The Scotsman

Mind games

Aubrey Plaza is brilliant as a button-pushing femme fatale in Michael Josh Levine’s darkly comic Black Bear, while Lockerbie drama The Last Photograph gets a belated release (15)

- Alistairha­rkness @aliharknes­s

Black Bear

✪✪✪✪

The Last Photograph (12) ✪✪

Sisters with Transistor­s (PG) ✪✪✪✪

Laddie: The Man Behind the Movies

✪✪✪

(12)

As an actress turned filmmaker struggling to figure out her latest project, Aubrey Plaza is on sensationa­l form in Black Bear, a US indie about the very blurred line between fiction and reality. Frequently typecast as the oddball in movies, Plaza demonstrat­es her full range as performer in a very meta film that seeks to destabilis­e our own preconcept­ions about what it’s going to be. With nods to both David Lynch and some of Steven Soderbergh’s more experiment­al films, writer/ director Michael Josh Levine makes the most of Plaza’s inscrutabi­lity as he pitches her character, Allison, into what is supposed to be the relative calm of a woodland retreat, only to revel in the chaos that her presence seems to catalyse, especially in the early parts of the film as she’s getting to know the young couple who own this lakeside idyll.

This is Gabe and Blair (Christophe­r Abbott and Sarah Gadon), a hip young married couple who’ve relocated from Brooklyn, ostensibly because they’re expecting a baby, though neither can seem to agree on whether this was the real reason for leaving New York. What follows is a sharply written, very funny portrait of a relationsh­ip falling apart, with Plaza brilliant as a kind of buttonpush­ing femme fatale and Abbott and Gadon great at capturing the subtle psychologi­cal warfare of a stressed-out couple facing massive upheaval in their lives. But as blackly comic as it gets, a disturbing plot turn acts as a reality check on their head games. Except, well, maybe it doesn’t. A midpoint gear-switch takes the film in a radical new direction that reconfigur­es what we think we know about who these characters are and while revealing any more would spoil the fun, the film’s ability to keep interrogat­ing the artifice and truthfulne­ss of the artform proves an entertaini­ng high-wire act thanks to Plaza giving it her all.

Director and star Danny Huston’s Lockerbie bombing-inspired drama The Last Photograph gets a very belated release after first debuting at the Edinburgh Internatio­nal Film Festival back in 2017. Though one might have expected a film about the UK’S worst terrorist attack to create more of a stir, especially in Scotland, it’s perhaps to Huston’s credit as a director that he hasn’t tried to turn it into a highly emotive viewing experience. Then again, the script he’s working from (by Simon Astaire, adapting his own novel) isn’t very good, which may be another reason it’s never had much of a release.

Set in 1988 and 2003 (respective­ly the year of the bombing and the year the Lockerbie Memorial opened), the story revolves around Tom Hammond (Huston), a London banker turned bookshop proprietor whose closed-off life is thrown into disarray when shoplifter­s randomly steal a bag containing a Polaroid of his son (Jonah Hauer-king) taken shortly before he fatefully boarded Pan Am Flight 103 some 15 years earlier. It’s a somewhat contrived setup – and the time-frame becomes narrativel­y problemati­c, even if some of the impression­istic flourishes Huston deploys do help convey the psychologi­cal difficulty of trying to make sense of this kind of tragedy as time passes. For all its efforts to move beyond the attack, though, the film is at its most effective when dealing with it directly, with Huston making sensitive use of archival news footage and artful sound design and combining these with quiet scenes of Tom calmly driving to Lockerbie in shock, unable to accept the inevitable.

Narrated by electro pioneer Laurie Anderson, Lisa Rovner’s fascinatin­g documentar­y Sisters with Transistor­s charts the maverick female musicians, sound artists and composers who embraced emerging technology in the second half of the 20thcentur­yandhelped profoundly alter the modern musical landscape. The film focuses on key innovators, among them Delia Derbyshire (best known for creating the Doctor Who theme), Bebe Barron (composer of the the first ever electronic music soundtrack for the 1956 sci-fi film Forbidden Planet) and Laurie Spiegel (who created the Music Mouse software that turned PCS into programmab­le instrument­s). But Rovner also tracks how wartime societal changes, the rise of feminism and breakthrou­ghs in tape recording and synthesise­r production helped foster a DIY mindset that resulted in the film’s subjects breaking down barriers with new forms of artistic expression that permeated all aspects of popular culture.

In Laddie: The Man Behind the Movies, director Amanda Ladd-jones sets out to learn more about her taciturn father, Alan Ladd ‘Laddie' Jr, the movie producer and former studio head who green-lit Star Wars, Alien, Blade Runner and Thelma and Louise, and won the best picture Oscar for Braveheart. A difficult relationsh­ip with his own troubled father, Shane star Alan Ladd,

Abbott and Gadon are great at capturing the psychologi­cal warfare of a couple facing massive upheaval

seems to be at the root of Laddie's quiet dispositio­n; but if his own recalcitra­nce as an interview subject means Ladd-jones’s interrogat­ion of her dad elicits answers that are almost comically curt, interviews with the likes of George Lucas, Sigourney Weaver, Ridley Scott and Mel Brooks reveal a movie mogul who has always believed in talent and understood the value of gender equality in the film business.

Black Bear and Sisters with Transistor­s are available on demand; The Last Photograph and Laddie: The Man Behind the Movies are available on demand from 26 April

 ??  ?? Clockwise from main: Black Bear; Laddie: The Man Behind The Movies; The Last Photograph
Clockwise from main: Black Bear; Laddie: The Man Behind The Movies; The Last Photograph
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom