We rely on this for all of our information even if it's not real. "If I came into your home and burned all your books, you could just download them. "I was working with this script back in January 2016, and a lot of it had to do with the internet and this supercomputer in your hand that you're constantly recording on," Bahrani told Newsweek at the Fahrenheit 451 premiere recently. In the new HBO film though, it's the power of the internet and social media that keeps society trapped. In the book, television is the authoritarian government's main way to keep civilians distracted. More than book burning, the HBO's movie, co-written and directed by Ramin Bahrani, depicts a world where free thought and independent thinking are discouraged. Firemen, like Montag, spend their days actually starting fires instead of putting them out. Jordan as Bradbury's protagonist, Fireman Guy Montag, is set in a dystopian city where books are illegal. Movie Review: Class and Race and Drag and Murder in the D.R.HBO will premiere it's highly anticipated adaptation of Ray Bradbury's 1953 book, Fahrenheit 451Saturday.Movie Preview: Willa, Dermot and Shane and Chevelles - If the Stereotypes Fit, it must be “The Dirty South”. Movie Preview: Costner finally makes his “How the West Was Won” - a Two Part Western Epic, “Horizon: An American Saga”.Movie Review: WWII Hungarians in the USSR contend with partisans and atrocities in the grey “Natural Light”.Netflixable? Vengeance in Pointe Shoe Pixie Form - “Ballerina”.Krieps makes her journey into this open wound not just intriguing, but heartbreaking. And it’s entirely possible that “guilt” figures into Clarisse’s manic grief. Something was irretrievably broken and lost. Whatever is going on with this woman, we fear for her even if empathy is slower coming. Krieps cagily gives her an air of self-absorption that we wonder might be self-preservation. “Hold Me Tight” (“Serre moi fort”) hangs on our engagement in the mystery, and our empathy for Clarisse. We glimpse flashbacks to how Clarisse and Marc met, and follow the children’s lives into their teens.Īnd all along the way, Amalric immerses us in the madness of regret and the futile search for explanations and “closure.” Lives have been disrupted, if not rent apart.Īmalric keeps his story’s secrets as long as possible, dropping hints and revelations here and there. At a local bar, she is a talkative, clingy tippler whose erratic behavior - drunkenly hugging strange men, wandering up a snowy mountain, burying her face in ice at the fresh seafood market - merits stares and “Are you OK, Ma’am?” questions.Īnd back home, her son is crawling into a bubble bath in his favorite spaceman costume, his tweenage sister pulling him away from their father since she alone can comfort him. She is a translator, and flips out at a father correcting his son’s behavior in the middle of a port town tour. Whatever is going on with that family - “You made Mom run away!” and “You BROKE Mom!” are accusations thrown around (in French with English subtitles) - Clarisse is sending signals that point to everything from “flaked out” and “drunk” to “manic” and “certifiable.” And we see life go on for the family she’s apparently left behind for whatever journey she is impulsively taking - piano practice, meals, work and homework. We follow Mom down the road to a friend’s service station, and beyond. The complaints and excuses include “I want Mom to make me hot chocolate!” What that “something” is only becomes clear after we’ve been wholly-engaged and drawn into this sad saga, a film that doles out its clues in tiny doses, leaving some things a mystery which the viewer can only speculate on, further enriching the experience.Ī woman ( Vicky Krieps of “The Last Vermeer,” “The Girl in the Spider’s Web” and “Phantom Thread”) fumes over Polaroids of her family and then purposefully storms out the door, driving away in an ancient AMC Pacer.Ī husband and father ( Arieh Worthalter of “The Take” and “Girl”) nags his kids ( Anne-Sophie Bowen-Chatet and Sacha Ardilly) to get ready for school. Adapting a play by Claudine Galea, actor-turned-director Mathieu Amalric (“The Diving Bell and the Butterfly”) finds exquisite melancholy in a story of a family that’s been shattered by something. “Hold Me Tight” is a beautifully mysterious French tale of grief, guilt, regret and madness.
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