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Harpoon beer review
Harpoon beer review











  1. #HARPOON BEER REVIEW MOVIE#
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It’s a measure of this movie’s compassion, rather than its cruelty, that Nadja - played with exquisite delicacy and pinpoint comic timing by Beer, Petzold’s frequent collaborator of late - is on hand to yank him back out. It’s a song that even Leon can’t help getting lost in, maybe because it’s hypnotic and beautiful, or maybe because it seems to capture his own retreat into a dreamily narcissistic head-space.

#HARPOON BEER REVIEW MOVIE#

(It won the Silver Bear Grand Jury Prize at this year’s Berlin International Film Festival.) It’s a story about the here and now it’s also about men and women, love and friendship, and the way art often draws from, and frequently distorts, the stuff of everyday life.įor all its low-key moment-to-moment realism, the movie at times folds in a layer of abstraction, whether in the sudden emergence of a narrator’s voice or the strategic repetition of “In My Mind,” a moody dream-pop song by the Viennese band Wallners. With its genre-adjacent premise, barbed character interplay, sharply chiseled performances and portents of meteorological disaster, “Afire” might be Petzold’s most accessible work in some time. But while “Afire” wrings its own variation on that idea, it also represents a departure from the historically fraught, morally contemplative political thrillers, like “Barbara” and “Transit,” that shaped the director’s critical reputation. In “Phoenix” (2015), his suavely haunting postwar riff on “Vertigo,” one character’s failure to recognize another reads as a kind of moral blindness. The difference between simply looking and actually seeing, between mere sensation and deeper perception, is hardly a new theme in Petzold’s work. He doesn’t have to be “working,” as Leon defines it, to stumble on new perspectives and fresh sources of beauty, inspiration and insight. Happily, there are also those like Felix, a photographer who has his own looming portfolio deadline but none of his friend’s self-importance. His particular brand of obliviousness - clear to everyone, but especially to his impatient publisher (Matthias Brandt) - is not, the movie suggests, exactly uncommon among certain kinds of artists. Throughout this movie, an absorbing, barbed and frequently funny evisceration of artistic ego, Petzold practices a deft and disarming sleight of hand, using key details to keep the viewer off balance and deliver a stinging rebuke to Leon’s myopia. To answer that question would spoil one (though not all) of “Afire’s” surprises.

harpoon beer review

It’s hard not to wonder exactly how Petzold plans to use this encroaching threat: Given the brush-heavy environs, spotty Wi-Fi and lack of a functioning vehicle, is this a full-scale disaster movie in the making? Or do those flames licking at the horizon serve a more symbolic purpose, echoing the dynamics of a house where tempers turn fiery and the emotional temperature is always on the rise?

harpoon beer review

And also, perhaps, a literal one: “Afire,” as suggested by its title and the regular noise of water-bombing planes flying overhead, takes place in the midst of an especially rough wildfire season. Tracking these tense dynamics with an unerringly well-placed camera (the cinematographer is Hans Fromm) and fluid, intuitive editing (by Bettina Böhler), the writer-director Christian Petzold turns this scenically remote destination into an emotional and psychological trap.

harpoon beer review

He’s not entirely wrong to feel put out, given the closeness of the quarters and the nightly sounds of music and sexual congress issuing from the room next door. When they finally make it to their destination and find they’ll be sharing it with an unexpected houseguest, Leon grumbles and despairs of getting anything done. When Felix’s car breaks down, stranding them and their bags in the middle of the woods, Leon has nothing to offer beyond complaints. From the moment we meet Leon, riding shotgun while Felix drives, he is sour, disagreeable company, as well as a one-man rebuke to the notion that likable protagonists are always the most compelling. He does have a lot of work to do, though not the kind he thinks.

harpoon beer review

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Trying to revise his (wretchedly bad) novel over a few days’ countryside retreat, Leon is beset by one unreasonable demand after another: How dare his friend Felix (Langston Uibel) invite him to go for a swim, or ask him to help patch a leak in the roof? How can Leon possibly be expected to lift a finger or even flash a smile? Can’t everyone see how much work he has to do? It’s a scowl that rarely leaves your memory, since it so rarely leaves his features: a full-lipped mouth that hangs contemptuously half-open eyes that glare lazily ahead, as though so worn down by irritation they couldn’t even be bothered to roll properly. Leon (Thomas Schubert), the exasperated - and exasperating - young writer at the heart of the superb German drama “Afire,” has a mesmerizingly punchable scowl.













Harpoon beer review