Welcome to WeeklyWilson.com, where author/film critic Connie (Corcoran) Wilson avoids totally losing her marbles in semi-retirement by writing about film (see the Chicago Film Festival reviews and SXSW), politics and books----her own books and those of other people. You'll also find her diverging frequently to share humorous (or not-so-humorous) anecdotes and concerns. Try it! You'll like it!

Tag: 60th Chicago International Film Festival

“Nightbitch” Screens on October 21, 2024 at the 60th Chicago International Film Festival

Marielle Heller walked the Red Carpet outside the Music Box Theater on Monday, October 21st at the 60th Chicago International Film Festival in support of “Nightbitch,” which she co-wrote and directed. The screenplay is based on the book by Rachel Yoder. Heller’s previous directing forays include “Diary of a Teen-aged Girl” (2015), “Can You Ever Forgive Me” (2018) and “A Beautiful Day in the Neighborhood” (2019). Amy Adams and Scoot McNairy play a husband and wife parenting a toddler, played by twin tow-heads Arleigh and Emmett Snowden.

“I’m never going to be smart, happy or thin ever again. And I’m pretty sure I’m turning into a dog,” says the Mother character. That line sums up the plot. All mothers in the audience will be able to relate—up to the dog part, anyway. The theme of a hassled Mom trying to cope with daily life at home with kids reminded me of Jason Reitman’s 2018 film “Tully,” but Charlize Theron had three kids and there was no werewolf-ian metamorphosis involved.

Marielle Heller

Marielle Heller on October 21, 2024, at the 60th Chicago International Film Festival.

As she took the stage to accept her Visionary award, Marielle Heller said, “This is one of my most personal films. I’m just thrilled to be bringing it here tonight.” The 98-minute film’s tag line? “ Motherhood is a bitch.” The IMDB classification lists Body Horror, Comedy, Horror, and Dark Comedy. If you liked “Can You Ever Forgive Me” which earned Melissa McCarthy an Oscar nomination, you’ll like this one. If you’re a Mom, you’ll like it twice as much. (Amy Adams won a TIFF acting award for her role.)

Q&A

After the film screened, Heller shared some insights into the production. The feeling that this could be “any city” and “any Mom” was intentional. Specifics are missing on purpose, including names. Heller is delineating the marital playbook where the wife gives up her career and her dreams to stand by her man. She is thinking, “How many women have delayed their greatness while the men around them didn’t know what to do with theirs?” Adams’ character was a successful artist and worked in an art gallery before she and her husband decided to have a child. Now, as the script says, “The whole concept of motherhood that we’re sold is basically bull-shit.”

SCRIPT
One scripted exchange between the couple has her husband saying, “What happened to the girl I married?” to which Amy Adams responds, “She died in childbirth.” The absence of specific names for our married couple is intentional. One scene (that others wanted to cut) was “the kale salad scene.” Heller described it as a difficult one for Amy Adams to play and “the heart of the film.” As she explained, “It’s that feeling of becoming more and more invisible as you age.” (Tell me about it. No, don’t. I live it daily.)

In the scene, the waiter seems to disregard Amy’s order of a kale salad on more than one occasion. The actor playing the waiter asked the director why the waiter doesn’t seem to respond to Amy Adams repeated request for a kale salad, as she dines out with former work colleagues. Heller told him, “Your ears are not tuned to the sound of any woman over 40.” Adams declares herself a “sand cow” and says, “The woman that I used to be, she’s down here in my intestines, buried in kale.”

SETS/CASTING

Marielle Heller

Marielle Heller on the Red Carpet outside the Music Box Theater in Chicago during the 60th Chicago International Film Festival on October 21, 2024.

One interesting fact was that the team looking for a house to use for filming looked at over 60  of them. Heller said, “There was more effort to make the movie seem effortless than you could imagine.” (She stumbled upon the house at 2 a.m. on Zillow). She explained that the house they were seeking should demonstrate a certain level of good taste, but “with a layer of baby crap over the good taste.” The most difficult casting was that of the BookBaby Moms. Best BookBaby Moms scene is where each confides an anecdote about their failures as keepers of the household’s pets, whether a bird, a fish or a cat. The sharing occurred after Adams said, in response to inquiries from her BookBaby friends about the couple’s recent separation, “I just had to break out of it. And I killed the cat this week, which made me aware that I’m not doing well emotionally.”

HUMOR

It is dead-pan delivery of lines like the one about the cat that will amuse anyone with a sense of humor— especially any woman who is a new mother struggling to keep her head above water. The script (a collaboration between the author of the book and Heller) is particularly good. It conveys laughs that are truisms that hit home, as when Adams says, “I needed to dig around in the dark and just find myself again.” She salutes all women who have given birth, citing “That shared bond of all you’ve given up for the continuation of the species.”

One of the best and most humorous techniques that Heller uses throughout the film is to show the socially correct response, contrasted with the actual REAL response. One such exchange occurs in the produce aisle of the grocery store in response to a work colleague who asks Amy about being home all day with her new child. (REAL response, unsaid:“I would like to feel content, but instead I feel like I’m trapped within a prison of my own making.”) Instead, she trots out the socially and politically correct response. Scott McNairy as the husband finally admits, “I didn’t see all that you were giving up by being at home.” (An apology is tendered, which Heller said made some people feel uncomfortable. As for herself: “We need to see more men apologize in movies.”) Responding to the platitude “choose happiness” with a strong slap would be the real response. “I’ll try” is what women are conditioned to respond.

DIFFICULT SCENES

There are multiple dogs in the film. When asked about the difficulties of working with animals, Heller said, “With every dog there is a trainer who is talking off-camera. I didn’t know how chaotic that would feel.” She also embraced more unscripted spontaneity than in past films,
because of the small child (actually two twin boys) whose immediate responses needed to be captured. The twins were wonderful in their part and any mother of a small boy will be able to relate to the antics of the toddler.

Asked about one of her favorite scenes, Heller singled out the scene that was her favorite scene to watch with an audience. It involved Amy’s increasing feeling that she is somehow changing and becoming more animalistic. Heller’s brother, Nate, (who played the singing male leader of the Book Babies club) accused his sister of liking gross things. In the scene Amy Adams examines some changes her body is undergoing and takes action. As someone who has a friend who absolutely loves the “Dr. Pimple-popper” television segments, I’ll leave the specifics up to you to discover when you see the film in December (it premieres December 6th), but suffice it to say that it hasn’t been done on film in any movie I’ve seen.

Marielle Heller

Marielle Heller, Director of “Nightbitch,” onstage at the Music Box Theater during the Q&A at the 60th Chicago International Film Festival on October 21, 2024.

CONCLUSION
You’ll want to put this one on your “Things that make you laugh and cry at the same time,” —especially if you’re a Mom (as I am). If you’ve ever found yourself saying, “I don’t want anything or anyone else needing me or touching me,” then this is the film for you. Remember this scripted line if you’re still just giving the politically correct response to those questions about life with a new baby, “Insist on your joy. Time is short.”
Words to live by and a good reason to see “Nightbitch.”

 

 

Director Antonio Piazza Discusses “Sicilian Letters” at 60th CIFF on October 20, 2024

Antonio Piazza

Writer-Director Antonio Piazza (“Sicilian Ghost Story”), who spoke with me one-on-one on October 20, 2024.

Directors Fabio Grassadonia and Antonio Piazza, who directed “Sicilian Ghost Story” in 2017, return to the screen with “Sicilian Letters,” the story of an attempt to capture real-life Mafia crime boss Matteo Messina Denaro. The crime boss known as the last godfather was hunted for 30 years and was finally captured January 16, 2023 outside a medical facility in Palermo where he was seeking treatment for colon cancer under an assumed name.  Over 100 police were involved in his apprehension that day. He was transferred to a prison with a cancer medical facility, where he died 8 months later (September 25, 2023), after slipping into a coma on September 24, 2023. At the time of his death, aged 61, it was estimated that Matteo—who had been sentenced to life in prison in absentia for the death of Giuseppe DiMatteo in 2012—was worth $4 billion dollars.

Lucia Rasso (Barbora Bobulova) with whom Matteo hides in “Sicilian Letters.”

Matteo, portrayed by Elio Germano, was known to be a cold-blooded adversary. He once killed a rival (Vincenzo Milaggo from Alcamo) and then strangled the man’s pregnant girlfriend. Matteo had been familiar with guns since the age of 14. At one point, he tells the woman harboring him (Lucia Rasso, played by Barbora Bobulova) that he was responsible for avenging her husband’s death and that he murdered the killer when he was only 17. Matteo also bragged, “I filled a cemetery all by myself.”

We see this early descent into savagery in the film’s opening scene, when Matteo steps up to murder a goat under the direction of his father, upstaging his older brother and foiling the attempts of his sister to grab the knife herself. Matteo’s father, Francesco Messina Denaro, known as Don Ciccio, died in November of 1998. By then, Matteo had been on the FBI’s Most Wanted list for 5 years, after a string of bombings in 1993 that killed two prosecutors, Giovanni Falcone and Paolo Borsellino.

PLOT

The film begins by saying “Reality is a point of departure, not a destination.” In other words, as with most films, a certain amount of poetic license has been taken with real life. But, as Director Antonio Piazza told me in a conversation on August 20th, most of the story is true.  In order to capture the last godfather, the police attempt to turn the former Mayor and Headmaster Catello Palumbo (Toni Servillo), who was Matteo’s godfather, into a trusted go-between. Catillo has just spent 6 years in Cuneo prison. The police tell him, “Our meeting is your chance to get back in the game.” They want him to help capture the arch criminal, who has been on the loose for 30 years. and Catello suggests that writing notes (“pizzini”) might be the way in. It is known that Matteo likes to read and Catello offers up the truism that incarcerated prisoners might be the last real readers on the planet. (Sad, but potentially true).

Catello & Matteo face off

Catello Palumbo and Matteo Messina Denaro in “Sicilian Letters,” screening at the 60th Chicago International Film Festival.

Catello—an odd-looking individual with his comb-over hairdo—has  returned to his long-suffering wife Elvira, who seems to take a dim view of her spouse. Catello’s hotel project is in jeopardy; it’s illegal because it’s in a nature preserve. His wife, Elvira (Betty Pedrazzi), is fed up with the circumstances the family has been reduced to during Catello’s incarceration. His daughter Latizia (Dalila Reas) is pregnant by the janitor at Catello’s old school, (a part well-played by Giuseppe Tantillo as the “simple and sweet” Pino Turino.) Elvira does a good job of defending Pino from Catello’s put-downs, but there were other instances in the screenplay where women are demeaned, but none stand up to their abuser. It was definitely a sign of those early 2000 times. One such scene has a male investigator, Captain Schiavon (FaustoRussi Alessi), screaming in the face of female investigator Rita Mancuso (Daniela Marra). There is a line in the screenplay that says,”It’s the men who make decisions at home.” Rita definitely seems angry and upset most of the time.

The police embrace Catello’s idea of using letters to ferret out Matteo’s location. The letters—known as “pizzini“—were small folded-up notes used to communicate with other members of the Cosa Nostra in order to avoid phone conversations. They look very quaint in the era of e-mail and pagers blowing up in Gaza. The pizzini remind of notes passed from student to student in schools from the forties through the sixties, now an anachronism. The idea is to use Catello’s relationship with Matteo as his godfather and the trust Matteo might have in Catello to “Let him hear his father’s voice from beyond the grave.” It seems to work—or does it?

TRUST & CORRUPTION

Investigator Rita Mancuso (Daniela Marra) and Catillo Palumbo (Toni Servillo) join forces to find Matteo in “Sicilian Letters.”

The issues of corruption and trust were huge in the film. One scripted line, “In this village we all spy on one another.”  Matteo at one point executes a friend (Nando) who is suspected of stealing cocaine and tells him at the moment of truth that the issue is not the value of the drugs but that “It’s an issue of trust.” The female investigator Rita Mancuso (Daniela Marra) early in the investigation tells Catello not to trust the other investigators on the case. She suspects (correctly) that there is so much corruption that the police don’t really want to catch Matteo.  Sicilian singer-songwriter Colapesce even composed a song for the film, “La mal vagita seve al mondo intero” which means “evil serves a purpose for the entire world.” Matteo is the center of an entire world using him for their own greedy purpose.

THE GOOD

The plot is complicated and there are quite a few characters to follow. The acting is compelling. Elio Germano, who plays Matteo, actually moved to Palermo for a short period of time to pick up the dialect and the culture (and some Sicilian mannerisms). The part of Catello’s wife (Elvira, portrayed by Betty Pedrazzi)) was particularly interesting. She was one woman of the era who spoke up. Elvira seems very fed-up with her ex-convict husband and says so. The comic touches helped lighten the mood, as when we learn that Catello’s nickname is “Straight-shitter,” which has to do with the circumstances of his arrest. Some found Catello’s odd hair-do and the comic touches distracting, but  they were well-done and necessary to prevent a grim film from becoming too depressing. There is the jab at Matteo’s sister’s “taralli,” a pastry that Matteo warns is as hard as cement. The cinematography and music also served the film well.

 SPEAKING WITH  DIRECTOR ANTONIO PIAZZA

Matteo’s father takes his 3 children to kill a goat for the holiday meal in an early scene from “Sicilian Letters.”

The significance of the small statue described as being the most valuable in the town’s small museum was explained to me by the director, Antonio Piazza. Not only is it true that the statue was very valuable, but it demonstrated how the Mafiosa ripped off antiquities of the country for their own benefit. The statue was called “pupu.” As Director Piazza explained, the word has different meanings in Sicilian.  It can mean “puppet” and it can mean “child.”  Said Antonio, “In a way Matteo is a puppet and a child.” The director explained that the existence of the “Pupu” statue was absolutely true. As Director Piazza noted, “Reading the notes left behind in Matteo’s hide-out and seeing the personal items left behind opened up a whole world to us.” The puzzle in Matteo’s hide-away was one way  he passed the time while in hiding for 30 years. The real Matteo actually did write a letter to the puzzle manufacturer complaining about the missing puzzle piece. Matteo also read voraciously and watched such television shows on DVR as “The Sopranos” and “Sex and the City,” plus reading an Andre Agassi book, Baudelaire, and Dostoyevsky.

CHARACTERS

Pino Turino (Giuseppe Tantillo)

Pino Tumino, well-played by Giuseppe Tantillo, is the only character in “Sicilian Letters” who comes off as pure.

“Pino Turino (who is married to Catello’s daughter) is the only character in the movie who comes out pure,” said Antonio.   “Somehow he was able to read the context, which protected him morally.”  Police investigator Rita Mancuso, Antonio explained, “really wants to capture the fugitive.  She’s honest and idealistic and blinded by her obsession to capture Matteo.” Asked about the accuracy of other names in the film, Antonio said that only Matteo’s name was true to life; most others were changed.  We discussed the state of women at this time in history and in the world. Antonio agreed that Matteo’s sister would have been pissed off that she was a woman living in a man’s world at a time when, as the script says, “It’s the men who make decisions at home.”

Matteo was very close to his father, who died in 1998. However, his father was not the womanizer that Matteo chose to be. One small change that Antonio acknowledged was that the illegitimate child is said to be a son. In reality, the child who wrote the Father’s Day essay about her MIA father, was a girl. Matteo’s sister really did feel that Matteo should acknowledge his daughter, but the film—with its father-and-son dynamic, worked better with the child being male.  The second-class citizenship of girls is made clear from the opening scene of the three children with their father and the goat. I wondered if the sunglasses perched on the small child’s head (Matteo’s illegitimate son, in the film) was meant to show a passing of the torch to the next generation in the film. Director Piazza acknowledged that the RayBan sunglasses were definitely Matteo’ signature and became iconic. Photos of him on driver’s licenses, old and young, show him wearing  RayBan sunglasses. (Think Tom Cruise in “Risky Business.”)

CONCLUSION

Matteo’s father, Francesco Messina Denaro (Don Ciccio) on his deathbed in “Sicilian Letters.”

The primary themes of “Sicilian Letters” concern evil, corruption, and trust. Director Antonio Piazza said, “Your reading of the film is very much true.  We are asking the audience, ‘How is all this possible?’” This continued exploration of Cosa Nostra in Sicily and the 30-year search for Matteo Messina Denaro, the last godfather, was an engrossing, well-written, well-plotted, well-acted and well-directed outing which I thoroughly enjoyed.

 

 

 

 

 

“Life and Other Problems” Screens at the Chicago International Film Festival

 

Marius the giraffe

Marius the giraffe at the Copenhagen zoo.

Ten years ago in 2014, the news that Marius the giraffe was being put down by the Copenhagen Zoo went viral all the way from Hollywood to Chechnya. This Matt Kestner directed 98-minute documentary about that Marius controversy is a nominee for the Gold Hugo at the Chicago International Film Festival. It’s a philosophical examination of life, spurred by the decision by Bengst Holst of the Copenhagen Zoo, to euthanize a perfectly healthy two-year-old giraffe, simply because Marius was fighting with his father within the zoo. Holst took a very hard-nosed clinical view of life-and-death. You get the feeling that he would have done well in the Third Reich. There is no romanticizing of the death of a relatively young animal nor any feeling that Holst is remorseful about the path he has chosen (and sticks with, despite massive criticism). Bengst Holst definitely becomes “the bad guy” of the narrative, which is nominated for a Gold Hugo for Best Documentary at the Chicago International Film Festival. The documentary opens October 20th in the United States.

BENGST HOLST: aka THE BAD GUY

Bengt Holst, Copenhagen zoo director, and television interviewer.

Television interview with zoo director Bengt Holst, who condemned Marius to death.

Holst appears in the film articulating his view that death is a part of life (which, of course, it is). He calls dying “the natural conclusion to life” and says, “Everything is life.  We take life all the time. We now have a surplus to put down,” in regards to Marius the giraffe.

The backlash is immediate and harsh. One letter writer tells Holst, “You deserve to die a cruel death.” Offers come in from Sweden and the United States to give Marius a new home, but the Copenhagen zoo director rejects all offers suggesting that one zoo, in particular, is no better than a pet shop and might attempt to sell Marius for financial gain. Holst says things like, “We can’t act like death isn’t part of real life.  This isn’t Disney.  Death is a sad thing in our lives.  You can’t live without death. It’s a sad thing, of course, but it belongs together. We’re all left alone in the end.” Another pragmatic, hard-nosed remark: “For some to survive, others must die.  That’s how nature works.”

CONSCIOUSNESS

Marius.

One question that the film asks is if animals like Marius have consciousness.  “Because we know we have consciousness. Do giraffes have it?” As Max Kestner says, “You look for the consciousness of other things.” One good line is “How much cognition and what kind? That’s the right question.”

The shots of owners with their pets— dogs, swans, pigs and horses— certainly makes an argument for kindness towards animals, an emotional commodity in which Holst seems lacking.

A PETA representative enters the debate saying, “They’re their own beings. Leave them alone. They’re just like us.” But Holst disagrees, saying, “We can’t even explain how a thought comes into being” and “It doesn’t matter if Marius lives or not.”

Do pets have consciousness?

ROUGH

Still, it is hard to deny that Holst has correctly pointed out that all beings on planet Earth will ultimately come to the end of their time on the planet. He is nothing if not pragmatic about the end we all will face. The next chapter in his determination to teach us all a lesson in the natural circle of life seems harsh, however. There is a public butchering of Marius’s carcass, followed by feeding the meat to the lions at the zoo. It gets even more brutal when a young girl’s pony is euthanized onscreen. That animal, too, is fed to the carnivores at the zoo.

I accept the fact that “in the midst of life we are in death” but there are a number of little kids watching Marius the giraffe being publicly butchered. Holst praises the curiosity of little kids at such a time. Judge Jeanine Piro called it a bloody spectacle and referenced it as the start of serial killers like Jeffrey Dahmer, who first killed animals. While not a Judge Jeanine fan (nor a Fox fan) I had to agree that watching Marius be cut up wasn’t exactly family friendly viewing.

I can speak to the trauma that a small child may experience when witnessing an animal being butchered—especially one that seemed quite sweet and docile.

When I was the age of the young children shown watching Marius’ being butchered, I was present for the slaughtering of a hog that had  broken its leg on an Iowa farm. Of course, my father didn’t know that the animal was going to be strung up by its hind legs and have its throat slit, in full view of his 8-year-old daughter, but that’s what happened. I had nightmares for weeks. I remember the horrific noises of the dying animal. It is still vividly etched in my Little Golden Book of Unfavorite Childhood Memories. It is one thing to explain the circle of life and how Marius has gone to his great reward. But to display every aspect of Marius’ butchering and show lions eating the friendly giraffe might have been a bridge too far.

Marius’ remains.

FUZZY FOCUS

What is the meaning of life? How did life evolve? Does life end at death? Is life heading for something specific? Is there an end goal to life? Is the opposite of life not death, but loneliness, because all of life is about relationships? Is death a transformation?

There are no religious answers in this one. There are no definitive scientific answers, either, but the documentary does lean towards the scientific in search of explanations for why Herr Holst seems to act  heartlessly and without any true fond feeling for poor Marius—an animal he claimed to love.  You come away with the definite feeling that Marius could have been saved, but not while Herr Holst was in charge. As a sometimes Texas resident I got the feeling that Bengst Holst and Governor Abbott of Texas would get along famously.

For me, I enjoyed the philosophical discussions and sidelights. The experts choose to answer the question about life’s purpose using physics and saying that there are really two categories: the purpose you give to your own life and the purpose you claim for life, in general. After that, you have to roll up your pant legs and wade into the deep discussion, parking romantic religious illusions of a gauzy focus reincarnation or reunion after death at the door. It can get a tad pedantic, but it interested me, even though some might find it less-than-riveting.

Carnivores eat meat.

 

CONCLUSION

This is a film that will stir up animal activists, engage those of us asking ‘What Is the meaning of life?,” and leave viewers with more questions than it answers. I thoroughly enjoyed it. I do think that just the “pro” versus con argument of Marius’ life or death (“To be or not to be?”) would have been enough for the film, but it ambitiously took on the universal questions of life. At times, the philosophy became pedantic to the point of growing dreary, but then it comes roaring back with an animal death or a young girl witnessing the death of her pony.

With humans described as “just another evolutionary branch on the tree of life” we hear one of the scientists say, “Oh, shit! I hate humans!” Since it is a human who has decided in his infinite wisdom that Marius must die, without much support for his point-of-view, the human contention that life on earth is about the survival of the fittest does paint a picture of human life on Earth as terrible and horrible, without any higher purpose but predation, ending in death. But there is a muted plea for some sort of equilibrium between life and plants on the planet that will prevent man from turning Mars into a cold bleak planet or Venus into a boiling one. Watching Hurricane Milton ravage Florida while writing this, I certainly agree that we must be better stewards of the Earth. I mourn the opportunity that electing Al Gore would have given us 24 years ago to start on that journey of saving our planet.

Tackling a documentary in 98 minutes that addresses All of the Big Questions of Life, inspired by the death of a giraffe, is very ambitious. Maybe TOO ambitious. But Writer/Director/Editor Matt Kestner keeps the train on track, with expert assistance from a team of 6 cinematographers (Jacob Sufussen, Maria Von Hausswolff, Sturla Brandth Grovlen, Emil Aagaard, Masafumi Seki, Noah Collier) and with the able editing of Michael Haglund. I’ll be thinking about this one for a long time.

“Okie” Is Great Find @ CIFF This Weekend

The first thing that struck me about “Okie” were the gorgeous cinematic images. Kudos to Director of Photography Wojciech Kielar. There are so many panoramas and rural vistas that are shot with wide lens beauty. Creston, Illinois, never looked better.  The music is good and the acting is top-notch, with Scott Michael Foster (“Greek,” “Crazy Ex-Girlfriend,” “You”) playing the lead, Louie Mulgrin.

BACKGROUND

"Okie" bus scene

From “Okie,” which screens this weekend in Chicago at the 60th Chicago International Film Festival on both Saturday and Sunday.

Then I read up on the husband/wife team, Kevin Bigley and Kate Cobb, who are responsible for this truly outstanding indie film. They’ve been collaborating as a team for a decade and Katie, whose directing debut this is, is currently working on a residency at Princeton, providing visual content for a Princeton student working on his PhD in composition. She is also the female lead in the film, portraying Louie’s old girlfriend, Lainey Gamble.  Katie has had acting roles in television’s “Shameless,” “Scandal,” and “Grey’s Anatomy.”  In 2014 she founded a production company called BigCobb productions and worked for “Funny or Die” producing content. Next up for the team will be a film called “Dirt,” which husband Kevin Bigley will also write. Kate Cobb, the director of “Okie,” graduated from Theater School at DePaul and was named Best Director at the UCLA Film Fest for her film “Dandelions.” Kate and Kevin make a dynamic producing team. I’ll be certain to watch for their next outing, because this one is great.

PLOT

Okie fair scene

Okie fair scene

Here is the plot line of “Okie” as released by the BigCobb team:  Louie Mulgrin, a wealthy writer, returns to his beleaguered Oklahoma hometown after his father passes away. The town, a weathered setting, and its people have served as the subject matter for Louie’s writing. He has done relatively well writing fictionalized versions of friends and family.  When Louie drops into town to pick up a few things from his deceased father’s house, he is reunited with his childhood friends, including Travis Young—who suggests that Louie ought to have enough time to hang with his old buddies for a day or so. The fair is in town and there are beers to be drunk at parties to be held.

CONCLUSION

This film is extremely well-done and professional.

Travis Young is portrayed by the writer and one of the co-stars of this indie film, Kevin Bigley (“Bojack Horseman,” “Animal Control,” “Upload”). Kevin is not only one-half of the creative team behind this expertly shot 82-minute indie film, Kevin is also the writer of wife Kate Cobb’s next film project, “Dirt.”

I’ll return to “review” more completely on November 5th , with a few questions about plot points. I wanted to post this for any Chicago International Film Festival patrons who can still see this great flick this coming weekend (10/19 and 10/20) at 8:30 p.m. on Saturday at the Gene Siskel Film Center (164 N. State St.) and 11:45 p.m. on Sunday at the AMC Newcity 14 on North Clyburn Avenue.

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