Change Your Image
rtomkinse
Reviews
God's Pocket (2014)
Uneven Effort
How to sum up this movie? It has a good helping of Coen-brothers-like black humor (minus the great music), a dash of Tarantino-esque surprising violence, and at the center of it all a sad Philip Seymour Hoffman just trying to make everything alright and an ethereal Christina Hendricks floating through it all.
The story: in an insular Philadelphia neighborhood called God's Pocket (which was actually filmed in Yonkers, NY), a despicable 20ish kid gets himself killed and his survivors have to deal with the fallout. His stepfather Mickey (Hoffman) doesn't have the money for a funeral. His mother Jeanie (Hendricks) suspects foul play but can't begin to figure out what happened.
Richard Jenkins is excellent as the boozy reporter working the story. The only problem is that his character is not believable. Supposedly the people in this gritty working-class neighborhood adore this reporter because he "gets" them. Yet in the voice-overs of him reading his poetically crafted articles, that just doesn't ring true. Devotees of The New York Times Sunday Magazine might appreciate his prose, but not likely this crowd of barflies.
Very believable, on the other hand, is Peter Gerety as the tough neighborhood bartender who helps raise money for the funeral and tries to shield Mickey from some further bad news.
The talents of John Turturro are wasted in his role as Mickey's gambling buddy.
The most disappointing part is that it didn't all hang together with a strong, consistent flow for me. It's an uneven ride that works out okay in the end, kind of.
How to Make Movies at Home (2012)
I want to move to Hillport, Maine!
You can mount a digital camera on an old roller skate and become a filmmaker. That's one of the tips we learn from How to Make Movies at Home. But this is not really a how-to movie. It's the story of a band of young filmmakers still living in the coastal Maine town where they grew up, working in the restaurants and hotels there to support their passion. They spend all their free time filming and then gathering at house parties to screen the films. Along the way it occurs to Jonah (magnetic Elizabeth Lardie), the young woman who is the driving force of the group of guys, to make an instructional video. That's how we learn about framing shots, lighting, sound, camera angle, lenses, and even an incredible five-minute history of film.
The problems start when a big-time Hollywood producer and his crew come to town planning to film a new TV show there. This is not a welcome development. The expense-account executives and the homegrown, guerrilla movie makers get in each other's way at every turn. Eventually they get so tangled up it could undo them all.
According to the movie's website, the basic premise mirrors how writer-director Morgan Nichols and his band of filmmakers ("Like a rock band. Or a band of monkeys.") got their start, making a movie every Saturday. The practice definitely paid off. This is his (their) third independent feature. I haven't seen the others, but this movie is a joy.
The entire cast is so strong that it's hard to believe you can't go to Hillport, Maine, and see the mayor, Henry (Joe Foster, director Nichols's real-life high school English teacher), driving around in his vintage convertible.
I saw this movie at YoFi, the Yonkers (NY) Film Festival, on October 12, and now I want everyone to be able to see it at their local theater. It will make you happy. It's a wonderful valentine to shoestring movie making, a sweet love story about staying true to yourself, and a fun romp with some serious education slyly slipped in. As in real life, we learn the biggest lesson from this movie by example: Budget and big names are not the important things. Have a big heart, a tight crew, and a good story.