Film For All Project with AT&T at Tribeca Film Festival

I was lucky enough to attend this year’s TriBeCa Film Festival thanks to the generosity of my daughter and son-in-law.  Armed with my “Gold Pass” credentials, I bounced from one workshop or screening to another and loved every New York minute of it.  One of the best seats I had, though, was right at home — well, at my daughter’s home where I was staying.  Her apartment building is a few streets from the AT&T Long Lines Building, and the view from her balcony on the 30th floor to that building is free and clear.  If you’re not familiar with it, the AT&T building is one of the strangest I’ve seen — a 27-floor skyscraper with no windows. Through a partnership with NYC and the TFF2014, AT&T put on a very cool Film For All display, by projecting images onto that building that could be seen across the city.


How many movies did you recognize?

Film Art as Allegory

favreau  Chef

Jon Favreau does it all – produces, writes, directs, acts – and he knows for the most part what mainstream audiences want. So it was no surprise to learn that his latest film Chef won the Heineken Audience Award for best narrative film at the 2014 TriBeCa Film Festival. At a Q&A session during TFF2014, Favreau talked about the film and, interestingly enough, comparisons between the protagonist and Hollywood filmmaker. In the film, the chef gives up creative control of his food art for a prestigious position in a five-star “corporate” restaurant. He no longer has creative control over what he makes in the kitchen; he’s told what the menu will be. The problem is he never quite reconciles himself to the fact he “sold out” to the corporate machine. A social-media snafu starts a chain of events that give the protagonist a chance to redeem himself. So, what is the allegory?

Favreau began his career as an Indie filmmaker. In the twenty-plus years he’s been making films, he’s progressed to mainstream, working with mega-Hollywood studios like Universal, Paramount, and DreamWorks, but he’s still an Indie filmmaker at heart. With this latest release, Chef, perhaps Favreau has written a protagonist that voices the filmmaker’s own yearning to return to his roots?

InceptionIf you’ve seen Christopher Nolan’s blockbuster Inception, to say the film is ambiguous would be an understatement.    However, Nolan himself has discussed its allegorical connection to filmmaking – a movie about making movies. When we watch a film, don’t we all lose ourselves in that cinematic reality – watching a film is like slipping into that dream world. But Inception goes further than that. Many film lovers have noticed that the characters represent key roles in filmmaking: Cobb the director, Fischer, the viewer, Saito, the producer, etc. This idea of  Inception as a metaphor for filmmaking isn’t new; you can find lots written about it on the internet.

There are other allegorical films out there. What are your favorites?

The 10 Most … Best … Greatest …

top 10Admit it. You’ve clicked on one of these top 10 lists, too. The 10 Best Comedies or The Top 10 Sci-Fi Movies. Some lists are more specific, like The 10 Greatest Movie Kisses or The 10 Best Car Chases. These lists have gotten as common as Buzzfeed’s quizzes, so I rarely notice them anymore. I came across a few yesterday, though, that stopped me: The 10 Most Brutal Brawls in Movies, The 10 Greatest Trippy Cartoons for Stoners, The Top 10 Movies You Shouldn’t Watch on a Date. At first I thought, Who comes up with these lists? and then immediately started thinking of a few of my own: The 10 Best Movies to Watch While Doing Your Homework, The 10 Greatest Depressing Comedies … well, you get the idea. Got any top 10 lists of your own you’d like to share?
The 10 Best Movies to Watch While Doing Your Homework (in no order)
Commando
Independence Day
National Treasure
The Money Pit
Aliens
Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man’s Chest
Shooter
Horrible Bosses
Taken
Leap Year