When I found out the Abu Dhabi Film Festival would be my only chance to watch good films, uncensored, I went out and bought 12 movie passes as soon as the box office opened. I had been to one movie in the theaters since arriving, and while the violence was aplenty, anything beyond a hug was cut out. I also noticed that most of the movies that come here are action or kid movies. Even horror movies seem to be ok, just nothing with kissing or homosexuality or nudity or... NORMALCY.
Another annoyance about going to the movies in the UAE is the lack of theater manners. I thought the film festival would also be an exception to this norm, but unfortunately it was not. Every single movie I have been to (13 so far) has been interrupted by phones going off, people talking through the movie, notification alarms, prayer calls, and the most annoying of all: the tweet. I had never heard the tweet before moving here, and for a while thought it was just some popular notification sound that all the Arabic and Emirati people used. Then I found out it was the sound of the tweet, as in twitter. This is just one more reason I hate twitter. So yeah, it takes a lot of patience to sit through a movie when people are so inconsiderate. Makes me really appreciate you, America. You have trained us well.
So here are my reviews of the rest of the movies I saw during the festival. My top three, which I highly recommend, are: Philomena, Belle, and Broken Circle Breakdown.
Villa 69
I can't remember why I chose this movie. Maybe I was trying to be as international as possible, and also hit a few "world premieres." The best part of this movie was the beginning and the end, because that is when the movie stars were on stage, and the gals next to me were freaking out as if it was the damn Beatles. I had never heard of these stars, but apparently they are HUGE in Egypt. The movie itself was ok, just ok. It was about a man who was dying-- typical artsy foreign film. I had to suck on peppermints to get through without falling asleep.
Only Lovers Left Alive
Jim Jarmusch's latest film starring Tilda Swinton, about vampires and rock and roll. This may just be my favorite Jarmusch film, after Dead Man of course. It was smart, and the music was great. One review I read said it was a hipster vampire movie, which I think was just one Twilight fan's attempt to understand a film that was probably too "weird" for their tastes. The movie took place in two very different cities: Detroit and Tangiers. I can never quite put my finger on what it is I love about his movies, but this one haunted me for days.
Dial M for Murder
(in 3D, which is how Hitchcock originally filmed it)
I thought it would be a great idea to go see this movie on Halloween night, being that I didn't have any plans. It was Thursday night, the end of the week, and I should have known better than to try to stay up past 8 pm. I slept through the first 20 minutes of the movie (I think I just missed a bunch of talking), and then enjoyed the rest of the film. It was not as suspenseful as I was hoping it would be, but it was a good mystery. And that Grace Kelly is a doll.
School of Babel
I don't know what I was thinking choosing a movie about teaching, students, and school, but apparently I bought my tickets during a week long holiday and forgot how much I enjoy my weekend breaks from all things school related. This wasn't a bad film. It was a documentary about a class of middle school immigrant students learning French in Paris. Their stories were heart-breaking, and I cried at the end when the teacher said goodbye and they were all crying. I guess a movie must be somewhat good if it makes you cry.
Giraffada
I was really excited to see this film because I absolutely LOVE giraffes. I was disappointed. It was a Palestinian film, and I was turned off by the anti-Israeli propaganda. The story could have been good though, and it had some really great scenes. It was about a vet and his son who live in the West Bank and take care of animals at a zoo. There are 2 giraffes and the little boy is obsessed with them. During a missile strike, the male giraffe hits his head and dies, then they boy, his father, and his father's new French journalist "friend" try to find another male giraffe to replace him since the female is depressed and on a hunger strike. Of course the vet has a vet friend in Israel who happens to have extra giraffes, so they come up with a plan to try to smuggle the giraffe back into Palestine. The message in this movie: Giraffes come first.
Broken Circle Breakdown
The only reason this isn't my favorite movie of the festival is because it broke my heart. Still, it was amazing. The soundtrack is still playing in my head. It was just what I needed-- an escape from all things UAE. There was sex, nudity, profanity, tattoos, and a lot of bluegrass. I smiled when some man in the audience exclaimed in disgust "This is too much!" during one of the steamy sex scenes. It was not pornographic by any means, just a typical rated R sex scene. I was surprised they allowed this movie to play here, but I guess the usual rules don't apply during the festival-- all in the name of art. This was a Belgian film, a story about a bluegrass musician and a tattoo artist, told masterfully in a non-linear fashion. It was brilliant, completely unexposed, human, raw, and full of emotion and passion. It was heart-breaking, but then again so is life.
Qissa
This movie was CRAZY. I think I will steal the words from another review:
"I honestly have no words to help gain my footing because this film exists on a level beyond my comprehension. I don’t know if that is good or bad—probably alternatingly both—but the result is definitely something uniquely its own. A tale of rebirth, honor, fidelity to family, and the loss of identity, Anup Singh‘s Qissa tackles an insane subject matter so realistically tragic that its head-scratching shift to fantastical and spiritual allegory can’t help but take you aback. Right when you’ve maybe wrapped your head around the central conceit, Singh blindsides you once more with a revelation that simply isn’t feasible in the context of verisimilitude. The title is Arabic for “folk tale,” however, so I guess I shouldn’t have been surprised there would be enchanted liberties taken with reality."
Another annoyance about going to the movies in the UAE is the lack of theater manners. I thought the film festival would also be an exception to this norm, but unfortunately it was not. Every single movie I have been to (13 so far) has been interrupted by phones going off, people talking through the movie, notification alarms, prayer calls, and the most annoying of all: the tweet. I had never heard the tweet before moving here, and for a while thought it was just some popular notification sound that all the Arabic and Emirati people used. Then I found out it was the sound of the tweet, as in twitter. This is just one more reason I hate twitter. So yeah, it takes a lot of patience to sit through a movie when people are so inconsiderate. Makes me really appreciate you, America. You have trained us well.
So here are my reviews of the rest of the movies I saw during the festival. My top three, which I highly recommend, are: Philomena, Belle, and Broken Circle Breakdown.
Villa 69
I can't remember why I chose this movie. Maybe I was trying to be as international as possible, and also hit a few "world premieres." The best part of this movie was the beginning and the end, because that is when the movie stars were on stage, and the gals next to me were freaking out as if it was the damn Beatles. I had never heard of these stars, but apparently they are HUGE in Egypt. The movie itself was ok, just ok. It was about a man who was dying-- typical artsy foreign film. I had to suck on peppermints to get through without falling asleep.
Only Lovers Left Alive
Jim Jarmusch's latest film starring Tilda Swinton, about vampires and rock and roll. This may just be my favorite Jarmusch film, after Dead Man of course. It was smart, and the music was great. One review I read said it was a hipster vampire movie, which I think was just one Twilight fan's attempt to understand a film that was probably too "weird" for their tastes. The movie took place in two very different cities: Detroit and Tangiers. I can never quite put my finger on what it is I love about his movies, but this one haunted me for days.
Dial M for Murder
(in 3D, which is how Hitchcock originally filmed it)
I thought it would be a great idea to go see this movie on Halloween night, being that I didn't have any plans. It was Thursday night, the end of the week, and I should have known better than to try to stay up past 8 pm. I slept through the first 20 minutes of the movie (I think I just missed a bunch of talking), and then enjoyed the rest of the film. It was not as suspenseful as I was hoping it would be, but it was a good mystery. And that Grace Kelly is a doll.
School of Babel
I don't know what I was thinking choosing a movie about teaching, students, and school, but apparently I bought my tickets during a week long holiday and forgot how much I enjoy my weekend breaks from all things school related. This wasn't a bad film. It was a documentary about a class of middle school immigrant students learning French in Paris. Their stories were heart-breaking, and I cried at the end when the teacher said goodbye and they were all crying. I guess a movie must be somewhat good if it makes you cry.
Giraffada
I was really excited to see this film because I absolutely LOVE giraffes. I was disappointed. It was a Palestinian film, and I was turned off by the anti-Israeli propaganda. The story could have been good though, and it had some really great scenes. It was about a vet and his son who live in the West Bank and take care of animals at a zoo. There are 2 giraffes and the little boy is obsessed with them. During a missile strike, the male giraffe hits his head and dies, then they boy, his father, and his father's new French journalist "friend" try to find another male giraffe to replace him since the female is depressed and on a hunger strike. Of course the vet has a vet friend in Israel who happens to have extra giraffes, so they come up with a plan to try to smuggle the giraffe back into Palestine. The message in this movie: Giraffes come first.
Broken Circle Breakdown
Qissa
This movie was CRAZY. I think I will steal the words from another review:
"I honestly have no words to help gain my footing because this film exists on a level beyond my comprehension. I don’t know if that is good or bad—probably alternatingly both—but the result is definitely something uniquely its own. A tale of rebirth, honor, fidelity to family, and the loss of identity, Anup Singh‘s Qissa tackles an insane subject matter so realistically tragic that its head-scratching shift to fantastical and spiritual allegory can’t help but take you aback. Right when you’ve maybe wrapped your head around the central conceit, Singh blindsides you once more with a revelation that simply isn’t feasible in the context of verisimilitude. The title is Arabic for “folk tale,” however, so I guess I shouldn’t have been surprised there would be enchanted liberties taken with reality."











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