February 03, 2010

NEW YORK, I LOVE YOU

Udah lama aku pingin nonton film ini ... tapi baru kesampean, padahal udah ± sebulan main di blitz-blitz ...
Walopun temenku kurang suka nonton film NEW YORK, I LOVE YOU ini ... tapi dia cukup baik ... kenapa aku bilang cukup baik ... karena dia gak complaint sama sekali sampe film habis (ato males debat kali' yah??????) ... he he he ...

Film Reviews
New York, I Love You -- Film Review
By Erica Abeel, October 05, 2009 04:59 ET

Bottom Line: This collage of vignettes breathes life into New York's edgy lovers.

"New York, I Love You" continues the "Cities of Love" series that began with "Paris je t'aime," far surpassing it. Although a few of the film's 10 vignettes fail to coalesce within their allotted eight minutes, and the inevitable final twist becomes predictable, most of these linked "shorts" succeed remarkably in nailing the serendipitous flavor of love, New York-style.

At the same time, the ensemble of stories is knitted together by clever transitions or reappearing characters, forming an innovative multipaneled portrait. The art house crowd should cotton to the omnibus form and a tone ranging from street-smart to wistful.

The helmers -- an eclectic group ranging from Mira Nair to Yvan Attal to Brett Ratner -- were bound by a few rules: They had only 24 hours to shoot, a week to edit and needed to give the sense of a particular neighborhood. Perhaps these strictures have contributed to the film's breathless style, which adds to the sense of a city in overdrive.

Although the filmmakers hail from all over, the Gotham conveyed here, curiously, is predominantly young, mainly south of 14th Street, cold and rainy and populated with nervous types in leather itching to step outside for a smoke.

Two of the strongest stories come from French director Attal. As a romantic pitchman, Ethan Hawke plies with dirty talk an attractive Asian woman (Maggie Q.) on the curb outside a SoHo restaurant. But a wicked reversal suggests she might be better at his game than he is.

A second New York moment again finds a man (Chris Cooper) and a woman (Robin Wright Penn) sucking in the nicotine, but this time the woman is hitting on the man. "You know what I always like about New York?" she muses, encapsulating the film's theme. "These little moments on the sidewalk, smoking and thinking about your life. ... Sometimes you meet someone you feel like you can talk to." On their return to the restaurant, their shared secret is revealed.

In a punchy if vulgar tale by Ratner, James Caan as a pharmacist suckers a young naif into taking his disabled daughter to the prom. Things are never what they seem in these stories, including, in this case, the daughter's agenda.

Shekhar Kapur directs a haunting vignette suffused with sadness, with Julie Christie as a former diva installed in a New York hotel, where she's drawn to the lame Russian bellhop (Shia LaBeouf).

Along with the pungent sketches come a few duds: a Mira Nair-helmed encounter between Hassid Natalie Portman and a Jain diamond dealer (for this, Portman needn't have shaved her head); Orlando Bloom as a frantic musician on deadline somewhere grungy on the Upper West Side; and Andy Garcia matching wits with Hayden Christensen in a flaccid love triangle.

But any misses are redeemed by a touching and humorous final vignette by Joshua Marston, with Eli Wallach and Cloris Leachman as an aged couple making their own style of love in a town that belongs to the young.

"New York" opens a romantic window into the city via a sort of filmmakers' cooperative. The vignettes are tied together into a single feature through a "recurrent character," a videographer who interacts with the other characters. And transitional elements -- choreographed by 11th director Randy Balsmeyer -- move the viewer from one world to another, uniting all these intimate stories into a single shimmering fabric.

Opens: Friday, Oct. 16 (Vivendi Entertainment)

Production: An Emmanuel Benbihy and Marina Grasic production in association with Sherezade Films, Benaroya Picture, Grosvenor Park Media, Ever So Close Visitor Pictures Plum Pictures and Grand Army Entertainment
Cast: Drea De Matteo, Bradley Cooper, Julie Christie, John Hurt, Shia LaBeouf, Carlos Acosta, Jacinda Barrett, Natalie Portman, Shu Qi, Eli Wallach, Cloris Leachman, Orlando Bloom, Andy Garcia, Hayden Christensen, Ethan Hawke, Anton Yelchin, James Caan, Olivia Thirlby, Robin Wright Penn, Chris Cooper
Directors: Mira Nair, Jiang Wen, Shunji Iwai, Yvan Attal, Brett Ratner, Allen Hughes, Shekhar Kapur, Natalie Portman, Fatih Akin, Joshua Marston, Randy Balsmeyer
Screenwriters: Hu Hong, Meng Yao, Suketu Mehta, Shunji Iwai, Olivier Lecot, Yvan Attal, Jeff Nathanson, Xan Cassavetes, Anthony Minghella, Natalie Portman, Fatih Akin, Joshua Marston
Executive producers: Michael Benaroya, Glenn Stewart, Marianne Maddalena, Taylor Kephart, Claus Clausen, Pamela Hirsch, Celine Rattray
Directors of photography: Mark Lee Ping Bing, Declan Quinn, Michael McDonough, Benoit Debie, Pawel Edelman, Jean-Louis Boompoint, Mauricio Rubinstein, Andrij Parekh
Production designer: Teresa Mastropierro
Music: Jack Livesey, Peter Nashel
Costume designer: Victoria Farrell
Editor: Affonso Goncalves
Rated R, 110 minutes

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