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January 20, 2010

Creation

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Real-life married couple Paul Bettany and Jennifer Connelly star as Charles Darwin and his wife in this biographical drama. Set before the publication of ON THE ORIGIN OF SPECIES, CREATION finds Darwin grieving over the death of his daughter and feeling far away from his wife.

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The life of Charles Darwin tries to crawl its way out of the primordial soup—or is it syrup?—of Creation. You wince at the struggle, the sentimentality drowning the survival odds of the film’s less-than-fit biopic subject. After his early years of seafaring expedition aboard the Beagle, the evolutionist (Bettany) fell into a sickly period of writer’s block, during which he married and raised a family (at an emotional remove, we’re led to believe). A child, Annie, died of complications from scarlet fever; that’s the story’s guilt-ridden crux. (Alongside The Lovely Bones and the forthcoming Edge of Darkness, it’s a season of ghostly dead daughters.) Elsewhere, this is the kind of drama in which Brits shout things like, “You’re fighting a war with God, Charles!” Will On the Origin of Species pass muster in a tense draft-reading climax with pious wife Emma (Connelly, strangely stilted with real-life spouse Bettany)?

Still, there are sparks here that suggest the smarter movie a more scientifically minded director—say, David Cronenberg—might have made. Bettany is effortlessly brainy, even able to assume a slight dottiness while in explainer mode that’s charming. A baby sparrow falls from its nest, and the camera speeds up into scary Lynchvision as the body decomposes, capturing the harshness of Darwin’s radical ideas. The beaming smile of young Martha West (playing Annie) is almost a special effect unto itself; likewise an extraordinary sequence with an actual orangutan interacting with Bettany on the floor in a zoo. The two cavort, draw and touch hands; it awakens precisely what the rest of the movie lacks—curiosity.—Joshua Rothkopf

Opens Fri 22. Find showtimes

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January 9, 2010

Garbage Dreams

Filed under: Movies, Movies online, Release — Tags: , , , , , , , — admin @ 4:18 pm

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Follows three teenage boys born into the trash trade and growing up in the world’s largest garbage village, on the outskirts of Cairo. It is the home to 60,000 Zaballeen — Arabic for “garbage people.” Far ahead of any modern “Green” initiatives, the Zaballeen survive by recycling 80 percent of the garbage they collect. When their community is suddenly faced with the globalization of its trade, each of the teenage boys is forced to make choices that will impact his future and the survival of his community.

Production Status: In Production/Awaiting Release
Genres: Documentary and Teen
Running Time: 1 hr. 22 min.
Distributors:
Films Transit International
Production Co.:
Iskander Films, Chicken & Egg Pictures, MotiveArt
Produced in: United States

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MOVIE REVIEW

GARBAGE DREAMS What a dump! In Arabic, with English subtitles. Running time: 79 minutes. Not rated (nothing objectionable). At the IFC Center, Sixth Avenue and Third Street.

Who knew that people could love their gar bage so much that they grow angry when it is taken from them? Meet the zabbaleen, the subject of “Garbage Dreams,” Mai Iskander’s fascinating documentary about trash recyclers in Cairo.

They survive by collecting garbage from around the chaotic city of 18 million people, bringing it to their community on the outskirts of Cairo and recycling 80 percent of what they collect.

It’s not a pleasant way to make a living, but the participants accept their lot in life. “It’s my fate,” Adham, 17, tells New York-based Iskander, the film’s director, producer and lenser.

Adham supports his mother and four sisters by shearing off the tops of used soda cans, separating the more lucrative aluminum tops from their tin canisters.

But, as so often happens in the 21st century, their way of life is threatened by globalization.

The government, in the quest for modernization, has started outsourcing the garbage collection to foreign companies.

This change is met with resistance by the zabbaleen, who note that while they recycle 80 percent of the garbage they gather, the outsiders reuse just 20 percent.

In the words of Al Gore, ” ‘Garbage Dreams’ makes a compelling case that modernization does not always equal progress.”

vam@nypost.com

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