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  • September 28, 2009
    By Peter Keough

    Here are two kinds of political demonstrations.

    First, the Iranian Republican Guards Corps test-firing a ballistic missile with a range sufficient to hit Israel, Moscow, parts of Europe and US military targets as a way to break the ice for an upcoming meeting in Geneva on Thursday with U.N. Security council members to discuss its nuclear program.

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  • September 25, 2009
    By Peter Keough

    A couple of days ago, as reported in the "New York Times," Mahmoud Ahmadenijad proclaimed to the UN that the Iranian "people entrusted me once more with a large majority" in a ballot he described as "glorious and fully democratic." Wordlessly and far more elequently earlier this month the great Iranian filmmaker Jafar Panahi challenged that claim when he and the other members of the jury for the Montreal Film Festival took the stage wearing green scarves - green being the color of those opposing, Ahmadenijad's regime.

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  • September 21, 2009
    By Peter Keough

    Lars Von Trier's "Antichrist" now has a local opening date - October 23 at the Kendall Square Theatre. Which reminds that it's been a while since I did an Antichrist/Google check, in which I insert the name of someone who is rumored to be the Antichrist onto Google and see how many hits come up.

    You might recall back in August 2008, before the election, I Googled "Barack Obama" and "Antichrist" and came up with 510,000 hits.

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  • September 16, 2009
    By Peter Keough

    Some years back, on March 25, 1994 to be exact, I had a story in the Phoenix called "Jerk Chic" in which I discussed how many films were coming out featuring heroes who were louts, boors, assholes, and so on. Fifteen years later I'm happy to report that there aren't nearly as many jerks on screen any more and most of those -- in Woody Allen's "Whatever Works, " "Bruno," "The Hangover," "Inglorious Basterds," in "The Baader-Meinhof Complex," for example -- are mostly intended negatively or ironically.

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  • September 15, 2009
    By Peter Keough

    For obvious reasons, most of the TV and other appreciations of the late Patrick Swayze have been heavy on clips of his role as the title spook in Jerry Zucker's "Ghost" (1990). Never mind I cried like a baby when I first saw it (don't ask). But I think Swayze is miscast: with his impish, faun-like features and the coiled, sensuous menace and grace of his powerful body, he seemed the kind of shade who would be more at home somewhere other than the celestial destination implied at the end of the film.

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  • September 11, 2009
    By Peter Keough
    The time comes, as it always does, to say farewell to the festival. But before leaving I had to take advantage of some of the sites and charm of the beautiful city of Montreal. So with my companion YH (who took these photos), I made my way to the lovely botanical gardens, which immediately gave me a much needed lift after nearly two weeks of intense cineasting.

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  • September 10, 2009
    By Peter Keough

    As the US convulses in the uncivil war over health care reform, up north across the border people just shake their heads in disbelief. The Montreal member of the Festival jury, Pierre Pageau, has assured me that the GOP's portrayal of their health care system is a tissue of distortions, hysteria and lies. I assured him that that's just the way we discuss issues here these days in our country.

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  • September 04, 2009
    By Peter Keough

    If you have a loaded doctor in the first act he has to go off by the end of the movie. Anton Chekhov said that, or he would have had he been watching the same films as I have over the last couple of days.

    Like "Morphine," mentioned previously, in which a doctor in a remote outpost clinic in Siberia becomes a drug addict and seeks the ultimate high.

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  • September 03, 2009
    By Peter Keough

    When you come right down to it, serial killing is just another form of addiction. Like drugs or watching three or more movies a day. That's what I was thinking after seeing "Distance" and Alexey Balabanov's "Morphine" on the same evening.

    In the latter film, based on a collection of short stories by the Soviet writer Mikhail Bulgakov, a young doctor takes up residence in a grim and frozen outpost in Siberia.

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  • September 01, 2009
    By Peter Keough

    After the eloquent protest against Iranian repression by Jafar Panahi and his fellow jurors with the green scarves, the whirling acrobats in the stage show preceding the Montreal World Film Festival's opening nightscreening came as a bit of jolt. Also, the film itself, Ricardo Trogi's autobiographical comedy "1981" seemed a change of pace.

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