Last night watched the very dark, slow-paced, and atmospheric thriller Night Moves by acclaimed American indie director Kelly Reichardt at the Paramount. I am always intrigued by her films; especially the ways in which they increasingly twist cinematic genres (western, suspense, mumblecore) in order to speak toward the manifold problematic aspects of contemporary society. In this film, environmental activism of the sort treated in the formidable documentary If a Tree Falls on the Earth Liberation Front gets a sharply critical take, along with glimpses of eco-fundamentalist idealism, new age materialism, recreational camping, and organic farming. Night Moves features a great trio of actors (Jesse Eisenberg, Dakota Fanning, and Peter Sarsgaard) with strong cameos and support (Alia Shawkat, James LeGros). There’s a terrific interview with the director on the Tribeca Film Festival site: “The shit the BPs of the world are doing is way more radical than anything in the movie—but you know, that’s all legal. So there’s all these different levels of what’s radical. I think the film is asking, if their actions are not the right response to the state of things, what is?”
Posted
CommentPost a comment