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Tag: IFC

  • ‘Saccharine’ Review: Midori Francis Navigates the Hallucinatory Minefield Between Body Image and Body Horror in Messy Weight-Loss Freakout

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    There’s nothing sweet about Saccharine, but just as it should be gaining traction, nothing terribly coherent about it either. Natalie Erika James throws a bunch of great ideas into her fem-horror riff on body dysmorphia, shame and the tireless quest for physical perfection in a culture obsessed with youthful hotness — following in the path of The Substance and Ryan Murphy’s latest dollop of high-gloss trash, The Beauty. But the storytelling goes haywire, to the point where you’re unsure what the Australian writer-director wants to say, though her game lead, Midori Francis, keeps you watching.

    James’ visually stylish film, acquired by IFC and Shudder ahead of its Midnight bow at Sundance, has some originality thanks to a subtle grounding in the Buddhist/Taoist folk tradition of the hungry ghost. But James never commits fully enough to the spiritual/supernatural side to add much dimension to the confused narrative. While the protagonist is Japanese Australian, the movie has a feel closer to Thai horror in atmosphere, if not in intensity or dread.

    Saccharine

    The Bottom Line

    Let them eat cake.

    Venue: Sundance Film Festival (Midnight)
    Cast: Midori Francis, Danielle Macdonald, Madeleine Madden, Robert Taylor, Showko Showfukutei, Emily Milledge, Joseph Baldwin, Louisa Mignon, Annie Shapiro
    Director-screenwriter: Natalie Erika James

    1 hour 52 minutes

    Obsessively recording her observations in a journal and charting her progress on a graph, Melbourne med student Hana (Francis) is determined to get down to her goal weight of 60 kilograms (132 pounds). Her unspoken attraction to toned and confident gym trainer Alanya (Madeleine Madden) might be part of the incentive, given that Hana is queer more in theory than practice. She signs up to be Alanya’s guinea pig in a 12-week fitness program.

    While she’s out at a club with her student pals Josie (Danielle Macdonald) and Georgie (Emily Milledge), Hana runs into an old friend, Melissa (Annie Shapero). Hana doesn’t recognize her at first, until it clicks that Melissa is the svelte transformation of the heavy, bullied girl she knew in high school. Telling Hana that the girl from back then is dead, Melissa puts her astonishing weight loss down to a miracle drug she calls “the gray,” giving Hana a few tablets and urging her to try them.

    Melissa’s insistence is somewhat questionable since Hana looks like a normal-size young woman by non-Hollywood standards, even with some prosthetic enhancement. But perhaps that’s part of James’ point — that body expectations for women are so unrealistic that many, like Hana, are driven to starvation and self-loathing. Except that with “the gray,” Melissa swears she can eat as much as she wants and not gain weight.

    Which appears to be the case when Hana wakes up after a heavy night of clubbing with the messy debris of a large takeout assortment on her bedroom floor and yet somehow feels different. She’s sufficiently intrigued to analyze the pills in the university medical lab, discovering a compound of phosphates and … human ashes. Luckily, she has a cadaver handy, one of several people who donated their bodies to science and are getting cut up in class.

    The body assigned to Hana, Josie and their lab teammates is a corpulent woman cruelly nicknamed “Big Bertha.” Hana starts taking home a rib cage here, a few bones there, grinding them up with a mortar and pestle to make her own DIY version of the gray. The compound works, and while her gluttonous binges become increasingly uncontrolled — filmed by James and DP Charlie Sarroff like woozy Francis Bacon images — her weight keeps plummeting. That gets her an admiring comment, an Instagram post and perhaps a flicker of sexual interest from Alanya.

    But homemade meds can come with unexpected side effects — in this case, ghoulish visitations from the hangry Bertha, looking like a cross between Eric Cartman and Nosferatu. Visible only to Hana at first, in convex reflective surfaces like a kettle or the back of a spoon, Bertha does not take kindly to Hana’s attempts to kick the pill habit and start policing her food intake the old-fashioned way.

    In one of the funnier episodes, the spectral presence shoots candy bars from Hana’s rucksack across the room at her until she shovels them in her mouth in a rattled semi-trance state. It’s unclear whether Bertha is also enraged by Hana’s weight continuing to drop — she gets down to 45 kilograms (99 pounds) at one point — but girl, we’ve all been there with the body envy.

    James’ 2020 debut feature, Relic — a slow-burn chiller about three generations of women tormented by a presence in the family home — worked because the director never allowed her control of the material to slacken, even when the narrative was stretched a bit thin. But Saccharine slips off the rails, especially once Hana convinces Josie that Bertha’s spirit has latched onto her in malevolent ways, growing bigger and stronger all the time.

    The always terrific Macdonald (If I Had Legs I’d Kick You) is under-used, and the rebuke of confident, plus-size Josie to Hana for letting fatphobia curb her self-acceptance is a point made too hurriedly to register.

    Scenes with Hana’s parents seem intended to shed more light than they actually do, with some psych 101 subtext suggested by the fussing of her birdlike Japanese mother (Showko Showfukutei) and the remoteness of her mostly immobile Australian dad (Robert Taylor), who is steadily eating himself to death. But the parental elements just end up seeming like narrative clutter, with nothing gained by the teasing delayed reveal of Hana’s XL father.

    The climactic scenes toy with the blurred lines between hallucination and reality, but the logic falls apart; threads like Hana’s rash decision to undertake a dangerous surgical fix virtually evaporate without much payoff. And at just under two hours, the movie could seriously benefit from cutting some flab.

    Saccharine is more polished in its technical aspects than in its storytelling, from the queasy visuals (Sarroff shot Relic, as well as both Smile movies) and sickly lighting to composer Hannah Peel’s eerie synths to some impressively gnarly gore. Ultimately, however, the biggest plus is Francis, whose commitment to the central role is so unfaltering that she makes the script’s rough patches less of a deal-breaker.

    James has no lack of talent, but fans of Relic who were hoping this might be a return to form after the mixed-bag Rosemary’s Baby prequel Apartment 7A — either as a juicy serve of Cronenbergian feminism or a movie with something to say about accessible weight-loss meds — will likely be disappointed.

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    David Rooney

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  • Reviews For The Easily Distracted: Good Boy – Houston Press

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    Title: Good Boy
    Describe This Movie Using One Billy Madison Quote:
    BILLY:  If your dog goes missing you don’t look for an hour and then call it quits. You get your ass out there and you find that fuckin’ dog!
    Brief Plot Synopsis: Can you give Best Actor to a dog?
    Rating Using Random Objects Relevant To The Film: 4 “Jurassic Barks” out of 5.

    20th Century Fox

    Tagline: “Trust his instincts.”
    Better Tagline: “You think a cat would stick around for this shit?”
    Not So Brief Plot Synopsis: Against the advice of his sister Vera (Arielle Friedman), Todd (Shane Jensen) decides that going to his grandfather’s old house in the woods is just the thing to recuperate after a hospital stay brought on by his recurring illness. Todd and Vera’s grandfather (Larry Fessenden) died in the house under mysterious circumstances, of course, and Todd’s dog Indy realizes things are not what they seem in spite of his master’s obliviousness.

    YouTube video

    “Critical” Analysis: In a recent episode of the We Hate Movies podcast, the hosts talk about the first Conjuring movie. A throwaway part of the discussion (centered on how James Wan created a nifty horror movie in spite of what frauds the Warrens were) was the idea of using a dog as part of your pre-home buying inspection. The reasoning being that the Australian shepherd in the movie, Sadie, refused to enter that film’s haunted house. With good reason, as it turns out. After all, if you’re going to cough up for a guy to look at the foundation, would it hurt to bring in man’s best friend for a paranormal sniff-around?

    Whether we’d pay attention is another question entirely. Enter “Indy,” writer/director Ben Leonberg’s own Nova Scotia Duck Tolling Retriever and the star of Good Boy. And I’d be hard pressed to think of a better performance in a recent horror movie aside from Michael B. Jordan in Sinners. He’s comfortable enough on camera that Leonberg draws suspense out of nothing more than Indy walking through the darkened house, snuffling after whatever is going bump in the night. It’s so natural that you have to remind yourself this was filmed without using any CGI.

    The dog, for his part, seems remarkably chill when confronted with phantom figures and disturbing noises emanating from the cellar. Or maybe that’s just in comparison to my dog, who would lose his ever loving mind in the same circumstances.

    Indy’s loyalty to Todd (whose face we never see, except in reflection or on a screen, until the end) is all the more remarkable considering his owner is kind of an idiot. Todd has no business being out of a hospital, much less living out in the woods in a run-down, leaky ass house. And it’s Indy’s devotion, coupled with Vera’s (admittedly heavy-handed) concern, is what makes what ultimately transpires so heartbreaking.

    You might think a feature-length movie would stretch our patience for a dog-centric narrative, and you’d be right. So it’s a good thing Leonberg brings everything in under 74 minutes. The only human who gets significant face time is Fessenden, and that’s almost entirely captured on the grandfather’s increasingly unhinged old VHS tapes. Everything else is Indy.

    Good Boy automatically goes into the upper echelon of cinematic dog performances. In fact, the only other I can think of that even comes close is Jed the wolf/Malamute hybrid from The Thing (who’s only in the movie for 20 minutes). Or maybe Skippy, who played Asta in the Thin Man movies.

    But a dog in the lead role is just a gimmick if there’s not a solid film around it, and Leonberg never lets Good Boy descend into what could just as easily been a horror-comedy. It’s tense and atmospheric, and there are enough jolts in there to keep you off balance, whether you’re concerned about Indy’s eventual fate or not (short answer: not to worry).

    Good Boy is in theaters today.

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    Pete Vonder Haar

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  • IFC to invest ₹600 crore in Mahindra unit at valuation of up to ₹6,020 crore

    IFC to invest ₹600 crore in Mahindra unit at valuation of up to ₹6,020 crore

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    Mahindra & Mahindra, on Wednesday, said World Bank Group arm, IFC, will invest ₹600 crore in a new unit of the company, which is being incorporated to scale up the last-mile electric mobility business.

    IFC is investing ₹600 crore in a new last-mile mobility (LMM) company — a wholly-owned subsidiary of Mahindra & Mahindra — that will be newly incorporated (NewCo), the Mumbai-based automajor said in a statement.

    IFC’s first investment in an EV manufacturer in the country and the first in electric three-wheelers globally will be in the form of compulsory convertible instruments at a valuation of up to ₹6,020 crore.

    The ₹600 crore investment will result in an ownership of between 9.97 per cent to 13.64 per cent for IFC in NewCo.

    Also read: Mahindra Electric Mobility merges with M&M

    The NewCo will house the last-mile mobility division, including three-wheelers (Alfa, Treo, Zor) and four-wheeler SCV (Jeeto), Mahindra & Mahindra said.

    IFC’s financing will help scale up electric mobility in last-mile connectivity while enabling the development and manufacturing of new generation products in this space, it added.

    “Decarbonising the transport sector is crucial to achieving the climate goals that India has set for herself. IFC, with its focus on sustainability and boosting prosperity, is an ideal partner for us,” Mahindra & Mahindra MD and CEO Anish Shah said.

    IFC’s Regional Director for South Asia Hector Gomez Ang said India is the largest three-wheeler market globally, and this investment marks a significant step towards scaled domestic production of electric vehicles catering to this segment as well as small commercial vehicles.

    Also read: If India does well in attracting investment, this could be India’s time: World Bank Chief Economist

    “By supporting a leading market player, IFC hopes to encourage other large automotive manufacturers to follow suit, driving EV adoption across India and helping the government deliver on its climate targets,” he added.

    Decarbonising the transport sector, which contributes about 13 per cent of the country’s greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions, can help substantially reduce the impacts related to GHG emissions and other air pollutants.

    This is vital given that India has committed to reducing its emissions profile by 45 per cent by 2030.

    Mahindra & Mahindra Executive Director and CEO (Auto & Farm Sector) Rajesh Jejurikar noted that the last-mile mobility business presents a tremendous opportunity, both in terms of electrification and growth.

    “Being the market leaders in this segment, we have an opportunity to drive higher EV penetration in this segment and provide a more sustainable as well as profitable option to microentrepreneurs,” he added.

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