Sign In
  • U.S.
  • International
  • Canada
  • Espau00f1ola
The Ranglaal
  • Home
  • Bollywood
  • Entertainment
  • Fashion
  • Relationship
  • Business
  • Career
  • Tech
  • Food
  • Sports
Reading: Five International Movies to Stream Now
Share
Aa
The RanglaalThe Ranglaal
  • Home
  • Bollywood
  • Entertainment
  • Fashion
  • Relationship
  • Business
  • Career
  • Tech
  • Food
  • Sports
Search
  • Home
  • Bollywood
  • Entertainment
  • Fashion
  • Relationship
  • Business
  • Career
  • Tech
  • Food
  • Sports
Have an existing account? Sign In
Follow US
© The Ranglaal All Rights Reserved, Made with ❀ by SquidTeck IT Solutions.
The Ranglaal > Blog > Entertainment > Five International Movies to Stream Now
Entertainment

Five International Movies to Stream Now

The New York Times
Last updated: 2023/11/17 at 10:16 PM
The New York Times
Share
Five International Movies to Stream Now
SHARE


Contents
‘My Two Voices’‘Jonaki’‘Phantom Project’‘Rom’

‘My Two Voices’

Stream it on the Criterion Channel.

The camera tilts up the glassy facade of a skyscraper and roves across a wall mural featuring voluptuous pinup models, while, on the soundtrack, a woman recalls her early experiences as an immigrant: ordering food in tentative English, taking the bus, learning to dress for winter. Lina Rodriguez’s intimate, inventive documentary ties together the aural testimonies of three women about the (often violent) journeys that brought them from various parts of Latin America to Canada, and the everyday struggles of living, working and raising a family in an unfamiliar world.

“My Two Voices” is an ethnography of sorts, but unlike most entries in the genre, this one focuses on sounds and sensations rather than faces. The images we see onscreen rarely illustrate the voice-over (or vice versa). Textured close-ups of nature, household objects and limbs make up most of the film, with distinct characters appearing only at the end, in a kind of revelation. This disjuncture of sound and visuals forces you to listen to the women with a rare attention — not just to their words, but all that is contained in their voices.

The title of the film comes from a phrase one of the women uses to describe the different personalities she embodies while speaking English and Spanish. Watching the film with English subtitles gives us a glimpse of that split experience of the world, and the extraordinary sensory alertness required to navigate it.

This slippery Turkish thriller revolves around an unusual protagonist: an aspiring novelist who works as a prison guard tasked with censoring letters received by inmates. In an opening rich with metaphor, we go from a session in which Zakir (Berkay Ates) and his fellow guards are told to read carefully for hidden messages in letters, to a creative-writing class where Zakir is taught the literary art of subtext and insinuation.

The lines soon begin to blur for our hero (played by Ates with a mix of guilelessness and cunning) when he finds inspiration for a story in a photo ensconced within a letter. Soon, he becomes obsessed with the beautiful and mysterious woman in the picture, the wife of an inmate who complains in her missives about her suffocating father-in-law and miserable home life.

“Passed By Censor” recalls the films of Hitchcock and Antonioni in a lower, more realist key. The director Serhat Karaaslan plays with reflections, searching looks and elliptical edits to conjure a sense of queasy intrigue that immerses us within Zakir’s increasing paranoia that the woman is being abused. Is he onto something, or is his imagination — and his saviorism — taking wild flight? There are no pat answers in “Passed by Censor” — only glossy, opaque surfaces that turn your gaze back at you.

‘Jonaki’

Stream it on Netflix.

This Bengali-language period drama from India unfolds as a series of tableaux that are as exquisite as they are, at least at first, cryptic. In a decrepit mansion thick with dust and cobwebs, an 80-something lady (Lolita Chatterjee) answers a phone call. Elsewhere, seemingly in the same house, a middle-aged man and woman converse in a dimly lit bedroom about fixing a marriage for Jonaki, their 19-year-old daughter. As the film proceeds, these characters come together in beguilingly inexplicable ways: the older lady, it seems, is Jonaki, whom the couple refer to as a teenage girl. Her wrinkled, aged body is bathed by her mother, and she is chided like a child for her secret rendezvous with a handsome young man (Jim Sarbh).

This oneiric paradox reveals its logic in a conclusion I won’t spoil — in any case, the journey is the point in “Jonaki,” rather than the destination. Based on the director Aditya Vikram Sengupta’s own grandmother, this film is one of stunning images, with light and shadow carefully choreographed in an atmospheric Gothic set. Each frame is haunting and made strange by the anachronisms at play, conjuring a ghost story that trembles with the force of unfulfilled dreams and indelible memories.

‘Phantom Project’

Stream it on Tubi and Amazon.

The ghost in this Chilean slacker comedy is one of a kind, not least because of its playful gender fluidity. A line-drawn animation that squiggles constantly into different human shapes and figures (with mutating genitalia), the specter begins to appear in the apartment of Pablo (Juan Cano), an aspiring actor, when his roommate moves out and leaves him with an old cardigan, unclaimed plants and a dog. As Pablo tries to find a new tenant, get acting gigs, and move on from his recent breakup with a YouTube star, the ghost haunts his rooms, its mischief ranging from breaking mugs to having sex with him in a marvelously eroto-comic scene.

Largely comprising Pablo’s hangouts with his friends, “Phantom Project” is a charming and witty portrait of a small, queer community in Santiago, with a series of sitcom-like vignettes featuring a host of eccentric characters. The ghost emerges in Pablo and his friends’ lives as an amusement, a fantasy and also a sparkle of magic — a sign that there is enchantment even in a world of young artists who are both broke and heartbroken.

‘Rom’

Stream it on Tubi and Amazon.

Slanted angles, a syncopated soundtrack and raw, in-your-face cinematography move this Vietnamese thriller at a ruthless pace through the streets of Ho Chi Minh City. Tran Thanh Huy’s film revolves around Rom (Tran Anh Khoa), a 14-year-old orphan who sells lottery tickets to the debt-ridden residents of a crumbling apartment complex being eyed by developers. Rom; his impoverished clients; his bookie, Mrs. Ghi; and Rom’s rival, another teenager named Phuc, are all part of the same ecosystem of desperation. Money passes fleetingly through their hands, promising an illusory escape from their hardships.

The premise may smack of poverty porn, but worry not: As abundant as “Rom” is in pathos and precarity, it’s far too slick and kinetic a movie to spend too much time navel-gazing or dwelling in pitiful sentiment. Huy assembles a coterie of distinctive characters and moves them through labyrinthine alleyways and cramped rooms like pieces in a kaleidoscope. The film is both a grittily realistic portrait of Vietnam’s underclass and a larger-than-life parable about the vicious spirals of capitalism.



News Credit Source link

Share this Article
Twitter Email Copy Link Print
What do you think?
Love0
Sad0
Happy0
Sleepy0
Angry0
Dead0
Wink0
Previous Article ‘Please Don’t Destroy: The Treasure of Foggy Mountain’ Review: Fools’ Gold ‘Please Don’t Destroy: The Treasure of Foggy Mountain’ Review: Fools’ Gold
Next Article ‘Beyond the Aggressives: 25 Years Later’ Review: Trailblazers Revisited ‘Beyond the Aggressives: 25 Years Later’ Review: Trailblazers Revisited
Leave a review Leave a review

Leave a review Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Please select a rating!

Editor's Pick

Top Writers

Akash 64 Articles
Hey! There
Author
Vivek Dubey

Oponion

Yeshwant Bhagwat Mishra’s book “A Storm of His Own” depicts the deep bond between humans and dogs – Primex News Network

Yeshwant Bhagwat Mishra’s book “A Storm of His Own” depicts the deep bond between humans and dogs –

Mumbai (Maharashtra) , November 27: The number of dog lovers is…

November 27, 2023

Mumbaiya Misal and Vadapav targets 200+ outlets across Gujarat in two years, eyes national presence –

Ahmedabad (Gujarat) , November 27: Fast-food chain…

November 27, 2023

Meet Charles Melton, the Breakout Star of ‘May December’

The ex-“Riverdale” star transformed himself for…

November 26, 2023

Can a Rom-Com Make Sense in Dark Times? Yes, When It’s From This Master.

There’s a detail in Aki Kaurismaki’s…

November 26, 2023

Beyoncé’s ‘Renaissance’ Film: 4 Takeaways From the Premiere

Only a little bit got left…

November 26, 2023

You Might Also Like

Meet Charles Melton, the Breakout Star of ‘May December’
Entertainment

Meet Charles Melton, the Breakout Star of ‘May December’

The ex-“Riverdale” star transformed himself for Todd Haynes’s new drama. As an actor, he’s caught between wanting to be seen…

0 Min Read
Can a Rom-Com Make Sense in Dark Times? Yes, When It’s From This Master.
Entertainment

Can a Rom-Com Make Sense in Dark Times? Yes, When It’s From This Master.

There’s a detail in Aki Kaurismaki’s brilliant new gem of a comedy, “Fallen Leaves,” that I didn’t notice — even…

9 Min Read
Beyoncé’s ‘Renaissance’ Film: 4 Takeaways From the Premiere
Entertainment

Beyoncé’s ‘Renaissance’ Film: 4 Takeaways From the Premiere

Only a little bit got left outThough the ballad-heavy prelude that opened Beyoncé’s Renaissance set list is trimmed, nearly every…

3 Min Read
Five Science Fiction Movies to Stream Now
Entertainment

Five Science Fiction Movies to Stream Now

‘If You Were the Last’Stream it on Peacock.After three years of buddy banter and watching the same movies over and…

8 Min Read
The Ranglaal

The Ranglaal tells the stories in retro style that catches imagination of the youth. It also empowers them with current knowledge that is helpful in their physical, emotional, social and financial growth. The ranglaal

Categories

  • Bollywood
  • Entertainment
  • Fashion
  • Relationship
  • Business
  • Career
  • Tech
  • Food
  • Sports

More

  • About Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Guidelines Privacy Policy
  • Corrections Policy
  • DISCLAIMER
  • Ethics Policy
  • Fact-Checking Policy
  • Contact

Subscribe to our Newsletter

© The Rang Laal All Rights Reserved, Made with ❀ by SquidTeck IT Solutions.

Removed from reading list

Undo
Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Lost your password?