Mountain Xpress 09.11.13

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expect it to. (And let’s be honest, where you expect it to go is also where you want it to go.) It’s a generous film in which just about everyone is likable to one degree or another. Stylistically, it’s pretty straightforward, as comedies tend to be, but still refreshingly professional. Its great strengths are its quirky script, the performances and its casting. (Why isn’t Demetri Martin given good roles in more movies?) Plus, there’s the fact that it heralds the arrival of a fresh new voice on the filmmaking scene. That by itself makes it something you should see. Rated R for language including some sexual references. reviewed by Ken Hanke Starts Friday at Fine Arts Theatre

Ain’t Them Bodies Saints HHHH

Director: David Lowery (St. Nick) Players: Rooney Mara, Casey Affleck, Ben Foster, Keith Carradine, Nate Parke Crime Drama Romance Rated R The Story: Tragic romantic crime drama about a prison escapee trying to return to the woman he loves and the daughter he’s never seen. The Lowdown: Strong on visuals, atmosphere and performances, but perhaps a little too deliberately paced and enigmatic for all audiences. Those interested in the art-film scene should definitely take notice.

Calling Ain’t Them Bodies Saints the breakthrough film for indie filmmaker David Lowery is probably an overstatement, but it is the film that has pulled him out of the festival circuit with a limited release by IFC Films. Those who follow these things likely already know that the film has been likened to the work of Terrence Malick — and that’s certainly justified, though the film probably looks more like Robert Altman’s McCabe

& Mrs. Miller (1971), even if the tone has more to do with Malick. As a narrative, Lowery’s film is a good deal more accessible than Malick’s more recent work, though it could hardly be called straightforward. It’s dense and more is suggested than stated. This is a fatalist romantic crime drama, and while it is not without its outbursts of violence — sometimes startlingly so — it is not by any definition “action-packed.” It is also an achingly sad film, though not depressingly so. Casey Affleck stars as Bob Muldoon, a man who — along with his pregnant girlfriend, Ruth Guthrie (Rooney Mara) — gets involved in a robbery that goes wrong and ends with them holed-up in a ramshackle house shooting it out with the cops. Ruth, in fact, wounds one of the cops, Patrick Wheeler (Ben Foster), a crime for which Bob takes the rap, earning him a 25-to-life stretch in prison. While Bob’s imprisoned, Ruth lives with their daughter in a house given to her by the enigmatic Skerritt (Keith Carradine), and Bob dutifully writes to her. Four years have passed when Patrick shows up at her door with the news that Bob has escaped. This is no surprise to anyone — least of all Ruth — but exactly what it will mean remains to be seen, though it clearly means something different to a lot of people. Perhaps the oddest thing about Ain’t Them Bodies Saints is just how little screen time is shared by Bob and Ruth. It almost goes unnoticed because of the voice-overs of his letters, suggesting a bond that goes far beyond anything we actually see. But the situation is complex. Ruth is as concerned — if not more concerned — for her young daughter as for Bob. Patrick, who holds no grudge over the shooting, is sympathetic, yet is also falling in love with Ruth. There are people who want to help Bob, people who want to catch him, people who want to kill him — and at least one person, Skerritt, whose motivations remain impenetrable. This is a film that lives on its atmosphere and on what it wants you to feel — with little time to worry about what you think or even necessarily understand. Both Ruthie and Bob are heartbreaking, though the tragic Bob more so. There is no doubt that there can be no happy ending for

him. Affleck is touching in his role, because of his seeming inability to do anything besides loving Ruth. It’s a performance I probably wouldn’t have thought he had in him, and yet it’s so grounded in his innocent appeal that it really shouldn’t have surprised me. However, the most interesting performance is that of Keith Carradine. His role as the unknowable Skerritt — yet authoritative, appealing and slightly terrifying — is the kind of thing you carry with you long after other aspects of the film have evaporated. Lowery’s film is not perfect and its dense quality isn’t for everyone, but for the things it does right, and the performances it elicits, it’s still special. Rated R for some violence. reviewed by Ken Hanke Starts Friday at Carolina Cinemas

Riddick HH Director: David Twohy (Chronicles of Riddick) Players: Vin Diesel, Matt Nable, Jordi Molla, Katee Sackhoff, Dave Bautista Sci-Fi Action Rated R The Story: Intergalactic badass and wanted man Riddick gets stranded on a barren, dangerous planet, concocting an escape plan by luring in unsuspecting bounty hunters. The Lowdown: Overlong, cheap, juvenile sci-fi/action hybrid that’s for fans of previous Riddick films only.

Steering away from the indulgent space-opera trappings of the muchmaligned but sort of enjoyable bomb The Chronicles of Riddick (2004), director David Twohy revives the franchise with Riddick. In mood and structure, this latest installment is much more in line with the series’ first entry, Pitch Black (2000). Though nothing truly special, Pitch Black was a solid little sci-fi/horror combo, a formula Riddick attempts to recapture, as Vin Diesel’s titular anti-hero is stranded on a barren planet full of nasty CGI monsters that he must battle in order to survive. The concept, in theory at least, is good enough, but Twohy — and some issues inherent

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