Review: ‘Ferrari’: A Cinematic Symphony of Speed, Sorrow, and Spectacle

2023 has been a return to the big screen for many old masters. The latest of these is Ferrari, the latest feature film from one of the most important directors of the last 40 years, Michael Mann. Ferrari documents a snippet of the life of Enzo Ferrari (Adam Driver) after the death of his son Dino. The Ferrari company has been struggling due to lackluster racing and needing to sell more sportscars to finance the expensive racecars they need to produce. This, paired with turmoil throughout Enzo’s personal life as he juggles running Ferrari with his wife Laura Ferrari (Penélope Cruz) and being there for his other son Piero (Giuseppe Festinese) whom he had with Lina Lardi (Shailene Woodley). Most of the film takes place in 1957 which is a wonderful choice from Mann. In many biopics taking on an entire life and fitting it into 2 or 3 hours is a tall task and rarely does the film or the subject justice. 

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Review: ‘Marriage Story’ Offers a Profound Perspective on Modern Stories of Love and Divorce

In Noah Baumbach’s newest feature, Marriage Story, opens the soon to be separated Charlie (Adam Driver) and Nicole (Scarlett Johansson) are asked to write a list of what they love about each other to ease them into what they hope to be an amicable process of disconnecting their intricately merged lives. If asked to write a list of what there is to love about this film, there would be too much to say.

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Review: ‘The Report’ is Spotlight Crossed with Zero Dark Thirty

The Report tells the real story of senate staffer Daniel Jones and the Senate Intelligence Committee as they uncover the horrifying details about the CIA’s use of torture during the War on Terror. In 2012, Jones (Adam Driver) and his team created an over 6,000-page report that alleged that the CIA’s enhanced interrogation techniques were torture and resulted in no new information from prisoners. The report and its authors were faced with push back from the CIA and the White House as they tried to hide conclusions reached in the report.

When sitting down to watch The Report, I was expecting to see Spotlight crossed with Zero Dark Thirty, and in short, that is exactly what I got. First and foremost, The Report has all the pieces of an investigative journalism story like Spotlight. As we follow their investigation, we hear a healthy amount of the government jargon and acronyms that take a while to get used to and understand. Inter-cut throughout the film are flashbacks to 9/11 and the beginning of the War on Terror. Many of these flashbacks showed the torture of prisoners at CIA black sites. As the film progresses, the torture becomes more and more graphic, and yet it is never gratuitous. The flashbacks show how the prisoners where treated and emphasize why the work that Jones and his team is doing is so important.

Adam Driver gives a stellar performance as the leading man and further cements himself as an amazing actor who also happens to be in Star Wars and not the other way around. Annette Bening and Jon Hamm also give great supporting performances as Senator Dianne Feinstein and White House Chief of Staff Denis McDonough, but both are easily outshined by Adam Driver.

As with most films based on a true story, they are a Hollywood dramatization of the real-life events. The Report is no exception to this commonality; there is bound to be a bias, especially since there are politics involved. However, in comparison, The Report actually seems to have very little bias, as the film tries to focus on only the facts, even though some of them are exaggerated a little to make them more interesting for the big screen. One thing that stands out in the cinematography is how the flashback sequences are presented. In the flashbacks, there is a noticeable change in lighting and color of the film to give it a hazy or fuzzy look, to emphasize the political ambiguity of the recounting of past events and how they are swayed to favor certain people.

The Report gives an account of real-life events that is not dry and boring, and yet it isn’t a political thriller either. If you’re interested in what happened with the CIA and their use of torture during the War on Terror, but don’t want to read the dry Wikipedia page, then check out The Report and Adam Driver will tell you all about it.

3/5 STARS

Review: The World is Off Its Axis in Jim Jarmusch’s ‘The Dead Don’t Die’

The Dead Don’t Die played on June 8th at the Seattle International Film Festival, but will be making its return to year round SIFF on June 21st.

“The world is off its axis.” Though this tagline isn’t on the poster for Jim Jarmusch’s The Dead Don’t Die, it very well could be. You read the newspaper, check Twitter, talk to people outside and you begin to realize just how off-kilter the world is in 2019. This feeling of unbridled, societal chaos is at the heart of Jarmusch’s latest as it paints an apocalyptic world in parallel to our own.

Drawing from the well of 1950s and 60s B-rate horror films, the film focuses on the citizens of Centerville as they fight off zombies rising from their grave after a global incident. It’s a simple premise that lends itself to featuring the likes of Bill Murray, Adam Driver, Tilda Swinton, Selena Gomez, and more in the film’s star studded cast, but in its simplicity lies the distillation of the genre it pulls from. There are no complex inter-character relationships, subtle themes, or logical developments, but that seems to be exactly what the film is going for. B-rate horror films are typically devoid of any of those, and in the pursuit of replicating that, Jarmusch created a genre film that evokes that whole aesthetic.

In the name of aligning itself with its influences, the film takes on a very literal, on-the-nose approach to its meaning, often resulting in the film’s driest and funniest lines. Jarmusch’s sense of humor is extremely self-aware and tongue-in-cheek, making self referential statements, commentary on the obvious, and fourth wall breaking jokes to play up the film’s B-movie vibe. It’s consistent and explicit in its intent, and believing other wise would be a tough sell given the poetic precision of Jarmusch’s last film, Paterson.

The film is shameless in its overt meaning, but intentionally so. The film premises itself on the aforementioned idea that “the world is off its axis” in literal and metaphorical terms. After a fracking incident causes the Earth’s to be knocked out of alignment, polar fields are disrupted, day and night cycles are out of wack, and zombies start rising from the grave. With nods to climate change, societal trends, political unease, and the like, the film sets its apocalyptic world in a very realistic setting. Everything is one rung higher than our own reality, making for scenarios where we can laugh at slightly hyperbolic situations that bear truth after we leave the theater. The Dead Don’t Die is B-movie genre film that doubles as a poignant social commentary about the dismay in society. Where we see regressive decline all around us, we too may enter a world where zombies roam amongst us and society is brought to an end.

The cast is laden with stars, and luckily each one gets their own moment to shine. Murray, Driver, and Chloë Sevigny play a trio of semi-capable officers patrolling the town, stopping in on the film’s supporting characters periodically. Steve Buscemi plays a conservative farmer with an attitude, Caleby Landry Jones plays a rest stop clerk with an inkling for horror films, Tilda Swinton plays a coroner with hidden talents, and the list goes on and on. All these characters excel within the film and have at least one moment where they take center stage.

Full of great moments and characters, The Dead Don’t Die is another great outing by Jarmusch that distills the essence of its influences for a comedic zombie flick about contemporary problems. Keenly aware of its effects, the film hones in on genre tropes and plays with them to both pay homage to its influences and generate tongue-in-cheek humor about the world we live in. By presenting the end of society, it seems as Jarmusch is reconciling the insanity he sees around him. His answer: have fun and laugh at the madness, cause in the end, we’re probably all doomed.

3.75/5 STARS