SxSW 2021 Continues From Documentary to Midnighters

SXSW 2021 online continued to offer a rich and varied platform as the week unspooled. While some films didn’t work for me, uniformly all of them were well-worth viewing.

Case in point was Mei Markino’s Inbetween Girl. The bittersweet coming-of-age-the-hard-way story crammed a lot into its run time, with teen Angie Chen indulging in secret hooking-up with an unfaithful boyfriend. Her burgeoning friendship with the boy’s main squeeze was the most interesting part of the well-acted, angsty film; the boy/girl fling just didn’t compel. Touching on racial topics and stereotypes enriched the story, Markino will do much more.

The conflicts of gentrification and the lives of real, gritty, down-on-their-luck residents resonates in director Liz Lambert’s Through the Plexi-Glass: The Last Days of the San Jose. Both as a character study and the history of a neighborhood, the story took turns and twists. Fascinating and raw.

While Disintegration Loops bore marks of a low-budget production (cue the grainy zoom images), it was nonetheless quite wonderful in revealing the composer behind a haunting and beautiful piece of “found” looped music. Director David Wexler merges interviews and 9/11 footage with filming of New York City under early pandemic lockdown, introducing viewers to composer William Basinski in the process. Basinski’s work received widespread recognition when the music was presented as an elegy to 9/11. I wanted it to last longer.

Violet, from director/screenwriter Justine Bateman, was literally the only film viewed in the festival that did not grab me in one way or another. Boasting a full cast of well known’s, including lead Olivia Munn, the thin story centered on a film-development executive trying to overcome an abusive childhood that resulted in her own negative guiding voice. Perhaps in another, less reverentially meta work setting, I might’ve cared. Some.

Witch Hunt, on the other hand, was an extremely smart use of the horror genre to confront racism.

Director and screenwriter Elle Callahan crafted a nail-biting horror thriller in an America where witches are not only real, they’re outlawed, and the witch-hunting version of ICE persecutes them. Safe territory is Mexico, but can a sheltered teen make it there? And will America ever change? Definitely could not look away at the hope we can burn racism at the stake.

Oh no, not a pandemic comedy! Too soon? Apparently not. Recovery is nothing if not zany fun, with a number of genuine laugh-out-loud moments. Directors Mallory Everton and Stephen Meek, along with screenwriters Whitney Call and Mallory Everton, lead viewers on two sisters’ wild journey to “recover” their grandmother from a nursing home experiencing a COVID outbreak. We could all use a dose of smart n’ silly about now.

The Fallout is an absolute wow. Justifiably the jury pick for a Narrative Feature win, the film had me dissolved in tears and hurting with anger.

Perfectly acted high school drama about the aftermath of a school shooting, writer/director and co-star Megan Park focuses on high schooler Vada and her relationships with her family, friends and future. A film that ached to be made, its powerful and resonant. Park scores high on all counts.

The documentary Lily Topples the World introduces us to the cool and successful world of a domino artist. Director Jeremy Workman tackles another jury award winner with the insightful story of 20-year-old Lily Hevesh, the only woman in her field. While this was an excellent character study, the documentary that blew me away – was the story of 25-year-old Reality Winner.

Director Sonia Kennebeck does a riveting job of exposing the perfidy of the FBI and truth about the young woman who disclosed one document about Russian election interference to the media in the United States vs. Reality Winner. Persecuted by the Trump administration, this armed service veteran and down-home Texas girl has received one bum rap. Here’s hoping President Biden pardons her, and the film is widely viewed; Kennebeck does stellar work on a do-not-miss story.

I’m Fine (Thanks for Asking) a strong concept and well-performed lead can’t save Kelley Kali and Angelique Molina’s film about a beleaguered single mom and young widow forced to live in a tent with her young daughter. I was rooting for them, but amateurish supporting performances and a repetitive, rather sluggish storyline derailed the power of what could’ve been a truly moving film about being houseless in Los Angeles.

Shorts

Above, Joanne is Dead

Sisters – Director and writer Jess Brunetto expertly explores a tense relationship between two estranged sisters with wit and a perfect third-act twist. Lots of story packed in a small package, the film expertly strides the line between funny and poignant.

Joanne is Dead – I loved the black comedy of this film about one wicked old spy in a nursing home. Director, writer and co-star Brian Sacca does not fail to surprise.

O Black Hole – Animated and adventurous, this didn’t grab me, but it is visually lovely and uniquely spiritual. Renee Zhan’s Jury prize winner touches on deep subjects such as the passage of time, singularity, and loneliness.

Puss – Okay, so it’s odd, to say the least, but ultimately fun; the story of a pandemic-cloistered woman seeking a booty call with a kitty at home definitely made me laugh. Writer/director Leigh Shore has shaped an edgy, clever, and enjoyable Midnight Short.

Significant Other – taut and well-done, this super-short horror tale gives us a red orb throbbing away in the madness of late night. Wonderfully creepy, writer/director Quinn George knows how fashion one weird glow.

A Really Dark Comedy – Absolutely loved this funny and quirky tale crafted by Texas High School filmmakers about a lovelorn boy, a potential prom date, and a dog in the wrong place at the wrong time. Director Manasi Ughadmathe and writer Jackson Coates have done an awesome job, one which should predict a bright film future.

Overall verdict on SXSW 2021? Not only was it an often outstanding film festival, I just wish I had more time to explore other programming sections. A festival I will not miss, pandemic or no pandemic, this was a deep breath of fresh and intelligent filmmaking.

  • Genie Davis; photos courtesy SXSW

South by Southwest 2021: SXSW is Innovative as Ever

SXSW2021 is my fourth virtual film festival within the last year, but the platform has many offerings beyond film, although that is the section of the festival we’ll be focusing on here. VR, comedy, music, education are all major elements of South by Southwest online, but with a short run of 5 days, film comes first.

Here are the first capsule reviews of films I’ve viewed so far, and which for the most part receive a consistent thumbs-up here. Some of my favorites were in the Documentary and Midnighters sections, but there were exceptional exceptions to that rule as well.

Here Before, from director and screenwriter Stacey Gregg fooled me. I was expecting a straight up horror premise, and instead received a really riveting psychological thriller touching on grief, motherhood, and marital fidelity. Shot in Belfast, the U.K. production stars a compelling Andrea Riseborough, and is filled with a compelling, harrowing tension. Possibilities from possession to madness swirl, and if the conclusion is slightly more prosaic than that, it does little to discredit the powerful and absorbing film that comes before. With riveting and pitch perfect performances, the film remains one of my favorites.


Our Father is quintessentially American, in both its sense of aimlessness, pressing money matters, and family strife. The turbulent relationship of two estranged sisters, Beta and Zelda is temporarily rebonded as the pair defy the certainty of their more estranged stepmother and her three sons, and go in search of their missing uncle, mentioned in their late father’s will. The story is elusive at times, but director/writer Bradley Grant Smith sets an absorbing and poignant mood that hurts, haunts, and often amuses. Strong cast, too.

The End of Us is another of those “my relationship in pandemic lockdown” movies that keep cropping up, and that I inexplicably keep watching, hoping one will offer profound insight. That said, while this one does not, director/writers Henry Loevner and Steven Kanter manage to create a film this is often charming, and often sweet, in which a broken-up couple must remain together yet negotiate their own way through the uncharted territory of a pandemic lockdown, both together and apart. A much better film than the bigger star-powered WB-film Lockdown that came before it, here, there were strong moments and waves of good humor popping up that kept me watching.

Kid Candidate is a quite wonderful documentary about a 24 year old musician and his run for city council in Amarillo, Texas. As smart and winning as its upstart subject, director Jasmine Stodel creates a surprisingly intimate portrait of an honest and passionate young man. The corruptness of our money-driven political process is the B-story, and that resonates too. Having once run for local school board and finding even that supposedly not-so-partisan office overrun with moneyed candidates, this one was a no-brainer for me to watch, and a wonderful and heartfelt character study, too.

If Kid Candidate was winningly sweet, The Oxy Kingpins is anything but. A harrowing expose, this documentary feature from skilled director Brendan FitzGerald is an astonishing and horrifying story of the ways in which a network of pharmaceutical “leaders” engaged in criminal behavior. And doubtlessly they still do, as they remain out of jail despite their operation and perpetration of the opioid crisis in America. Drug dealers: jailed. Addicts: jailed. Corporate criminals: free to continue wreaking havoc – isn’t that the American way? Devastating and important, this is simply a must-see.

I really was rooting for the narrative feature Ludi, which was a sweet story of a hard-working nurse as she struggles to survive her American Dream/Nightmare of money needs and long hours. The problem for me was that the set-up and twist to the bonding between Ludi and her elderly overnight client was easily predicted; and the curmudgeon she wins over a frustrating mess. Touching moments and a winning lead performance do work, unfortunately for me the film as a whole did not. Director Edson Jean and screenwriters Edson Jean and Joshua Jean-Baptiste doubtlessly have more powerful projects ahead.

Alien on Stage is a documentary that puts a smile on your face and keeps it spreading. I loved this U.K. film from director/producers Danielle Kummer and Lucy Harvey. Sweet, fresh, surprising, the film documents an amateur theatrical production of Ridley Scott’s film Alien. While not a hit in the small community its initially staged, the bus drivers and their friends involved in the production nonetheless hit the big time with an offer to perform the saga in London’s West End. It’s a pure delight, and I defy you to find one better.


Broadcast Signal Intrusion is a fascinating, narrative dark horror, one ultimately as mysterious when it concludes as when it began. Eerie pirate broadcasts interrupt programming and women – including the video editor/protagonist’s girl friend – disappear. We follow a maze of breadcrumb trails into the heart of darkness and emerge somewhat dazed. I couldn’t stop watching, and if the sum isn’t quite as great as its parts, this was still a terrific, taut film from director Jacob Gentry and screenwriters Phil Drinkwater and Tim Woodall.

Director/Screenwriter: Mickey Keating weaves a richly creepy spell with Offseason, in which a daughter must visit a shuttered town, ostensibly in the Florida Keys, to deal with vandalism to her mother’s grave. But the desecration is merely a lure, as the devil has cast his own bargain with the town’s inhabitants and descendants, and a night of terror begins. Despite a conclusion that veers toward horror convention, it’s a grand nail-biter, with shades of The Shining, Preacher and Cape Fear mixed together. An atmospheric and fun horror ride.

Shorts

Still from The Moogai

Marvin’s Never Had Coffee Before is a witty take on trying to fit in and find friendship during the pandemic. Brief and sharp, can a cup of coffee really create a bonding experience among co-workers? Director Andrew Carter and screenwriters Carter and Kahlil Maskati think it can indeed. A fun little brew.

The Mohel is somber and sweet, as director and screenwriter Charles Wahl explores the tension from family convention and financial stress after the birth of their first born son. Celebrating a traditional circumcision ceremony with the help of a renowned Mohel, questions of faith and reverence arise. Artful and moving.

The Other Morgan invites us to meet two sisters, one whom knew nothing about the other, but who both share the same name. Add in one beloved and deceased father, life choices and the search for happiness. Mix these elements together and director/writer Alison Rich makes some delightful and laugh-out-loud funny.

Sophie and the Baron is a lovely documentary short about art and collaboration. Director Alexandria Jackson depicts the friendship and sharing between photographer Baron Wolman and contemporary artist Sophie Kipner, whose freehand drawing style is as unique as Wolman’s iconic Woodstock-era images. Gentle and touching, the story is as much about the renewing spirit of friendship as art.

From Australia, director/screenwriter Jon Bell crafts a terrifying tale of Aboriginal horror in The Moogai, which is a perfect little bundle of terror for the parents of a newborn child. Can’t wait for Bell’s first feature. A deserved winner in the jury’s short horror narrative category.

Special Screening

Filmmakers answer questions at the SXSW Film Festival Premiere of “Tom Petty Somewhere You Feel Free” during SXSW Online on March 17, 2021.

Director Mary Wharton crafts an engaging archive of Tom Petty at work on his 1994 release, Wildflowers, in the archival documentary Somewhere You Feel Free. The newly found footage and interviews from the making of this album is moving and deeply personal; I wanted to hear more of the music, but that’s me. If you’re a Petty fan it’s a loving must-see.

Guess what? More reviews coming up including other stellar docs and spine-chilling horror plus a devastating narrative feature, too.

  • Genie Davis; photos courtesy SXSW Online 2021