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A good movie

Posted : 3 years ago on 12 April 2021 08:43

I wasnā€™t really sure what to expect from this flick but since it had been very well received, I was quite eager to check it out. Well, to be honest, it didnā€™t turn out to be an easy watch but since it was from the same guy who gave us ā€˜Tangerineā€™, it was hardly surprising. Indeed, Sean Baker gave us once again a movie without an actual plot and, in fact, during the whole thing, pretty much nothing really happened. And, yet, the damned thing still worked though. Once again, Baker continued his deconstruction of the America Dream by displaying some seemingly colourful but in fact decrepit hotels filled up with people living, or surviving would be more accurate, in the margins of society when a few miles away, 1000ā€™s of tourists spends fortunes to go to Disneyworld. As I mentioned before, nothing much really happened through the whole thing, you mostly see the main characters either wandering aimlessly or running some scams and, on top of that, they were all rather unlikable making the whole thing ever harder to watch. Except of course for Willem Dafoeā€™s character. Dafoe would be eventually praised for his work here but, to be honest, I thought it was a distraction to see such a well-established actor among all these amateurs or first timers. The fact that he played basically the only decent guy around didnā€™t help either. Eventually, I was above all impressed by Brooklynn Prince who gave one of the most incredible child performances I have ever seen. Of course, she seemed to be so annoying and she was for sure, but behind the obnoxious behaviour, you had also a survivor with some major streetwise knowledge and a kid able to create the greatest adventures out of thin air. Concerning Halley played by Bria Vinaite, well, it was even more difficult to root for her for some obvious reasons. Indeed, she kept making some terrible decisions and her behaviour was probably even more obnoxious than her daughter so your first reaction would be to think that she might be the worst mother in the world. And, yet, if you would dig a little deeper, she actually gave her daughter a roof, food and, above all, love and it would have been easier for her to ditch the kid (like her father did apparently) but it was never an option for her. Anyway, to conclude, even though the damned thing was seriously bleak and even heart-breaking, it was still a solid watch and it is definitely worth a look.Ā 



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Bad movie.

Posted : 5 years, 11 months ago on 3 June 2018 10:57

Williem Dafoe is a good actor but this movie is a waste of time.


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The Florida Project

Posted : 6 years, 2 months ago on 28 February 2018 05:30

On the periphery of Disney World thereā€™s a little motel called Magic Castle, and it is here that we begin our story. Itā€™s the summer, and weā€™re quickly introduced to Moonee (Brooklynn Prince, a stunner of a child actorā€™s performance), a six-year-old heavily interested in playtime, imagination, and performing various mischievous acts without the forethought of where these actions will lead. The Florida Project will place us directly into her point-of-view and journey, and itā€™s an emotional ride of great rewards.

Ā 

Moonee lives with her young mother, Halley (Bria Vinaite, another great find), at the hotel, and she quickly meets up with the new girl at the motel, Jancey (Valeria Cotto), after spitting on Janceyā€™s momā€™s car. Moonee gets in trouble, Halley encourages Jancey and Moonee to be friends, and weā€™re off from there. Thereā€™s not a solid story structure to The Florida Project, we merely sit back and observe various episodes in Mooneeā€™s life.

Ā 

We watch many things occur from Mooneeā€™s perspective, several of which we can fill in the gaps as adults whereas the details appear mystifying to her, and observe the human need for denial in full activity. Various scenes portray the bittersweet reality of these characters with a clear-eyed empathy for their humanity and the unspoken, largely unknown reasons for how and why they ended up here. Thereā€™s a refreshing lack of judgment as these characters scramble to survive, protect their kids, and maintain some semblance of dignity and humanity.

Ā 

Orbiting it all is the kindly manager, Bobby (Willem Dafoe) one of many adult figures trying desperately to keep the tragedy of life at bay from the children occupying the slum motel. He performs his normal duties with lived-in ache and tiredness, but also emerges as a fatherly figure to the various denizens of the Magic Castle. Dafoe develops this subtlety and with great compassion for this man. For an actor of his stature to appear in a film populated by unknowns and first-timers could easily dip into star vanity, but no so here. Dafoe develops a rapport with them, and grounds himself into a man that expresses a decency that feels forged out of hardship and personal pain and tragedy.

Ā 

His protectiveness is never more apparent than running off a man thatā€™s hinted at being a child predator, and his rage is palpable. Even better is a scene where he runs interference between Halley, having turned to prostitution to provide for herself and Moonee after losing her meager support system, and a john. Bobby acts as a human shield between the two of them while Halley, in a bit thatā€™s nearing slapstick but still nonjudgmental about her, telegraphs her rage and contempt through her face and flashing the john the middle finger. He not only diffuses the situation but does so in a way thatā€™s entirely protective of Halley and Moonee. Bobby is the supportive through line of The Florida Project, an emblem of the protections in place to try and let these kids just be kids.

Ā 

If Moonee understands any of these developments, you wouldnā€™t know it from her persistent need to play and imagine. Sheā€™s aware enough of the cultural currency at play here to know sheā€™s not going to Disney World itself any time soon, but she finds spaces where she can pretend that theyā€™re various locations or attractions from the theme park. Director Sean Baker allows for Mooneeā€™s vivid imagination to play out as a nearly holy communion with something larger than herself. Itā€™s beautiful how he simply allows her to be in these spaces and observe where her spirit and mind will take her.

Ā 

Baker also manages to capture a feeling of transience to these imaginings that extends to the surroundings. Earlier in the film, Moonee and the other children say goodbye to one of their own thatā€™s moving away. While moving away, his father makes him give away his toys to the other kids because thereā€™s no room in the car, and the kid stands by with a curious expression on his face as these totems of his childhood and time spent here are given away. Heā€™s learned something about the ephemerality of life despite the promise of replacing them all with brand new ones. It wonā€™t be the same, nothing in life ever is.

Ā 

This feeling carries us into the final moments of the film which play out in a curious emotional space. With Halley and Moonee being separated from each other, briefly theyā€™re routinely told, after someone ratted on Halleyā€™s escorting, we witness Mooneeā€™s rage and confusion as to whatā€™s happening. Moonee knows that something dark is descending upon her, something that will shatter the delicate nature of childhood innocence and precociousness. In a flight of desperation we watch her run with Jancey to Disney Worldā€™s Magic Kingdom. Or did they? Is this scene real or the most fully-realized bit of daydreaming weā€™ve witnessed to this point?

Ā 

The literal truth of the scene is nearly impossible to read. She very well could have run off, but I prefer to think of this as a last-ditch effort, a moment of clearly thought-out self-preservation of her innocence, rather than any kind of literal truth. Itā€™s a complicated moment of heartbreak and joy, underscoring the transient nature of childhood innocence, and further underlining the socioeconomic structures at play here. Itā€™s a perfect ending to one of 2017ā€™s best films.



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The Florida Project review

Posted : 6 years, 3 months ago on 4 February 2018 08:45

It makes no sense if you don't understand where the hell is and what an ignored hell could be living in the edges of Orlando. Monster tender kids and and a bigger monster mother, human Dafoe, and an espectacular Magic Kingdom ending.


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The Florida Project review

Posted : 6 years, 4 months ago on 7 January 2018 05:56

The trailer and summary of this movie are absurdly misleading. They may make you think this is a beautiful movie about childhood and upbringing, just like Little Miss Sunshine, but it's definitely not like that.

Here, we have Halley, a terrible, irresponsible single mother who raises her 7-year-old daughter in the worst possible way in a motel in Florida. This woman says bad words in front of her daughter, feeds her with junk food all the time, doesn't teach anything useful or good. Besides, she prostitutes herself while her daughter takes a bath in the same room.

There are no redeeming qualities about Halley. The movie fails to raise empathy for her and for her obnoxious daughter, since it fails to accurately and efficiently develop its characters. I understand this movie tried to show child abuse from a different perspective, but it ended up being empty and shallow. All we see is hyperactive children being obnoxious to everybody and running errands , while their mothers and parents are absent and irresponsible. No background of any character whatsoever. No psychological profile. Only a mother who throws fits when things don't go her way and her daughter who behaves the same way.

When you're recording a movie about child abuse and negligence, you have to make sure you'll either make the audience feel some kind of empathy for the child or for the mother. In here, we don't have any. The movie focused too much action on WHAT the characters do, and not WHY the characters do it.

Willem Dafoe was basically wasted in this movie. Such a marvelous, talented actor should never be hired just to have a supporting role as a motel manager while the rest of the cast with their mediocre performances have much more screen time. I honestly don't see anything special about Brooklynn Price's performance. She behaved like a kid, nothing groundbreaking about that. And Bria Vinaite as Halley only threw fits and gave the middle finger to people - I won't judge too harshly her performance though, because the main flaw here is the screen script, not her performance - she had to work with what she was given.

Cinematography is fine, and so is photography. Beautiful color palette that makes us remind of the Disney World parks. But that just it. What could be a dark yet beautiful movie about child abuse and upbringing became an empty portrait of an irresponsible mother and her obnoxious child. We'll never care about them because the movie didn't care to give us some of their background. It's hard to make a beautiful movie when you don't properly develop your characters.


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