My reviews from the latest issue of The American Conservative (now available to electronic subscribers). Excerpts:
In  this age of family break-up, the theme of separated fathers and sons underlies  the summer's sci-fi popcorn movies, such as "War of the Worlds,"  "Batman Begins," and "Revenge of the Sith." It also drives  two of the season's quieter releases for grown-ups, "Broken Flowers"  with Bill Murray and "The Beautiful Country" with Nick Nolte.
Opening July 8th, "The Beautiful Country"  is, indeed, a beautifully-filmed story about the Vietnamese son of an American  GI. Because he's Amerasian, everyone in Vietnam mistreats him because they think  he's ugly. You'll have to take that on faith, however, because the director (who  is, oddly enough, Norwegian) couldn't find a Eurasian actor. The pure Vietnamese  fellow he hired, Damien Nguyen, looks like all the other Vietnamese who are  scorning him for his mixed features. "Colorblind casting" might work  in theatre, but in film you have to get race right, especially when your movie  is about heredity...
In "Broken Flowers," which opens August 5th,  veteran minimalist auteur Jim Jarmusch has his most commercially promising film. 
With 1984's "Stranger than Paradise," Jarmusch began making  glacially-paced exercises in sensory deprivation that bored you into the  giggles. The highlight of "Stranger" was watching two dullards on a  midwinter visit to Cleveland try, and fail, to figure out something to do. Go  look at the frozen Lake Erie? Their lapses into hopeless silence lowered your  resistance enough that when Eddie eventually dredged up the suggestion that  maybe they could take in a Cavalier's NBA game, and Willie scornfully replied  "The Cavs? They're like one and fifty!" well, just by contrast this  dialogue seemed almost as brilliant as Captain Renault's "Round up the  usual suspects" at the climax of "Casablanca."
"Broken Flowers," though, has a more elaborate and conventional plot.  Murray plays an aging and depressive Don Juan named Don Johnston, whose latest  girlfriend leaves him because he's uninterested in marriage and children, and,  frankly, a bit of a blank. But then Murray receives an anonymous letter on pink  stationery from an old flame revealing that after they broke up in the 1980s,  she bore his son, and the young man has now gone on the road in search of his  father.
My published articles are archived at iSteve.com -- Steve Sailer
 
 
 
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