Wednesday, February 18, 2026

Gerhard Richter (2026 exhibition at Fondation Louis Vuitton, Paris)

 
Detail from: Gerhard Richter, Gudrun, 1987  (CR 633), detail. Oil on four canvases, 260 x 200 cm each. Neue Nationalgalerie, Stiftung Preußischer Kulturbesitz, Berlin, loan from Gerhard Richter Art Foundation. © Fondation Louis Vuitton, Paris Gerhard Richter 2025 (18102025)

Fondation Louis Vuitton
8 avenue du Mahatma Gandhi ; 75116 Paris ; Jardin d'acclimatisation de Paris ; Bois de Boulogne.
Exposition du 17.10.2025 au 2.3.2026.
In partnership with France Culture.
Commissariat: Dieter Schwarz et Nicholas Serota.
    Visited on 18 Feb 2026

AA: Visiting the magnificent Gerhard Richter retrospective is entering in chronological order a lifetime of art in many periods, approaches and techniques. There cannot be many active artists born in the Weimar Republic, but Richter is one of them. 

He grew up in Nazi Germany, got his academic education at the Dresden Academy of Fine Arts in the German Democratic Republic, and found his voice in the Federal Republic of Germany where he signed the Opus 1 of his Catalogue Raisonnée in 1962.

A key continuity through all the diversity is a refusal of the live model, no matter whether a person, a landscape or a still life. There is no immediate experience, direct observation or unmediated perception. There is always a photograph, a magazine, a book page, an illustration or a pre-existing artwork. Richter's art is often a photorealistic, illusionistic, mimetic image of an image.

Richter's art is a grand remise en cause, a calling into question of our perception. His art consists of perceptions of perceptions. It is knowledge about knowledge, reflection about reflection. All art has a dimension of philosophy, and Richter's more than most.

Two years ago the 150th anniversary of impressionism was celebrated, and it was an occasion to think about the epochal self-reflective turn it brought in art. Impressionists painted from live models, and they went further than before, because they had a new awareness of the ephemeral and temporary, the incessant changes of lights and shadows, clouds, mists, smokes and other air pollutions, temperatures, radiations and reflections, even the moods that guide our perceptions. In the instant they found eternity.

Impressionists were philosophers of the immediate experience, by necessity, whether consciously or intuitively. Gerhard Richter's world is different. He lives in the society of spectacle. He swims in a deluge of images, keeping his distance, fighting back.

Besides meta-imagery, a further major current in Richter's work is abstraction. Among his abstractions are series of paintings which begin with a highly transformed but still recognizable reflection of another painting such as Tizian's Annunciation. Subsequent paintings move further away from the original and end in a cycle of pure abstractions.

Richter's work is also essential from the perspective of the end of art, the rejection of the classical tenets of the beautiful and the sublime. There is no agreement yet about a terminology for the non-beautiful and the non-sublime. Much modern art looks ugly and/or banal from the traditional perspective, but what it actually is is something beyond the conventional. It may be challenging, unsettling, disturbing, transcendent, illuminating. Whatever it is, it doesn't let us in peace.

From pictures in magazines the exhibition proceeds to paternal family photo albums and romantic landscapes (Gallery 1) to a portrait gallery of 48 public figures, classic subjects from lakes and meadows to starry skies and seascapes and from pointillist wall-sized mosaics of pure colours to abstract pencil drawings (Gallery 2). (There is no Gallery 3 in the exhibition).

In Gallery 4 we can examine outsized elongated paintings whose subject is an endless brushstroke. We are also allowed to study a set of 120 photographs of an image. From l'art pour l'art emphases Richter moves to the disturbing topic of terrorism in the 6. October 1977 cycle (Gallery 5). Richter also works on paper, pursuing both the colourism of watercolours and the black and white glory of pencil drawings. He creates Eckspiegel, mutually reflective monochromatic corner mirrors. He paints giant abstractions in which he uses besides the paintbrush also a palette knife and a squeegee. He devotes intimate series of paintings to his own family with three children  (Gallery 6).

Mirrors reflect masks. In Gallery 4 there is a wall-length horizontal mirror. "Don't blame the mirror if your face is crooked" (Nikolai Gogol). In Gallery 7, there is a 11-layered mirror, whose image resembles the blur characteristic of Richter's oil paintings. Impressionists integrated reflections in their visions. Richter finds in reflections the very subjects of his glass sculptures and installations. (There is no Gallery 8).

One of the grandest exhibits is the abstract Cage cycle in Gallery 9, devoted to the composer John Cage. Gradually taking absence from painting, Richter produced a series called Strips by digital processing.

His abstract ventures range from wild, jarring colour dysfunctions to works which take absence even from the nonfigurative. The Black Square could be seen as a defiant statement at the Age of Empire, but Richter creates gray rectangles. They are not even black. A similar impact is in series of paintings in dirty colours. In Gallery 11 we discover the latest drawings, conducted in line, frottage or tone. The last mirrors are startlingly gray.

In the last corner of Gallery 10 we face what for me is the terminus: four photographs, the only ones that remain of the Auschwitz-Birkenau concentration camp when it was still active, taken by the prisoners. Reflecting on them, Richter created four abstract paintings. The Richter family also had a Holocaust victim: Gerhard's aunt Marianne was murdered in the euthanasia project by the Nazis because of her mental illness.

The exhibition was packed. Waiting in the long line to the coat rack I asked how fellow visitors would rank the show on the Richter scale, used to measure earthquakes. "Ten" was the answer. I remembered a favourite quote from This Is Spinal Tap, directed by Rob Reiner (1947–2025): "These go to eleven".

...
OFFICIAL INTRODUCTION: "From October 17, 2025 to March 2, 2026, the Fondation presents a major retrospective of works by Gerhard Richter—one of the most influential contemporary artists—born in Dresden in 1932. He fled East Germany for Düsseldorf in 1961 before settling in Cologne, where he currently lives and works."

"Continuing its tradition of landmark monographic exhibitions devoted to leading figures of 20th and 21st-century art — including Jean-Michel Basquiat, Joan Mitchell, Mark Rothko, and David Hockney — the Fondation dedicates all its galleries to Gerhard Richter, widely regarded as one of the most important and internationally celebrated artists of his generation."

"Gerhard Richter was featured in the inaugural presentation of the Fondation Louis Vuitton in 2014, with a group of works from the Collection. Now, the Fondation is honoring the artist with an exceptional retrospective — unmatched both in scale and in chronological scope — featuring 275 works stretching from 1962 to 2024. The exhibition includes oil paintings, glass and steel sculptures, pencil and ink drawings, watercolors, and overpainted photographs. For the first time, an exhibition will offer a comprehensive view of over six decades of Gerhard Richter’s creation - an artist whose greatest joy has always been working in his studio."

"Gerhard Richter has always been drawn to both subject matter and the very language of painting — a field of experimentation whose boundaries he has continually pushed, avoiding any singular categorization. His training at the Dresden Academy of Fine Arts led him to engage with traditional genres such as still life, portraiture, landscape, and history painting. His desire to reinterpret these genres through a contemporary lens lies at the heart of this exhibition. Regardless of subject, Richter never paints directly from nature or from the scene before him: every image is filtered through an intermediary medium — through a photograph or a drawing — from which he constructs a new, autonomous work. Over time, he has explored an extraordinary range of genres and techniques within painting, developing various methods of applying paint to canvas — whether with a brush, a palette knife, or a squeegee."

"The exhibition brings together many of Richter’s most significant works up to his decision in 2017 to stop painting, while continuing to draw. Presented in chronological order, each section spans approximately a decade and traces the evolution of a singular pictorial vision — one shaped by both rupture and continuity — from his early photo-based paintings to his final abstractions."

Gallery 1: 1962–1970 — Painting from Photographs: Photography as a Source of Imagery
"From the outset, Richter’s choice of subjects was complex: on the one hand, seemingly mundane images taken from newspapers and magazines, such as the work that Richter regards as his ‘number 1’, in 1962, an image of a table taken from an Italian design magazine and partially obliterated, (Tisch); on the other, family portraits referring to his own past (Onkel Rudi, Tante Marianne), as well as to the shadows of German history (Bombers). Already in the mid-1960s, Richter was challenging the illusionist conventions of painting with his sculpture Four Panes of Glass and his first Color Charts. With the Cityscapes, he explored a pseudo-expressionist impasto style; with the Landscapes and Seascapes, he tested classic genres against the grain."

Gallery 2: 1971–1975 — Investigating representation.
"The 48 Portraits, painted for the 1972 Venice Biennale and a true tour de force, mark the beginning of a new chapter in which Richter interrogates the nature of painting in multiple ways: through the use of his signature blur technique (Vermalung); the progressive copying and dissolution of a Titian Annunciation; the random distribution of color in the large Color Charts; and the rejection of representation and expression in the Grey Paintings."

Gallery 4: 1976–1986 — Exploring abstraction.
"During this decade, Richter laid the foundations of his distinctive approach to abstraction: enlarging watercolor studies, examining the painted surface, and making the brushstroke itself the subject of a painting (Strich). At the same time, he painted the first portraits of his daughter Betty and continued exploring traditional subjects such as landscape and still life."

Gallery 5: 1987–1995 — “Sombre reflections.”
"Motivated by a profoundly skeptical view of artistic and social change, Richter painted the October 18, 1977 series — exceptionally on loan from MoMA — his only body of work that explicitly refers to recent German history. During this period, he also produced some of his most striking and somber abstract works. Returning to the theme of his early family paintings, Richter created the Sabine mit Kind series."

Galleries 7 and 9: 1996–2009 — New perspectives in painting: chance.
"In the late 1990s, Richter entered a highly productive period, spanning small figurative and abstract works, the austere Silikat series, experiments with chance that culminated in 4900 Colors, and the meditative Cage Paintings, a tribute to composer John Cage."

Galleries 9 and 10: 2009-2017 — Final paintings.
"Richter surprised audiences by abandoning painting for several years to experiment with glass works and digitally generated Strip images. He returned to painting with Birkenau, a group of works inspired by four photographs taken inside a Nazi extermination camp. The final room of paintings presents his last masterful abstract canvases completed in 2017, after which Richter’s attention has focused on the drawings shown in Gallery 11."

"Sculpture appears at key points throughout the exhibition, and three rooms dedicated to watercolors, drawings and overpainted photographs provide an interlude and change of pace in the 1970s and 1990s, while illustrating the artist’s ongoing concerns since he stopped painting in 2017."

Tuesday, February 17, 2026

Backwood Madness

 
Ari Savonen: Backwood Madness (FI 2025). Tomi Kandelin as the Stranger.

FI © 2025 Ari Savonen & SF Media. PC: SF Media Oy. P: Kimmo Perkkiö, Ari Savonen.
    D: Ari Savonen. SC: Aleksanteri Jaakkola, Ari Savonen, Janne-Markus Katila, Jari Manninen. DP: Esa Jussila, Mikko Löppönen – colour – release format: 25 fps, 2K DCP Scope 2.39:1, 5.1 Mix.
    Ari Savonen (art direction, set design and locations). * Janne Andberg, Harri Rautiainen (costume design & costumes). * Ari Savonen (costume design & costumes & miniature and artificial head FX & creature design). * Janne Andberg. Aleksanteri Jaakkola (miniature and artificial head FX & alternative creature design). * Full moon footage: Tero Saikkonen. Mask maker: Mika Niiranen. Key makeup & SFX makeup artists: Soile Karhu, Isa Koskelainen, Laura Laukkanen, Anniina Saari. Cost: Soile Karhu, Saija Koskelainen, Iivari Pääkkönen. Costumes & tractor and old machines & electric aggregates: K. A. Savonen, Tarja Tarvainen. Chainmails and knives & gun expert & Suomi-konepistooli expert (Palsanpuron Paja): Iivari Pääkkönen. Gun experts: K. A. Savonen, Markus Tilli, Jussi Halttunen. Post production supervisor & visual effects and green screen & trailer editor: Matti Kuusniemi. 
    M: Jussi Huhtala. Song: "Pimeä on oksan taitto" by Jonne Järvelä. S: Kimmo Perkkiö. ED: Ari Savonen, Toni Luoma-Nirva. 
    CAST:
Toni Kandelin  … The Stranger
Aleksanteri Jaakkola  … Väinö  
Jari Manninen  … Father Aatami
Roope Olenius  … Tapio  
Pekka Lehtosaari  … Peikkokuningas / Troll King Oksa (voice) (Sami Huhtala (motion capture)
Jarmo Koski    Father Juhani
Jukka Hautajärvi  … Rahko  
Niina Ylipahkala  … Eeva  
Aslak Karsten  … Shaman
Ari Karhunen  … Witch doctor
Jarmo Pukkila  … Kyyrölä
Enni Ojutkangas  … Lotta [female paramilitary]
Jonne Järvelä  … the human side of the Stranger in dreams
Håvard Ellefsen  … the troll side of the Stranger in dreams
Joni Karhila  …  Hiisi / Goblin
    Loc: Saarijärvi, Kouvola, Orimattila, Tampere, Nokia, Porvoo, Äänekoski, Laukaa, Espoo, Seinäjoki, Turku. Forest: Saarijärvi, aerial: Haikankärki ridge (Summassaari island in Lake Summanen). Other Saarijärvi sites: Kivikauden kylä (stone age village), Rahkola village, trenches (Lumpero), Julmat Lammit.
    Language: Finnish.
    95 min
    Genre: fantasy, horror.
    Distributor: Bright Fame Pictures. International sales: Fizz-e-Motion.
    Finnish premiere: 22 Aug 2025.
    2026 Jussi Awards Nominee: Best Makeup.
    Vimeo link for Jussi Awards viewed at home in Paris, 17 Feb 2026

OFFICIAL:
 
"Backwood Madness (2025) on Ari Savosen ohjaama ja käsikirjoittama kauhufantasia, jossa seikkaillaan peikkojen maailmassa. Metsänväen rauha järkkyy ihmisen aiheuttamien sotien vuoksi, josta alkaa kostonkierre ihmisten ja metsän olentojen välillä. Taistelun voi kuitenkin lopettaa vain yksi hahmo, Muukalainen (Toni Kandelin). Elokuva oli tuotannossa yli 10 vuotta ja se on saanut huomiota kunnianhimoisesta tehostemaskeerauksesta."

"Ihmisten sodilla on musertavat vaikutukset metsään ja sen olentoihin. Metsä vastaa niin kuin sinne huudetaan, ja olennot tahtovat koston. Metsän tasapaino on järkkynyt, ja on vain yksi, joka voi tuoda sen takaisin."

"Suomen suurin tehostemaskeerauselokuva on sotaseikkailu hiisien, peikkojen ja shamaanien maailmaan, jollaista ei ole ennen nähty. Fantasiaa ja kauhua yhdistelevä elokuva on ohjaaja-käsikirjoittaja-tuottaja Ari Savosen esikoiselokuva ohjaajana. Savonen on myös suurelta osin suunnitellut ja toteuttanut elokuvan tehostemaskeerauksia ja tehosteita."

"The war of men harms the beings of the forest. The beings demand revenge and the balance between men and the forest is broken. There might be one who can bring back that balance."

"The biggest special makeup effects film coming out of Finland is an unforeseen war adventure in the world of goblins, trolls and shamans. The fantasy-horror film is director-screenwriter-producer Ari Savonen’s directorial debut. Savonen has also designed and crafted many of the special makeup effects and other practical effects seen in the film."

AA: Ari Savonen's Backwood Madness is a spectacular creature feature unlike anything made in Finland before.

A forest horror extravaganza. "Niin metsä vastaa niin kuin sinne huudetaan" is an untranslatable Finnish proverb, literally "the forest echoes back what you shout", but meaning "you reap what you sow".

An unapologetic gore and splatter film. During World War II, a soldier kills a forest troll, and an endless cycle of retaliation begins, inviting cavemen, trolls, goblins and witches to participate. The action is full of slaughters and other atrocities. Hearts and intestines are ripped out. "Blood streams like champagne" like Dostoevsky wrote in Notes from the Underground. Bodies pile up, corpses rot. A rape and a devil baby are among the sights.

Backwood Madness belongs to the cinema of attractions, slight on narrative, structure, development, character, psychology, emotion, tension and suspense.

Strong on shock, atmosphere, mood, landscape, aerial cinematography, sound and music. 

It is visionary cinema.

The creature design is unique and well integrated into a fascinating and coherent visual concept, including clothes, weapons, buildings and equipment. The goblins, trolls and shamans appear as outgrowths of the forest, a magical, animistic and sacred milieu for Finns. Usually benign, until it isn't. 

Because of the creature design warmly recommended for international aficionados of the cinefantastique.

...
CAST CREDENTIALS FROM THE PRESS DOSSIER
    ACTORS
Toni Kandelin (Goremageddon 2), Aleksanteri Jaakkola (Bunny the Killer Thing), Jari Manninen (Punainen Kohina), Roope Olenius (Free Skate), Sami Huhtala (Rendel), Pekka Lehtosaari (Röllin sydän), Jarmo Koski (Salatut elämät), Jukka Hautajärvi (Skeleton Crew), Ari Karhunen (Gravediggers), Niina Ylipahkala (Kyrsyä – Tuftland), Jarmo Pukkila ((Pri)sons), Kristian Aho (Nightsatan and the Loops of Doom), Jonne Järvelä (Korpiklaani -yhtye) and Mortiis aka Håvard Ellefsen (Mortiis -yhtye).
    INTRODUCING
Nooa Eronen, Aslak Karsten and Harri Rautiainen.
    CAMEOS
Veera W. Vilo (Free Skate), Petri Hiltunen (Väinämöisen paluu -comics), CHRZU (Carlotta Moore and Me), Sampo Marjomaa (Hauskat kotivideot), Anette Aghazarian (Uusi päivä), Enni Ojutkangas (Lapua 1976), Antti L. J. Pääkkönen (Paavo Pesusieni -ääni), Jere Saarela ((Pri)sons), Rauli Ylitalo (Salatut elämät), Ville Lähde (Video Cop) and Rami Rusinen (Armomurhaaja).

CAST IN EXTENSO IN ELONET
Toni Kandelin Muukalainen
Jari Manninen Aatami
Aleksanteri Jaakkola Väinö
Roope Olenius Tapio
Nooa Eronen Muukalainen (lapsi)
Niko Takalahti Muukalainen (teini)
Kerttu Koskelainen Muukalainen (vauva)
Panu Poutanen Muukalainen (uusi Rahko)
Jonne Järvelä Muukalainen (puoliksi ihminen)
Mortiis Muukalainen (puoliksi peikko)
Antti L. J. Pääkkönen puolikas peikko (ääni)
Sami Huhtala Oksa
Pekka Lehtosaari Oksa (ääni)
Jarmo Koski Juhani
Jukka Hautajärvi Rahko
Ari Karhunen Torko / Vesihiisi
Jarmo Ikola Kyyrölä
Aslak Karsten shamaani
Ari Savonen shamaani & poppamies (ääni)
Harri Rautiainen poppamies
Niina Ylipahkala Eeva
Eeva Putro Aino
Kristian Aho peikkokuningas
Jussi Tuomi peikkojen johtaja
Ari Nieminen isäntä
Veera W. Vilo emäntä
Marika Kim Aatamin tyttöystävä
Marsa Niskanen peikkotyttö / Näkki
Markus Tilli Jussi
Karo von Rutenhjelm Sulevi
Marko Pesonen Antti
Janne Koskelainen mies rannalla
Anne Tarvus nainen rannalla
Mikko Milan Mikko
Teemu Kauppi esihistoriallinen luolamies
Johanna Borman esihistoriallinen hiisi
Olli Saarenpää hevosella ratsastava peikko
Esa Kemppainen sotilas
Anette Aghazarian Lotta
Emma-Lotta Kiuru Lotta
Enni Ojutkangas Lotta
Sara Tarnanen Lotta
Lloyd Kaufman erikoisvieras (ääni)
Muut esiintyjät: peikot, hiidet ja kyläläiset.

Saturday, February 07, 2026

À pied d'œuvre / At Work


Valérie Donzelli: À pied d'œuvre / At Work (FR 2026). Bastien Bouillon as the writer-handyman-father Paul Marquet.

FR 2026 © 2025 Pitchipoï Productions, France 2 Cinéma. Production : Alain Goldman.
    Fiche technique
Réalisation : Valérie Donzelli
Scénario : Valérie Donzelli et Gilles Marchand, d'après le roman éponyme (2023) de Franck Courtès
Photographie : Irina Lubtchansky – format : couleur – 1,66:1
Décors : Manu de Chauvigny
Costumes : Nathalie Raoul
Musique : Jean-Michel Bernard
Son : Emmanuel Croset, Simon Poupard et André Rigaut
Montage : Pauline Gaillard
    Distribution
Bastien Bouillon : Paul Marquet
Virginie Ledoyen : Alice, éditrice chez Gallimard
André Marcon : le père de Paul
Valérie Donzelli : l'ex-épouse de Paul
Marie Rivière : Christine
Adrien Barazzone : Pierre Lautrec
Marion Lécrivain : la sœur de Paul
Oscar Tillette : le fils de Paul
Ève Oron : la fille de Paul
Philippe Katerine : le bijoutier
Claude Perron : la femme à la valise
Béatrice de Staël : la marchande de presse
Pauline Serieys : la jeune femme de la mezzanine
Michel Gondry : le client aux chaussettes
Éric Reinhardt : le client maniaque
Christopher Thompson : l'homme aux buis
    Soundtrack: 
– Franz Schubert: Trio in Es-Dur für Klavier, Violine und Violoncello nr. 2, D 929 (op. 100) (1827), perf. Trio Thaleia (Thomas Haug, Thomas Bruder, Wolfgang Hess)
– "Joe le taxi", de Vanessa Paradis
– "Le vieux couple", de Serge Reggiani
– "Foule sentimentale", de Alain Souchon 
    Dedication : À mon père / To My Father
    Loc : Paris, Montmorency
    Langue originale : français
    Durée : 92 minutes
    Genre : biographie, drame
    Sociétés de distribution : Diaphana (France) ; Agora Films (Suisse romande), Lumière (Belgique)
    Dates de sortie :
Italie : 29 août 2025 (Mostra de Venise) – Winner: Golden Osella: Best Screenplay – Winner: Premio Fondazione Fai Persona Lavoro Ambiente Award – Special Mention: Treatment of Issues Related to Work 
Belgique, France, Suisse romande : 4 février 2026
    Vu samedi, le 7 février 2026, Majestic Bastille, 4 bd Richard-Lenoir, 75011 Paris, M° Bastille, Lignes 1, 5, 8

Venice Film Festival 2025: Synopsis
" “Finishing a text doesn’t mean being published, being published doesn’t mean being read, being read doesn’t mean being loved, being loved doesn’t mean being successful, and success offers no promise of fortune.”
"À pied d’œuvre tells the true story of a successful photographer who gives up everything to devote himself to writing — and discovers poverty. This radical account, blending clarity and self-deprecation, portrays the journey of a man willing to pay the ultimate price for his freedom. "

Director’s Statement
" À pied d’œuvre is the portrait of a man who leaves behind a comfortable life to devote himself to writing, eventually slipping into precarity. This radical and deeply personal choice moved me profoundly. I wanted to stay true to the honesty of his journey, its simplicity and discipline. Together with Gilles Marchand, we wrote a character who is upright, gentle, and determined. Bastien Bouillon quickly emerged as the obvious choice, with his quiet strength and understated presence. This film questions the value we place on a life driven by a silent, unspectacular, yet unstoppable passion: the need to create, no matter what. " (Venice Film Festival 2025)

AA: Valérie Donzelli's À pied d'œuvre / At Work is a vision of contemporary life based on the acclaimed eponymous autobiographical novel by Franck Courtès. 

The protagonist Paul Marquet (Bastien Bouillon) is a decent and talented man fighting for survival in a twin trap. He is a top photographer who has switched to writing because that is his calling. He is a great writer, but you cannot earn a living as a writer anymore. Which is why he enters the gig economy.

Paul writes in the morning, and the rest of the day he is a handyman (un homme à tout faire, un factotum, un Michel Morin, un bricoleur, a jack of all trades) in the world of the precariat and petits boulots (odd jobs). 

Paul is a construction worker who helps demolish buildings. He is a gardener. He is a plumber. He is a carpenter. Helping take apart a steel ladder from a bunk bed he is injured and prescribed a month of sick leave which he cannot afford. He is a taxi driver whom his friends and relatives are embarrassed and shocked to meet like this. He is a window washer. He changes balcony plantings. When he hits a roe deer (chevreuil) with his car, he empathizes with its suffering and butchers it for dinner.

Like Ken Loach's Sorry We Missed You and Boris Lojkine's Souleymane's Story, À pied d'œuvre is a fascinating and essential study about self-employment. We witness the functioning of the Jobbing website where the job seeker can enter his offer. The lower the bid, the better the chance, and you see your status improve on a sliding scale the less you ask. On the other side, there is an online review feature in real time. Your performance gets instantly scored for all to see.

As a writer, Paul keeps being rejected by his editor (Virginie Ledoyen) at Gallimard because his stuff is too autobiographical. In a desperate turn, the hard drive of Paul's computer gets irrevocably broken, and he needs to start again from hand-written notebooks. The book (on which the movie is based) is finally published and favourably received, but the financial reward is far from enough to make a living.

Thus despite the success, Paul keeps multi-tasking in his triple life – besides a writer and a handyman he is also a devoted father of three children, although he has been evicted from home by his ex-wife (played by the director herself). Mostly Paul is a remote father, in touch with his offspring via teleconferences, but still in warm terms. His own father condemns him for being a clochard, which he is not, but he allows Paul to live in his unheated cellar, a former maid's room.

À pied d'œuvre resembles Anton Chekhov's My Life (Моя жизнь, 1896) in important ways, especially the inside view in social downfall. The important difference is Paul's triple life. Chekhov's Misail (yes! the name his father gave instead of Mikhail) has only a single life, of which he is proud, while all others find it a disgrace.

Because of the cellar symbolism of the social descent I was reminded of Bong Joon-Ho's Parasite (2019) and F. M. Dostoevsky's Notes from Underground (Записки изъ подполья, 1864), for Edwin Frank in Stranger Than Fiction the point of origin to what he calls the "Twenthieth-Century Novel". Martin Scorsese's Taxi Driver is another point of affinity, also via Dostoevsky and Bresson. But in À pied d'œuvre the downfall is only external, and it is not a study in alienation. While losing his social status and the superficial paraphernalia of what Pierre Bourdieu called la distinction, Paul actually comes closer to life and his inner self. His is a journey of discovery in the world of today and himself.

Valérie Donzelli's movie is not a Bressonian study of spiritual illumination and transcendence in asceticism, although there are common qualities of dignity, self-sacrifice and inner growth. 

Donzelli displays a warm and engrossing commitment to her unusual tale. The cast is great, and her regular actor Bastien Bouillon excels in the leading role with silent indomitability. There is something Keatonian in his unsmiling yet appealing habitus.

The cinematography by Irina Lubtchansky impresses with precise observation, sharp mise-en-scène and a subtly warm colour palette. I like the attention paid to fine soft detail in beautiful close-ups. À pied d'œuvre is an adventure in the world of today, and the documentary appetite of Donzelli and Lubtchansky never fails to excite.

For Franck Courtès and Valérie Donzelli, À pied d'œuvre is about Paul's internal and individual challenge, his existential freedom of choice. The epic backstory in current social history goes unmentioned. Since the breakthrough of the internet 30 years ago, the cultural sector and the media have suffered a devastating blow. Photographers lost their income when everybody became a photographer with their smartphones. The supremacy of the internet destroyed most of the media, including literature, as people perceive that everything is free online. The internet behemoths of Silicon Valley are winners who take all. Creative artists and professionals get crumbs. Although not intended so by he author of the book nor the director of the film, for me À pied d'œuvre is also a saga of the creative professional in the age of the internet.

The audience was impressed. We were nodding at each other in astonishment of how good the film was. À pied d'œuvre is a film I look forward to revisiting, and I would find more films like this welcome.

Today I saw three films with a Paris premiere this week: A Light That Never Goes Out, The Mastermind and À pied d'œuvre. All with a male protagonist who has lost his hold on life. All in the cultural sector: a musician, an architect and a writer. All from different countries: Finland, the United States and France. All different: one coming to terms with depression, one with his lack of talent, and one facing the fact that the world we knew does not exist anymore.

The Mastermind


Kelly Reichardt: The Mastermind (US 2025). Josh O'Connor (James Blaine Mooney)

    US © 2025 Mastermind Movie Inc. Sociétés de production : FilmScience, MUBI et UTA Independent Film Group. Production : Neil Kopp, Vincent Savino, Anish Savjani et Sam Tischler.
Réalisation et scénario : Kelly Reichardt
Photographie : Christopher Blauvelt - 16 mm - colour - 1.66:1
Direction artistique : N/A
Décors : Anthony Gasparro
Costumes : Amy Roth
Musique : Rob Mazurek
Montage : Kelly Reichardt
    Distribution
Josh O'Connor : James Blaine Mooney
Alana Haim : Terri Mooney
John Magaro : Fred
Hope Davis : Sarah Mooney
Bill Camp : Bill Mooney
Gaby Hoffmann : Maude
Eli Gelb
Cole Doman
Javion Allen
Matthew Maher
Rehnzy Feliz
    Paintings: Arthur Dove (1880-1946).
    Loc: Cincinnati, Hamilton, Middletown (Ohio) - Columbus, Cleo Rogers Memorial Library (Columbus, Indiana).
    Durée : 110 minutes
    Genre : drame, casse
    Sociétés de distribution : MUBI (Monde) ; Condor Distribution (France)
    Dates de sortie :
France : 23 mai 2025 (Festival de Cannes 2025) ; 4 février 2026 (sortie nationale)
US : 29 Aug 2025 (Telluride Film Festival) ; 17 Oct 2025 (sortie nationale)
    Vu samedi, le 7 février 2026, MK2 Bastille (Côté Fg Saint-Antoine), 5 faubourg Saint-Antoine, Paris 11e

Official storyline: "In a sedate corner of Massachusetts circa 1970, JB Mooney (Josh O’Connor) an unemployed carpenter turned amateur art thief, plans his first big heist. When things go haywire, his life unravels."

Mara Fortes (Telluride Film Festival 2025): "The self-absorbed J. B. Mooney (Josh O’Connor) is an occasional carpenter and former art student in a sleepy Massachusetts town; his wife (Alana Haim) is the family’s dependable parent and breadwinner. In a stroke of hubris, he decides to recruit a pair of unreliable partners to rob the local museum. But he doesn’t plan for after the heist—and it’s the aftermath of the bungled scheme that’s the focus of Reichardt’s quietly subversive, often incisively funny and masterfully observed film. O’Connor is stellar as the inscrutable Mooney, cinema’s most unhurried man-on-the-lam. As he drifts unsteadily west, the country is shaking on its tilt: in the background, students galvanize in anti-war protests and the streets buzz with civil unrest. The tumult of the ‘70s permeates the airwaves and seeps through Reichardt’s careful compositions, and Rob Mazurek’s percussive jazzy score perfectly modulates the film’s darkly comic beats and richly textured moods." –Mara Fortes (U.S., 2025, 110m) In person: Kelly Reichardt, Josh O’Connor

Cannes Film Festival, Official Selection website: Manon Durand: A look back at the Cannes premiere on 4.2.2026: "For her second film presented in Competition, American director Kelly Reichardt directs Josh O’Connor for the first time in The Mastermind. In this heist film, the director of First Cow leaves her beloved Oregon behind to film in 1970s Massachusetts. A new unexpected theme that is once again a testament to the author’s eclectic range."

"Josh O’Connor plays J. B. Mooney, an unemployed carpenter who reinvents himself as an amateur art thief. Set against the turbulent backdrop of 1970s America, in the midst of the Vietnam War and the women’s liberation movement, the young man plans his first big heist yet. When things go haywire, his life unravels."

"Alongside the British actor — who also made an appearance on the Croisette this year for his role in the queer romance The History of Sound by Oliver Hermanus — we have the pleasure of seeing the lovely Alana Haim, who made her debut in Licorice Pizza by Paul Thomas Anderson four years ago, and whom we haven’t seen since. Both actors are featured for the first time under the direction of Kelly Reichardt, like the actress Hope Davis, who also walked the Red Carpet this year for Wes Anderson’s The Phoenician Scheme."

"This heist drama has enough to pique the curiosity of Kelly Reichardt fans as it basically is a true departure from her usual minimalist and bucolic style. Already selected for Un Certain Regard in 2008 for the moving Wendy and Lucy, and in Competition in 2022 with Showing Up, — both showcasing the iconic Michelle Williams — Kelly Reichardt was also a member of the 2019 Feature Films Jury. Her filmmaking explores the American experience from a gentle and poetic perspective and often takes a particular interest in working-class characters living in small-town communities — reminiscent of Sean Baker’s sensibility." (Cannes Film Festival, Official Selection, a look back by Manon Durand)

AA: The title of Kelly Reichardt's The Mastermind is ironic. The legacy of the heist film, including John Huston, Jules Dassin, Stanley Kubrick, Jean-Pierre Melville and Michael Mann, is implicit, only to be ignored by Reichardt, who does not even turn to parody such as Mario Monicelli's I soliti ignoti / Big Deal on Madonna Street, or comedy, such as the caper films of Laurel and Hardy.

Instead of building suspense or comedy, Reichard defuses both. The approach is anti-dramatic in the extreme in this evocation of small town America in 1970. The epochal social turmoil of the age appears as background noise until the finale in which J. M. Mooney tries to hide in an anti-Vietnam War demonstration, only to be caught there by the police. There is a connection with Charles Chaplin in Modern Times.

Josh O'Connor as Mooney creates a portrait of a sleepwalker in his time and age, in his family and his own life. It is a study of a lack of awareness and self-awareness. In a time of drop-outs and counterculture, Mooney cannot even be registered as belonging to them. As the brains of the art heist, he fails unspectacularly at every stage, and Reichardt refuses dramatic punches in them. 

As narrative cinema, The Mastermind is unusual. As visual art, as well. Shot on 16 mm film, there is a watercolour quality in Christopher Blauvelt's autumnal colour palette, with an emphasis on gray and brown and soft, blurred hues.

Rob Mazurek, a master of experimental jazz of the Chicago Underground, debuts as a film composer.  His relaxed sound world, with Latin American touches, is yet another countermeasure to thriller expectations. Silences count as much as sounds, the music connects with interiority while the imagery shows the material world.

Josh the loser and failed architect tries to shape up for the sake of his family – his own and the paternal one – but humiliations only get worse. The desperate attempt to reverse the situation by committing a crime reminds me of Roofman, but unlike it, The Mastermind does not strive to be an audience-pleasing genre film.

The portrait of the art museum is realistic. Arthur Dove (1880-1946), the first American abstract painter, was no longer a hot ticket in the early 1970s. While the art museum is fictional, the story is based on a real robbery. Kelly Reichardt had long been fascinated with art thefts and surprised to discover how relatively easy at the time it was to steal art, even by Gauguin, Picasso and Rembrandt. Against this background, Josh's failure seems even more devastating.

Jossain on valo joka ei sammu / A Light That Never Goes Out


Lauri-Matti Parppei: Jossain on valo joka ei sammu / A Light That Never Goes Out (FI 2025). Samuel Kujala (Pauli), Kaisa-Leena Koskenkorva (Anni). The primal scream against the Bothnian Bay.

La Lumière ne meurt jamais / Uma Luz que Nunca se Apaga / Ένα φως που δεν σβήνει.
    FI © 2025 Elokuvatuotantoyhtio Made. P: Ilona Tolmunen. Co-PC: Goodtime Pictures (Norway), Mediefondet Zefyr (Norway). Co-P: Vincent Saunders, Ngål Lambrechts.
    D+SC+M: Lauri-Matti Parppei. Dramaturges: Anna Brotkin, Ulla Heikkilä, Jan Forsström, Sissel Dalsgaard Thomsen. DP: Mikko Parttimaa – colour – 16:9. Lighting: Henri Jaaksola. AD: Nanna Hirvonen. Cost: Mimosa Kuusimäki. Makeup: Natalie Costello. SFX: Suomen Pyrotekniikka Oy. VFX: Jon-André Hakvåg, Theodor Flo-Groeneboom, Samuel Karlsson, Ulrikke Skjold. M: all music was played live. See soundtrack listing below. S: Yngve Leidulv Sætre, Juuso Oksala. ED: Frida Eggum Michaelsen. Casting: Minna Sorvoja.
    CAST
Samuel Kujala / Pauli
Anna Rosaliina Kauno / Iiris
Camille Auer / Sini
Kaisa-Leena Koskenkorva / Anni
Mari Rantasila / äiti
Jarkko Pajunen / isä
Jari "Onde" Pelamo / Onde
Aapo Kivenmaa / vihainen Lukko-fani
Marios Kleovoulou / iloinen Lukko-fani
Suvi Korpela / juhlavieras
Totti Kaarle / kitaransoittaja
Jussi Puukka / Anton
Toni "Protoni" Järvinen / Protoni
Katja Lukkarinen / Julia
Merimaija Aalto / viulisti
Aino Juutilainen / sellisti
Ilona Tolmunen / konserttijärjestäjä
Ville Kulju / vahtimestari
Katarine Lehtomäki / täti
Anita Osola / täti
Eija Nurmio / täti
Päivi Kasala / täti
Kalevi Kasala / setä
Markus Nikkanen / setä
Petteri Hovi / setä
Matti Mustonen / kapellimestari
Matvei German / soittaja
    Other performers:
Heemus (dog)
    110 min (Elonet), 108 min (L'Officiel des Spectacles)
    Genre : Drame
    Langue de tournage : Finnois (dialecte de Rauma = Rauman giäl)
    Loc: Rauma: Kalatori, Hauenguano, Valtakadun tasoristeys, Saharanta, Petäjäksentie, Otalahden uimaranta, Urheilukatu, Uudenlahdentie, Eteläpitkäkatu, Syväraumankatu, Rauman terveyskeskus, Rauman Taidemuseo, Ravintola Otava, Pihlajamaan Musiikki.
    Loc: Uusimaa: Villa Salmela, Musiikkitalo, Sipoon Seurakunta, Loviisan Kotisatama, Cygnaeuksenkatu, Niinisaarentie, Raappavuorenrinne, Untamontie.
    Rauman Taidemuseo artworks: Jarmo Mäkilä: Kukkoilijat (2023), Valtakunta (2023), Kärpästen herra (2010). Laura Jalava, Johanna Naukkarinen: Kävelet neljällä jalalla, minä kahdella.
    Festival premiere: 15 May 2025 ACID Cannes.
    Helsinki premiere: 12 Sep 2025 – distributor: B-Plan Distribution Oy.
    Date de sortie en France : 4 février 2026 – distributeur : Les Alchimistes Films – sous-titres français : Emil Sana.
    Vu samedi, le 7 février 2026, Cinéma Saint-André-des-Arts, Salle 1, 30 rue Saint-André-des-Arts, 75006 Paris, M° Saint-Michel, ligne 4.

L'Officiel des Spectacles: "Pauli, célèbre flûtiste classique, retourne dans sa petite ville natale pour se remettre d'une dépression. Il renoue avec une ancienne camarade de classe, qui lui propose de rejoindre un groupe de musique joyeusement anticonformiste. Pauli, de nature plutôt perfectionniste, se laisse embarquer dans cette aventure musicale aussi inattendue qu'expérimentale."

"La lumière ne meurt jamais est le premier long-métrage de Lauri-Matti Parppei, artiste au parcours éclectique qui s'inspire largement de sa propre enfance à Rauma, ville dans le sud de la Finlande où se déroule le film. Invitation au dépassement de soi, il s'agit aussi d'un récit initiatique au sens littéraire du terme. Le réalisateur explique : « En grandissant au sein de la scène musicale underground, j'ai été confronté à des problèmes de santé mentale importants. Certains d'entre nous ne sont plus là aujourd'hui, mais pour la plupart nous sommes parvenus à nous sauver les uns les autres. Il y a toujours de l'espoir et c'est ce que j'essaye de transmettre dans le film. »"

AA: An exceptional sonority runs through Lauri-Matti Parppei's debut feature film A Light That Never Goes Out. It is the story of the burnout of a star artist, the flute maestro Pauli (Samuel Kujala) who has lost his mojo in life and art.

About depression, it is not depressive. The movie is driven by a serene intensity. It is also characterized by a purity of observation, a fine composition, and an assured mise-en-scène.

For 20 years Pauli has been a professional in the world of classical music. Now he retreats to his childhood home in Rauma. His mother (Mari Rantasila) and father (Jarkko Pajunen) are seriously concerned, and Pauli does not make life easy for them.

On the streets of Rauma, Pauli stumbles upon old acquaintances, who invite him to experiences of concrete sound, breaking free of conventions. Even concepts such as "orchestra", "concert", "tonality" and "instruments" are abandoned, perhaps even "music". But it is about sound, performance, and even recording (preferably analogue in vinyl).

The performances are all live by the team called ______________ , consisting of  Iiris (Anna Rosaliisa Kauno), Pauli, Sini (Camille Auer) and Anni (Kaisaleena Koskenkorva). They call their creations "assaults of sound colours", not music but "attacks against the audience". Their sources of inspiration range from electric toothbrushes to primal screams towards the sea. They get in touch with galactic energy. Going back to square one, the black square even. The eternal return of dada.

Visiting the Helsinki Music Center, Pauli meets fellow musicians. They struggle to understand what Pauli is doing and talk down about self-produced amateur stuff, but Pauli defends his Rauma team in a way which reminds me of John T. Chance (John Wayne) in Rio Bravo. Pat Wheeler: "A game-legged old man and a drunk. That's all you got?" John T. Chance: "That's what I got."

This sequence connects to a topic reverberating in contemporary cinema: academic people out of touch with reality, condescending to people who don't share their surface status. In recent weeks, this has struck me in Kenraaliharjoitus and À pied d'œuvre. It was also a subtext in my favourite film of last year: Highway 99: A Double Album. A major background in the rise of populism, including in Finland and the U.S. When parties previously championing the working people abandoned them, the field was left free for populists.

Pauli's journey of self-discovery continues. Until now it has been a self-evident career. Germans have an apt word: Laufbahn, meaning literally a runtrack. Pauli has been a child prodigy driven to pursue his art on the highest level. But he has lost touch with himself. He does not have friends, only colleagues and acquaintances. He has not even succeeded in killing himself.

Although he participates in the sound happening of his Rauma circle, he is ashamed of himself and insults his fellows deeply with his parting words. But he returns to apologize. To start again he must return to zero.

The sense of place is vibrant, and the Rauma dialect is appealing in a similar way as the Pori dialect was in Levoton Tuhkimo (2024) in which Samuel Kujala also participated as the keyboardist Pete. Rauma is a mere 50 km to the south from Pori, but the dialects are different. A main connection is Mari Rantasila who plays Pauli's mother and directed Levoton Tuhkimo. Dialogue like this is music.

The art milieu also includes a visit to Rauman taidemuseo (Rauma Museum of Art) where I am delighted to see paintings by Jarmo Mäkilä. Mäkilä has found a unique approach to realism: starting from authentic observations he transforms them in ways that are not magical, surrealistic nor symbolistic but something which words fail to convey. Something similar happens also in Parppei's cinema, something beyond plain observation, such as the luminous dog.

A world of transcendence is also introduced in the Orthodox world. The Orthodox Church of Finland is not prominent on the west coast of Finland where Rauma lies. But Parppei is an old Karelian family name, and the director's ancestors stem from Orthodox Eastern Karelia, now in Russia. An ancestor of Lauri-Matti's was the first person to be photographed with a kantele (a Karelian zither). A deeply moving moment is the communal singing of the traditional Orthodox birthday song "Monia vuosia (Many Years / Многая лета)" composed by Dmitri Bortniansky.

A Light That Never Goes Out is about rebirth in life and art.

...
SOUNDTRACK LISTING

1:10 000
säv./sov. Anna Rosaliina Kauno
san. Lauri-Matti Parppei
es. Anna Rosaliina Kauno

Tuntuu ettei tunnu miltään
säv./san. Lauri-Matti Parppei
sov. Lauri-Matti Parppei, Anna Rosaliina Kauno, Samuel Kujala, Camille Auer
es. ______________

Anna vanhojen unelmien kuolla II
säv. Lauri-Matti Parppei &
Orvokki Ottila
san./säv. Lauri-Matti Parppei
es. Kaisa-Leena Koskenkorva

Suomen majakat
säv./san. Lauri-Matti Parppei
sov. Lauri-Matti Parppei, Anna Rosaliina Kauno, Samuel Kujala, Camille Auer
es. ______________

Kiireellisiä viestejä ihmiskunnalta
säv. Lauri-Matti Parppei
sov. Lauri-Matti Parppei, Anna Rosaliina Kauno, Samuel Kujala, Camille Auer
es. ______________

Pauli hei
säv./san. Lauri-Matti Parppei
sov. Lauri-Matti Parppei, Kaisa Koskenkorva
es. Kaisa Koskenkorva

Lohduta mua
säv./san. Lauri-Matti Parppei
sov. Lauri-Matti Parppei, Anna Rosaliina Kauno, Samuel Kujala, Camille Auer
es. ______________

Monia vuosia / Many Years / Многая літа / Многая лета
säv. Dmitri Bortniansky / Дмитрий Бортнянский (1751–1825, Russian composer of Ukrainian Cossack origin)
san. tuntematon, sov. P. P. O.
es. Katarine Lehtomäki, Anita Osola, Eija Nurmio, Päivi Kasala, Kalevi Kasala, Markus Nikkanen, Petteri Hovi

Maurice Ravel: Sonate pour violon et violoncelle (1920) à la mémoire de Claude Debussy
M.73: III. Lent
säv. Maurice Ravel
es. Merimaija Aalto & Aino Juutilainen

Attachment Styles
säv. Lauri-Matti Parppei & Laura Jalava
san. Laura Jalava
es. Naamalau

The Body
säv. Lauri-Matti Parppei & Laura Jalava
san. Laura Jalava
es. Naamalau

...
L'ACID CANNES
15 MAY 2025

LA LUMIÈRE NE MEURT JAMAIS
Un film de Lauri-Matti Parppei
Finlande, Norvège – 2025 – 108 min

" Pauli, célèbre flûtiste classique, retourne dans sa petite ville natale pour se remettre d’une dépression. Il renoue avec une ancienne camarade de classe, qui lui propose de rejoindre un groupe de musique joyeusement anticonformiste. Comment Pauli, de nature plutôt perfectionniste, va t’il se laisser embarquer dans cette aventure musicale aussi inattendue qu’expérimentale ?

" Successful classical flutist Pauli (29) returns to his small hometown after a breakdown. Reconnecting with old schoolmate Iiris, he is drawn into experimental music. Pauli, who has always sought perfection, is drawn to her chaotic energy and finds comfort in their sonic experiments. "

À PROPOS DE LA LUMIÈRE NE MEURT JAMAIS
" Lauri-Matti Parppei, qui a enregistré plusieurs disques dans une vie parallèle, nous emmène dans sa ville natale, au sud de la Finlande, un endroit où l'on parle peu et surtout pas de dépression — le mal qui ronge Pauli, revenu chez ses parents le temps de panser ses blessures. Sous le signe de la mélancolie, le film, mis en scène de façon précise, sans chichis, tisse sa narration comme une partition musicale — Pauli rejette le succès, renaissant grâce à une chaotique bande de parias. "

" L'amitié, plus forte que tout, crée une musicalité, à l'unisson, elle scande ce retour à l'essentiel. Celles et ceux qui s'attendent à un film sombre seront surpris·es : La lumière ne meurt jamais est une comédie qui enchante par sa tonalité, son propos, son univers queer et ses dandys burlesques — mention spéciale aux deux acolytes de Pauli, aussi tordant·es qu'émouvant·es. "

" Ne sachant pas très bien quoi faire de son héritage, de sa bonne éducation, cette génération angoissée décide, au nom de la liberté, avec jubilation, de tout envoyer en l'air. Non, l'Art ne doit pas être muséifié, la beauté du geste et la ferveur du processus créatif importent plus que la reconnaissance : un premier film unique, qui ne met pas la musique en avant comme un résultat, mais comme un terrain d'expérimentation et une possibilité d'amitié. "

– Jan Gassmann, Benoît Sabatier et Pamela Varela, cinéastes de l'ACID

" Lauri-Matti Parppei, who has recorded several albums in a parallel life, takes us to their hometown in Northern Finland, a place where people speak little and depression is a taboo - this is Pauli's illness, as he returns home to heal his wounds. With a melancholic tone, the film, through its precise, no-frills directing style, weaves its story like a musical score. Pauli rejects success and returns to life thanks to a chaotic lineup of outcasts. "

" Friendship, stronger than anything, sets the tone, in unison, and rhythms Pauli's return to the basics. But if you're expecting a dark film, you might be surprised: A Light That Never Goes Out is a delightful comedy through its tone, its theme, its queer universe and its dandies- special mention to Pauli's two farcical buddies, both hilarious and moving. Not knowing what to do with its inheritance and its education, this anxious generation decides, in the name of freedom, to throw everything into the air with excitement. "

" No, Art should not be museumized; the craft and the enthusiasm of the creative process matter more than recognition. A Light That Never Goes Out is a singular first feature, which doesn't value music as an outcome but as a testing ground and a possibility of friendship. "

Jan Gassmann – Cinéaste
Benoît Sabatier – Cinéaste
Pamela Varela – Cinéaste

Paroles de cinéastes
À propos de LA LUMIÈRE NE MEURT JAMAIS

" Préparez-vous au grand départ pour le sud de la Finlande ! Son dialecte particulier, sa lumière d'une clarté et d'une netteté merveilleuse, ses parents taiseux et religieux, et ses jeunes loin des normes : vous allez voyager. Et surtout en prendre plein les oreilles. Car La Lumière ne meurt jamais nous immerge aux côtés d'un groupe de musique expérimentale, ou plutôt, selon eux, d'un collectif d'art sonore. "

" En suivant la naissance de l'amitié entre Pauli, jeune flutiste prodige mais dépressif et Iris, flamboyante musicienne à qui rien ne fait peur, ce premier film va nous sortir de la noirceur. On y découvrira qu'être amis c'est parfois juste faire des sons bizarres ensemble, que des chiens lumineux peuvent faire de fidèles compagnons et on saura enfin quel genre de musique font les écrous quand on les mixe (oui, oui dans un mixeur !). "
 
" Fourmillant d'idées, le film propose une approche extrêmement ludique du travail de la musique concrète, toutes les compositions du film ayant d'ailleurs été enregistrées sur le plateau pendant le tournage. Profondément punk, profondément libre, une vraie découverte. "

Arlène Groffe – Programmatrice du Ciné 104 à Pantin

...
OFFICIAL IN FINNISH:

“ Kui moni raumalainen on tehny levyn, mikä jonai päivänä lähetetään avaruuteen? 

"Romahduksen kokenut ammattihuilisti Pauli (Samuel Kujala) palaa lapsuudenkotiinsa Raumalle. Hän tapaa vanhan koulukaverinsa Iiriksen (Anna Rosaliina Kauno), joka sinnikkäästi taivuttelee Paulin mukaansa tekemään outoa musiikkia, jota kukaan ei tiennyt haluavansa kuulla. Aiemmin virheettömyyteen pyrkinyt Pauli alkaa löytää lohtua kummallisista äänistä ja omalaatuisesta ystävyydestä."

"Cannesin elokuvajuhlien ACID-sarjassa maailmanensi-iltansa saanut Jossain on valo joka ei sammu on Lauri-Matti Parppein anteeksipyytelemätön esikoisohjaus ja vilpitön rakkaudentunnustus kotikaupungilleen Raumalle."

OHJAAJAN SANA

"Jossain on valo joka ei sammu perustuu omiin kokemuksiini pienen kaupungin tee-se-itse-kulttuuripiireissä. Halusin tehdä elokuvan, joka on vimmainen, anteeksipyytelemätön ja toiveikas kuvaus oman äänen löytämisestä ja vaikeiden aikojen yli selviämisestä."

"Asuin nuoruuteni Raumalla ja teininä musiikilla, elokuvilla ja taiteella oli valtava merkitys. Olin yksinäinen ja koska muutakaan tekemistä ei ollut, aloin tehdä itsekseni musiikkia. Sen kautta tutustuin vähitellen ihmisiin, jotka olivat yhtä hukassa, mutta halusimme kaikki palavasti tehdä jotain omaa. Kun kukaan ei kiinnostunut musiikistamme, perustimme oman levy-yhtiön ja järjestimme itse keikkamme. Julkaisimme monta levyä, joita harva on kuullut ja vielä harvempi ostanut, ja yleensä keikoilla oli enemmän soittajia kuin yleisöä. Se ei haitannut: Emme osanneet haaveilla menestyksestä, sillä musiikin tekeminen itsessään antoi merkitystä olemassaololle ja keinon vaikuttaa ympäröivään todellisuuteemme. Ja meillä oli aina lähes yhtä hauskaa kuin elokuvan hahmoilla sitä tehdessä!"

"Musiikilla on tärkeä rooli myös elokuvassa. Elokuvassa ei ole lainkaan perinteistä taustamusiikkia, vaan näyttelijät esittivät kaiken musiikin elävänä kameran edessä. Halusin säveltää elokuvaan musiikkia, joka on samaan aikaan outoa ja lähestyttävää. Tärkeää oli, että erikoisten kokeilujen pitää näyttää hauskalta ja innostavalta. Elokuvan näyttelijöiden, myös musiikillisesti lahjakkaiden, Samuel Kujalan, Anna Rosaliina Kaunon, Camille Auerin ja Kaisa-Leena Koskenkorvan kanssa oli vaivatonta kuvata poikkeuksellisen aidon tuntuista ystävyyttä, joka rikkoo myös perinteisiä sukupuolirooleja ja -stereotypioita."

"Elokuva on kuvattu ja se sijoittuu pääosin Raumalle, noin 40 000 asukkaan pikkukaupunkiin, jolla on ainutlaatuinen huumori sekä vahva oma murre, tai tarkemmin sanottuna kieli, joka on yhä äidinkieleni. Pienellä paikkakunnalla tehty taide voi olla verrattoman merkityksellistä, sekä tekijöille itselleen, että koko yhteisölle heidän ympärillään. Lopputulosta tärkeämpää on tekemisen luoma yhteys ja ystävyys. Oman elämäni se pelasti, ja samoin se pelastaa myös Paulin, Iiriksen ja Sinin."

"Toivon, että Jossain on valo joka ei sammu on elokuva, jonka maailmassa kaikki saavat olla hetken sellaisia kuin ovat – ja toteuttaa itseään niin hulluilla tavoilla kuin vain osaavat ja uskaltavat. Elokuva, jonka äärellä voisi tuntea olevansa vähän vähemmän yksinäinen."

Tuesday, February 03, 2026

Anssi Sinnemäki: Kritiikkien kritiikki / [A Critique of Critiques] (an essay collection)

 
Anssi Sinnemäki: Kritiikkien kritiikki / [A Critique of Critiques] (FI 2025). Cover art from: Lyubov Popova: Архитектоника / Painterly Architectonic: Black, Red, Gray (1916), oil on canvas.

Anssi Sinnemäki : Kritiikkien kritiikki ja muita kritiikkejä / [A Critique of Critiques and Other Critiques]. 260 pages. Soft cover. ISBN: 978-952-411-096-9 (printed). ISBN: 978-952-411-097-6 (pdf). Helsinki : Kulttuurivihkot, 2025. Day of publication: 10 Oct 2025.

OFFICIAL:
"Anssi Sinnemäki on valpas lukija, joka löytää teosten piileviä piirteitä ja yllättäviä merkityksiä. Teoksen nimi perustuu kirjoitukseen ”Kritiikkien kritiikki, eli muistokirjoitus dynastialle”. Siinä pohditaan vasemmistokirjallisuuden etujoukon nousua ja hiipumista sodanjälkeisessä Suomessa.  Yli 60 vuotta kirjallisuuskritiikkiä harjoittaneen ja yhä aktiivisesti harjoittavan Sinnemäen näkökulma asettuu usein esteettisen ja ideologisen rajankäyntiin, kirjallisuuden ja politiikan kentän vuorovaikutukseen; pääpaino on kuitenkin esteettisessä arviossa. Kritiikin polttopisteessä ovat usein kaanon ja reseptio, kritiikin särmät ja sivuvaikutukset, ja mitä kritiikin kautta voi ilmaista, eikä vain ilmaista vaan myös saada aikaan, hyvässä ja pahassa."

"Anssi Sinnemäki on kirjailija ja filosofian maisteri, jonka ensimmäinen kirjallisuusjuttu ilmestyi Helsingin Sanomien ”Nuoressa Hesassa” keväällä 1964."

"Teoksen artikkeleista valtaosa käsittelee suomalaisia kirjailijoita Aleksis Kivestä Juha Seppälään ja Aulikki Oksaseen ja kotimaisia kriitikkoja Anna-Maria Tallgrenista Pekka Tarkkaan ja Helena Ruuskaan. Kriitikko saattaa pahimmillaan vaientaa kirjailijan, mutta Anna-Maria Tallgrenin tapaus kertoo siitä miten kriitikko vaiennetaan. Viimeisen osan painopiste on moraalikritiikissä ja kritiikin moraalissa, aivan viimeisenä kartoitus otsikolla ”Vielä kerran Alice Munro”."

"Kritiikki on oma instituutionsa kirjallisuuden kentässä. Kriitikon sananvalta on sidoksissa kentän voimasuhteisiin - ja kriitikon ammattitaitoon. Kritiikin ja kriitikon asema on jäänyt median kumouksen jalkoihin. Käytössä olevat foorumit ovat keskittyneet, huvenneet tai hukkuneet printtimedioiden lakkautuksen myötä verkon syövereihin. Kritiikin vapaus yhä ahtaammissa oloissa ei voi toteutua."

"Kritiikin kriisi on eksistentiaalinen. Yksi vastaus on ottaa käyttöön vanha kunnon julkaisualusta: painettu kirja, jonka kauniiden kansien välissä on hyödyllisellä ja huvittavalla tekstillä täytettyjä sivuja. Käyttäkää hyväksenne!" (official introduction)

AA: In Finnish and Swedish, like in French, German and Italian, there is no distinction between the words "critique" and "criticism". Anssi Sinnemäki's book is about literary criticism, but there is also a more general and profound dimension of critique.

Before reading, I thought that Sinnemäki's book might be a reflection on Tomas Forser's Kritik av kritiken [A Critique of Critique] (SE 2002), a modern classic of Nordic literary studies, theoretical textbook and thorough overview on the metamorphosis of literary criticism in 20th century Sweden (with excursions into Denmark and Norway). It is also an account of the downfall of criticism since the golden age of the 1960s through the 1980s.

In a way Sinnemäki's work is such a reflection, but the meaning of his title is more serious - that of a miscarriage of justice. A critic has power. Finnish literary history knows instances in which a critic has crushed a talented writer's work, including books that have since been recognized as the greatest classics. This can be a matter of life and death. With power comes responsibility. 

Sinnemäki has discussed these issues in all his books: Kapina rippituolissa (1989), Pyhät paikat (2007), Vastakirja, eli, miten lapset syövät vallankumouksensa (2011), Sota Kentästä ja kasarmista (2014), Trifonovin syndrooma (2017) and now Kritiikkien kritiikki.

Half of the book is devoted to the rehabilitation of a single critic, Anna-Maria Tallgren (1886-1949), grande dame, a bold and original talent with a cosmopolitan perspective and a special passion for French culture. In 1934 she edited her magnum opus, a Golden Book of French Literature, including many key writings in Finnish for the first time. Tallgren was not afraid to speak out about aesthetic blunders of men who were on their way to become pillars of the cultural establishment such as V. A. Koskenniemi and Huugo Jalkanen. With pioneering investigative research Sinnemäki shows how they and their networks carried out a revenge by blacklisting and cancelling Tallgren from her prominent position in Finnish culture. An open streak of misogyny is revealed. The injustice continues even after Tallgren's death. Her reputation in Finnish literature history, including her Wikipedia entry, is still stained by the wrath of the vengeful enemies.

A huge red thread in Sinnemäki's work is fatherlessness. His book The Trifonov Syndrome discusses the traumatic history of the Soviet Union through the family saga of the writer Yuri Trifonov (1925-1981), whose Old Bolshevik and Red Army veteran father was murdered in Stalin's purges in the 1930s. His mother survived the Gulag. In that book, Sinnemäki also offers an extraordinary encyclopedia of fatherlessness among writers. I have never read anything like this in any language. Sinnemäki is exploring an immensely rich and rewarding territory.

In A Critique of Critiques, Sinnemäki returns to a favourite writer of his, Paavo Rintala (1930-1999), whose father died in the Winter War, this time via one of his "critiques of critiques", of Juha Seppälä's book Reading Rintala. Both critics focus on a key long story, "Eino", with new interpretations. The theme of fatherlessness deepens again. Seppälä and Rintala bonded in a way in which Sinnemäki sees Seppälä turning into a surrogate son for Rintala.

In two essays, Sinnemäki contributes to a self-criticism of Finland's leftist intelligentsia in the 1930s and the 1970s. These are valid and important texts, and I hope the debate continues because I would look forward to a "high angle" perspective for a bigger picture.

The final essay is "Farewell to Alice Munro". Finns have been fond of Alice Munro since the early 1980s, and many critics, including Sinnemäki, have written perspicaciously about her. 

When Munro died in 2024, her youngest daughter Andrea Skinner revealed that her stepfather Gerald Fremlin had sexually abused her for years ever since she was nine. Having learned about the abuse, Munro separated from Fremlin for a while but then returned, and the abuse went on. The condition was known to many, including Munro's biographers, but kept secret.

The 2024 revelation was a lethal blow to the reputation of Munro, the Nobel laureate. Her books are avoided now, people remove them from shelves, her name is seldom mentioned. Sinnemäki shares the distaste.

I'm thinking about Marcel Proust's Contre Sainte-Beuve. For the mighty French critic Charles Augustin Sainte-Beuve (1804-1869), the writer equals the work. Sainte-Beuve would have cancelled Alice Munro.

For Marcel Proust, the writer is a different "I" than the dandy who carouses in the nightlife of Paris. Proust would have embraced Alice Munro, her "I" as the writer. Art must be evaluated as art and biography as biography, both separate. This is also the lineage of New Criticism. 

My opinion is that Alice Munro's biographies need to be revised with the new devastating knowledge. Sexual abuse in families is more common than publicly acknowledged. Discussion about it is desperately needed. A prominent case helps spread awareness. But the artistic value of Munro's work remains unchanged.

The best of us can be the worst.

Friday, January 30, 2026

Hamnet


Chloé Zhao: Hamnet (US/GB 2025) with Jessie Buckley (Agnes) and Paul Mescal (Will, William Shakespeare).

Chloé Zhao: Hamnet (US/GB 2025). "The rest is silence". The audience of the Globe Theatre reaches out to the dying prince. The woman in the middle is Agnes Shakespeare (Jessie Buckley).

Hamnet (title in Finland) / Hamnet (title in Sweden).
    Fiche technique (Wikipédia): 
US/GB © 2025 Focus Features LLC.
Sociétés de production : Amblin Entertainment, Hera Pictures, Neal Street Productions et Book of Shadows. Production : Pippa Harris, Liza Marshall, Sam Mendes et Steven Spielberg. Production déléguée : Laurie Borg, Nicolas Gonda et Kristie Macosko Krieger.
Réalisation : Chloé Zhao
Scénario : Maggie O'Farrell et Chloé Zhao, d'après le roman Hamnet de Maggie O'Farrell
Photographie : Łukasz Żal. Format : couleur.
Décors : Fiona Crombie
Costumes : Malgosia Turzanska
Musique : Max Richter
Montage : Chloé Zhao
    Cast (Wikipedia):
Jessie Buckley as Agnes Shakespeare, William's wife
Faith Delaney as young Agnes
Paul Mescal as William Shakespeare, Agnes' husband
Emily Watson as Mary Shakespeare, William's mother
Joe Alwyn as Bartholomew Hathaway, Agnes' brother
Smylie Bradwell as young Bartholomew
Jacobi Jupe as Hamnet Shakespeare, William & Agnes' son & Judith's twin
Olivia Lynes as Judith Shakespeare, William & Agnes' younger daughter & Hamnet's twin
Justine Mitchell as Joan Hathaway, Agnes' stepmother
David Wilmot as John Shakespeare, William's father
Bodhi Rae Breathnach as Susanna Shakespeare, William & Agnes' older daughter
Freya Hannan-Mills as Eliza Shakespeare, William's sister (based on Joan)
James Skinner as Gilbert Shakespeare, William's younger brother
Elliot Baxter as Richard Shakespeare, William's younger brother
Dainton Anderson as Edmond Shakespeare, William's youngest brother
Louisa Harland as Rowan Hathaway, Agnes' mother
Noah Jupe as the actor who plays Hamlet in Hamlet
Raphael Goold as the actor who plays Horatio in Hamlet
Shaun Mason as the actor who plays Claudius in Hamlet
Matthew Tennyson as the actor who plays Gertrude in Hamlet
El Simons as the actor who plays Ophelia in Hamlet
Clay Milner Russell as the actor who plays Laertes in Hamlet
Sam Woolf as the actor who plays Bernardo in Hamlet
Hera Gibson as the actor who plays Francisco in Hamlet
Jack Shalloo as the actor who plays Marcellus in Hamlet
Javier Marzan as the actor who plays The Fool in Hamlet
Zac Wishart as Joan's older son, Agnes' stepbrother
James Lintern as Joan's younger son, Agnes' stepbrother
Eva Wishart as Joan's older daughter, Agnes' stepsister
Effie Linnen as Joan's younger daughter, Agnes' stepsister
Laura Guest as a midwife
John Mackay as a Edward Woolmer, the local priest
Albert McCormick as Boy in window
Eliah Arnstjerna as Drum player
Edward Anderson as Flute player
    Durée : 125 minutes
    Langue originale : anglais
    Genre : drame
    Sociétés de distribution : Focus Features (États-Unis), Universal Pictures (international)
    Dates de sortie :
États-Unis : 29 août 2025 (festival de Telluride) ; 28 novembre 2025 (sortie limitée) ; 9 janvier 2026 (sortie nationale)
Canada : septembre 2025 (festival de Toronto)
France : 21 janvier 2026
Finland: 30 January 2026 - distributor: Finnkino Oy - Finnish / Swedish subtitles Minna Franssila / Frej Grönholm
Viewed at Tennispalatsi Luxe 6, Salomonkatu 15, 00100 Helsinki, 30 Jan 2026

Telluride Film Festival 29 Aug 2025: Made possible by a donation from Daniel & Mary James. Bilge Ebiri: "Chloé Zhao’s adaptation of Maggie O’Farrell’s award-winning, enormously moving 2020 novel about the death of William Shakespeare’s only son is a story of devastating loss and transference in the age of plague. Will (Paul Mescal) is a daydreaming tutor on the verge of becoming the greatest playwright of the English language, and Agnes (Jessie Buckley, who is the soul of the film) is a spirited, independent-minded mother experiencing the deepest of suffering. Much has been surmised about Shakespeare’s life and family, and the death of 11-year-old Hamnet not long before the writing of Hamlet has always been particularly ripe for speculation. Zhao (from a screenplay she wrote with O’Farrell herself) finds in the text of the play raw traces of all-consuming sorrow, shame, and guilt. HAMNET offers a vision of how Shakespeare, a romantic with sharpening ambition, created art in the face of all-consuming tragedy. And it provides a vital and necessary new reading of his greatest work." –BE (U.K., 2025, 125m) In person: Chloé Zhao, Jessie Buckley, Paul Mescal

AA: Chloé Zhao's Hamnet is a film of quality, a heritage film and a prestige film in the same current as Shakespeare in Love (GB/US 1998) produced by Miramax starring Joseph Fiennes and Gwyneth Paltrow, which tells a different love story than this imagined account of William Shakespeare's family and children.

The stars are great: Jessie Buckley as Agnes (Anne) and Paul Mescal as Will, as well as the rest of the cast. The production values are of the highest order. Hamnet is superb entertainment.

A pantheistic sense of nature prevails in the beginning, focusing on Agnes the forest witch. Opposites attract: the illiterate Agnes and the greatest master of the English language feel an irresistible attraction. They are made for each other. Their love is both passionately physical and transcendentally spiritual. Their kind of love is familiar from A Midsummer Night's Dream. As a Finn I recognize the connection between forest magic and language magic. And sexual magic. A woman makes a man. When Agnes grips Will's shakespeare, the poet is born. Sex and wit are interconnected.

Agnes and Will pursue their love affair in defiance of their respective families like Romeo and Juliet.

Maggie O'Farrell and Chloé Zhao approach Hamlet as a case of Trauerarbeit for William and Agnes coming to terms with the death of their son Hamnet. William takes the stage as the ghost of Hamlet's father, and Hamlet becomes a surrogate for Hamnet. This fictional-biographical approach is bold and unusual. 

The core mystery, which has puzzled generations of interpreters and made Hamlet the play of plays, is sidelined. Why is Hamlet mysteriously incapacitated (to the point of madness) when his mother weds the killer of his father? 

In January I have engaged with the theme of fatherlessness in Kullervo and the work of Anssi Sinnemäki. Hamlet the play is a classic of that theme, Hamnet the movie introduces an alternative dynamics.

The film ends with marvellous scenes about the construction of the Globe Theatre and the premiere of Hamlet. Hamlet dies on the proscenium, and Agnes touches his hand like she touches William. The entire audience, deeply moved, reaches out.

Chloé Zhao evoked Shakespeare already in Nomadland, in which Fern (Frances McDormand) recites his sonnets and Macbeth's monologues.

Nomadland is for me one of the greatest movies of the century. Chloé Zhao revisited the Western genre, merged it with the modernist legacy of existential alienation and energized it in contemporary context, complete with Amazon storage halls. 

In Hamnet she is the perfect professional, but I miss her unique energy and originality.

Friday, January 23, 2026

Marty Supreme


Josh Safdie: Marty Supreme (US 2025). Timothée Chalamet as Marty Mauser. What makes Marty run?

Marty Supreme - unelmoi isosti / Marty Supreme (title in Sweden)
    Fiche technique (Wikipédia):
US © 2025 ITTF.
Sociétés de production : A24, Elara Pictures et IPR.VC
Sociétés de distribution : A24 (États-Unis), Metropolitan Filmexport (France)
Production : Ronald Bronstein, Eli Bush, Timothée Chalamet, Anthony Katagas et Josh Safdie
Coproduction : Samson Jacobson et John Paul Lopez-Ali
Réalisation : Josh Safdie
Scénario : Josh Safdie et Ronald Bronstein
Photographie : Darius Khondji
Décors : Jack Fisk
Costumes : Miyako Bellizzi
Musique : Daniel Lopatin
Montage : Ronald Bronstein
    Cast from Wikipedia:
Timothée Chalamet as Marty Mauser, an aspiring table tennis champion, fiercely determined to be the best in the sport. The character is loosely based on real-life table tennis player Marty Reisman.
Gwyneth Paltrow as Kay Stone, a wealthy, retired actress and socialite who forms a sexual relationship with Marty.
Odessa A'zion as Rachel Mizler, a married, childhood friend of Marty who is having an affair with him.
Kevin O'Leary as Milton Rockwell, an influential businessman and Kay's husband who takes interest in Marty and table tennis.
Tyler, the Creator as Wally, a taxi-driver and Marty's friend, also skilled at table tennis.
Abel Ferrara as Ezra Mishkin, a criminal that Marty crosses paths with.
Fran Drescher as Rebecca Mauser, Marty's mother.
Luke Manley as Dion Galanis, Marty's friend who lives with his parents.
Emory Cohen as Ira Mizler, Rachel's husband.
Larry "Ratso" Sloman as Murray Norkin, Marty's uncle and shoe shop owner.
Ralph Colucci as Lloyd, Marty's coworker at the shoe shop.
Géza Röhrig as Bela Kletzki, a Holocaust survivor and table tennis champion representing Hungary. The character is loosely based on real-life table tennis player Alojzy Ehrlich.
Koto Kawaguchi as Koto Endo, a deaf table tennis champion representing Japan. The character is partially inspired by Kawaguchi himself and partially by real-life table tennis player Hiroji Satoh.
Pico Iyer as Ram Sethi, the head of the International Table Tennis Association.
John Catsimatidis as Christopher Galanis, a businessman and Dion's father.
Sandra Bernhard as Judy, Marty's neighbor who lives downstairs.
George Gervin as Lawrence, a table tennis club owner.
Ted Williams as Ted, a worker at Lawrence's table tennis club.
Penn Jillette as Hoff, a farmer in New Jersey.
Isaac Mizrahi as Merle, a publicist working with Kay.
David Mamet as Glenn Nordmann, a stage director working with Kay.
Fred Hechinger as Troy, a stage actor working with Kay.
Spenser Granese as Clark, a man who gets hustled by Marty and Wally.
Levon Hawke as Christian, a man who gets hustled by Marty and Wally.
Isaac Simon as Roger, a man who gets hustled by Marty and Wally.
Hailey Gates as Trish, Roger's girlfriend.
Mitchell Wenig as Mitch, Ezra's henchman.
Mariann Tepedino as Mariann, a shoe store customer.
Philippe Petit as a Brussels MC.
Tracy McGrady as a Globetrotter.
Kemba Walker as a Globetrotter.
Naomi Fry as an assistant to Kay Stone.
Ronald Bronstein as the voice of Blarney Stone Phone.
Ray Tintori as a Wembley cameraman.
Paul Grimstad as a theatre production manager.
Robert Pattinson as the voice of the British umpire at the tournament. (uncredited)
    Music Credits
    The 1980s
Change - Tears For Fears
Forever Young - Alphaville
I Have The Touch - Peter Gabriel
Everybody's Got To Learn Sometime (Alternate Version) - The Korgis
The Order Of Death - Public Image Ltd.
The Perfect Kiss - New Order
Everybody Wants To Rule The World - Tears For Fears
    The 1950s
Carnival Day - Dave Bartholomew
How High The Moon - Les Paul & Mary Ford
Walk That Mess - Tiny Bradshaw
Don't Let The Stars Get In Your Eyes - Perry Como
The Fat Man - Fats Domino
As Summer Turns To Fall - The Jubalaires
Rock, Daddy, Rock - Big Bertha Henderson with Al Smith Orchestra
Belle Reve - Alex North & Ray Heindorf
Rile's Wiles - Paul Sikivie
My Song - Johnny Ace, The Beale Streeters
    Other
Piano Sonata No. 17 - Jeno Jandó (Beethoven)
Novus Pt. 2: The Flying Bach - Daniel Lopatin (written by Constance Demby)
American Fantasie - Victor Herbert's Orchestra
Twinkle Twinkle Little Star - Traditional
Toukyou Bugiugi AKA Tokyo Boogie Woogie
Hiroshi No Sakura Ondo - Hirohi Itsuki
    Loc: New Jersey.
    Langue originale : anglais
    Budget : 70 millions de dollars
    Genre : comédie dramatique, sport
    Durée : 149 minutes
    Dates de sortie :
États-Unis : 6 octobre 2025 (festival de New York)
États-Unis : 25 décembre 2025
France : 18 février 2026
Finland: 23 Jan 2026 - released by Nordisk Film - Finnish / Swedish subtitles by Charlotte Elo
Viewed at Tennispalatsi 2, Salomonkatu 15, 00100 Helsinki, 23 Jan 2026

AA: Josh Safdie's Marty Supreme is a study in chutzpah. The rags to riches story belongs to the lineage of What Makes Sammy Run? (Budd Schulberg, 1941) and The Apprenticeship of Duddy Kravitz (Mordecai Richler, 1959). Timothée Chalamet breaks new ground on his Laufbahn (career) as the obnoxious antihero Marty Mauser who lies and cheats his way to the top while his unique talent in table tennis is unquestionable. The games are thrillingly photographed in wide shots by maestro Darius Khondji who records the cartoonish chase sequences in extreme close-up with a handheld camera. 

Flight is the essence: breaking free from restraints to talent, from the shadows of the past, from responsibility in relationships and from furious debt collectors of mounting hotel bills. Marty has relationships with two married women and makes both pregnant, evading consequences until he cannot anymore. 

An undercurrent is antisemitism, and daringly (a bit like Ernst Lubitsch) Safdie flaunts the negative characteristics of his villainous Jewish protagonist. The beehive flashback involving Bela Kletzki (Géza Röhrig) is an unusual contribution to Auschwitz lore. Marty is twice exposed to public humiliation: in a vicious spanking by Milton Rockwell and a threat of having to kiss a pig in front of the Tokyo exhibition match audience.

A glamorous counterpart to the rough-skinned Marty Mauser is Kay Stone (Gwyneth Paltrow), the trophy wife of Milton Rockwell (Kevin O'Leary), the mighty businessman and cuckolded husband. We get glimpses of Kay's solitude and desolation in the gilded cage.

In the final sequence Marty seems to be on the brink of redemption as he holds in awe his newborn baby. Safdie connects here with a cinematic tradition of villains redeemed by a baby from Charles Chaplin's The Kid and John Ford's The Three Godfathers to Coline Serreau's Trois hommes et un couffin. 

Marty Supreme offends, disturbs and defies clichés. It is powered by unique energy. A film you might love to hate.

Saturday, January 17, 2026

Kenraaliharjoitus / Sudden Outbursts of Emotions


Paula Korva: Kenraaliharjoitus / Sudden Outbursts of Emotion (FI 2025) with Iina Kuustonen (Jane), Riku Nieminen (Mikki) and Laura Malmivaara.

Sudden Outbursts of Emotions (title in Sweden).
    FI © 2025 Yellow Film & TV Oy. P: Marko Talli. EX: Olli Haikka, Jorma Leinilä.
    D+SC: Paula Korva. Based on the novel (2019) by Anna-Leena Härkönen. Dramaturge: Daniela Hakulinen. Script advisor: Petja Peltomaa. Plays rehearsed: Anton Chekhov: "The Seagull" and Minna Canth: "Anna Liisa". DP: Teppo Högman. AD: Outi Kallio. Cost: Kaisa Pohjola. Makeup: Jenni Aejmelaeus-Pyysing. M: Ville Tanttu. Soundtrack: Antti Autio: "Tuhansien öitten läpi" and "Kaikki hyvin". J. S. Bach: "Suite für Violoncello solo Nr. 1 G-Dur BWV 1007 Prélude c G-Dur" and "Air aus der 3. Orchestersuite D-Dur BWV 1068" arr. Ville Tanttu. S: Juha Hakanen. ED: Jyrki Levä. Intimacy coordinator: Sara-Maria Heinonen. Casting: Pigga Filenius.
    CAST:
Iina Kuustonen  Jane
Riku Nieminen  Mikki
Laura Malmivaara  Valma
Minka Kuustonen  Karo
Jasir Osman  Marko
Marc Gassot  Arttu
Lauri Maijala  Saku
Lilja Vainio  Pihla
Anni Porspakka  Milla
Daniel Virtanen  Aki
Sofia Voltti  Petja
Ville Mustonen  teatteriohjaaja
Birgitta Taussi  Oliverin äiti
Anna-Leena Härkönen  Sarita
Ilari Johansson  lautturi
Pyry Nikkilä  isäntä
Markku Haussila  joogi
Arttu Kapulainen  Erkki
Cécile Orblin  Beatrice
Sara Ritala  Anni
Hanna Liinoja  Anneli
Esa Anttila  Raimo
Miro Laiho  järjestäjä
Eevi Lappalainen  Pihlan ystävä
Tristan Hughes  Oliverin isä
Jaden Defour  Oliver
Janne Lesonen  Atte
Aino Sirje  Didi
Katariina Pasanen  orgiatyöpajaan osallistuja
Gaia Saarinen  morsiuskaupan myyjä
Yaoandy Jimeno  juhlija
Yannick Julie  panohenkilö
Jarno Kovamäki  vahtimestari
Mikko Lauronen  Valman ystävä #1
Katy Suutari  Valman ystävä #2
Sam Jammeh  Valman ystävä #3
Veera Kaukola  ravintolan baarimikko
Tanja Heinänen  Niina
Youssef Asad Alkhatib  karonkkabaarin baarimikko
Tatu Arminen  Jare
Sami Huhtala  poke
Heidi Hilpinen  matkatoimiston työntekijä
    97 min
    Loc: Helsinki: Makasiinipuisto, Savoy-Teatteri, Helsinki archipelago, Skiffer, Siltavuorenranta, Hietalahti Beach
    Genre: comedy
    Premiere: 7 March 2025 - distributor: Nelonen Media.
    Viewed on Ruutu+ at home, 17 Jan 2025.

Literal translation of the film's title Kenraaliharjoitus = Dress Rehearsal.

OFFICIAL SYNOPSIS:

"Kenraaliharjoitus on raikas romanttinen komedia pariskunnasta, joka suhdekriisissään päättää alkaa tapailla muita ihmisiä. Päärooleissa loistavat Iina Kuustonen, Laura Malmivaara ja Riku Nieminen."

"Jane on matkatoimistovirkailija, joka työssään myy muille seikkailuja, mutta omassa elämässään jumittaa turvallisissa rutiineissaan. Hänen puolisonsa Mikki on näyttelijä, joka kamppailee uransa kanssa. Jane uskoo suhteen olevan onnellinen — kunnes Mikki pudottaa pommin ja ehdottaa suhteen avaamista. Vierailu trendikkäissä, seksipositiivisissa bileissä saa kuitenkin Janen katsomaan asioita uusin silmin, eikä ajatus avoimesta suhteesta tunnukaan enää niin pelottavalta. Uusien ihmisten myötä pintaan nousee kuitenkin myös yllättäviä tunteita, eikä vapautuminen vanhoista kaavoista olekaan niin helppoa kuin Jane kuvitteli."
 
"Paula Korvan hurmaava esikoisohjaus kuplii energiaa ja haastaa romanttisen komedian totutut kaavat. Elokuva pohjautuu Anna-Leena Härkösen samannimiseen romaaniin."

AA: Kenraaliharjoitus is Paula Korva's debut as a director of a theatrical feature film, following a run of short films and television series. Based on the novel by Anna-Leena Härkönen, Kenraaliharjoitus is a satire of modern love, beautifully shot by Teppo Högman in summertime Helsinki.

Open marriage and open relationships are the trendy topic, recently also covered by Selma Vilhunen in Neljä pientä aikuista / Four Little Adults (FI 2023). The protagonists are 40-50 years old, facing a turning-point in their relationships and a precariousness in the job market, at its harshest in the freelancer cultural sector. Those with children meet different challenges. I learn about "a brutal cancel culture" towards transgressors in families with children.

To save their long-term relationship, Jane (Iina Kuustonen) consents to visit with her companion Mikki (Riku Nieminen) the Isle of Lust in the Helsinki archipelago, a sex happening complete with orgy workshops and panohuoneet (banging rooms). All is under control, no alcohol is allowed, mobile phones are confiscated, and rules of consent are strict to the point of hilariousness.

Paula Korva navigates tactfully between registers of spoof (including Eyes Wide Shut references) and honest curiosity. Comfort zones are challenged. The main source of comedy is a studied casualness in weird situations. 

In the orgy workshop, Valma (Laura Malmivaara) is like a hawk stealing on the prey. It is a startling performance of the female gaze, the lady as the hunter. A butch / femme charge emerges between Valma and Jane. 

Finally the experiments boil down to observations such as "listen to yourself and your own needs" and "focus on yourself". On 8 November 2025 there was a cover story in The Economist about "the relationship recession": there are less marriages than ever, less relationships than ever, less sex than ever, and less children than ever. Reportedly 25% of Americans have relationships with robots. We love ourselves and machines. Good luck.

Satirical targets include conceit in the academia. Markers of distinction are flaunted, but is there anything beyond? Again I notice that there is no English term for Bildung, in Finnish sivistys. You can have high education and little Bildung.

Iina Kuustonen is fantastic as the protagonist Jane. A great comedienne with a quick wit and perfect timing, she keeps getting better. It is good to see her with her sister Minka Kuustonen in their first movie together. The anthology piece is Jane's drunken sequence. Her preposterous comments escalate into a long laugh-out-loud fest. Laughter prolongs life.