Author Archive
‘Greetings from Tim Buckley’ – ***
by Parker Mott on May.18, 2013, under Biopics, Festivals, Movie Reviews, TIFF '12
We all know the saying “like father, like son”, but it’s hard to imagine the pressures of being the son who had to be “like” Tim Buckley, the late musician whose legacy left an indelible mark on the folk music scene and also produced 9 studio albums, 8 live albums, and innumerable compilations. The son was Jeff Buckley, a skinny, pallid, and rumply-haired musician who in his early career was recognized for uncannily resembling his father. (continue reading…)
‘The Great Gatsby’ – **1/2
by Parker Mott on May.17, 2013, under Adaptations, Festivals, Movie Reviews, Period Pieces
The initial reactions to Baz Luhrmann’s adaptation of The Great Gatsby, which opened this year’s Cannes Film Festival, are strangely similar to the ones of F. Scott Fitzgerald’s original 1925 book. Both works were first critically rebuked, respected only for a single redeeming quality: Luhrmann’s style and Fitzgerald’s prose. People complained that the latter’s characters were “marionettes” and in Luhrmann’s adaptation it can argued that the characters are merely dancing puppets of a cinematic pageantry. (continue reading…)
The Keys to ‘Room 237′ and ‘The Shining’
by Parker Mott on May.15, 2013, under "Classics", Festivals, Great Directors, Horror/Suspense, Movie Reviews, Stanley Kubrick, TIFF '12
The Shining is probably Stanley Kubrick’s most mind-boggling film, certainly not his best but not far from what its poster heralds as “a masterpiece of modern horror.” Watching the film for maybe the seventh time the other day – but the first ever on the big screen, in a gloriously crisp 35mm print at Toronto’s TIFF Bell Lightbox – the film registered to me as droll. Many scenes, thanks to Kubrick’s craftsmanship, sink their hooks in you, while others hang loosely with pin-dropping bemusement. (continue reading…)
‘I Declare War’ – ***
by Parker Mott on May.10, 2013, under Action, Canadian Film, Festivals, Movie Reviews, TIFF '12
I Declare War is a no-holds-barred coming-of-age drama that is more than just dipped in the realm of fantasy. It exists, almost wholly, through the eyes and in the minds of several feral youngsters as they compete in a game of war in the woods (shot in Orange Valley, Scarborough over the course of 20 days). Yes, this is “Canadian” soil but directors Jason Lapeyre and Robert Wilson aren’t – ‘scuse the stereotype – making any apologies. (continue reading…)
‘Iron Man 3′ – **1/2
by Parker Mott on May.09, 2013, under Action, Comic Book Movies, Movie Reviews

Sidekicks: Robert Downey, Jr. and Don Cheadle face-off against the ruthless Mandarin in "Iron Man 3".
Iron Man 3 marks the first Marvel blockbuster of the summer (and, assumedly, a box office wonder), thus detonating the big bang of Hollywood spectacle and action-oriented narrative sure to disperse across the multiplexes these next coming months. The Marvel movies are typically theme-park rides, built on a grand scale and meant simply to thrill (Iron Man 2’s motif use of ACDC’s “Shoot to Thrill” was thereby apt). (continue reading…)
Capturing the Look in “Just About Love”
by Parker Mott on Apr.26, 2013, under Essays and Other Works, Foreign Films

The first time: a not-so intimate moment in the many first sexual encounters in the poignant "Just About Love".
Lola Doillon’s visual style in Just About Love (2007) is admirably observational with how it follows the film’s characters and naturally shows them interacting with their environment. This style is predominantly manifested in tracking shots, a technique that fosters an inherent intimacy amongst the characters, because it shows they are spatially close, coming in and out of the frame concurrently. (continue reading…)
‘La Dolce Vita’: A discursive analysis of a “sweet life”
by Parker Mott on Apr.26, 2013, under Essays and Other Works, Federico Fellini, Foreign Films, Great Directors
There is an important irony that Federico Fellini’s La Dolce Vita (“The Sweet Life” – 1960) signifies a transition for Italian cinema, while its protagonist Marcello (Marcello Mastroianni) is ostensibly in one himself. The first refers to La Dolce Vita as Fellini’s departure from Italian neorealism and themes of salvation and grace within a bleak Italian social reality. The second – ultimately the consequence of the first – indicates Marcello’s fruitless stroll through a new Italian reality of stardom and media consumption. The social reality was just as bleak, but it was adorned by Marcello’s self-gratifying, insatiable, and ostensibly pleasurable search for “the sweet life”. (continue reading…)
Death of a Lover, Birth of an Obsession: Marie’s delusion in Under the Sand
by Parker Mott on Apr.26, 2013, under Essays and Other Works, Foreign Films, Movie Reviews
In “Does a Long-Term Relationship Kill Romantic Love?”, Bianca P. Acevedo and Arthur Aron argue that “romantic love – with intensity, engagement, and sexual interest – can last. Although it does not usually include obsessional qualities of early stage love, it does not inevitably die out or at best turn into companionate love – a warm, less intense love, devoid of attraction and sexual desire” (59). (continue reading…)
Agora as “Peplum”: Comparing and Contrasting
by Parker Mott on Apr.26, 2013, under Essays and Other Works, Foreign Films, The Epic
Alejandro Amenabar’s Agora is a fitting way to wrap up this course, because it emulates many of the studied peplum tropes, in order to tell a Roman epic that is convincingly cerebral in nature. As the late critic Roger Ebert wrote: “I went to Agora expecting an epic with swords, sandals, and sex. I found swords and sandals, some unexpected opinions about sex, and a great deal more.” (Ebert) Ebert indicates that Agora challenges the contemporary preconceived notion, as a result of Hollywood action bombast like Clash of the Titans and Immortals, that peplum films automatically involve a robust male hero with a gorgeous woman tucked at his side, and plenty of chariot races to carry us along to the conclusion. (continue reading…)
There’s No Place Like Home: Anxieties of the American family in “The Day After”
by Parker Mott on Apr.26, 2013, under Essays and Other Works, Science Fiction, War Films

The unthinkable event: nuclear fallout in an innocent Kansas pastoral town in "The Day After" (1983).
“A nuclear family stands in the archway of an arcade emblazoned with symbols of Western culture, high and low, and watches three missiles arc over an idealised landscape.”
- Susan Boyd-Bowman, on the press poster of The Day After (1983)






