Archive for June, 2009

 

June 26th, 2009

Adapting her own novel, director and author Rebecca Miller presents “The Private Lives of Pippa Lee,” starring Robin Wright Penn in the title role as a woman of 50 who uses the unraveling of her marriage to reminisce about the path her life has taken. The large ensemble cast includes Alan Arkin, Julianne Moore, Monica Bellucci, Maria Bello, Blake Lively, Winona Ryder and Keanu Reeves. Apparently, “Pippa Lee” will be released throughout the world beginning next month, but the film is still searching for an American distributor.

IFC interviews “Precious” director Lee Daniels and discovers “The World According to Lee Daniels.

Released in March in the UK, “The Damned United,” the biopic of famed football manager Brian Clough starring Michael Sheen, will be released stateside in September.

The Globe and Mail believes that director David Bezmozgis’s debut film “Victoria Day” Smells Like Teen Spirit.

One Film Wonder: Until he snagged the role of Bernardo, the leader of the Sharks in “West Side Story,” George Chakiris had been cast almost exclusively in the previous decade as an unnamed “dancer.” Following the film which earned him the Best Supporting Actor Oscar for 1961, Chakiris worked primarily on Broadway and in European films for the remainder of the decade, then spent the 1970s and 80s guest starring on American television. Since the mid 90s, he has been retired from the entertainment industry and reportedly crafts sterling silver jewelry.


Revanche

The Ripple Effect

June 26th, 2009

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The Hollywood Theatre in Portland went dark. And the film began. There were no public service announcements. No trailers. Just the random sounds of nature somewhere tranquil and seemingly isolated as a lens focused on a tall grove of trees reflected in water. Then an object smacked through the surface, submerging instantly, and the ripples undulated until the water was calm again.

After this ambivalent but evocative opening, the Austrian film “Revanche” suddenly is immersed in the hardcore, urban plight of a hardscrabble Viennese couple. With purposely very little known about the specifics of the plot going in, it is a jarring juxtaposition as the movie becomes engrossed for some time in the grotty and grim story of an ex-con and his prostitute girlfriend. (What did the opening sequence portend?) But patience is required, and rewarded, for a film which eventually returns to the rural setting so that the city and the country form a concentric circle for themes of discontent, anguish and retribution. Revanche translates as revenge. And the first inclination is to suspect that a story steeped in subterranean Vienna will just be a classic story of noirish comeuppance and unintended consequences. But the film Götz Spielmann creates is more complex; it is noir but as if imagined in the pages of Walden. “Revanche” is a deliberate, thorough (and Thoreau) tale which channels the words of the venerated transcendentalist.

The mass of men lead lives of quiet desperation. What is called resignation is confirmed desperation. From the desperate city you go into the desperate country, and have to console yourself with the bravery of minks and muskrats. A stereotyped but unconscious despair is concealed even under what are called the games and amusements of mankind. There is no play in them, for this comes after work. But it is a characteristic of wisdom not to do desperate things.
Henry David Thoreau, Walden

Desperation hounds Alex and Tamara. Alex (Johannes Krisch) is the Austrian ex-con toiling as a put-upon dogsbody in a Vienna brothel named “Cinderella.” Tamara (a suitably undemonstrative Irina Potapenko) is the Ukrainian prostitute pressured by the brothel’s owner to work as a more upscale whore, but who fears she’ll be even more controlled by this pimp. Alex is resourceful, aware and kind; his boss calls him soft. With his widow’s peak hair slicked casually back and a prominent moustache, Krisch has the solid sensual presence of Viggo Mortensen and the haunted countenance of Willem Dafoe. As Tamara, Potapenko fixes upon her face the unfazed mask of a sex worker; her gaze is always distant, as though she’s searching out a new, less tormented life with her melancholy eyes. Both in debt, the couple decides to bolt for Ibiza after Alex plans to pilfer a large sum of money in one last score.

In the brothel, the camera of cinematographer Martin Gschlacht can be as dispassionate as closed-circuit television. It watches from a hallway peering into a bedroom, or sits at the edge of a changing room as vacant women slip into lingerie without a word passed between them. Sometimes characters walk off screen while the camera holds its position, just long enough to evoke a jittery mood. (Color and mirrors are used judiciously.) It’s all quite tense while feeling legitimate and fittingly tawdry, dangerous and unsettling.

When a bank robbery is botched, Alex escapes to the countryside outside Vienna and calls upon his grandfather (Johannes Thanheiser), an infirmed but defiant farmer, who lives alone on a working farm. Desiring isolation, Alex chops wood in anticipation of the winter and becomes, reluctantly, a dutiful grandson. The repetitious physical labor affords the mournful Alex a massive amount of time for contemplation. The grandfather’s closest neighbors are a married couple, Robert (Andreas Lust), a Vienna police officer, and Susanne (Ursula Strauss), a shopkeeper who visits the elderly man often. It is a bucolic setting, filmed pleasantly, where winter apples are ripening and his grandfather picks up a dusty, long-forgotten accordion to play for Susanne. But the couple is struggling to conceive and Robert is weighed down with guilt from work. And with every drag on his cigarette, Alex’s face becomes more wounded and hardened, the light extinguished from his eyes, except for the thought of vengeance. Even intercourse isn’t carnal pleasure, just forceful rutting as he is consumed by a desire to vindicate.

Revenge is a powerful narrative device. Every cop movie, gangster flick and crime thriller seems to rely on its allure; and almost every vigilante lauded in films is obsessed with meting out justice. It’s a moviegoer’s aphrodisiac. And the avenging violence of the final showdown is so universal that it apparently satisfies a primordial impulse. “Revanche” expresses the concept with a fresh, interesting and challenging twist. It is a long but smart and meticulous film of 121 minutes with a less cathartic resolution that still lingers intensely once the house lights come up.


June 19th, 2009

Swooped up after a frenetic bidding war at Sundance, the blaxploitation homage “Black Dynamite” arrives in theaters in September.

In August, First Independent Pictures will release “Big Fan,” the directorial debut from “The Wrestler” screenwriter Robert D. Siegel. Patton Oswalt plays Paul Aufiero, a 35-year-old parking-garage attendant from Staten Island and self-described “world’s biggest New York Giants fan.” Oswalt shared his Sundance Experience on his blog, with special lacerating wit unsheathed on the trolls of Axe.

The prodigious Woody Allen returns this month with “Whatever Works,” starring his curmudgeonly doppelganger, Larry David. It marks the 28th consecutive year that the 73-year-old director has released a film.

While helming his feature film debut, “Easier with Practice,” recent University of Miami film school grad Kyle Patrick Alvarez kept a behind-the-scenes blog journal detailing the creative process, from the earliest inklings of the story to the last moments of post-production. Based on a first-hand GQ article by Davy Rothbart, the film begins as a writer’s road trip but is interrupted by a random phone call from a stranger which unearths a new dimension of intimacy.

On his attractive blog, Alvarez includes in-depth descriptions of how he optioned the article, life on the set, and the making of the trailer. He even gives his mom a few posts. “Easier with Practice” had its world premiere at the CineVegas Film Festival last week and enjoys an international premiere this week at the Edinburgh Film Festival, where the film has already earned a strong nod from The Scotsman newspaper.

One Film Wonder: In 1966, Jocelyne LaGarde played Queen Malama in “Hawaii,” the highest grossing film of the year. She spoke only French and Tahitian so read her lines in English phonetically. LaGarde won the Best Supporting Actress accolade at the 1967 Golden Globes and was nominated for an Academy Award as Best Actress in a Supporting Role. It was her only film appearance.


The Limits of Control & Goodbye Solo

A Summit, Not a Bluff

June 19th, 2009

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In the latest film from the mercurial Jim Jarmusch, “The Limits of Control,” more than one character intones “the universe has no center and no edges.” The aphorism could well sum up the movie itself, a beautiful, amorphous muddle thwarted by a soporific pace and an unerring allegiance to the atmospheric. It’s pretty, vacant.

Isaach de Bankolé plays “Lone Man,” the phlegmatic, ice cold hitman, a cooler than cool customer with an exquisite, sculpted face, tautly tailored suits and a monastic devotion to the practice of Tai Chi. In an antiseptically timeless airport, he’s told at the outset by his French handlers in coded parlance to case the joint. In this case the joint, it seems, is Spain. And once he lands in Madrid, he begins to meet a succession of intermediaries who each deliver a matchbox stuffed with a missive. (The actual meaning of the numbered and lettered notes which he deciphers and then digests with a single swallow is never revealed.) The matchbox messages send him from the capital to Seville and finally to Andalusia, and all the while he resembles not so much a hired killer than he does a stoic, sartorial Rick Steves.

He sits, stylishly, in plazas for long stretches, observing but not scanning, doing nothing more menacing than ordering two espressos for himself in very particular terms; not a double but two singles. Characters enter the story randomly, as though the Lone Man is dreaming, and none of these unnamed, cameoed enigmas are given a modicum of depth. They are visages. Paz de la Huerta is “Nude,” literally, as she lolls in his swankily appointed hotel room unsuccessfully tempting him. Tilda Swinton is introduced striding strikingly in a painstakingly dramatic slow-motion shot across a plaza with cowboy hat, super cool boots and a Johnny Winters shag. It’s a performance as the “Blonde” which could be described as andrudgery. John Hurt, the Grizzled Earl of Indie, brings his reliable panache to his brief appearance as “Guitar,” but then he made captivating reading of tepid tabloid diaries on “The Big Fat Quiz of the Year,” so he’s an old hand at the more-from-less game. Gael García Bernal shows up for a mere wisp of a tacked on appearance as the whiskered “Mexican.” They chatter about art, films, bohemians and musical instruments, but decidedly one-sidedly as “Lone Man” listens with piercing eyes and barely an acknowledgment.

Yet as indecipherable as the movie becomes, “The Limits of Control” may be Jarmusch’s most visually appealing film. Christopher Doyle – who built his reputation with the works of Kar Wai Wong and Phillip Noyce and more recently shot films as disparate as “Hero” and “Paranoid Park” – provides mesmerizing cinematography. Dense and sharp and lovely in both styles, Doyle’s camerawork is meticulous. Whether winding through the contoured stairwells of “Lone Man’”s Madrid hotel, or capturing the earthy Mediterranean tones of the streets of Seville, or observing Bankolé sitting quietly in a museum gazing at Antoni Tàpies’s Gran Sábana, Doyle constantly finds captivating angles and perspectives to enhance the myriad color palette. The sets compliment the pictures and the production design from Eugenio Caballero is superlative.

By the time “Lone Man” breaches the heavily fortified compound of the “American” businessman played by Bill Murray – and as with the matchboxes we’re left ignorant to the secret of his entry — all semblance of a coherent story has been discarded for ambiance. Like Jarmusch’s last film, the unsatisfying “Broken Flowers,” the lead character travels but doesn’t really go anywhere, which contrasts so decisively from his enchanting “Coffee and Cigarettes” where folks essentially sat still, chatted and made welcome company. “The Limits of Control” is festooned with suits, wigs, scruffy beards and pubic hair; a costume party of fancy dress and meandering guests.

As Jarmusch becomes more imperceptible, Ramin Bahrani has emerged as one of the most lucid, forthright and important American directors of the decade. An independent filmmaker whose movies capture the meaningful lives of society’s marginalized, Bahrani makes films which display empathy and respect for the characters and care and concern for their stories. Since 2005, he’s made three extremely important works – “Man Push Cart,” “Chop Shop” and this year’s “Goodbye Solo” — about people who live in a recessionary existence even before the mainstream bottom fell out from under the giddy, greedy, and pernicious Wall Street orgy.

While the first two commendable features were set in New York City, Bahrani has returned to his hometown of Winston-Salem, North Carolina for this latest moving tale, “Goodbye Solo.” An immigrant from Senegal, Solo is a jovial cabdriver with a dream to become an air steward. He is also an expectant first-time father and de facto step-dad to his girlfriend’s pre-teen daughter. Solo befriends one particular passenger, William, who harbors an apparent death wish for reasons he doesn’t divulge. At an appointed time, William wishes to be taken to “Blowing Rock” above Johns River Gorge in the Blue Ridge Mountains, and he doesn’t need a ride back. Solo wants to make sure he’s the driver who takes the fateful fare.

Bahrani fills the film with several story arcs which could have become trite or maudlin in lesser hands – the relationship between the irascible older gentleman and a happy-go-lucky junior; Solo trying surreptitiously to discover the untold basis for William’s decision; and a relationship fractured by a pregnancy. But he is such a composed, thoughtful director that he finds a fresh perspective to examine these recognizable elements. Bahrani is also ably assisted by co-writer Bahareh Azimi, who collaborated on “Chop Shop,” on a script which infuses the gritty with grace, smoothly melding the dramatic and the light hearted in a finely honed balance so that the see saw that seems so much like real life is both familiar and contextual.

In each of his movies, Bahrani has hired novices as the protagonists and they have mined perceptive and lasting performances. In “Man Push Cart,” Ahmad Razvi simmered with the vestiges of hidden pathos in the main role of the beleaguered cart operator. Alejandro Polanco delivered a phenomenally assured performance as the plucky Ale in “Chop Shop.” And in “Goodbye Solo,” Souleymane Sy Savane continues the trend of strong depictions with a stirring and convincing portrayal in the titular role in his first feature film. Bearing a remarkable resemblance to Liberian former world footballer of the year George Weah, Savane, an erstwhile runway model and African television star, creates an affable character who is charming but not slick, chatty but not scatty, and determined but not dogmatic. Savane is particularly effective at an airline interview where he is regal, earnest and genuine. He is an actor with immense presence and should, if casting directors have any sense, find work handily. As William, Red West, a one-time member of Elvis’s Memphis Mafia, carries himself with suitable hangdog resignation but brings an avuncular strength and nuance to the quietly tender moments. And Diana Franco Galindo is a poised delight as Alex, the savvy young girl who develops a parental bond with Solo, which is underscored in a touching scene when he helps her with schoolwork.

In the film’s denouement, Solo, with Alex along for support, drives William to “Blowing Rock.” The camera ascends into the clouds, poetically hovering at the precipice of a shrouded canyon, the wind rasping heartrendingly. Bahrani’s movies are potent, even searing at times, but he does not inflict them on an audience; they are indelible but not tattooed. Intrinsically human, they are films which give without taking.


June 12th, 2009

Zaire. 1974. The Rumble in the Jungle. James Brown. “Soul Power.” Opens next month.

Despite word this week that Senator Distribution will be folding, the company will still release a few of its remaining projects, including “Mesrine: A Film in Two Parts,” starring Vincent Cassel in a César-winning performance as a notorious French mobster. Jason Solomons of The Guardian chatted to France’s Most Wanted earlier this year.

With “The Boat That Rocked,” writer-director Richard Curtis boards a pirate radio ship frolicking in international waters under government threat. Coming in August, the film set in 1966 features an ensemble cast including Philip Seymour Hoffman, Emma Thompson, Bill Nighy, Kenneth Branagh, Nick Frost, “Mad Men”’s January Jones and “The IT Crowd”’s Chris O’Dowd.

After popping up at Sundance, “Cold Souls” has been travelling the festival circuit before an anticipated August release date in the United States. The debut film from Sophie Barthes finds Paul Giamatti becoming a patient of Dr. Flinstein, a soul extractionist, played by David Strathairn (a graduate of Ringling Brothers and Barnum and Bailey Circus Clown College). Barthes chatted with Coming Soon about the film which is being widely compared to the works of Charlie Kaufman.

One Film Wonder: Jaye Davidson reportedly left the film industry long ago. He appeared in a mere three movies, with his last appearance in 1994’s “Stargate.” But before he returned to the fashion world, Davidson mesmerized audiences in his 1992 debut with a seductively sweet Oscar-nominated turn as Dil in Neil Jordan’s “The Crying Game.” It’s a performance which incidentally includes one of the most gasp-inducing and talked-about surprises in movie history.


Observe and Report & Paul Blart: Mall Cop

Lost in the Supermarket

June 12th, 2009

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What strange fruit do we expect to fall from the Apatow Family Tree? Seemingly, nothing more odd than a genial, likable protagonist or two. Toss in an imperfect but not twisted leading lady. And cameos for the loose cannons with empty holsters. It’s become a sort of ironic comfort zone for moviegoers in the late 2000s.

But with “Observe and Report,” writer and director Jody Hill – who handled the same duties on “The Foot Fist Way” and HBO’s ”Eastbound & Down” — upsets expectation with a darkly comic tale of damaged goods at a shopping mall. Seth Rogen drops his Fozzie Bear as hipster persona to play Ronnie Barnhardt, a peculiar, self important security guard with a God complex. A rampant flasher sets Ronnie into a frenzy as his desire to capture the “pervert” becomes the obsessive focus that coalesces all the disparate parts of his life into what he sees as his crime fighting destiny. Each distinct element becomes intertwined so that Ronnie, the frustrated cop wannabe, harnesses his lust for gun culture, mocks with open disdain the police detective assigned to the case, strives to protect the object of his intense infatuation, Brandi, a slag of a cosmetics counter chick played by Anna Faris, while all the while hoping to make his alcoholic mother proud. He closely resembles Travis Bickle as he patrols the parking lot as an amped golf cart driver. “You Texting to Me?…You Texting to Me?”

Raunchy and a tad emotionally disquieting, “Observe and Report” portrays Ronnie as angry, spiteful and self righteous. He’s perpetually pissed off; and a bi-polar person not prone to taking his meds. As the film proceeds, Rogen’s character becomes darker, especially when he pursues his dream to co-opt his vigilante streak by becoming a police officer. In a trippy scene during his cadet screening, a sincere Ronnie, when asked what inspired him to become a cop, regales a police department psychologist with an elaborate, disturbing dream which ends with him dispensing justice in the violent mowing down of perpetrators. But the delusional Ronnie doesn’t grasp how unsettling his recitation of the vision is; he earnestly, and smugly, sees himself as a crusader while describing the unabashed bloodshed. His is, he proudly intones, “Getting God’s work done.” After he is informed that he won’t be invited to join the police academy, a disbelieving Ronnie is consoled by an acolyte of a colleague, the seemingly childlike Dennis, played cleverly by Michael Peña. Fittingly for a film with such a murky undercurrent, a montage sequence of joyriding hijinks on the job quickly devolves into a bitter Dionysian blur.

The romance between Ronnie and Brandi is decidedly one sided and fittingly debauched. Anna Faris is a comic firecracker as Brandi. Genuinely funny, she brings an artisan’s touch to her zany, narcissistic party hardy persona and her drunken sloppiness is second to none. When Brandi and Ronnie consummate their date, it’s a tipsy dance of comic timing but squirm-inducing as well because Rogen doesn’t undercut Ronnie’s earnestness and Faris isn’t shy about Brandi’s skankiness.

And Ray Liotta as Ronnie’s nemesis, Detective Harrison, shows that he’s as good as the material he’s working with. (He’s on target here; for his excruciating worst, check out his hammy turn in “In the Name of the King: A Dungeon Siege Tale.”)

The film climaxes with Ronnie capturing the flasher — this sequence of exposed male penis is shot in such excruciating slow motion I thought a Coldplay song would break out on the soundtrack — but, again, his violent tendencies are overreaching as dream becomes reality. In the end, he solves the crime and gets the girl (no, not that one); now if he’d just get some help.

If you take “Observe and Report” and strain it, strain it of everything clever, edgy and funny, you’re left with “Paul Blart: Mall Cop,” a fatigued, deflated and impotent comedy.

Paul Blart, like Ronnie Barnhardt, is a mall security guard with a desire to be a police officer who lives at home with his mother. He also shares the house with his pre-teen daughter, Maya (a charming Raini Rodriguez), the smartest, savviest, and not coincidentally, most relatable character in this hodgepodge of comic porridge. Instead of a flasher, Blart (Kevin James) will thwart a hostage crisis to earn his police credibility and win the heart of his wig-selling crush.

Written by James and Nick Bakay seemingly during a lunchbreak from “The King of Queens”and “Sabrina, the Teenage Witch,” respectively, the film is essentially a tiresome, saggy collection of fat jokes. A Segway is an overused prop. And hypoglycemia is referenced (again and again) with so little wit that the movie resembles a Glaxo sales pitch. With undeveloped characters and a plot with all the gravitas of an episode of “The Suite Life of Zach and Cody,” “Paul Blart” is a movie that is so lazy that during the hostage situation at the lockdowned mall which is surrounded by swarms of police, Blart’s daughter sneaks into an unguarded side door…only to become a hostage as well.

James — who’s given too much credit by the story as being a lovable sort with a heart of gold when very little he does justifies this evaluation — is a lethargic screen presence. His love interest, Amy, is played by Jayma Mays, an actress with the eerie physical resemblance and emotional nuance of an Anna Faris Madame Tussaud’s sculpture. The talented Bobby Cannavale shows up for a payday as a pompous SWAT commander who went to high school with Blart and several of the “Happy Madison” repertoire company tear themselves away from craft services long enough to snag a few lines.

Vapidly filmed with less vigor than a mid-season episode of “Gary Unmarried,” “Paul Blart” is a tedious exercise. But none of this is surprising given that this stolid effort was directed by Steve Carr, who is forging a Hall of Fame directing career, if that Hall of Fame enshrined those hitting below the Mendoza Line. His resume includes a Murderers’ Row of mediocrity: “Next Friday;” “Dr. Dolittle 2;” “Daddy Day Care;” “Rebound;” and “Are we Done Yet?” With this track record, one can’t wait to ignore the next James-Carr production, “Do We Care Yet?”


June 5th, 2009

Coming this December, a buff Robert Downey Jr. stars in the title role of Guy Ritchie’s “Sherlock Holmes” with Jude Law tagging along as his long-suffering Watson.

In the current issue of Bright Lights Film Journal, Matthew Kennedy reviews Frankly, My Dear: “Gone with the Wind” Revisited by Molly Haskell while during this 70th anniversary year of the classic film David Denby evaluates the career of director Victor Fleming, The Real Rhett Butler.

Later this summer, Charlyne Yi and Michael Cera will appear in “Paper Heart,” a romance melding documentary and narrative styles. I’m going out on a limb here but I predict that at some point Cera will be flummoxed. To the point of awkward silence.

The always frank, no bullshit slinging David Cross talks about a wealth of topics, including the joy of not having to talk anymore about whether there’s going to be an “Arrested Development” movie.

One Film Wonder: In 1986, in a watershed moment for American independent cinema, Spike Lee released “She’s Gotta Have It.” The shoestring budgeted film with the thunderbolt cultural effect artfully followed three suitors, including Lee’s comic creation Mars Blackmon, as they formed simultaneous relationships with the enticing and untethered Brooklynite Nola Darling, played by Tracy Camilla Johns. She’s only found roles in four projects since, including a part as a “club patron” in Lee’s “Mo’ Better Blues.”


Anvil! The Story of Anvil

Shine On You Crazy Diamond

June 5th, 2009

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Beginning with mid 80s concert footage of a never-heard-of-them foursome channeling Spinal Tap and ending more than two decades later with a rousing, touching validation for a long-forgotten Canadian metal band, “Anvil! The Story of Anvil” spans the spectrum of emotions as few movies recently have in one of the most moving and human musical documentaries ever made.

The archival video that opens the film presents a triumphant Anvil on stage in 1984 at a massive rock festival in Japan. Lead singer and guitarist Steve “Lips” Kudlow swaggers before the fervent thousands sporting a bondage harness and a big goofy grin as he strums his electric guitar with a dildo. Drummer Robb Reiner wields two sticks with speed metal ferocity. They tear into their signature anthem, “Metal on Metal.” Big Hair, Big Noize. This was their exact apex moment as the band’s career fizzled, and quickly. Yet, this Headbanger’s Ball asterisk earned adulation for their thunderous sound and technical proficiency. Unequivocal props are delivered by Slash, Lemmy, Lars Ulrich and Scott Ian; all mystified at the demise of the audacious heavy metal group. There were no drug induced purges or stints in Her Majesty’s prisons or fatally toxic band dynamics. “The Story of Anvil” is not about tortured lives and talent spurned. Things just didn’t work out as they would have wished. The two long-haired ever-presents in the band, married, middle-aged and friends since the age of 14, hold down jobs during the day — Lips delivers school lunches and Robb works as a handyman — while performing on free evenings to rowdy, fervent crowds in nondescript bars in the Toronto area.

A cycle they’ve repeated for the better part of two decades, given where they’ve been and where they’d still like to go, it’s extraordinary in its ordinariness. “Anvil” intimately and fascinatingly follows these two regular dudes in their seemingly quixotic quest to resurrect Anvil to its former glory.

A few years ago, just after Lips turned 50, the band snagged an opportunity to play gigs in Europe and the images captured by the filmmakers of the European tour are mesmerizing. Lips, especially, envisions the tour as a springboard and it opens quite promisingly at a large festival in Sweden. As he notices rock legends strolling the backstage area, Lips’s sweetness is infectious as he acts not like a contemporary but as a giddy fan, all rushed sentences and hopeless anecdotes. Did he really think legendary drummer Carmine Appice would remember a brunette on a Toronto street from 30 years before? He’s an endearing fellow, and his enthusiasm and optimism will be excruciatingly tested when the tour dissipates into a fiasco. In a Spinal Tapish moment, Tiziana, the girlfriend of the band’s other guitarist, Ian, is the overwhelmed tour manager. (Ian and bassist Glenn have been earnest members of the band since the mid 1990s) She mishandles schedules and overlooks the most basic details of life on the road. Trains aren’t reserved. Gigs aren’t confirmed. In the Czech Republic, Lips erupts after a meagerly attended show when a Prague club owner stiffs the band. A slightly tipsy English solicitor who just happens to be in the club and overhears the kerfuffle speaks a basic truth about Anvil’s circumstances when he intones that in Europe the band should be playing before crowds in the thousands. (With Tiziana at the helm, it’s almost surprising that they weren’t booked to play an air force base.)

As the tour slinks into its sixth week, they arrive in Transylvania for the final show and in a 10,000 seater auditorium perform before only a paltry 174 rockers. Yet Lips won’t speak ill of Tiziana. He’s an incredibly decent man as back in Toronto he comes to her defense and says she gave her best. (It’s an illuminating instance of his sincere generosity and perhaps speaks to why the band sputtered when success seemed an easier option.)

With a bond more like brothers than friends, Lips and Robb are both children of Jewish immigrants but stark contrasts in upbringing and temperament. The ebullient Lips was raised in a family — with the notable exception of an older, generous sister — which saw his musical pursuits as fanciful, at best. His face regularly breaks into a toothy, childlike grin that cannot be muted by his still disappointed mother and disapproving accountant and endocrinologist brothers.

Conversely, the introspective Robb flourished artistically in an endearingly encouraging home environment. He quietly but movingly tells the story of why he wears a necklace in honor of his deceased jeweler father, Villi, a Hungarian Jewish Auschwitz survivor. A droll and reflective soul, Robb provides one of the funnier segments in the film as well when he takes the filmmakers on a tour of his artwork.

But both are surrounded by folks who not only care for them but share their dream. (It’s a good-hearted film with very few public villains.) Both are married to long-time spouses who are unerringly supportive, grounded and patient; Robb’s wife is only too aware that her hair still foreshadows that she loves 80s metal.

The boys also recruit an old ally, producer Chris Tsangarides, the force behind their most potent work in the early 80s, to help oversee their latest (and 13th) full-length album, which is funded by Lips’ benevolent sister. They travel to Dover, England, where the kindly and sagacious Tsangarides finetunes the demos into structured songs. But he is also the perfect personality to alleviate the strain of the recording regimen. When Lips and Robb blow up in a particularly venomous sibling-like tiff, Tsangarides is the even-tempered salve. The honest, raw emotion from the session where Lips and Robb reconcile with Chris’s help is powerful and touching.

They may rage against each other (with the concomitant apologies and hugs) and rail against the machine that is the record industry, with record labels earning the particular ire of Lips, but they never disparage the fans. They never complain that folks just didn’t get them. (In a recent One-Hit Wonder program on American television, it was disheartening to see the number of performers who denigrated their listeners for, of all things, adoring their music, even if it was for one selective song.) Lips and Robb have been let down and dismayed by the machinations of the business but they aren’t cynical; they truly love playing and genuinely appreciate the audience, even a rowdy barroom in Etobicoke. They desperately want to play bigger stages worthy of their talent but they won’t disparage the modest venues and patrons.

In a career where they have clearly relied on too many of the wrong people to their detriment, they couldn’t have found a more worthy person in whom to place their trust than Sacha Gervasi. A first time director (and a fan since at least the age of 19 in 1985), Gervasi crafts their story with respect and care. He documents the travails with a dogged determination. And there’s the right mix of Spinal Tapish humorous moments (yes, it does go to 11) and sincere emotion so that the funny doesn’t overwhelm the passionate. Gervasi also creates a film which keeps surprising throughout with a narrative that at times seems almost fictional and a world-wide span of characters worthy of literature.

“Anvil! The Story of Anvil” is a testament to the essence of art and the creative process, and Lips’ romantic fervor and Robb’s quiet drive are the genuine quotidian embodiments. It’s easy to root for such good, authentic fellows. Do nice guys win? They do, if they say they do.