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    Sundance Film Festival 2013

    Political documentaries make the grade at Sundance, but teacher-student sex affair film fails

    Jane Howze
    Jan 26, 2013 | 12:00 pm

    The first few days of the Sundance Film Festival are characterized by film stars, paparazzi and gridlock traffic. But as the festival continues, actors depart for their next gig, the many gifting suites and nightclubs start winding down, and the town is left, for the most part, with serious moviegoers.

    It's time to focus on catching the gem of a film that could be the next Little Miss Sunshine.

    With a drama in mind, I headed to A Teacher by director Hannah Fidell. Shot in Austin, the film explores the psychological free fall of a teacher who has an affair with a student. The film promises to explore the familiar but forbidden female teacher-male high school student sexual relationship from a different angle but begins with the two having a quickie in the back seat of her car. We have no idea how the affair started or why.

    The suspense builds as each sex scene is accompanied by menacing and annoying music, so there is no doubt that the teacher will get caught; it’s just a matter of when.

    The first 40 minutes of the film are devoted to little action of the non-sexual type. The suspense builds as each sex scene is accompanied by menacing and annoying music, so there is no doubt that the teacher will get caught; it’s just a matter of when.

    I suppose after seeing a similar story in the 2006 film Notes from a Scandal my expectations were too high, as the film, agonizingly long, pointlessly dragged on. Fidell explained afterward in the Q&A that she wanted to depict the disintegration of the teacher and not the oft-treated beginning and inevitable end of these relationships.

    Actors Lindsay Burdge and Will Brittain as teacher and student made the grade with stellar performances, but the film didn’t.

    After than disappointing classroom experience, I returned to documentaries and found a lot to like.

    Inequality for All
    Robert Reich, former Secretary of Labor in the Clinton Administration and professor of public policy at the University of California, Berkeley, teaches a master class in the consequences of tax and government spending policies dictated by lobbyists for moneyed interests on both the left and the right.

    It sounds dense and bland, but filmgoers have compared Reich’s film to Al Gore’s Oscar-winning An Inconvenient Truth — only with a focus on the economy rather than the environment. I found Reich’s film more interesting than Gore’s because it transcends party lines.

    In the Q&A, Robert Reich laughingly commented that his son told him, “Dad, I have heard you talk for 20 years but never understood what you were saying until I saw the film.”

    Inspired by Reich’s book, Aftershock, director Jacob Kornbluth clarifies the complex subject with entertaining charts and profiles of middle-income families struggling to achieve the American dream, along with a venture capitalist who earns more than $10 million to $30 million a year and has a tax rate of 12 percent but advocates a fairer tax policy for the middle class.

    The film also provides details on Reich’s background, including his time in the Clinton Administration, where he admits “I was a total pain in the ass to Clinton.”

    Kornbluth presents Reich as an eloquent, entertaining educator. In the question-and-answer segment, Reich laughingly commented that his son told him, “Dad, I have heard you talk for 20 years but never understood what you were saying until I saw the film.”

    The film has been acquired by The Weinstein Company, so it will make its ways into theater later this year.

    Manhunt
    Greg Barker’s documentary Manhunt echoes Kathryn Bigelow’s Zero Dark Thirty on the hunt for Osama bin Laden, with a different focus and without showing the raid itself.

    Although the film opens with President Obama’s announcement that Osama bin Laden has been killed, the story begins in the mid-1990s when a number of CIA female analysts known as The Sisterhood became aware of a terrorist group seeking to harm America. At the time they didn’t even know the name of the group but started tracking it.

    In the Q&A, CIA analysts were asked if they were worried that terrorists could use the information in the film to mount another attack in the United States.

    They are the central figures in the documentary, along with two CIA operations agents who work in the Middle East. The film documents the warnings the CIA gave the government, especially in 2001 prior to 9/11, and how analysts uncovered bin Laden’s courier — the piece of the puzzle that led them to bin Laden.

    The film barely touches on torture or “enhanced interrogation” as it is now known, other than pointing out how the FBI opposed it and the CIA favored it.

    In the Q&A, two of the women analysts and operations case officer Marty Martin (who appears in the film and trains CIA sources) were asked if they were worried that terrorists could use the information in the film to mount another attack in the United States. They said that everything in the film is public information that has been known to our enemies for years.

    Manhunt will premiere on HBO in May.

    The Gatekeepers
    A documentary by the Israeli director Dror Moreh, The Gatekeepers focuses on interviews with six retired former heads of Shin Get, the Israeli security agency, who reflect about triumphs and frustrations in the Middle East conflict. They answer questions dispassionately and candidly about the “targeted assassination” of Hamas militants, “moderate physical pressure” applied (sometimes fatally) to Palestinian prisoners and their failure to prevent the assassination of Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin.

    The interviews are illustrated with archival footage and chilling computer animations of attacks on based on photographs taken at events. This is a dark and depressing film but challenges the conventional wisdom in the search for a lasting peace between Israel and the Palestinians.

    The film premiered at the Jerusalem Film Festival, with a U.S. release scheduled for February 1. It has been nominated for Best Documentary in this year's Oscars.

    In Inequality for All, Robert Reich explains the consequences of tax and government spending policies dictated by lobbyists for moneyed interests on both the left and the right.

    Sundance Film Festival, Inequality for All, January 2013
    Photo by Svetlana Cvetko
    In Inequality for All, Robert Reich explains the consequences of tax and government spending policies dictated by lobbyists for moneyed interests on both the left and the right.
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    Movie Review

    Remake of Schwarzenegger classic The Running Man stumbles

    Alex Bentley
    Nov 13, 2025 | 2:21 pm
    Glen Powell in The Running Man
    Photo courtesy of Paramount Pictures
    Glen Powell in The Running Man.

    For all its cheesy ‘80s greatness, the original version of The Running Man starring Arnold Schwarzenegger was a very loose adaptation of the novel by Stephen King. For the new remake, writer/director Edgar Wright has tried to hue much closer to the story laid out in the book, a decision that has both its positive and negative aspects.

    Glen Powell takes over for Schwarzenegger as Ben Richards, a family man/hothead who can’t seem to hold a job in the dystopian America in which he lives. Desperate to take care of his family, he applies to be on one of the many game shows fed to the masses that promise riches in exchange for humiliation or worse. Thanks to his temper, Ben is chosen for the most popular one of all, The Running Man, in which contestants must survive 30 days while hunters, as well as the general population, track them down.

    Given a 12-hour head start, Ben earns money for every day he survives, as well as every hunter he eliminates. Since he only has a relatively small amount of money to use as he pleases, Ben must rely on friendly citizens who are willing to put their own lives on the line to help him. That’s a task made even more difficult as the gamemakers, led by Dan Killian (Josh Brolin), use advanced AI to manipulate footage of Ben to make him seem like a guy for which no one should root.

    Co-written by Michael Bacall, the film is shockingly uninteresting, working neither as an exciting action film, a fun quippy comedy, or social commentary. The biggest problem is that Wright seems to have no interest in developing any of his characters, starting with Ben. Our introduction to the protagonist is him trying to get his job back, a situation for which there is little context even after we’re beaten over the head with exposition.

    The situation in which Ben finds himself should be easy to make sympathetic, but Wright and Bacall speed through scenes that might have emphasized that aspect in favor of ones that make the story less personal. The filmmakers really want to showcase the supposed antagonistic relationship between Ben and Dan (and the system which Dan represents), but all that effort results in little drama.

    Ben has a number of close calls, and while those scenes are full of action and violence, almost every one of them feels emotionally inert, as if there was nothing at stake. It doesn’t help that Wright doesn’t set the scene well, making it unclear how far Ben has traveled or who/what he’s up against. There are times when Ben feels surrounded and others when he can walk freely, weird for a society that’s supposed to be under almost complete surveillance.

    Powell has been touted as a movie star in the making for several years following his turn in Top Gun: Maverick, but he does little here to make that label stick. With no consistent co-star thanks to the structure of the story, he’s required to carry the film, and he just doesn’t have the juice that a true movie star is supposed to have. Nobody else is served well by the scattershot film, including normally reliable people like Brolin, Colman Domingo, Michael Cera, and Lee Pace.

    The Running Man is a big misfire by Wright and a blow to Powell’s star power. On the surface, it has all the hallmarks of an action thriller with a side of social commentary, but nothing it does or says lands in any meaningful way. Schwarzenegger’s one-liners in the original film may have been goofy and over-the-top, but at least they made the movie memorable, which is way more than can be said of the remake.

    ---

    The Running Man opens in theaters on November 14.

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