CHICAGO – Patrick McDonald of HollywoodChicago.com appears on “The Morning Mess” with Dan Baker on WBGR-FM (Monroe, Wisconsin) on March 21st, 2024, reviewing the new streaming series “Manhunt” – based on the bestseller by James L. Swanson – currently streaming on Apple TV+.
Film Review: Meditative ‘Uncle Boonmee Who Can Recall His Past Lives’
Rating: 3.5/5.0 |
CHICAGO – “Uncle Boonmee Who Can Recall His Past Lives” opens with one of its most striking, memorable, and essential images. A buffalo stands in a forest at what appears to be dusk, as we can see him only in shadow. He moves slowly around a tree, almost ghostly, before escaping and running through a field and into a forest. As the film unfolds after this unusual prologue, one can trace its themes back to the power of that image — as the natural and spiritual worlds seem to intertwine in the picture of a majestic creature.
The very non-linear and untraditional “Uncle Boonmee” was the surprising winner of the Palme D’Or at last year’s Cannes Film Festival and played last year at the Chicago International Film Festival before opening at the Music Box this weekend. It is certainly not a film for everyone. It is a piece that almost defies conventional interpretation like a foreign fable that doesn’t completely make sense through translation. But as hard as it can be to crack the surface of this meditative piece, it is equally mesmerizing. It gets to the point where one doesn’t care that they can’t decipher the plot in a traditional way but merely takes in the ideas and emotions not unlike remembering a dream.
Read Brian Tallerico’s full review of “Uncle Boonmee Who Can Recall His Past Lives” in our reviews section. |
Essentially, “Uncle Boonmee Who Can Recall His Past Lives” is about the days before dying and bridging the spiritual and natural worlds. It is a film with long scenes without dialogue and little drama. A man named Boonmee runs a farm and tries to deal with kidney disease. It is not clear that the disease will kill him until an unusual evening when his wife appears at the dinner table. His wife has been dead for almost two decades and has come to report that “Heaven is over-rated. There’s nothing there.”
It’s only moments after this casual appearance of an apparition that Boonmee’s son walks up the stairs looking not unlike Chewbacca, covered in black hair with bright red eyes. His son has been missing for years after trying to track down a “monkey ghost,” mating with one, and joining the natural world. It is the arrival of the spiritual on one side of the table and the natural on the other that makes it clear that Boonmee is about to take a journey. And when the film takes a break in the middle for the parable of a princess who mates with a catfish under a waterfall, it becomes even more clear that this is not your average death drama.
Uncle Boonmee Who Can Recall His Past Lives
Photo credit: Strand Releasing