Archive for the ‘Damián Szifron’ Category
Opinions Never Caught Anyone
To Catch a Killer
Director: Damian Szifron
Cast: Shailene Woodley , Ben Mendelsohn, Ralph Ineson, Jovan Adepo, Jason Cavalier, Rosemary Dunsmore, Mark Camacho
Running Time: 1 hour and 59 minutes
Film Rating: 7 out of 10
PLEASE NOTE THIS FILM MIGHT ALSO BE KNOWN AS MISANTHROPE
IN OTHER WORLD TERRITORIES.
Argentinian Oscar winning director of Wild Tales, Damian Szifron directs his first English Language film: a murky and bloody detective story, To Catch a Killer starring Golden Globe nominee Shailene Woodley (The Descendants, Big Little Lies) as a rookie cop Eleanor Falco in Baltimore, Maryland who teams up with veteran FBI investigator Lamar, brilliantly played with a maverick style flair by Australian actor Ben Mendelsohn (Animal Kingdom, The Dark Knight Rises).
The pair team up with an arsonist investigator Mackenzie played by Babylon star Jovan Adepo when a lone marksman shoots 29 people dead in various Baltimore skyscrapers on New Year’s Eve.
The Trio upon increasing pressure from the FBI and city authorities are racing against time to find the perpetrator before another massacre occurs. That happens very soon in a city shopping mall, whereby the suspected killer is cornered in a food court and resorts to extreme violence to escape.
To Catch a Killer is a relevant film to watch at the time when America is experiencing its worse wave of gun violence in US history, with mass killings happening on a weekly basis in almost every state of the country. This film asks relevant questions. Why should individuals with severe mental illness or disabilities be allowed to carry heavy guns and deadly rifles? Why aren’t the laws in America strict enough? It’s a complex issue for a country of that size whereby the gun laws differ from state to state.
As a film, Szifron keeps the cinematic palette dark and saturated with murky colours adding a sombre ambience to a film about death and mass killings. Fortunately both Shailene Woodley and Ben Mendelsohn are talented actors to keep this distressing detective film engaging and thrilling. The best scenes in the film are between the two main leads.
Woodley is superb as the recovering drug addict turned investigator and Mendelsohn is excellent as the flamboyant lead detective on a prolific case which ultimately consumes his personal and professional life.
To Catch a Killer has enough plot twists to keep audiences guessing and when the killer is finally revealed, his blandness and ordinary status as an ex-abattoir worker makes his final confession even more chilling and psychopathic. In this case, the banality of evil is done for its own sake without any moral justification or redemption.
This film highlights the epidemic of gun violence currently sweeping America, the role that the media plays in this and the devastating personal cost which happens to the victims who are senselessly murdered and to the survivors that are traumatically left behind.
As Lamar says to Eleanor at the film’s beginning, “Opinions never caught anyone, but good detective works does”.
To Catch a Killer is an exciting but bleak look at gun violence, microscopic detective work and the toll that mass killings takes on a society. The film gets a rating of 7 out of 10 and will appeal to audiences that enjoy a gritty American detective story.
69th BAFTA AWARDS
THE 69th BAFTA AWARDS /
THE BRITISH ACADEMY FILM AWARDS
Took place on Sunday 14th February 2016 in London
BAFTA WINNERS IN THE FILM CATEGORY:
Best Film: The Revenant
Best Director: Alejandro G. Iñárritu – The Revenant
Best Actor: Leonardo DiCaprio – The Revenant
Best Actress: Brie Larson – Room
Best Supporting Actor: Mark Rylance – Bridge of Spies
Best Supporting Actress: Kate Winslet – Steve Jobs
Rising Star Award: John Boyega
Best British Film: Brooklyn directed by John Crawley
Best Original Screenplay: Tom McCarthy and Josh Singer – Spotlight
Best Adapted Screenplay: Adam McKay and Charles Randolph – The Big Short
Best Costume Design: Jenny Beavan – Mad Max Fury Road
Best Foreign Language Film: Wild Tales directed by Damián Szifron (Argentina)
Source: 69TH BAFTA AWARDS