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MT 8 APR 2018

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maltatoday SUNDAY 8 APRIL 2018 42 This Week "NEVER work with animals or children" is an oft-trotted warn- ing to whoever sets out to at- tempt a film or theatre produc- tion, even if both those things are likely to score you audience- friendly points in the long run. But for his third feature film after his 2015 breakout Tangerine – shot on a series of iPhones and drawing on the lives of the mar- ginalised community of trans sex workers in Hollywood – writer, director and, crucially given the nature of his projects, editor Se- an Baker doesn't quite strike me as the type to shy away from a challenge. Although there aren't all that many animals in his latest film, The Florida Project – save for a memorable and pun-heav y avi- an encounter towards the end – kids feature aplenty. And not only that: the bulk of the action is framed from the closely-fol- lowed experience of the six-year- old Moonee (Brooklynn Prince); who lives with her mother Hal- ley (Bria Vinaite) in 'The Magic Castle' – a motel complex in Kissimmee, Florida. Overseen by the well-meaning but heavily put-upon Bobby Hicks (Willem Dafoe), the Castle's array of eco- nomically compromised tenants paint something of stark picture; particularly given its location just outside that idyllic symbol of capitalist triumph and child- hood bliss: Walt Disney World. But Mooney and her friends Scooty (Christopher Rivera) and Jancey (Valeria Cotto) remain largely oblivious to the wider realities of their impoverished lives, making do with what they have to enjoy another summer of getting up to no good under the baking Florida sun. Then again, while she's affectionate to a fault and endlessly indulgent with her daughter, Halley's night-time ac- tivities threaten to catch up with her, and maybe even burst the little cocoon of happiness she's managed to build for herself and her daughter. In lesser hands, this would all have collapsed as a piece of avoidant gloss; a kind of sub- Benigni rosy-eyed vision of the American underclass rendered with button-pushing cliches and using kids to distract us from its faults with their clumsy cute- ness. But from its loud opening frames – loud with both the kids yelling to get each others' atten- tion, as well as the brash colour schemes calibrated with appo- site style by cinematographer Alexis Zabe – it becomes clear that Baker is taking no cheap short-cuts into this story, and is allowing the young actors to give the fullest possible breath to their characters. Brooklynn Prince delivers an incredible performance – virtu- ally on screen for the whole time and juggling a complex array of emotions, she more than tran- scends the "not bad for a kid" marker that often follows suit in these cases, and one can only imagine the sensitivity and time required to get all those beats right. Whether it was rigorous trial-and-error before the cam- eras rolled or – and this seems more likely – whether Baker simply let the kids do their thing with minimal direction and then pulled it all together at editing stage, the end result is a hu- mane portrayal of the vagaries of childhood. Beyond the specif- ics of their situation, the games and initiation rituals the kids engage in are bound to trigger some long-forgotten memories, no matter who you are or where you're from. In tune with Baker's modus op- erandi since Tangerine, most of the cast comprises of non-pro- fessional actors (with Instagram, apparently, serving as enough of a casting tool to get started), and he's clearly a master at f lipping that apparent shortcoming on its head. But Willem Dafoe serves as something of a dramatic ful- crum for the action, and it feels as though only an actor of his type – so varied and undiscrimi- nating in his roles throughout the years, with such an idiosyn- cratic presence whether the pro- ject is trash or treasure – could have given his all to such a role. A weary but nonetheless com- passionate presence in the eye of this storm of humanity, he may just have pulled off a career best in a film that's already brimming with many pluses. IN CINEMAS TODAY Embassy Cinemas Valletta Tel. 21 227436, 21 245818 Ready Player One (3D) (12A) 10:35, 14:15, 17:45, 20:45 Peter Rabbit (PG) 10:00, 12:10, 14:20, 16:35, 18:50, 21:00 Black Panther (12A) 17:30, 20:45 Paul, Apostle Of Christ (12A) 10:15, 13:40, 16:00, 18:20, 20:50 A Wrinkle in Time (PG) 10:30, 13:45, 16:05, 18:30, 20:55 Tomb Raider (12A) 10:25, 13:40, 16:10, 18:40, 21:10 Valletta Living History (U) 10:00, 10:45, 11:30, 12:15, 13:00, 13:45, 14:30, 15:15 Eden Cinemas St Julian's Tel. 23 710400 A Wrinkle in Time (PG) 17:10, 21:15 Birth of the Dragon (12A) 14:15, 16:20, 18:30, 20:35 Black Panther (12A) 14:25, 18:00, 20:45 Duck Duck Goose (U) 11:40, 14:05, 16:15, 18:30 Game Night (15) 18:50, 21:00, 23:15 Gringo (15) 14:00, 16:25, 18:45, 21:10, 23:35 Macbeth (PG) 15:00 Monster Family (PG) 11:45, 14:05, 16:15 Pacific Rim: Uprising (12A) 20:40 Paul, Apostle of Christ (12A) 14:00, 16:20, 18:40, 21:05, 23:30 Peppa Pig: My First Cinema (U) 11:45, 13:40, 15:25, 19:30 Peter Rabbit (PG) 11:55, 14:10, 16:20, 18:40, 20:55 Proud Mary (15) 14:20, 16:25, 18:35, 20:40, 23:50 Ready Player One (12A) 11:10, 14:30, 18:00, 21:10, 23:10 Red Sparrow (15) 18:25, 21:15 Tomb Raider (12A) 11:15, 13:45, 16:15, 18:45, 21:15, 23:45 Empire Cinemas Bugibba Tel. 21 581787, 21 581909 Red Sparrow (15) 20:45 Peter Rabbit (PG) 11:00, 13:45, 16:30, 18:40, 20:50 Gringo (15) 10:50, 13:35, 16:10, 18:35, 21:00 Duck Duck Goose (U) 10:55, 13:40, 16:30, 18:40 Birth of the Dragon (12A) 11:05, 13:45, 16:30, 18:35, 20:40 Tomb Raider (12A) 10:45, 13:35, 16:05, 18:35, 21:05 Ready Player One (12A) 11:00, 14:00, 18:15, 21:10 Paul, Apostle of Christ (12A) 10:30, 13:30, 16:00, 18:30, 20:55 ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ THE FLORIDA PROJECT ★ ★ ★ ★ GO WITH THE FLOW ★ ★ ★ FLOWING NICELY ★ ★ FLO RIDA ★ FLOP FILM By Teodor Reljic A triumph of humanity THE FLORIDA PROJECT (15) ★ ★ ★ ★ Willem Dafoe and Brooklynn Prince shine in Sean Baker's third film The third film from Sean Baker is a funny and authentic look at the American underclass The verdict Committed to its vision in a way that could only falter after a stretch yet somehow – magically, miraculously – doesn't, The Florida Project is about as perfect a sopho- more effort from Sean Baker as things could possibly get, after the equally genuine and innovative Tangerine pinned him down as a force to be reckoned with. Heartfelt but unsentimental, it's a film that doesn't flinch from harsh re- ality. Instead, it presents an alternative to the represen- tation of poverty that goes beyond patronising heart string-tugging cliches, and is likely one of the most pow- erful and convincing repre- sentations of the childhood experience ever to be filmed.

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