Crossposted on Film.com 
This past week in Los Angeles, AFI threw it’s 25th film festival,  presented by Audi, taking over the Chinese and Egyptian theaters on  Hollywood Blvd. The films screened were divided into nine categories.  Galas & Tributes, Special Screenings, Guest Artistic Director,  Spotlight and Midnight were ineligible for awards, while World Cinema,  Young Americans, and Breakthough all had an Audience Award at stake,  which went to KINYARWANDA and JIRO DREAMS OF SUSHI in a tie, WUSS, and  WITH EVERY HEARTBEAT, respectively. New Auteurs had not only an Audience  Award, which went to BULLHEAD, but three prizes awarded from a  specially selected jury, THE LONELIEST PLANET receiving the Grand Prize,  ATTENBERG the Special Jury Prize and Matthias Schoenaerts in BULLHEAD  walking away with accolades for his universally lauded performance. But  with 26 screenings under my belt, I figured I should award my personal  Best of Fest to the thirteen films that struck me personally the most,  from all categories. First up, #13-#10.
Note: I saw  Melancholia and The Adventures of Tintin separately from the festival in  a non-review capacity, so will not be including them in this list.  Though had they been a part of my AFI experience, they would have both  easily made the cut. 
13. With Every Heartbeat (dir. Alexandra-Therese Keining)
In  this Swedish romantic drama, two soon to be step sisters, one of whom  is engaged to be married, find themselves drawn to each other at their  parents’ engagement celebration. Ruth Vega Fernandez does a great job as  the conflicted Mia, but it’s Liv Mjones as the free spirit Frida that  steals the show with her offbeat confidence and grace. Although the  third act becomes a bit too formulaic for my liking, the attraction  between these two women is palpable, resulting in one of the best love  scenes on screen this year, and their entire love story is well worth watching.
Favorite Scene:  After an unexpected encounter in the woods alters their previously icy  relationship, Frida climbs into bed with Mia and the unexpected occurs.
12. The Dish & The Spoon (dir. Alison Bagnall)
Alison  Bagnall returns to the scene after an eight year haitus with this sad,  sweet look at two lost and dejected souls who find comfort and care in  each other. Greta Gerwig plays Rose, a woman who just discovered her  husband’s infidelity and is on the brink of losing it altogether.  Gerwig’s performance dangles the question in front of us – did her  husband cheat because she’s crazy, or is she this unhinged solely  because of the adultery? As she begins to formulate her plan to take  down the other woman, she encounters an equally alone British teenager,  played by Olly Alexander. The two quickly bond and embark on a safe,  quirky, perhaps even pretend, romance straight out out of third grade,  complete with stories, costumes, games and role-playing. Whether this  connection is real or a coping mechanism remains a concern as we revel  in their awkward glow.
Favorite Scene: After  their first real kiss, Rose and the boy plot out their future together,  complete with marriage and ten kids. It’s utterly innocent and endearing  in the best way possible. For a brief moment, you think they could be  in it for the long haul.
11. Jeff Who Lives At Home (dir. Duplass Brothers)
When a movie opens with a slightly flabbier Jason Segel ruminating on the relevance of M Night Shyamalan’s Signs  to life at large, and meaning every damn word, you know it’s going to  be good. In this delightful follow up to last year’s Cyrus, about three  people who find themselves stuck in lives they never wanted, forced to  find their true paths on one fateful Louisiana day, the Duplass brothers  deliver yet again. Segel’s optimism as the titular Jeff is infectious  and could melt even the most cynic movie goer’s heart with his  determination. And, can I just say, Susan Sarandon looks amazing? Like.  Amazing. I had a smile plastered on my face for practically the whole  film and in a fest full of mostly depressing material, it was a welcome  change of pace.
Favorite Scene: Judy Greer’s  Linda and Ed Helms’ Patrick have a confrontation about their marriage  that challenges the quirky other-planeness of the universe that had been  so carefully established. It’s not the typical choice to have Judy  Greer play the person most grounded in reality, and the film greatly  benefits from thinking outside of the type-cast box.
10. Jiro Dreams of Sushi (dir. David Gelb)
This  film that tied for the World Cinema Audience Award takes a look at the  three Michelin star sushi bar in Japan, widely considered to be the best  in the world, Sukiyabashi Jiro, and more specifically, the man behind it, 85 year old Jiro Ono, and his two sons, the oldest of which, Yoshikazu,  will eventually and inevitably succeed Jiro as head chef. Although  director David Gelb originally set out to make a documentary on sushi  restaurants all over the globe, after his experience with Jiro and he  food he makes, there was no question that Sukiyabashi Jiro  would be the focus. We learn about the techniques that took years to  discover, hone, and pass on. Everything from the temperature and texture  of the rice, to the fish dealer, to the cut of the fish, to the number  of minutes spent massaging an Octopus has been boiled down to a science.  Or to be slightly more accurate, an art. The family drama surrounding  the question of whether the son can truly follow in the footsteps of his  father, the legend, brings in a whole other level. As an audience  member, I equally found myself wanting to get to Japan as soon as  possible to make sure Jiro himself would be the one crafting my fish,  and wanting the food community at large to acknowledge that Yoshikazu will be the best heir to the restaurant any father could ask for. But Gelb takes Jiro far  beyond a simple documentary. A goal of his was to shoot food the way  Planet Earth was shot, which explains the clean, direct and full  cinematography and in order to properly set the tone of watching a  master at work, Gelb chose music from Philip Glass to accompany Jiro’s  tale, elevated music for an elevated skill.
It should also be  noted that in the post-screening Q&A, director David Gelb was asked  where he recommends we have sushi in Los Angeles, and the first  suggestion was Sushi Nozawa, aka my favorite sushi place in the U.S.
Favorite Scene:  We are taken through the entire, specially created, twenty piece menu,  described by food critic Yamamoto as a symphony broken into three  movements. Each piece of fish looks as delectable as if it were right in  front of you and guaranteed, your mouth will inadvertently water.
Thursday, November 10, 2011
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