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mrbacim

Joined Feb 2001
Welcome to the new profile
Our updates are still in development. While the previous version of the profile is no longer accessible, we're actively working on improvements, and some of the missing features will be returning soon! Stay tuned for their return. In the meantime, the Ratings Analysis is still available on our iOS and Android apps, found on the profile page. To view your Rating Distribution(s) by Year and Genre, please refer to our new Help guide.

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mrbacim's rating
The Last Tattoo

The Last Tattoo

5.9
8
  • Nov 10, 2001
  • Atmospheric wartime mystery

    This is a well-acted film combining talents from the US and New Zealand to produce a work that creates an interesting sense of period and the clash of cultures during a time of extreme circumstances. Fox and Goldwyn play a Kiwi public health nurse and US marine officer respectively who unwittingly find themselves in the midst of dangerous political intrigues being played out between their nations against the background of the war in the Pacific in 1943, with the truth lying hidden within the seemingly unconnected murder of an American soldier and the sudden outbreak of an unusual strain of a sexually transmitted disease. From this odd-sounding premise, director John Reid fashions an evocative story of disenchantment and disharmony amongst servicemen and civilians alike that contrasts convincingly with glossier treatments of wartime. This is a deliberately-paced work that paints moving portraits of people caught up in larger events but who still long to find a few moments of warmth and companionship within the madness that surrounds them, and the production as a whole does a wonderful job of communicating the uncertainty of the time and it's accompanying hopes and fears.
    Channelling Baby

    Channelling Baby

    5.5
    10
  • Aug 11, 2001
  • A hugely visceral experience full of beautiful images

    I had to wait a long time and work extremely hard to see this film; as a big admirer of New Zealand cinema generally and Danielle Cormack specifically, this has been on the must-see list almost since it was released, and now two years (and many failed attempts to obtain a copy) later I finally get to see it. Was it worth the effort? Very definitely.

    'Channelling Baby' is a complex film that takes a very adult look at loss and separation, and examines the way that we deal as human beings with traumatic events through the presentation of conflicting memories and layers of truth surrounding the disappearance many years ago of the baby of the title. The interplay between it's four main characters maintains a high level of tension throughout, and although the events portrayed verge on melodrama, the emotional tone stays very much in the real world: the enduring images of the movie, alternating between the stunningly beautiful and the unbearably poignant, have the power to reach all of us because they speak of the universal themes of hope and despair.

    Much of the cast, especially the four leads, will be familiar to fans of Renaissance Pictures 'Hercules: The Legendary Journeys' and 'Xena: Warrior Princess,'American productions that were filmed in New Zealand between 1994-2001 - Kevin Smith, Joel Tobeck and Danielle Cormack all had recurring parts on the shows, and Amber Sainsbury also made several guest appearances. Here we get the chance to see them in very different roles, and to people who haven't previously explored the richness of New Zealand moviemaking, the experience should be an enlightening one. all give excellent good accounts of themselves, and show an impressive range of talents. But this is also very much a film of technical achievement - the cinematography of Rewa Harre is on several occasions quite breathtaking, and there is a wonderful use of colour as subtextual reinforcement of narrative shifts in time and mood; Chris Plummer's editing is also extremely successful in keeping the audience slightly unsettled, as we undergo rapid and provocative shifts from scene to scene.

    The film nevertheless belongs to its writer and director Christine Parker, who has given us a truly exciting first full-length work that strikes us both at gut level, pulling few punches (I laughed and cried, and it's been a long time since one movie provoked both reactions in me); and which is also intellectually satisfying. I've worked in the field of mental health all of my adult life, and this film said more to me about the experience of managing psychological pain than any other work I can remember having seen. Brava.

    I would not be true to my obsession with Danielle Cormack if I didn't give her some special mention, however! She gives a stunning performance and convinces as a blind woman (no easy task)whose life takes bewildering twists and turns; and she is never less than movingly plausible as she demonstrates almost the whole range of human emotion within Parker's highly literate script. In a movie of many wonderful moments, one scene in particular stands out, beautifully directed and deeply affecting to watch, as Cormack stumbles into the garden of her home and holds her baby up to the sun, begging the universe to notice the child and give to her what she needs. It's an image that will stay with me for a very long time, and exemplifies a film that should be widely seen.
    Topless Women Talk About Their Lives

    Topless Women Talk About Their Lives

    6.7
    9
  • Mar 2, 2001
  • A genuine achievement that deserves a much wider audience

    I confess to bias here, inasmuch as I'm a big fan of lead actress Danielle Cormack, but I loved this movie. It details the various interrelationships within a group of twentysomethings in Auckland and the key events in their lives that occur over a period of several months, some hilarious, some tragic. It's an exhilarating mixture of naturalistic insight and sheer absurdism, generally mundane events unfolding and being twisted into constantly tragicomic consequences. Wonderful ensemble performances (from a cast who will be very familiar to fans of TV's 'Xena: Warrior Princess,' a much less naturalistic drama but also the product of New Zealand!)give life to characters who are fully human in their self-absorption but utterly flawed understanding of their own lives. The brutal and tender moments of the film say far more about human relationships than a dozen feelgood Hollywood movies, and it's a great shame that this excellent piece of work didn't receive a major international release.

    (By the way, the movie is available on tape in Canada and Region 2 DVD in Germany, including on Amazon's German site. Good luck in hunting it down).

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