (8)

Sundance Film Festival 2011*

Park City, Utah

 

Lights come up

Sundance goes on, but for us it’s time to head back to work and families. In all, we took in 10 screenings and Q&As, an opening ceremony party and a trip up Main Street. We had countless conversations with people like us, people who

The Brothers Brown, Marvin (left) and John, caught in flurries at Sundance in Park City

The Brothers Brown: Marvin (left) and John, caught in flurries at Sundance in Park City. (Credit: John Brown)

seemed like something special, and people who seemed like they were from Mars.

Two things I will take back with me is the memory of the special time I shared with my brother, and the fun of being around so many strangers who, like me, just love the experience of watching films. Good films, bad films, long and short ones. Funny, serious, crazy, romantic and disturbing.

But I’d have to say the most powerful experience of Sundance is that for me it served as a linking tool of my life, tying together the decades between two kids—Marv and Amp—stomping off to the movies like little Siskel and Eberts, and the two married men—Marvin and John—who returned to that era (if only for a few days) and found they’re still a lot like those two kids who loved watching movie magic together.

| Check out our time at Sundance 2011 by clicking here.

 

Sights and sounds of Sundance

A dance party on opening night at Sundance (Credit: John Brown)

A dance party on opening night at Sundance (Credit: John Brown)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Demi Moore, during the screening for her film Another Happy Day (Credit: Marvin Brown)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The cast of Another Happy Day (from left): Ellen Barkin, Demi Moore, Kate Bosworth, Daniel Yelsky, Ezra Miller and Siobhan Fallon. (Credit: John Brown)

The cast of Another Happy Day (from left): Ellen Barkin, Demi Moore, Kate Bosworth, Daniel Yelsky, Ezra Miller and Siobhan Fallon. (Credit: John Brown)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Susan Sarandon at the screening for Another Happy Day (Credit: Marvin Brown)

Susan Sarandon at the screening for Another Happy Day (Credit: Marvin Brown)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Marvin Brown in Eccles Theater (Credit: John Brown)

Marvin Brown in Eccles Theater (Credit: John Brown)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

| Check out our time at Sundance 2011 by clicking here.

*Note: Since marvincbrown.com had not been created at the time of the 2011 Sundance Film Festival, I decided to go back and repost these reviews and festival  items, which were catalogued elsewhere—mainly because I needed to get these reviews into my archives, but also because it was an enjoyable experience I’d like to share.

Sundance 2011—The Return (1)

Sundance Film Festival 2011*

Park City, Utah

 

The Main Event

Among Day Three’s assortment of films and stars was a nice diversion to the heart of Park City and the Sundance Film Festival: Main Street. Nestled between the Wasatch Mountains and adorned with quaint and sleek storefronts, the main strip is alive with celebrities, tourists and industry hopefuls.

The Wasatch Mountains surround Park City. (Credit: Marvin Brown)

The Wasatch Mountains surround Park City. (Credit: Marvin Brown)

With mountains peeking over every roof and around every bend, Main Street seems at once an upscale getaway and an inviting hometown. Great shops and eats on every block. Friendly crowds, which is status quo for Park City, never took away from attractive smallness of the Main.

Lunch was had at The Eating Establishment—yes it was—a great restaurant near the top of the ascending Main Street. The breakfast portions are huge and the burgers have to be held with two hands. Interestingly, some store facades are manipulated to hype up the Sundance angle, so you might wonder why your favorite shop suddenly has a new name.

Main Street was great. If you’re going to take a break from screening films, yeah, this will do the trick!

Eccles Theater is one of several theaters around Park City that screen Sundance films. (Credit: John Brown)

Eccles Theater is one of several theaters around Park City that screen Sundance films. (Credit: John Brown)

My brother seems surprised to find a Playboy store on the main strip. It’s either new, or one of those Sundance Surprises.

Snow alert: Up until today it’s been clear skies. But today on Main Street, Sundance got its snow. And snow. And more snow. By the time lunch was done, the sidewalk and streets were covered.

OK, on to the shows.

| Movie reviews from Sundance screenings:

Beats, Rhymes &  Life: The Travels of a Tribe Called Quest

Red State

Meek’s Cutoff

Hobo with a Shotgun

Martha Marcy May Marlene

Win Win

John Brown at Eccles Theater in Park City

John Brown at Eccles Theater in Park City (Credit: Marvin Brown)

Lights come up. Saying goodbye to Park City.

 

*Note: Since marvincbrown.com had not been created at the time of the 2011 Sundance Film Festival, I decided to go back and repost these reviews and festival  items, which were catalogued elsewhere—mainly because I needed to get these reviews into my archives, but also because it was an enjoyable experience I’d like to share.

Sundance 2011—The Return (5)

Sundance Film Festival 2011*

Park City, Utah

 

Red State (2011)

Rated R

 

Kevin Smith’s Red State was one of the most controversial films at Sundance 2011. Smith, ever the class clown, entered a packed Eccles Theater describing outside anti-gay protestors as “fans,” and went to town mocking the protestors, even though his film honors their right to protest. If that wasn’t enough, Smith opened bidding on distribution rights for Red State before a crowd of potential studio investors, then, in some kind of rebuke to Hollywood establishment, reversed himself and declared he would distribute the film himself. OK.

Director/podcast guru Kevin Smith yucks it up at Eccles Theater before the debut screening of his Red State. (Credit: John Brown)

Director/podcast guru Kevin Smith yucks it up at Eccles Theater before the debut screening of his first horror film Red State. (Credit: John Brown)

The film, talky and juvenile on the front end, takes on religious fundamentalism with an odd mix of horror (done well) and action (done equally well), that ultimately doesn’t live up to its full potential.

What it gets right is fantastic. Five deaths in the film are powerfully depicted and each drew startled reactions from the crowd. It’s a hard thing to do in a horror film, to make that many deaths mean more than a body count. And a scene of blaring trumpets stopped the film in its tracks (in the good sense) and for a moment I was off the map of my cinematic experiences and didn’t know what to think or how to react. It was a moment that skirted greatness, but doesn’t achieve it.

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*Note: Since marvincbrown.com had not been created at the time of the 2011 Sundance Film Festival, I decided to go back and repost these reviews and festival  items, which were catalogued elsewhere—mainly because I needed to get these reviews into my archives, but also because it was an enjoyable experience I’d like to share.

Sundance 2011—The Return (4)

Sundance Film Festival 2011*

Park City, Utah

 

Meek’s Cutoff (2010)

Rated PG

 

Meek’s Cutoff/John’s Shortcut: A quiet little film that won’t be seen by 98 percent of America is about three families on the 19th Century Oregon Trail that get lost while supposedly taking a shortcut through the bleak landscape.

Kelly Reichardt’s film is deliberately paced, synched with the rhythms of daily life on the Trail, and rich in period detail. Bruce Greenwood—unrecognizable as the dusty, hairy, irascible Stephen Meek—leads the families on a doom journey he’s supposedly taken before.

A poster for Meek's Cutoff at Prospect Theater in Park City (Credit: Marvin Brown)

A poster for Meek’s Cutoff at Prospect Theater in Park City (Credit: Marvin Brown)

Michelle Williams (Blue Valentine, My Week with Marilyn) stands tall as the young matriarch of one of the families. She watches in the background and keeps her place as the men—her husband among them—hash out their dilemma. As things go from bad to worse, she subtly inserts herself into the negotiations (Should they abandon the obviously lost Meek and strike out on their own? What to do about the Indian they’ve captured along the way?), eventually going head-to-head with Meek himself—something the men seem afraid to do.

The punishing, sepia-toned/sun-scorched landscape—rolling endlessly, dry, sharp weeds and dull rock—eventually overtakes the senses and draws out dread.

After a screening of My Idiot Brother (renamed Our Idiot Brother once it made its way to theaters) was both delayed and ran long, my brother John Brown and I were left with 20 minutes to find the Prospect Theater for a screening of Meek’s. We had no time to wait for a bus and decided to hoof it over to the Prospect, even though we weren’t sure where we were going. After getting directions twice, we sprinted across snow, down alleyways and made the closed-door screening by the skin of our teeth. Things ended better for us than those wagon-trail families, I’ll tell you that.

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*Note: Since marvincbrown.com had not been created at the time of the 2011 Sundance Film Festival, I decided to go back and repost these reviews and festival  items, which were catalogued elsewhere—mainly because I needed to get these reviews into my archives, but also because it was an enjoyable experience I’d like to share.

 

 

| Marvin Brown’s Movie Review Archive

Sundance 2011—The Return (3)

Sundance Film Festival 2011*

Park City, Utah

 

Hobo with a Shotgun (2011)

Rated R

 

The title says it all. Hobo with A Shotgun. If that puts a smile on your face and you like nonstop, cartoonish violence and whatever-the-moment-needs plotting, come on in, the water’s warm … and bloody.

Rugter Hauer attends a late-night screening of Hobo with a Shotgun at the Library Theater in Park City. (Credit: John Brown)

Rugter Hauer attends a late-night screening of Hobo with a Shotgun at the Library Theater in Park City. (Credit: John Brown)

Director Jason Eisener (V/H/S/2) aims his post-apocalyptic film for the distant horizon then puts the petal to the floor.

Rutger Hauer’s title vagrant mills about the worst town in America, watching men, women and children alike slain by a sadistic meanie and his equally abhorrent sons.

All’s good until things get personal for our bummy hero. He picks up a shotgun and … you know the rest. Only the Midnight Movie Madness crowd and/or gorehounds need apply.

*Note: Since marvincbrown.com had not been created at the time of the 2011 Sundance Film Festival, I decided to go back and repost these reviews and festival  items, which were catalogued elsewhere—mainly because I needed to get these reviews into my archives, but also because it was an enjoyable experience I’d like to share.

 

 

| Marvin Brown’s Movie Review Archive

 

Sundance 2011—The Return (2)

Sundance Film Festival 2011*

Park City, Utah

 

Martha Marcy May Marlene (2011)

Rated R

 

Past and present collide gently and shockingly in Sean Durkin’s evocative Martha Marcy May Marlene. Making its debut here in Park City, the effective drama charts the escape of Martha (an amazing Elizabeth Olsen, Oldboy) from her two-year life in a backwoods, Upstate New York cult. After reconnecting with her estranged sister (Sarah Paulson)—her only remaining family—Martha tries to make sense of her values, purpose and trauma.

John Brown, right, with director Sean Durkin (Credit: Marvin Brown)

John Brown, right, with director Sean Durkin (Credit: Marvin Brown)

As the film tracks backward, we sense the mounting dread of cult life, but tense present-day scenes underscore that unstable family relationships may have helped drive Martha to the cult. Lead and supporting roles are gripping from top to bottom. But let’s single out veteran character actor John Hawkes (Winter’s Bone, The Sessions), whose quiet menace as the cult’s leader chills the blood.

Subtle editing and past-present transitions are powerful. Durkin’s direction—sure-handed, never showy—packs a punch.

See it | Skip it

*Note: Since marvincbrown.com had not been created at the time of the 2011 Sundance Film Festival, I decided to go back and repost these reviews and festival  items, which were catalogued elsewhere—mainly because I needed to get these reviews into my archives, but also because it was an enjoyable experience I’d like to share.

 

Marvin Brown, with actor John Hawkes (Credit: John Brown)

Marvin Brown, with actor John Hawkes (Credit: John Brown)