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Vito Goes Back to the Fest |  |  
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					|  For me one of the cinematic highlights every year is the Chicago European Union 
Film Festival. It takes place this year from March 8 through April 4 at the Gene 
Siskel Film Center which is located at 164 N. State Street. The hotline is 1- 
(312) 846 2800and the website is at 
https://www.siskelfilmcenter.org/ceuff/2019/festivalfilms 
 It is the largest festival in North America which shows films originating in the 
European Union. This year there will be sixty Chicago premieres representing all 
twenty eight EU nations.
 Some of the films were directed by such global superstars as Paolo Sorrentino (Loro), 
Krzysztof Zanussi (Ether), Bruno Dumont (Coincoin and the Extra-Humans) and 
Guillaume Canet (Rock N’ Roll).
 
 The films and even their credits reflect acceptance of the dissolving of 
barriers between countries and cultures. For instance the first reviewed film in 
the series: Ether is a multi nation co production 
(Polish/Ukrainian/Hungarian/Lithuanian/Italian). There is also quite a bit of 
promising new, fresh younger talent in the fest such as Antony Cordier (Gaspard 
at the Wedding), Judith Davis (Whatever Happened to the Revolution), and Marine 
Francen (The Sower). Now here are the reviews.
 
 (EDITOR'S NOTE: Entries have been added since the article's original publication date. 
These additions have been noted in RED)
 
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                     Aleksi 
                    **1/2 90 minutes
 Showings: Friday, March 29 at 6 pm & Saturday, March 30 at 
                    3 pm.
 
 Alexsi is a minor but competent melodrama that manages to 
                    capture millennial discontent and restlessness. Despite her 
                    savage intelligence, Alexsi has trouble holding down a job 
                    (perhaps because of her flightiness). She took several long, 
                    unpaid internships that did not lead to jobs. Her parents 
                    are unhappy because her life is so aimless, and she tries to 
                    impress people by telling them she is an abstract 
                    photographer. Her personal life is as chaotic as the other 
                    aspects of her life. She is simultaneously seeing three men: 
                    an older, wealthy playboy type, an American that seems to 
                    repel her when he acts too nice, and a musician who wants to 
                    confine her with his traditional viewpoints on male/female 
                    relationships. She is not completely happy with any of them. 
                    Her parents want her to take over the family wine business, 
                    but her big dream is to run off to Paris and hang out with 
                    intellectuals. Newcomer Barbara Vicario’s direction is fine, 
                    and the acting is above average, but there is nothing 
                    particularly original or memorable about the script or 
                    storyline. This is a rather rambling, aimless film that for 
                    good and bad reflects the rambling, aimless nature of the 
                    main character.
 
 In Croatian with English subtitles.
 
 THIS ENTRY ADDED: 032419
 
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                     Coincoin 
                    and the Extra-Humans **** 205 minutes
 Showings: Saturday, March 23 at 2 pm & Thursday, March 28 at 
                    6 pm.
 
 This long awaited sequel to Li’l QuinQuin (at least by me) 
                    was released in France last year where it was picked as 
                    second best film of the year (higher than Phantom Thread) by 
                    the prestigious film magazine, Cashiers du Cinema, but it is 
                    just coming to Chicago this month. The director, Bruno 
                    Dumont tends to use disabled people and non-actors with odd 
                    personality quirks and facial tics that he shoots from 
                    unflattering angles. This odd absurdist sci fi procedural 
                    police comedy has hints of body horror in it, and it seems 
                    influenced by Invasion of the Body Snatchers and perhaps The 
                    Andy Griffith Show. A small town teenager named CoinCoin 
                    (for some reason he was called QuinQuin in the previous 
                    film) encounters extraterrestrial globs of liquid that fall 
                    from the sky that cause people to produce identical clones. 
                    The clones emerge fully formed out of the original’s anuses 
                    in scenes that recall the mock birth scene in Alien but this 
                    time the births are funny. A bumbling inspector named 
                    Captain Van Der Weyden investigates the case (he is like a 
                    French Cousteau), and his deputy likes to shock people by 
                    driving the police car sideways on two wheels. There are 
                    also large bands of immigrants entering the country, and the 
                    film seems to be saying Europeans sometimes treat foreigners 
                    like extraterrestrials (one of the first people to see the 
                    alien glop is an employee of a white nationalist.) Since 
                    this film was originally released as a French TV miniseries, 
                    it does not use its final scene to provide closure, but 
                    there is a wonderful parade near end, which includes odd 
                    small town people, alien clones, and people in Mardi Gras 
                    like costumes, and a visibly decaying zombie. The film is 
                    enriched immeasurably by the exquisite widescreen shots and 
                    long takes of scenic landscapes by cinematographer, Guillame 
                    Deffontaines. This is a totally unique cinematic experience 
                    and director Bruno Dumont is able to create weird, surreal 
                    alternate universes as well as David Lynch, Lars Von Trier 
                    or Richard Kelly. In short, I loved it
 
 In French with English subtitles
 
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                     Ether 
                    (Eter) *** 118 minutes
 Showings: Friday, March 22 at 6 pm & Wednesday March 27 at 
                    7:45
 
 This darkly dramatic film was directed by Krystof Zanussi, 
                    who is probably best known in the United States for the 
                    prize winning, A Year of the Quiet Sun. It can be seen as 
                    meditation on the meaning of suffering. Early on the camera 
                    zooms in on Hans Merling’s powerfully horrific Last 
                    Judgement painting as if to visually announce that the film 
                    will take us on a psychic journey through hell. The film 
                    plays a bit like a cross between Faust and Frankenstein 
                    minus most of the sci-fi/ horror elements. Jacek 
                    Poniedzialek’s doctor character is reminiscent of Cushing’s 
                    profoundly evil depiction of Dr. Frankenstein in half a 
                    dozen Hammer films. Both characters repeatedly and 
                    improbably escape death. They also both are extremely 
                    Machiavellian, and they tend to put scientific progress 
                    above the welfare of their patients. The doctor in Ether 
                    sees physicians who care for their patients as suffering 
                    from extreme sentimentality. When the doctor finally makes a 
                    deal with a demon, he is not a man with horns but a high 
                    ranking, suit wearing bureaucrat serving the state 
                    dictatorship. Perhaps this is an even more fitting 
                    personification of evil. While the movie is mostly engaging 
                    and artful, the relentless bleakness, dark visuals, and 
                    constant sounds of people screaming into the background gets 
                    a slightly tiresome towards the end. This gruesome but 
                    worthwhile film is not recommended for extremely sensitive 
                    viewers. In Polish with English sub-titles
 
 
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					 Float 
                    like a Butterfly *** 101 minutes
 Showings: 8 on Friday, March 29 & 5:30 on Saturday, March 
                    30.
 
 This charming and folksy feminist film is from Ireland. 
                    Francis is an orphaned girl whose pregnant mom was killed 
                    when by a fork when she was tussling with a brutal cop. 
                    Above all, Francis admires Mohammed Ali and wants to follow 
                    in his footsteps and become a boxer. But her dad wants to 
                    marry her off as soon as she comes of age. He drinks too 
                    much and is often out of control. In one shocking scene she 
                    actually punches him out when he becomes plastered and 
                    abusive. Unlike his daughter, the father (played by a man 
                    who is the spitting image of Colin Farrell) seems resigned 
                    to living an impoverished, dead end life. He thinks 
                    education is a scam and school just teaches people to roll 
                    over and play dead. He obstinately insists, “No flesh of 
                    mine going to no school.” The film effectively documents the 
                    tension between modernism and tradition, and the director 
                    Carmel Winters (who is a fresh new promising talent) may be 
                    attending both screenings. In English.
 
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                     Lajko-a 
                    Gypsy in Space (Cigany Az Urben) *** 90 minutes
 Showings: Saturday, March 23 at 8:30 & Thursday, March 25 at 
                    8:15
 
 The Russians get sick of sending monkeys into space so they 
                    decide to hold a contest to determine which disposable 
                    citizen should be sent up. They test the applicants and 
                    decide on letting a Hungarian gypsy take the trip, but only 
                    after he starts falling for one of the female contenders. 
                    When he finally goes to space, he has a vison of his dead 
                    mother, which seems to be a homage to the sci-fi classics 
                    Solaris and Contact. This political black comedy pokes fun 
                    at bureaucracy as much as Death of Stalin but it is a little 
                    less clever. I was ready to judge this as one of the weakest 
                    films in the festival but the very true and amusing ending 
                    hit the ball out of the park and redeemed the whole film. I 
                    also liked how the film expertly incorporates real, ancient 
                    black and white stock TV footage to tell the story.
 
 In Hungarian, German, and Russian with English sub-titles
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					|  Loro 
                    1 (Them) **** 150 minutes
 Showings: Sunday, March 17 at 4:30 & Thursday, March 21 at 
                    7:30
 
 Superstar Italian director, Paulo Sorrention (his films The 
                    Great Beauty, Il Divo and Youth made my previous top 10 
                    lists) is back with a highly speculative but outstanding 
                    portrait of the former supremely corrupt Prime Minister, 
                    Silvio Berlusconi. The lead actor Toni Servillo does a 
                    masterful, quasi-sympathetic job at portraying the 
                    traitorous, magnetic and charismatic national leader/TV 
                    station owner. You can almost understand why dozens of his 
                    friends threw themselves under the bus to protect him when 
                    his many crimes became known. However, he is reminded of the 
                    limits of his power at a party that he throw consisting just 
                    of himself and dozens of beautiful women trying to vie for 
                    his attention. A 20 something year old (portrayed well by 
                    Alice Pagani) does not want him to make her an actress or 
                    star and is completely turned off because his breath smells 
                    like her grandfather’s (it turns out they have same type of 
                    dentures). However, he is later able the turn on the charm 
                    and he promises to replace the dentures of an old woman 
                    which were destroyed by an earthquake (he seems to feel her 
                    pain and relieves her despair in a Clintonesque show of 
                    empathy.) His wife Veronica is portrayed (well played by 
                    Elena Sofia Ricci) as the complete opposite of him. She is 
                    an intellectual homebody who is more interested in reading 
                    great literature than being in the public eye. This has to 
                    be one of the most mismatched marriages in history. People 
                    who do not see parallels between the supremely corrupt and 
                    decadent politician and a certain current politician in the 
                    white house are not paying close attention. I don’t quite 
                    know what the recurring goat image is supposed to mean but I 
                    liked it. Sorrentino may not quite be the new Fellini, but 
                    he is the closest thing we have. Despite its long length (it 
                    was cut from four hours to three) this pageantry-filmed film 
                    is one the cinematic highlights of the EU Festival and 
                    perhaps of the year (this will almost surely make my top 10 
                    list). This film has already played at the festival but like 
                    most of Sorrentino’s films, it will get an extended release 
                    in the US later this year.
 
 In Italian, Japanese, Spanish, and Chinese with English 
                    subtitles.
 
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					|  Love 
                    and Bullets (Ammore and Malavita) *** 134 minutes
 Showings: Sunday, March 17 at 4:30 & Thursday, March 21 at 
                    7:30
 
 This sloppily constructed but energetic and rousing gangster 
                    musical is about the passionate and inconvenient love 
                    between a mafia thug and a nurse. The film begins with a 
                    funeral of a high ranking mafia leader named Don Vincenzo. 
                    We soon learn that they actually buried a similar looking 
                    man as a decoy because there was a hit on the leader. A 
                    nurse sees the real Don in the hospital later, but since the 
                    mobsters want to keep it a secret they send a hitman to kill 
                    her. The man they send turns out to be her lover, and he 
                    betrays the mob, spares her and runs off with him. There are 
                    some delightfully bizarre and campy moments like when the 
                    nurse declares her lover for the failed assassin in a 
                    reworked version of the Flashdance theme with new Neapolitan 
                    lyrics about the situation. In Italian with English 
                    sub-tiles.
 
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                     The 
                    Sower (Le Semeur) ***1/2 99 minutes
 Showings: Saturday, March 16 at 3:30 & Monday, March 18 at 
                    6:00
 
 The text adapted for this film is the real story of a woman 
                    who did not allow it to be shared until 100 years after her 
                    death. This picturesque drama takes place in the aftermath 
                    of the French revolution. Some of Napoleon’s men forcibly 
                    remove all the adult male Republicans in a small village (in 
                    real life most of them were killed or deported) leaving only 
                    the women and kids. The isolated, lonely women make an 
                    unusual pact out of desperation. They agree that if any man 
                    comes to town all the women will share him. But when a 
                    handsome blacksmith from another country with a mysterious 
                    past shows up Violette bonds with him over literature (he is 
                    one of the only males she met that could read). They fall in 
                    love, and she wants an exclusive arrangement, but the other 
                    women want in. The film makes good use of mostly unknown or 
                    semiprofessional actresses that often put big names to 
                    shame. This starts out a bit like a less savage version of 
                    The Beguiled but it ends up going in a totally direction. In 
                    French with English sub-titles.
 
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                     Take 
                    it or Leave it (Vota voi jata) ***1/2 102  minutes
 Showings: Friday, March 8th at 4:00 & Thursday, Mar 14th at 
                    6:15pm
 
 This film has already been shown at the festival but it will 
                    soon be streaming online. A sensitive portrayal of 
                    struggling construction wchorker father who is 
                    singlehandedly raising an infant. When the mom rejects the 
                    baby, Erik must decide whether to raise him alone or put him 
                    up for adoption. Erik is a construction worker in Estonia, 
                    but he works in neighboring Finland presumably because like 
                    many modern Europeans he cannot get enough work in his 
                    native country. His ex-suffers from post-natal depression, 
                    and Erik reluctantly takes on the responsibility of the kid. 
                    He thinks it is a temporary situation and that his ex will 
                    eventually come around and take him. Erik soon has to give 
                    up construction to take care of the baby and he ends up 
                    doing handy work for a woman who watches the kid while he 
                    works. Erik is mostly a decent dad but there are bad 
                    consequences when he gets drunk and has a one night stand, 
                    and neglects the baby. Reimo Sagor is excellent as the 
                    devoted Erik and Nora Altrov is also fine as Moonika, the 
                    icy and cold neglectful mom. This film and the lead 
                    performances do a great job of humanizing its working class 
                    protagonists. The director’s last film (Liina 
                    Trishkina-Vanhatalo mostly does documentaries), Tangerines, 
                    scored both Oscar and Golden Globe nominations, and this 
                    film was on the Oscar shortlist for best foreign film 
                    representing Estonia.
 
 In Estonian with English sub-titles
 
 THIS ENTRY ADDED: 
                    033119
 
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                     Tiger 
                    Milk (Tigermilch) ***1/2 107 minutes
 Showings: Friday, March 15 at 7:45 & Wednesday, March 20 at 
                    7:45
 
 This film (named after an alcoholic beverage the teen 
                    protagonists illegally drink) skillfully blends together a 
                    coming of age/initiation story (some parts of this film 
                    could have been in the American rebellious youth Indy film 
                    13) with a tale designed to gain sympathy for undocumented 
                    immigrants. Nina and Jamel are extremely close 14 year old 
                    friends, but their friendship is tested when they accidently 
                    witness an honor killing, and their different cultural 
                    backgrounds (Jameeah came from Iraq to seek a better life 
                    and Nina is a native born German) cause them to disagree on 
                    what to do. Although the film is not particularly profound 
                    or original it moves along nicely and manages to get deep 
                    inside of the mind of the female protagonists almost as much 
                    as the recent Eighth Grade. Nina is capable of surprising 
                    profundity and at one point she even suggests that adults 
                    are not really alive and they only absorb light (or 
                    consequently life) from youth. This film does an excellent 
                    job chronicling the tension between adult and teens, and it 
                    perfectly captures the chaotic, frantic and spontaneous 
                    energy of youth. This fast paced, adrenaline pumping roller 
                    coaster ride that is sure to perk up audiences. In German 
                    with English subtitles.
 
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                     Touch 
                    Me Not  **1/2 125 minutes
 Showings: Saturday, March 30 at 7:45 & Wednesday, April 3rd 
                    at 6:00
 
 This highly explicit film examines sexual relations and 
                    behavior of various marginalized types including the 
                    disabled combining interviews, fiction and documentary. It 
                    touched upon such subjects as BDSM, alternative sexualities, 
                    fetishism and exhibitionism. One of the highlights is a 
                    group therapy session, where people are led through 
                    different exercises to break down barriers to intimacy. 
                    Christian Bayerlein, who tries to overcome his limitations 
                    caused by severe spinal atrophy is the bravest and most 
                    interesting character in the story. Although the film is 
                    well meaning and informative, it is ultimately tedious. The 
                    filmmakers’ clinical and academic tone ends up dehumanizing 
                    sexuality and reducing it to just another physical process.
 
 In English and German with English sub-tiles
 
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                     We 
                    (Wij) *** 90 minutes
 Showings: Saturday, March 30th at 8:0 & Monday, April 1st at 
                    8:00
 
 This very explicit Dutch film of youth gone wild takes more 
                    than a few cues from Harmony Korine’s Kids and Spring 
                    Breakers with a bit of Pasolini’s Salo thrown in with its 
                    fall of civilization theme. During a torridly hot summer, a 
                    group of teenagers naively begin to engage in sexual 
                    experimentation not knowing they will eventually get in over 
                    their heads and it will lead to tragedy. Their games become 
                    increasingly transgressive and some of them engage in 
                    blackmail, pornography and prostitution. Some of the girls 
                    enjoy flashing expressway drivers from the top of a bridge 
                    which causes considerable damage and multiple car crashes. 
                    Eventually one of the teens dies death because of their 
                    actions. The death and the film is told from multiple points 
                    of view like Kurasawa’s Rashoman, but it is not near that 
                    level of quality. The viewer must decide who is telling the 
                    truth and which fractured reality is more reliable. This 
                    film has not been rated but it is the equivalent of an NC17 
                    film.
 
 In Dutch and Flemish with English subtitles.
 
 THIS ENTRY ADDED: 
                    033119
 
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                     Whatever 
                    Happened to My Revolution? ***1/2 88 minutes
 Showings: Saturday, March 30 at 4:45 & Monday, April1st 
                    at 6:00
 
 Angele is a modern day, young radical who came from a 
                    revolutionary family. Her parents met in a Maoist protest, 
                    but Angele clashes with them and some of her friends because 
                    she thinks they sold out their ideals. She organizes left 
                    wing encounter group sessions which are well meaning but 
                    someone absurd. At one of them, some members have a long 
                    argument about whether Johnny Rotten was still punk after he 
                    did a butter commercial (the real Country Time butter 
                    commercial is a classic.) It is actually a great, 
                    entertaining conversation. One of the other members espouses 
                    the belief that society would be better off if had been more 
                    nomadic, but he has never left his town. The best part of 
                    the film is the lead performance by Judith Davis (she also 
                    directed the film.) She manages to create a completely real, 
                    multi layered and convincing character that is hard to 
                    forget. In French with English sub-titles.
 
 In English and German with English sub-tiles
 
 THIS ENTRY ADDED: 
                    032419
 
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					| For more writings by Vittorio Carli go to 
                    
                    www.artinterviews.org
                     & 
                    
                    www.chicagopoetry.com.
                    See his poetry show at the Art Colony on 
                    Saturday, April 13 from 5 to 7 at 2630 West Fletcher. Also 
                    catch his feature at the Elizabeth's Crazy Little Thing show 
                    at Phyllis’s Musical at 1800 W. Division on May 8 from 9 pm 
                    to 12. He will be reading from both his poetry books which 
                    are available at Alternate Reality. |  |  |  
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CHICAGO EUROPEAN UNION FILM FESTIVAL © 2019 Gene Siskel Film CenterAll Rights Reserved
 
 Article © 2019 Alternate Reality, Inc.
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