Take One (Dec 2003 - Mar 2004)

Record Details:

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Alaa by Van | Abi A FanTasia International Film Festival (7/17-8/10/03) BY MAURIE ALIOFF You'll never run into Gwyneth Paltrow or Sam Mendes at the Fantasia International Genre Film Festival, at least not at this point in their careers. But you will encounter intriguing people like actor Ray Wise. A gracious.man who enjoys the kind of movies that FanTasia screens, Wise has a face etched into millions of subconscious minds. When he played Twin Peaks’s Leland Palmer, he and David Lynch created the most deeply resonant fictional split personality since Jekyll/Hyde and Norman Bates. But Wise didn’t know Leland had abused and murdered his daughter Laura until the end of production. When he found out, the father of young girls “didn’t want it to be me. But David said, ‘Ray, it’s always been you,” as if, Wise laughs, he had been acting out Leland Palmer’s dark karma since the beginning of time. Ray Wise appeared in two pictures at FanTasia’s seventh edition, Jean-Baptiste Andrea’s and Fabrice Canepa’s Dead End and Victor Salva’s Jeepers Creepers 2. A French film made in the United States, Dead End portrays a dysfunctional American family that can’t stop driving on a lost highway during an endless night. Spooky and satirical, Dead End was named Best International Feature Film by FanTasia’s jury. As for J.C. 2, its monster is interesting, says Wise, because he’s “organic, a force of nature. And you don’t know where in nature he came from.” Opening with Korean director Jang Sun-woo’s zany opus, Resurrection of the Little Match Girl, aa 2003 — MARCH 2004 Jang Sun-woo's Resurrection of the Little Match Girl FanTasia featured four Takashi Miike pictures, including one of the Japanese “Wild Man’s” best, his typically demented 2001 extravaganza Ichi the Killer. In this witch’s brew of hyper-violence and slapstick surrealism, a blond, pierced, sadomasochistic yakuza, Kakihara, yearns for his Platonic ideal: someone who will torture him to death. He thinks he might have found his dream in baby-faced Ichi, a reluctant and guilt-ridden monster who slices people to ribbons with razor-tipped boots. /chi took the People’s Choice Bronze award for Most Groundbreaking Film while the Silver went to Shion Sono’s Suicide Club (2002). Yet another tainted gem from Japan, Suicide Club is based on real-life events. This loopy, disturbing movie about teenage kids gripped by an irresistible urge to kill themselves refuses to offer easy answers. Are the smiling kids jumping off subway platforms and rooftops victims of a mass psychosis or participants in a dumb trend like flash mobbing? Maybe they are under the spell of some kind of unfathomable supernatural force that communicates through the body language of a singing girl group. FanTasia’s jury deviated from audience opinion and tagged Suicide Club as the festival’s top innovator. Almost everyone thought the top Asian picture was Korean visionary Park Chan-wook’s Sympathy for Mr. Vengeance (2002), which intersects hideous physical torment, exquisite visual poetry and a deeply compassionate attitude toward its revenge-crazed characters. They’re not bad people; they’ve been victimized and they want to get back at their tormentors. Unfortunately, once you accept that, Park makes it clear with unrestrained horror and dark humor that somebody is out to get you. Marina De Van’s creepily intimate In My Skin (France 2002) received the Gold in the International Film category. The film’s heroine (played by De Van herself), a trendy young publicist, accidentally cuts her leg and becomes so fascinated by her wound, she starts to carve out new ones all over her body. Recalling such classics as Polanski’s Repulsion and Cronenberg’s Crash, De Van also wrote the script for her directorial debut. Dennison Ramalho’s Love from Mother Only (Brazil 2002), a People’s Choice for Best