And then there was Downloading Nancy. Whether you loved it or had serious issues with it (we fell into the latter camp), everyone agreed that the film is beyond "difficult" to watch. Deliberately so: loosely based on a true story, the topic is a wretched woman (Maria Bello, fearless as always), full of pain and desperate for a way out of her current situation. The film delves into Nancy's mental illness and the tenuous relationship that comes to exist between her husband (Rufus Sewell) and the new man in her life (Jason Patric). Downloading Nancy is provocative, and the violent images of cutting and other self-inflicted sadism caused quite a few audience members to walk out, some in tears. The entire film is bruised--master cinematographer Christopher Doyle provided sallow tones of yellow and blue. Sure, it's well-made, but with its dark tone and subject matter (and shades of misogyny), how exactly do you market such a downer?
Results tagged “eternalsunshine”
The end is near. Soon SIFF will be but a fading memory. So if you've been putting it off, this weekend is the last chance until next year for you to get some festival action. As an added bonus, on Sunday night at the Broadway Performance Hall, there will be an encore presentation for two of the films (one short, one full-length) that end up taking home SIFF awards. If you missed 'em the first (and second) time around, be there!
Seems like there's a lot of love going around for Bill Murray. Like a virus, it is. Throughout Hollywood, at Cannes, in the press, amongst the hipster elite...everybody's lovin' that hangdog face. Seattlest can't blame 'em, as Bill's worked so hard lately to mold meaty, genuinely affecting performances in well-crafted films and in return, gotten the shaft every year come award season.
Two little blurbs about music distribution, one cool and one really annoying.

Friendly Folk-Pop for the Kids: Hey Marseilles at Vera This Saturday