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More weekend films at the Festival Print E-mail
By Robert Hunt   
Posted 9:39 am Sat., 11.14.09

Helen

Directed by Joe Lawlor & Christine Malloy
Frontenac 3:15 pm
(also showing on Sunday, Nov. 15, 5:15 pm)

The titular figure in this strange film about lost identity (a theme of several of this year's festival film) is an 18-year-old girl with no real future. Raised in foster homes for her entire life, she's about to graduate from high school and enter a world with no family, no connections, nothing more to fill her time than her unrewarding job as a hotel housekeeper. When a classmate disappears, Helen is hired by the police to play the part of the missing girl in a filmed reconstruction of her disappearance (it's never clear why the police would be doing something like that...). For the first time in her life, Helen has a role to play, a way to imagine herself into a different life - one that even comes with a new set of relatives and friends as she is slowly pulled into the circle of her missing counterpart.

"Helen" is beautifully photographed and staged with a slow sense of consideration that plays its study of character against an almost forbidding modern environment. Making her film debut, Annie Townsend's strong, natural performance carries most of the dramatic weight and makes "Helen" a challenging, cerebral portrait of an emotionally undeveloped young woman walking a line between personality and performance. Is Helen growing emotionally, or simply learning how to adopt the role that people - the family and friends of the missing girl - want to see? A strong feature and a throwback to the idea-oriented postwar arthouse cinema, "Helen" is a portrait of a young woman as a tabula rasa. Like Chance in "Being There," she finds herself - or pretends to - by simply trying to fit in.

"Helen" trailer: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=31tML_ebIt4

Crude

Directed by Joe Berlinger (Berlinger in attendace)
Tivoli 6:30 pm

"Crude" is a skillful, informative, and even intimate film that goes deep inside the kind of dry, almost abstract news story you can read on any given day ("Village in Amazon rain forest sues Chevron for environmental damage"). Looking behind that story, director Joe Berlinger provides the details, the drama and the repercussions, weaving an intricate analysis of events and personalities across two continents, from South American villagers poisoned by the oilfield's waste to activists preparing to confront Chevron stockholders to celebrities drawing publicity to the issues by throwing their support behind the case (OK, semi-celebrities - Sting's wife - but there is a brief performance by The Police). This is no-nonsense documentary film-making at its best: smart, conscientious and thorough. And though many things are unresolved at the end, there's just enough of a dramatic pull to the film to convince you that the good guys might actually win this round.

Trailer: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YTnm01lWsTg

 

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'The Road Show' improv

Brent Jones | St. Louis Beacon

This Saturday was the debut of a new show by The Improv Shop that will bring out of town improv teams to St. Louis to play for — and with — a local audience. The Road Show brought teams "Everybody Grok" and "Felt" from Chicago.

We talked to Eric Christensen, producer of the Road Show and member of local improv team "Ted Dangerous"; Katie Nunn, member of "Ted Dangerous" and improv coach; and Melanie Penn and Ranjan Khan, members of local teams "Melanj" and "Magic Ratio"; about the St. Louis improv scene and why it's important to welcome teams from other cities to perform here.

See a larger version of the slideshow

About the Lens

Cinema St. Louis' The Lens is a multi-contributor blog aimed primarily - but by no means exclusively - at local cinephiles. The Lens will have a specifically St. Louis perspective when relevant - and will preview Cinema St. Louis events - but because film encompasses the world, the blog will offer material on every aspect of movie culture, with no ties to a particular place. Lens contributors - critics, academics, journalists, novelists, poets, essayists and filmmakers - will write, at any length and in any form, about all film-related topics, allowing for a wide array of approaches: simple reviews, stray thoughts, essays, reported articles, cartoons, photos, even audio clips and videos.

For a more complete introduction to The Lens, read the inaugural post by Cliff Froehlich.

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Barroom Conversations

The Beacon's nationally recognized Barroom Conversations program on race, class and other issues that divide will be held on Monday, Feb. 13, 2012, at 7:30 PM discussing Education and Class. RSVP on Facebook and invite your friends! We'll pick up where we left off at Six Row Brewing Co., 3690 Forest Park Avenue at Spring. We look forward to seeing you again!

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