Eleven foreign films to watch out for this year

From crime capers, icy murder mysteries to existential dramas, the most anticipated foreign films of this year have something for every cinephile

February 04, 2017 11:36 pm | Updated February 05, 2017 05:32 pm IST

much-anticipated:  (Clockwise from top) Stills from  The Other Side of Hope ,  Okja,   The Phantom Thread ,  Happy End  and  Loveless .  — photos: special arrangement

much-anticipated: (Clockwise from top) Stills from The Other Side of Hope , Okja, The Phantom Thread , Happy End and Loveless . — photos: special arrangement

Loveless

The new film by Andrey Zvyagintsev, the Golden Lion and Golden Globe-winning Russian director, will find a couple in the midst of a turbulent divorce. But their mutual disdain for each other will have to sustain a search for their 12-year-old son who disappears after witnessing his parents fight. Russians have a tempestuous relationship with Zvyagintsev, for he has established a veritable reputation for mirroring his nation’s uncomfortable truths through familial sights. Taking into account how Zvyagintsev’s celebrated works The Return (2003) and Leviathan (2014) built an epic sweep gently, expectations from Loveless are nothing less than sky high.

The Other Side of Hope

Aki Kaurismäki, the world’s most famous Finnish filmmaker, is known for his bleak comedies. His miserable worldview is populated with characters that are as drab as they are gentle. In action after a gap of six years, Kaurismäki is now turning his camera on the refugee crisis in Europe. The story will follow a poker-playing restaurateur and a former travelling salesman who befriend a group of refugees. And if we go by Kaurismaki’s trademark commitment to social commentary, The Other Side of Hope will be a sincere human tale on the ongoing global crisis through fluent visual ideas.

Alfonso Cuaron’s next

Mexican master Alfonso Cuaron has created a heterogeneous body of work, defying the trappings of genre, yet distinctive for outlining class struggle and an endearing love for long tracking shots. After delivering a box-office smash and pocketing the coveted Best Director Oscar with Gravity (2013), Cuaron is going back to his homeland Mexico to make his next film (as yet untitled) in his mother tongue. A small family drama that chronicles a year in the life of a middle-class household in Mexico City in the early 1970s, the film will mark the director’s return to native cinema after a long gap of 16 years. And yes, the dazzling Emmanuel Lubezki is the cinematographer.

Mektoub is Mektoub

Franco-Tunisian director Abdellatif Kechiche was much celebrated in 2013 when his film Blue Is The Warmest Color won the Palme D’Or at the Cannes Film Festival. The critically acclaimed Blue… also acquired some notoriety owing to the lead actors speaking out about Kechiche’s despotic attitude during filming. Though the film made him legendary, Kechiche has gradually built a profile for his exhaustive filming techniques and a curious exploration of identity in the melting cauldron of class. His new film is shrouded in secrecy, including the cast. But it is tentatively titled Mektoub is Mektoub . Based on Antoine Bégaudeau’s novel La blessure, la vraie , the film will follow a young screenwriter on a summer vacation on the Mediterranean, where he will meet a charming woman and consequently a producer’s wife, offering him conflicting choices and temptations.

 

The Phantom Thread

He might have started as a Robert Altman admirer, but Paul Thomas Anderson has now evolved into an independently imposing figure in the cinematic cosmos of America. This year, Anderson will reunite with Daniel Day-Lewis, whom he directed in There Will Be Blood (2007). The details have been kept under wraps, except a speculative logline which states that it will be set in the fashion world of 1950s under the working title of The Phantom Thread . Anderson’s penchant for searing discomfort, and Day-Lewis’s proclivity towards absolute devotion towards his characters makes this one of the most anticipated films of the year.

 

Happy End

“I can’t get too involved, or it turns into sentimental soup. I try to keep it light.” That’s Michael Haneke for you, a director who wasn’t considered a serious artiste by the Austrian public until he started scoring awards at the Cannes Film Festival. Haneke’s body of work makes us confront the ugly questions about life, faith and love. His next, titled Happy End , will have Isabelle Huppert and Jean-Louis Trintignant in a family drama set against the backdrop of the refugee predicament in Europe.

 

Okja

With films like Memories Of Murder (2003), The Host (2006) and Mother (2009) to his credit, Bong Joon-Ho is not only one of South Korea’s revered filmmakers, but also of the world. Unfortunately, the director’s English language debut Snowpiercer (2013), despite sparkling reviews, didn’t grab enough eyeballs thanks to distribution mishaps. His next, titled Okja, will follow a South Korean girl who becomes friends with a shy and introverted animal that according to the world is a monster. She has to stop a malevolent company from taking her best friend away. Financed by Netflix, and budgeted at around 50 million dollars, this film will be Joon-Ho’s biggest film to date, with an impressive cast that includes Tilda Swinton, Jake Gyllenhaal, Paul Dano, and Lily Collins. Okja has the possibilities of an adrenaline-charged ride and the element of surprise that the director is capable of throwing at his audience.

 

The Shape Of Water

While Guillermo Del Toro keeps teasing us with the possibility of Hellboy and Pacific Rim sequels on Twitter, the director quietly finished shooting his next film in October last year. The film, much smaller in scale, is set in 1963 America, at the peak of the Cold War and the Civil Rights movement. The story will follow a female janitor who falls in love with an amphibious man, who is held captive in the laboratory she works at, and is being experimented on. The insanely talented cast includes Sally Hawkins, Michael Shannon, Richard Jenkins, Doug Jones, Michael Stuhlbarg and Octavia Spencer. This film holds the promise of Del Toro’s earlier works and his affinity for magic and fantasy.

The Snowman

Swedish director Tomas Alfredson was cheered by the world when he brought much needed heft to vampire cinema, a genre usually derided for its cheesy ideas of romance, in 2008 with Let The Right One In . In his next, he took on the John le Carré Cold War espionage thriller Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy , skillfully delivering thrills with a dash of anxiety and paranoia. Alfredson is now adapting Norwegian crime-writer Jo Nesbø’s The Snowman , in which Michael Fassbender will essay the popular character of Detective Harry Hole, investigating the disappearance of a woman. Alfredson’s films are atmospheric, and photographed with a striking flourish. Nesbo’s icy Norwegian landscape will provide the right setting for the shivers.

Zama

The world has been patiently waiting for another film from director Lucrecia Martel since her widely applauded film The Headless Woman , released eight years ago. The Latin American world is abuzz with her next feature produced by Pedro Almodovar, which will take its inspiration from Antonio di Benedetto’s influential novel Zama. The novel is set in the last decade of the 18th century during the colonial Spanish Empire and describes the lonely existence of its titular character, Don Diego de Zama. A civil servant, Zama has been posted in remote Paraguay, and is coping with a combination of crises, professional, sexual and existential. Benedetto’s work is known for its critical engagement with the Argentine tradition and fits Martel’s intense exploration of the human mind.

Logan Lucky

We all knew that it was best to take Steven Soderbergh’s declaration of retirement with a pinch of salt. The director has never really left the world of cinema, watching hundreds of films every year and directing multiple episodes of the television drama series, The Knick . He is officially coming back thanks to his current muse Channing Tatum, who has lured him to make a heist film against the backdrop of a NASCAR race. For film lovers, it’s a big occasion, and the ensemble cast — Channing Tatum, Daniel Craig, Adam Driver, Hilary Swank, Katherine Waterston, Katie Holmes, Seth MacFarlane, Sebastian Stan and Riley Keough — only adds to the excitement. Logan Lucky already has the glee of a crime caper that echoes the cool quotient of his successful Ocean’s … series.

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