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CAPSULE REVIEWS: Feature films of the 7th Chicago Critics Film Festival

(Website: chicagocriticsfilmfestival.com)

(Website: chicagocriticsfilmfestival.com)

For the seventh consecutive year, many of the best domestic and international films on the festival circuit come to Chicago thanks to the Chicago Film Critics Association.  The 7th Chicago Critics Film Festival began May 17th at the famed and restored Music Box Theatre.  Steaming towards a decade in successful existence, the CCFF remains the only film festival curated by film critics in the nation.  This year, 25 feature films and two short film programs comprise their rich and ambitious offering slate.  

For the third year in a row, Every Movie Has a Lesson will be credentialed to cover this fine spread of movie offerings.  Ranked in order of recommendation, here are my capsule reviews for the feature films. Full pieces coming later when the respective films have their proper release:


THE FAREWELL

(Image: variety.com)

(Image: variety.com)

Drawing from a deeply personal story, director Lulu Wang’s second feature film shines comedy and drama on a culturally unique situation of gallows humor.  Ocean’s 8 and Crazy Rich Asians breakout Awkwafina stars as Billi, a Chinese-American struggling writer who learns the news that her beloved grandmother Nai Nai (Zhao Shuzhen) back home in Changchun has stage 4 lung cancer and presumably little time left to live.  The kicker comes in a heavy layer of dramatic irony created by cultural norms. It is tradition that those terminally ill are not told their diagnosis of inevitable truths, a decision weighing on everyone that Billi disagrees with.  As an excuse to bring everyone home to see Nai Nai, the family throws a shotgun wedding. Torn between celebrating on the inside and grieving on the inside, everyone tries to make the best in emotional and often hilarious results and releases.  Even with this divergent practice happening, the universal human condition feels are extremely strong in one of the most entertaining and freeing film experiences of recent memory. Indie champion A24 has another winner, Wang is a renewed artistic talent, and Awkwafina’s star grows even greater.  This Sundance darling is primed to be a summer favorite of counterprogramming come this July.

HIGHEST RECOMMENDATION


YESTERDAY

(Image: chicagocritics.org)

(Image: chicagocritics.org)

Academy Award winner and Trainspotting captain Danny Boyle teams with all-star British romantic comedy writer Richard Curtis for one of the most unique cinematic love letters to pop culture you may ever see.  Dream-chasing singer-songwriter Jack Malik (EastEnders cast member Himesh Patel) catches a break when his body gets broken in a bike vs. bus accident at the precise moment the entire planet experiences an electrical blackout.  When he comes to and heals up, Jack awakens to world, including the stalwart woman of his life (Lily James), that has never heard of The Beatles and the their music. Possessing a gold mine of borrowed inspiration, Jack begins to record and perform their catalog as if they were his own creative output, drawing the wild attention and popularity of the music industry and captive audiences.  Yes, the premise is preposterous, the happenstance and romance are cloying, but, by golly, is Yesterday energetic, intriguing, and endlessly charming.  Beyond the plot holes, the brilliance of The Beatles is at its center.  It makes you wonder if the Fab Four’s half-century-plus old lyrics and rhythms would capture audiences with the same love and universal appeal as they did in their actual time?  Likewise, what makes their music so great, the song or the performer? Yesterday is a wonderful fantasy playing out these possibilities through trancing, crowd-pleasing song and serenade.

HIGH RECOMMENDATION


OLYMPIC DREAMS

(Imdb.com)

(Imdb.com)

In a deft and ambitious sample of guerilla filmmaking, the husband-and-wife team of director Jeremy Teicher and athlete/actress/writer Alexi Pappas used the Artist-in-Residence program led by the Olympic Foundation for Culture and Heritage to compose a plucky and Linklater-esque romance in, around, and during the active 2018 Winter Olympics in PyeongChang, South Korea.  Notable star (and contributing co-writer) Nick Kroll plays a volunteer dentist named Ezra from the states who has jumped at the opportunity to serve and be a part of the Olympic experience. Ezra enters wide-eyed and fanstruck only for the buzz to wear off and remind him how alone he really is at this point in his life after a dissolved marital engagement back home.  With a kind and curious heart, Ezra chats up another homesick and forlorn soul in Penelope (Pappas), an American cross-country skier who has already lost her event and finds herself overwhelmed by the immediate end and disappointment of all that personal work and build-up. Over the course of a few days, weaving all throughout the host city and facilities, the two embark on shared quality time and brewing romantic possibilities.  With advantageous, authentic, and awesome production value, Olympic Dreams carries a very unique and unexplored setting which includes the smooth and charismatic involvement of dozens of non-actors and real athletes filling its settings and scenes.  Olympic Dreams feels like a swift-yet-patient Meet Cute romance hidden inside a voyeuristic documentary and travelogue that moves and breathes with caring and considerate tones from start to finish.  This is a hidden gem.

HIGH RECOMMENDATION

COMING SOON: Saint Frances, and the shorts programs on their own article

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MOVIE REVIEW: John Wick: Chapter 3 - Parabellum

(Image courtesy of Lionsgate via EPK.tv)

(Image courtesy of Lionsgate via EPK.tv)

JOHN WICK: CHAPTER 3 — PARABELLUM— 3 STARS

Let’s get the premier vocabulary out of the way before you get punched in the face, bitten by a dog, hit by a car, kicked by a horse, slashed by a blade, or, at the very least, double-tapped dead from opposition or inaction. The Latin subtitle applied to director Chad Stehelski’s third rapid fire romp is the stinger that sets the tone.

LESSON #1: DEFINITION OF “PARABELLUM” — Traditionally, parabellum translates to “prepare for war” as the endnote of the phrase Si vi pacem, para bellum voicing “If you want peace, prepare for war.” Diving deeper, it can also mean the “proprietary name for a type of automatic firearm.” How apropo for what some will consider a mindless action movie where the glibness is armor-piercing.

War set to a rate-of-fire beat of melee lead and breaking bones is indeed what you’re getting with John Wick: Chapter 3 — Parabellum. Springboarding from its increasing success, one could say the movie stylishly assaults your senses with its own creative focus, commitment, and will behind the camera to match the stoic Keanu Reeves protagonist in front if it. Swelling enough from its redundancies, this symphony of gunpowder and gumption will satiate your summer thrills just fine.

Continuing mere minutes after the conclusion of 2017’s sequel, John Wick (Reeves) has killed on Continental grounds, breaking a cardinal rule of the High Table underworld of assassins. His long-time friend and New York hotel manager Winston (Ian McShane) has no choice but to excommunicate Wick and level a $14 million open contract on his life with a benevolent one-hour head start. Once that clock chimes and the order comes down, John has no friends, safe havens, or available resources. The tactically thirsty and trigger-happy emerge from every seedy pore and urban armpit, right down to the Bowery King (Laurence Fishburne) and his army of disguised vagrants, to earn that lucrative score. By the way, Forest Whitaker and Jim Jarmusch called. They want their pigeons and sullied mystique back.

LESSON #2: THIS WORLD HAS TOO MANY CONTRACT KILLERS — While it’s a cool effect to see cell phones blow up and the eyes of deadly strangers stare daggers at their popular potential mark everywhere he goes, the question must be asked. Is there really that much available work for this many hired killers in the Big Apple? They’re on par with Uber drivers and starving artists. Well, our hero needs victims and the body count has to come from somewhere.

LESSON #3: MAYBE DON’T F — K WITH THE GUY WHO’S UNDEFEATED — It’s minorly admirable that these trendy and skilled warriors keep on coming with whatever dedication they have mustered, but at some point, they need to ask if this prize is worth it. Know that John Wick is better than you. Make your money elsewhere. There are plenty of other feathers to earn in one’s cap. Sit this one out and live a longer life.

Constantly fighting off combatants and needing an exit from the city, John retraces his personal history to seek assistance from two key people. First, he seeks the Director, played with stern regality by Anjelica Huston. She is the High Table woman who fostered John’s adoptive Belarusian origins, which opens exposition ever-so-briefly for a morsel of character development for our man “Jardani.” The second is Halle Berry’s twin-dog-flanked Sofia, the hardened manager of Casablanca’s gin joint Continental location in Morocco. She owes John Wick a marker that he cashes in for urgent assistance that pulls her away from management and back in the field.

LESSON #4: FEALTY IS IMPORTANT — The obligatory profession of loyalty for three movies and counting now has been “I will serve and I will be of service.” The talks of rules and consequences have only increased with the bounties. Not a single person in this film doesn’t bend to some measure of fealty and everyone has to answer to somebody. Asia Kate Dillon from Orange is the New Black introduces an edgy dimension as the Adjudicator of the High Table deputized to step to anyone and demand payment for unsatisfied fealty via the enlisted blades and kicks of Mark Dacascos’ sadistic Zero (a long time after Romeo Must Die and his cheap theatrics on TV’s Iron Chef incarnations) and his students.

With each increasingly more expensive movie in this series, the hero and the action have become more relentless with every new threat. The creativity of the acutely choreographed punishments meted out by the cast and their stunt teams remains endlessly inventive. The best sequences come in the front half of the film. Clashes with heavy books in a library, every blade imaginable in an antique weapon collection area, hooves in a Zorro moment on horseback, and Sofia’s canines darting through architecture, frames, and flesh are scenes that show off incredibly dynamic kinetic violence that has become second to none in the present blockbuster landscape. These scenes will make a primed communal crowd pop like a WWE arena.

Once those hapless initial opponents fall away, the fever breaks for an adrenaline-sapping Saharan walkabout to see a High Table elder (the internationally ambiguous Said Taghmaoui) who could lift sanctions. Between that lull and Zero’s emergence as the final heavy hitter, the hammy presence Dacascos is saddled with playing negates a good measure of the intensity away from what was already cartoonish enough at face value. The finale is not the time to lose your edge. If you reversed the action sequence order of this third film, you would have a movie that peaks instead of sags.

Halle Berry, who comes and goes too quickly in the beefy 131 minute saga, has a nice little speech to Reeves asking the rhetorical question series of whether John Wick can “fight wind,” “smash mountains,” or “bury the ocean.” With plenty of movie star invincibility, the answer might as well be another Keanu Reeve’s “yeah” growl in his steely signature deadpan stance. Hopeless from further performance expression, a Keanu in gear is a Keanu in gear. It works and it impresses. We knew this was coming, but, now that John Wick has gone international, this franchise has jumped the shark to a Fast and Furious level. Let’s have John Wick fight Ethan Hunt, James Bond, and Jason Bourne next. Go ahead and throw your pick of Dwayne Johnson and Jason Statham roles in next. Keanu will certainly be the most vacant personality in that battle royale, but he would still likely be the one standing at the end with the bloodiest mop. You know you’d pay money to see that. Don’t kid yourself.

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MEDIA APPEARANCE: David Ehrlich's IndieWire Critics Survey on May 13, 2019

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Notable and notorious IndieWire film critic David Ehrlich recently put out a social media call for film critic peers to join a weekly survey to discuss movie topics, answer questions, and highlight their work.  Representing Every Movie Has a Lesson, I, along with over 60 other emerging and established film critics including some of my fellow Chicago Independent Film Critics Circle members and Aaron White of Feelin’ Film, accepted the invitation to participate.  I'm honored by the opportunity, and I hope my responses are chosen each week.  


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THIS WEEK'S QUESTION: What is the best Keanu Reeves performance and how does it speak to his unique persona?

With the third John Wick film dropping this week, the question was an easy softball matching the film’s star. Keanu Reeves has had one interesting and steady career. The peaks are far spaced between his breakout with Bill & Ted’s Excellent Adventure, Speed, The Matrix, and John Wick, but he’s as steady as they come. I went with the dark and seedy stuff that made him break his deadpan persona for my survey pick. Second place would have been the little-seen The Watcher where Reeves plays an enigmatic serial killer.

Screen Shot 2019-05-14 at 5.30.53 PM.png Screen Shot 2019-03-25 at 10.26.15 PM.png Screen Shot 2019-05-14 at 5.30.39 PM.png THE FULL INDIEWIRE ARTICLE THIS WEEK My 1997 Retrospective including "The Devil's Advocate" LOGO DESIGNED BY MEENTS ILLUSTRATED

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MEDIA APPEARANCE: Participant in "World of Reel" Critics Poll for Best Films of the 2010s

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As I grow with press credentials and professional affiliation locally and nationally, I find myself more and more landing and conversing in circles with other film critics of various levels. Much like the David Ehrlich survey I participate in, I answered an open social media call from Jordan Ruimy of World of Reel. He is a fellow Rotten Tomatoes-approved critic who also has contributed to The Young Folks, The Playlist, We Got This Covered, and The Film Stage. His poll was to collect the Top 5 films of the 2010s from critics and other industry folk. I was honored to chime in with my quintet with some very high company, even if my picks didn’t climb very high compared to my peers. Enjoy the article and list. Check out your boy!

Screen Shot 2019-05-14 at 4.58.31 PM.png Screen Shot 2019-05-14 at 5.13.37 PM.png THE MAIN "WORLD OF REEL" ARTICLE THE FULL LIST OF 75 FILMS THE FULL LIST OF PARTICIPANTS LOGO DESIGNED BY MEENTS ILLUSTRATED

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MOVIE REVIEW: Still Human

(Image: scmp.com)

(Image: scmp.com)

gene-siskel.jpg

STILL HUMAN— 4 STARS

Like the well-worn path of other films that have come before it, Still Human has a peak scene that bonds its two characters from different walks of life in a exchange of shared vulnerability and empathy. Newcomer Crisel Consunji’s Filipino caretaker Evelyn carries the tender heart to help and heal the person across from them who is filled with hate and hurt. That broken and cantankerous man, inside and out, is the wheelchair-bound Leung played by Infernal Affairs veteran Anthony Wong Chau-sang. In a touching and tearful outpouring, Evelyn declares “you can’t choose not to be in a wheelchair, but you can choose how to sit in it.”

Those lines are a screenwriter’s dream of created sentiment. As doubtlessly as it could sting a nose on its directness, the moment squeezes tear ducts easily too. In this case, the sincerity is earned by Still Human’s meaningful journey and the dedicated performances of the leads. Director Oliver Siu Kuen Chan’s debut feature is the epitome of the genuinely genteel washing crassness away. The spirit-affirming foreign entry debuts locally in Chicago for a run at the Gene Siskel Film Center starting on May 13th.

Leung may occupy a busy Hong Kong apartment complex, but he couldn’t be more alone. A construction site accident years prior has him confined to a wheelchair and paralyzed from the chest down. The years since have not been kind. Leung is divorced and only communicates with his college-aged son through web chatting on chance occasions. He scoots through his solitude in mostly stern silence amid the busting urban sounds of his environment until something sets off his irascible, belligerent, and profane triggers.

The severity of Leung’s injuries and his work settlement call for an in-home caretaker. Needlessly to say, he’s gone through quite a few that have either quit or been fired, making viable candidates hard to find. In a place like Hong Kong, the young 20-something Evelyn is a looked-down-upon foreign worker. She holds a Bachelor’s degree but is burdened by familial disapproval and personal debts where this ugly work is all she can get at the moment. With diligence, constant courtesy, and her chin up, Evelyn obediently fulfills the role for fear of being fired. Clashes give way to apologies of temperance and shared circumstances.

LESSON #1: KEEP YOUR LIFE GOING EVEN IN LOW MOMENTS — Much that transpires in Still Human disarms our sensibilities. The arc is plenty predictable but very earnest. The closing of their language barriers and improved routines makes her ever-present encouragement louder and clearer. The presence of kindness softens Leung’s hardened stance that he is an unlucky burden and person of fault. Likewise, succeeding at this job helps Evelyn stand on her own through her dire needs.

LESSON #2: GETTING HELP WITH YOUR DREAMS — Having a big want will help Lesson #1. Our leads each carry a current life goal that begins as a lofty and unattainable wish at first. As one could expect, the obstacles are mental as much as they are physical in Leung’s case or financial in Evelyn’s. Their targets are rightly personal. Through their burgeoning kinship, the two become each other’s support system, secretly at first and then united later, for making those buoyant wishes become closer to reality and dreams worth celebrating instead of dreading.

Those lessons may be broad, but the nuance of Still Human maintains a trueness over straight syrup. Sharp framing plays with distance constantly. Little windows, corridors, and viewfinders play against the enormity of the metropolis around them always pinching things tightly. Little piano notes in the musical score warm the picture at the same time as the seasonal sun. The swells are fittingly small. The brightest rays of all belong to the actors themselves.

Crisel Consunji and Anthony Wong Chau-sang infuse discovered optimism into their respective characters’ adversities. Watching Crisel internalize Evelyn’s fears and process them into emotive performance, you would never know she was not an equal veteran to Wong Chau-sang. She anchors this film with vibrancy and light in a star-making performance. Navigating with confidence inside a guise of doubts, Anthony tempers his steeliness for honesty of his own to fit this minor melodrama. To see his granite features loosen for smiles and sobs, one cannot help be equally destroyed watching it happen.

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SPECIAL: Previewing the 7th Chicago Critics Film Festival

(Image via Facebook, Program designed by Ian Simmons)

(Image via Facebook, Program designed by Ian Simmons)

For the seventh consecutive year, many of the best domestic and international films on the festival circuit come to Chicago thanks to the Chicago Film Critics Association. The 7th Chicago Critics Film Festival opens May 17th at the famed and restored Music Box Theatre in the northside Lakeview neighborhood. Steaming towards a decade in successful existence, the CCFF remains the only film festival curated by film critics in the nation. This year, 25 feature films and two short film programs comprise their rich and ambitious offering slate.

For the third year in a row, Every Movie Has a Lesson will be credentialed to cover this fine spread of movie offerings. Last year, this event produced Aneesh Chaganty’s revolutionary Searching and Bo Burnham’s breakout Eighth Grade, two films on this site’s year-end “10 Best” list as well as Paul Schrader’s First Reformed with Ethan Hawke and the foreign film gem The Guilty. Stay tuned here on Every Movie Has a Lesson for festival capsules and eventual full reviews.

The 7th CCFF opens its schedule with Saint Frances, a Chicago-set coming-of-age story that debuted at the SXSW Film Festival earlier this year. Filmmaker/star Alex Thompson and fellow castmate Kelly O’Sullivan will be in attendance to present their film. Two top CCFF highlights include A24’s Sundance hit The Farewell starring Crazy Rich Asians breakout Awkwafina and the newest film from Oscar winner Danny Boyle, Yesterday, a Beatle-flavored fantasy comedy. The Farewell director Lulu Wang is scheduled as an in-house guest.

The luminaries do not end there. A throwback treat graces the Music Box on Saturday the 18th. A special 40th anniversary 35mm screening of Ridley Scott’s Alien will include a visit from star Tom Skerritt. Other guests across the festival include Chicagoland native Jim Gaffigan and filmmaker Paul Harrill for Light from Light, the group of Tom Cullen, Tatiana Maslany, and Jay Duplass representing the relationship film Pink Wall, and actress Aisling Franciosi of The Nightingale a convict revenge drama from The Babadook director Jennifer Kent.

A full schedule for the 7th Chicago Critics Film Festival can be found on their website. Full festival access can be had for a $150. Those passes and individual tickets are available online with the Music Box Theatre. The Chicago Film Critics Association (CFCA), the Chicago-area print, online and broadcast critics group that celebrates the art of film and film criticism. Follow the CFCA and the festival on Twitter at @chicagocritics and on Facebook here.

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MOVIE REVIEW: Clara

(courtesy of Screen Media via Falco Ink)

(courtesy of Screen Media via Falco Ink)

There is a touching exchange between the lovers of Clara, one of many performed by real-life spouses Patrick J. Adams and Troian Bellisario, that typifies their divergent dogmas. He is a man of objectives and data. She is a woman of compassion and altruism. As they share a riverfront park bench and stare upwards, the woman laments that the star-filled sky is “too beautiful to be random.” The man retorts “it’s beautiful because it’s random.” Opposite to the norm, their disagreement only brings them closer together.

This conversational chasm is a microcosm for the film inside and out. Citing genuine and actionable science, Clara builds heady inquiry for the voluminous and important research of its depicted discipline. Its sense of intelligence intertwines with the unpredictability found in the amorous reverberations of the human heart. This combination creates an intimate and daring film experience that enraptures as easily and as powerfully as it fascinates. This remarkable slice of romantic science fiction debuted on May 3rd on VOD platforms and in limited theatrical release.

Writer-director Akash Sherman’s sophomore feature film smartly and effectively places our two central characters within the astronomical happenings of the present and near future. Dr. Isaac Bruno (Adams of TV’s Suits) is a distant yet driven research astronomer and professor. When he’s not blasting his students with unmasked cynicism, Dr. Bruno and his academic colleagues (led by Dr. Charlie Durant, played by Ennis Esmer of TV’s Blindspot) have been anticipating the launch of a pair of new NASA telescopes that stand to revolutionize the search for habitable worlds and potential cognizant life.

LESSON #1: LEARN ABOUT TRANSIT PHOTOMETRY — The detection method and these specialized telescopes are completely legitimate and not convenient, far-fetched movie fallacies. The TESS Space Telescope is a 2018 upgrade of the Kepler which has discovered over 4000 exoplanets since 2009. The wider instrumentation of the TESS seeks to quintuple those findings. TESS will be paired in 2021 with the new James Webb Space Telescope which is three-times the size and power of the soon-to-be-retired Hubble Space Telescope. The interwoven backdrop of this actual methodology provides is a narrative boon for the science fiction of Clara.

Publicly promoted by the field-leading Dr. Rickman (veteran actor R.H. Thomson), NASA begins releasing the mountains of TESS data to the public as a recruiting call for citizen volunteers to help with the analysis. Promising findings of habitable zone candidate planets from TESS will receive priority clarity exploration from the Webb and would undoubtedly elevate any scientist’s career. Relieved of his teaching position, Dr. Bruno becomes obsessed with finding that first lightning rod recognition. He puts out a flyer for an unpaid, live-in research assistant which is answered by the struggling artist Clara (Bellisario of TV’s Pretty Little Liars).

LESSON #2: PROVING SCIENCE — The sheer scope of the mathematical probabilities used to calculate the universe’s potential for “Goldilocks Zone” planets and evolved life tells the scientific field to think with “when” and not “if” when it comes to what would be the greatest discovery in human history. Yet, here we all are, fearing the unknown and finding nothing when every byte of data says there has to be more than us in the universe. That assumed certainty, calling back to that introductory fact-and-opinion debate of purpose versus impermanence, compels Isaac and terrifies Clara.

As Isaac and Clara share work time and residence, their traits begin to clash and influence each other. Her soulful bohemian views soften the hardened hermit. Likewise, his determined intellect inspires her own path of discovery. As their work goals progress, so does their potential for greater connection. Extremely virtuous and tender performances from Bellisario and Adams guide merging paths of revelatory catharsis for two very uniquely damaged characters. These veterans of television have outdone themselves on this bigger stage maximizing their innate affinity towards each other. The expressions and releases of emotions in this intimate journey against an endless reality become paramount, ponderous, and dramatically affecting.

LESSON #3: PROVING LOVE — A reoccurring debate in Clara is finding the belief and understanding to prove the existence of love beyond the some cocktail of chemical triggers in our brains or a lofty phenomenon of quantum entanglement. Isaac rants “you can’t prove something based on a feeling” or how “outer space is a safer bet than love.” This is a battle of data and concepts against comforts and conceits. As it turns out, the answer becomes simple by posing the question of “Have you ever been hurt by love?” Not a soul on the planet can say no and that’s all it takes to prove it.

There is both solemnity and sweetness to Clara’s complicated love and the movie’s grounded presentation. That measured pairing of tones from Akash Sherman (The Rocket List), his writing partner James Ewasiuk, and the team of contributing artists couldn’t be more balanced. Vinyl spins of Bob Dylan tracks and a spare score from composer Jonathan Kawchuk tame the melodramatics to an appropriately soft level. The same can be said of the clean imagery captured by cinematographer Nick Haight and the patient editing of Matt Lyon. In its slightness, Clara is shaped to be a picture lost in cosmic thought only to still be bound by the weighty human holds that matter with equal and meaningful importance.

A less intelligent film would skimp on the supportive homework and land in the preposterous instead of the plausible. A less honest film afraid to ask the big existential questions would settle for the predictable and pompous. Instead, like a pitch-perfect slow dance of temperance, Clara soothes and satisfies even its most difficult challenges. The movie crescendos towards an absolutely breathless final reel where all of this elevated stargazing vaults into something earnest, powerful, and, best of all, special. This writer has found a hidden gem to champion all year.

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