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Hey Kids!  
Our website has the show times for
Friday, April 13, through Thursday April 19

  
Holding over for another week. Some titles will have limited shows. 
 
NEW!
THE RAID REDEMPTION --R (Subtitled)

raid

By Bruce Diones

 

More than a bit of old-school ultra-violence is delivered in the director Gareth Huw Evans's bone-crunching Indonesian action film. An élite group of law-enforcement officers raid a high-rise building run by a crime lord who lives on the top floor and has had video cameras installed everywhere. As the cops work their way up to the penthouse, they have to fight an army of his henchmen in brilliant, spectacular martial-arts fashion. The film may sound like a chopsocky, video-game-like lightweight, but there's more going on here. The skillful fight choreography has an economy and an immediacy that allow the performers to inject their own personalities into the combat. Evans's camera, as it slides along the floor and follows the pummelling bodies down corridors and up walls, seems free from the laws of gravity. The movie is a gory free-for-all, a horror film dressed up as an action film, and it's as pure a shot of adrenaline as any Tarantino fan could wish for.

 

 

 

 

PINA --R  

pina

 

PINA is a feature-length dance film with the ensemble of the Tanztheater Wuppertal Pina Bausch, featuring the unique and inspiring art of the great German choreographer, who died in the summer of 2009.

 

PINA is a film for Pina Bausch by Wim Wenders.

 

He takes the audience on a sensual, visually stunning journey of discovery into a new dimension: straight onto the stage with the legendary Tanztheater Wuppertal Pina Bausch ensemble, he follows the dancers out of the theatre into the city and the surrounding areas of Wuppertal - the place, which for 35 years was the home and centre for Pina Bausch's creativity.


 

 

Watch Trailer. 

THE ARTIST -- PG-13 

artist
Hollywood 1927. George Valentin (Jean Dujardin) is a silent movie superstar. The advent of the talkies will sound the death knell for his career and see him fall into oblivion. For young extra Peppy Miller (Berenice Bejo), it seems the sky's the limit - major movie stardom awaits. THE ARTIST tells the story of their interlinked destinies.
NOMINATED FOR BEST PICTURE!


 

A SEPARATION --R  (Subtitled)

separation

'A Separation" manages such a sublime balance of complexity and clarity, of the unique and familiar, that it's breathtaking.           

This is, simply put, one of the best films I've ever seen. And I've seen a few films. Written and directed by Iranian Asghar Farhadi, "A Separation" starts out as a domestic drama, then morphs into something resembling a murder mystery, all the while wrestling with the natures of truth and justice, right and wrong. It's about family, and society, and honor, and love ... good heavens, what isn't it about?

 

Well, it's not about space aliens or superheroes. Possibly the most stunning thing about "A Separation" is its remarkable originality.

The film begins with wife Simin (Leila Hatami) arguing in court for a divorce from husband Nader (Peyman Moadi).

She wants the family to move away from Iran for the good of their daughter, Termeh (Sarina Farhadi, the director's daughter). He does not want to abandon his dementia-riddled father (Ali-Asghar Shahbazi). She pleads for a divorce so she can leave; the court denies her.

 

OK, so the movie's about a family dealing with divorce and dementia, right? Hardly.

 

Simin moves back in with her family, Nader and Termeh continue to care for the old man. Nader hires a lower-class woman named Razieh (Sareh Bayat) to care for the man during the day, while he's at work and Termeh's at school.

 

Unfortunately, Razieh is distracted by both her own little daughter (Kimia Hosseini) and tensions at home with her husband, Hodjat (Shahab Hosseini). This leads to a literal falling out with Nader that ends up endangering both families.

 

For a long while, director Farhadi offers up lies while keeping the truth elusive, both in terms of the story and the characters themselves. The facts of the situation are eventually resolved; the effect of those facts may never be.

 

Aside from Simin's initial motivation to take her family out of Iran, "A Separation" is not a political film or a film that is in any way critical of Islam. It moves with complete comfort within the norms of its culture, and that ease makes the film simultaneously more fascinating and genuine feeling.

 

But if the film is comfortable in its surroundings and culture, it is in no way satisfied with the universal human condition. Messes pile upon messes here, the way messes might pile upon messes anywhere, and the results range from wearying to devastating.

The film's most effective moment finds the teen Termeh silently exchanging a wary, worried look with Razieh's much younger daughter. This is the world they will inherit? This is the future?

"A Separation" offers a complex and layered story about flawed characters trying to make their way through life, stumbling, fumbling and often desperate. These people seem so real they might live next door. And they probably do.

 

Watch Trailer.

fe chick THE IRON LADY --PG-13

THE IRON LADY is a surprising and intimate portrait of Margaret Thatcher (Meryl Streep), the first and only female Prime Minister of The United Kingdom. One of the 20th century's most famous and influential women, Thatcher came from nowhere to smash through barriers of gender and class to be heard in a male dominated world. 

 

Watch Trailer

 

WE NEED TO TALK ABOUT KEVIN --R 
kevin

Many people will come away from "We Need to Talk About Kevin" too stunned to talk about Kevin, or much else either.

Others may find themselves unable to shut up about the film. About Tilda Swinton's amazing performance - way too risky for mere Oscar gold - or the film's nature/nurture parenting arguments, or just on the sheer horribleness that is Kevin himself.It couldn't happen, could it? It isn't happening is it?

Director Lynne Ramsay, writing with Rory Kinnear, has come up with the ultimate bad seed story here.

It's a tale of a child who from birth is spiteful, mean, cruel and potentially murderous.

The boy is born to a normal enough Mom, Eva (Swinton), a travel writer who finds herself from infancy tied to the manipulations of her son, who handles his enabling father (John C. Reilly) like so much putty.

Kevin refuses to be potty-trained marching around defiantly in diapers until he's six. When a younger sister is born he - literally - tortures her. Pets go missing. Kevin never accepts blame for anything, and directly taunts his mother with his own madness.

Director Ramsay makes Kevin's impact all the more felt by coming at it from all angles. In flashbacks and forwards we see Eva rebuilding her life, hated by neighbors, after Kevin (Ezra Miller, grown) has gone on a school shooting rampage - it happens early, though not graphically - in the film, even as we see her struggle to reason with this devil of a child and her husband while protecting her younger daughter.

Swinton's cracked porcelain performance - at one point she takes the infant Kevin to a site filled with jackhammers just to drown out the sound of his screams - is the film's essence. The question isn't whether such a monster could exist?

The question is, what if he were your son?

 

 

OTHER STUFF:   A SEPARATION

A SEPARATION won Best Foreign Film for 2011. It deserved it. Granted, I'm a little biased in that I am playing the thing. I also have another bias. I love Iranian film. There is a purity of purpose in film from that part of the world that we do not see in much of Western cinema. See A SEPARATION and you'll know what I mean. It is a near perfect film combining the circuitous character loyalties of a David Mamet film and an understanding of the child's mind that crosses oceans and continents. All this is steeped in Persian culture where a judge hears a murder case while drinking tea in a small office amid the chaos of police station. Where people are called on their civility and rudeness with the same sternness as when they are called on their higher crimes. Where people understand and misunderstand each other the same way they do in most other places.

We are winding up the run of this film so let me encourage you to see it before you have to settle for seeing it on the small screen. And that would be horrible.  
Thank you for supporting the Darkside, now celebrating SIX years in business! That's 15 years if you count the Avalon Cinema!
Paul Turner
Darkside Cinema
215 SW 4th
Corvallis, OR 97333

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