Beat Magazine #1367

Page 24

THIS WEEK: ON SCREEN ACMI will host a six day program to celebrate the achievements of director Marco Bellochio this week. Bellochio is a thrice-time nominee for the Venice Film Festival Golden Lion and has been nominated six times for a Palme d’Or. After almost five decades of film making he was awarded a Gold Lion for Lifetime Achievement in 2011. The season will open with the Australian premiere of his latest film, the controversial, Dormant Beauty (Bella addormentata) (2012). It will also include screenings of Vincere (2009), In the Name of the Father (Nel nome del padre) (1971/2011) and close with Good Morning, Night (Buongiorno, notte) (2004). The season of Directed by Marco Bellochio will commence on Thursday April 18 and run until Tuesday April 23.

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ON STAGE In a backdrop of illustrious stories, Assassins, the newest production of fortyfivedownstairs, will delve into the story of infamous Americans who assassinated their presidents. Based off the book by John Weidman, Assassins will let you step into these American’s minds, including Confederate sympathiser John Wilkes Booth, Leon Czolgosz, and Charles Guiteau. JFK assassinator Lee Harvey Oswald will create a twisted, humourous recount of his tumultuous life, and what made him order that rifle in 1963, while Samuel Byck will detail his attempted assassination of Richard Nixon. Delivered with an abrasive, cold and black humour, Assassins will illustrate conflict of politics and life. Assassins will be performed at fortyfivedownstairs until Sunday April 21.

ON DISPLAY Tinning Street Gallery will be hosting Abigail Varney’s first solo exhibition this month. Entitled eyes for you. the exhibition explores the nonchalant moments of life. Abigail Varney recently completed her internship with New York photographer Mary Ellen Mark last year. This taught Varney how to refine her lens and create more portraiture-like images that pleased her. Varney has had images featured in multiple Frankie editions and helped with the photographer for The Blue Diamond Society in Nepal. eyes for you. will be exhibited at Tinning Street until Sunday April 21.

BEAT’S PICK OF THE WEEK:

SNAFU Theatre Company will be celebrating its tenth birthday with a new play at the Abbotsford Convent this month. Entitled Ten Months in a Cold Town, the play illustrates the town of an unnamed town under tyranny. Fun is prohibited, beaches are a fragment of the imagination and clapping can lead to a prison cell appointment. Two undercover agents meet and become embroiled in a situation beyond their control. Think of Ten Months as the adult version of The Hunger Games mashed with J. J. Abrams’ Alias. Featuring an original score, sharp dialogue and guest artist Cazz Bainbridge, Ten Months in a Cold Town will make one reconsider their selfentitlements. Ten Months in a Cold Town will be performed at the Abbotsford Convent from Thursday April 18 – Saturday May 4.

Beat Magazine Page 24

WARM BODIES BY CAITLIN WELSH

There’s a scene in Warm Bodies where our protagonist, known only as R, is trying to work out how to strike up a conversation with his new acquaintance, Julie. He hasn’t had a girl over in a while and is kind of struggling for an opening line. In voiceover, we hear him pleading with himself: “Don’t be creepy, don’t be creepy, don’t be creepy.” It’s a scene that’s relatable for anyone over 13 with a pulse – despite R’s lack of one. Talking to girls was hard enough even before the zombie apocalypse. R (Nicholas Hoult) spends his days shuffling around an airport with a few hundred others, occasionally exchanging grunts with his only “friend” (Rob Corddry) and joining packs in search of delicious brains. When they come upon a group of young humans during one of these missions, R sets dead blue eyes on Julie (Teresa Palmer), a girl about the same age he was when he died, and in the amygdala-munching melee that inevitably ensues he manages to save her from being lunch for his undead cohort. While Julie can’t hear the wry, self-flagellating inner monologue that endears R to the audience from the first scene (“What am I doing with my life? I’m so pale. I should get out more. I should eat better. My posture’s horrible. I should stand up straighter. People would respect me more if I stood up straighter.”), the selection of grunted syllables he can manage are enough to show her there’s a little humanity left in him. To complicate matters, her father (John Malkovich) is the uncompromising leader of a large human enclave he’s helped keep safe from the undead hordes for the past eight years. Based on Isaac Marion’s novel, Warm Bodies was adapted for the screen and directed by Jonathan Levine, whose

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previous films include cult coming-of-age indie The Wackness and 50/50. His next project is adapting Marie Lu’s Hunger Games-esque YA hit Legend, about a pair of teenagers on opposite sides of the law in an oppressive post-apocalyptic Los Angeles. It’s clear that Levine is drawn to stories about young people trying to find their way through intimidating and strange new worlds. “For some reason I’m very intrigued by that time in someone’s life. Things are so charged, emotionally, and everything is so intense,” he explains. “And that’s what I really like about this movie – it’s a great allegory for the emotions of becoming an adult.” R might be undead, but his role as our narrator means we’re privy to the thoughts that occupy him as he shuffles through his days, unable to remember what life was like before. Despite the signs of decomposition, he’s presented from the first scene as more human than any other zombie in recent memory. “A guiding light for me throughout the movie was just trying to make [R] a regular awkward teenager, and using the zombie thing as a metaphor for that,” says Levine. “And as we got to the post process, we did more and more stuff like that, we crystallised that comparison. And the more we of crisis. With a personal score to settle, Captain Kirk leads a manhunt to a war-zone world to capture a one man weapon of mass destruction. As our heroes are propelled into an epic chess game of life and death, love will be challenged, friendships will be torn apart, and sacrifices must be made for the only family Kirk has left: his crew. We have some double passes to giveaway. Head to beat.com.au/freeshit to win.

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did that, the more it made sense. So for me, I could identify with that character quite a bit because I always felt awkward and creepy around girls. Inarticulate…” he laughs. “And the more neurotic we made him, the more his character came to life.” While technically Warm Bodies fits under the “youngadult paranormal romance” umbrella, there’s none of the moony moping of Twilight here. Fans of hardscience backstories might be a little disappointed, as Levine acknowledges, but anyone who enjoyed Shaun Of The Dead’s pairing of hilarious one-liners and gory, stumbling spectres of death will find it a welcome addition to the rom-zom-com sub-genre. The romance between Julie and R, far from being tacked-on, is central to the plot – which is where Hoult’s shy charm and cheekbones come in handy. The former child actor, known as the About A Boy kid in the beanie before starring in UK series Skins, grew up very nicely indeed; he even modelled for Tom Ford after being cast in the designer’s directorial debut, A Single Man. “There was a pretty high barrier to convincing an audience that someone might find him attractive,” admits Levine with a chuckle. “So only someone as overwhelmingly attractive as Nick could pull it off.” Zombies, as you might have noticed, are having a serious pop-culture revival, meaning audiences now are particularly well-acquainted with a broad range of zombie tropes. Along with new BBC series In The Flesh (set in a civilised post-apocalypse Britain where former zombies, or sufferers of “Partially Deceased Syndrome”, are rehabilitated back into society), Warm Bodies might be part of the next wave in zombie storytelling – one where hope sits alongside the gore, an antidote to relentlessly grim interpretations of the genre, like The Walking Dead. “It’s awesome that there’s this zombie renaissance, or whatever you want to call it,” says Levine. “Because I think they’re smart, and that the best zombie movies are better than the best vampire movies.” In preparation, he adds, he watched “every single zombie movie I could get my hands on” – from George Romero and Lucio Fulci (Zombi 2) to Danny Boyle’s groundbreaking 28 Days Later – “because I knew that hardcore zombie fans were going to beat the shit out of me,” he says with a laugh. “I wanted to be very cognisant of the tropes, and to be aware of the rules even when we were violating them – to know that we were violating them, rather than just ignoring them.” Apart from a brief poke at humanity’s pre-apocalypse condition as smartphone-obsessed proto-zombies, Warm Bodies doesn’t go all-out on the social commentary. But Levine feels it’s impossible to make a zombie film that doesn’t contain some sort of message about what makes us human. “I think with the best ones – and certainly Romero – it was always there,” he says. “Whether it was Dawn of the Dead in the mall, or Night Of The Living Dead – which is kind of about tolerance, I think – and there’s the individual versus the collective, and all kinds of other stuff, especially in the Romero [films]. And that’s when I think it punches best … But even in Day Of The Dead there’s that [zombie] character who can talk, who is semi-articulate. And in Walking Dead – I haven’t seen all of it, but they certainly play off on the idea that these people were people. There’s a range of emotion. I think that was certainly something that people responded to in our movie, the notion that it wasn’t about a plague, it was about a cure; it was about hope.” Warm Bodies is showing in cinemas now.


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