Sofia Coppola’s The Beguiled celebrates its New York premiere at Metrograph. It was hosted by Marc Jacobs.
#film
Relive the Rebellious 90’s Through Hulu’s ‘Dumb: The Story of Big Brother Magazine’
Born from the cultural revolution of the 1960’s and 1970’s was the counter culture movement of the 1990’s and nothing embodied counter culture more than Big Brother magazine.
Jim McKay’s En El Séptimo Día (On the Seventh Day) is a triumph, a compassionate, warm, and deeply humane tribute to the everyday existence of undocumented workers who like so many other people, are committed to simply waking up and going to work.
Except of course for the men McKay’s film focuses on, all of whom are undocumented themselves and non-professional actors, that simple task is fraught with danger. We see the daily humiliations of working low wage jobs for bad bosses, against whom these men have no recourse. We see them crammed together in one apartment, spread across mattresses and couches, sleeping wherever they can find room.
And yet McKay avoids the obvious pitfalls inherent to this genre. There’s no overt exoticising, no liberal pitying, no moral high ground. From the very first scene, in which we see their soccer team, Puebla F.C. (named after their hometown team in Mexico) win the semi-finals match in their recreational league, its clear that McKay sees these men as human beings. The main character, Jose, who is so charismatic and so full of pathos that you forget it’s probably his first time in front of a camera, is also deeply flawed. When his boss at the restaurant where he works as a delivery guy won’t give him the following Sunday off, he hides the information from his teammates as long as he can, too afraid to challenge his boss and too ashamed to admit he won’t be able to play in the finals.
That, by and large, is the whole plot. The film is broken up by each day in the week, each sequence following Jose as tries to balance his job, staying in contact with his pregnant wife in Mexico, helping out his teammates, and worrying about whether they’ll win the big game. It’s a simple story, simply told, and the result is a film defined by quiet moments, drawing out drama and comedy from the mundanity of every day life. Waking up for work, going to soccer practice, cooking dinner together as a makeshift family. There are no grand revelations to be found, its most dramatic implications left onscreen. In their place, the non-professional actors and neorealist style work to implicate you in a world that is both completely foreign (at least for those of us who are not either undocumented immigrants or related to one), and yet deeply familiar.
The Brooklyn brownstones, situated amongst leafy streets and interrupted by more bodegas and churches than make sense, are instantly recognizable. McKay’s camera catches everything. The Chinese laundromats, the Yemeni store owners, the English pubs and German soccer teams— while the last year has often felt like a battle for the soul of America, here we the foundational myth put to the test. The United States of America is a nation of immigrants, we are constantly told from the moment we are born, and yet in En El Séptimo Día we see exactly what that means. It’s people working side by side, in solidarity with each other based on their shared experiences and shared struggle— to be recognized, to put food on the table, to get to work. When a fellow delivery man is hit by a car, we understand that it could have been Jose, or any of his teammates, and it is by pure luck that he can continue to get his bike from his restaurant to whoever orders from it, and hopefully get a tip at the end.
For some the soccer game Puebla play at the end might just be a game, and yet what McKay succeeds at is that without a character ever having to say it out loud, we completely understand why something as simple as a recreational game can mean so much more for the people who struggle day in and day out merely to survive. Like Happy Go Lucky or last year’s Patterson, En El Séptimo Día is ultimately a testament to the inherent bravery of waking up, putting on your shoes, getting out the door, and getting on with the business of one’s life. It’s simply perfect.
En El Séptimo Día plays as part of BAMcinemaFest, June 17th.
Exclusive: Aisling Walsh, Sally Hawkins, Ethan Hawke, and Kari Matchett talk ‘Maudie’
Filmed in a mere six weeks and set almost entirely in a tiny house in mid-19th century Nova Scotia, Maudie recounts the life of folk artist Maud Lewis, played by Sally Hawkins, and her relationship with longtime partner Everett Lewis, played by Ethan Hawke.
1992’s Leading Men in Film
Here’s a list honoring some of the most iconic black movies released in 1992.
Latest Spoken Word Documentary Produced by Russell Simmons to be Released Summer 2017
Mark your calendars for July 28 and hit the theaters to see “Romeo is Bleeding.”
GIFF 2017: Changemaker Gala 2017 with Renée Zellweger and Christy Turlington-Burns
We attended the 3rd annual Changemaker Gala along with Renée Zellweger, Christy Turlington-Burns, and more, part of the Greenwich International Film Festival.
Lexus Short Films Season 3 Hits an Intriguing Home Run in the Name of ‘Anticipation’
Just when you think you’ve heard of every power player on the digital field, Lexus ups the ante. The Weinstein Company and Lexus International show originality, voice, and beautiful cinematography during the Lexus Short Films Season 3.
‘Wonder Woman’ Cast Discusses Why Gender Doesn’t Matter and the Complexities of Character
Think you know who your favorite superhero is? Unless it’s already Wonder Woman, Gal Gadot and the rest of her all-star cast will have you reconsidering.
It hurts to be misunderstood. Cast upon society’s outback to decay like left-over dinner.