What I’m Seeing This Week: Between its excellent trailer and the fact that I’ve loved just about every film that Alexander Payne has ever directed, The Holdovers is probably my most anticipated movie of the year. My loving wife wants to see it, too, though, so we’re going to wait for Thanksgiving break when we’ll have plenty of relatives in town who are willing to babysit. My choice is therefore Priscilla, director Sofia Coppola’s latest film, which is at Cinemapolis.
Also in Theaters: I wrote about the 4k restoration of Werckmeister Harmonies which screens at Cornell Cinema tonight as part of their “Restorations and Rediscoveries” series after seeing it at the Maine International Film Festival this summer. Highly recommended! Palme d’Or winner Anatomy of a Fall and director Martin Scorsese’s latest film Killers of the Flower Moon, both of which are now at Cinemapolis, are the two best new movies now playing in Ithaca. Each one is about the potentially cavernous gap between what we think we know and what we really do and which one I’d recommend to you depends as much on how much time you have (the latter is nearly an hour longer than the former) and what else you’re into as the relative merits of either film. Much of Anatomy of a Fall takes place in a courtroom, and the film’s message is that no matter how many facts you have about a case, you can’t really be certain what happened unless you were actually there. Killers of the Flower Moon is a gangster film which mostly takes place *outside* the courtroom, although it also features a trial, and it is more concerned with the lengths we go to on both on the individual and societal level to convince ourselves that no really, we’re the good guys. You really can’t go wrong either way! Killers of the Flower Moon is also at the Regal Ithaca Mall.
Home Video: Other films directed by Alexander Payne available via subscription streaming services include his charming last effort Downsizing, which is on Netflix; Election, the first one I ever saw (at the United Artist Pacific 4 in Lancaster, PA (RIP) while I was still in high school–I remember it clearly because it was also the first time I ever had an entire movie theater to myself), which is on Max; and my personal favorite, his contribution to the anthology film Paris je t’aime, which is free on Prime Video with ads. Sideways, which also stars Paul Giamatti and which I remember fondly whenever I drink “fucking merlot,” is available on pretty much all the major platforms for a rental fee as well.
Previous “Ithaca Film Journal” posts can be found here.