Five Great Brie Larson Performances

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Brie Larson has spent a lot of time in film, television, and music making many appearances on television shows, sitcoms, dramas, and even working with Disney every now and then. She’s also a very prominent musician and has managed to finally break out in Hollywood over the last seven years as a surefire heavy hitter. Working her way from supporting player in to headlining acclaimed award winning films, Brie Larson has earned her stripes as a bonafide dramatic actress who is now an Oscar contender.

We’re rooting for her to take the gold home come February, but even if she doesn’t win, she has so many more amazing performances up her sleeve, and her potential for future wins are limitless. Being able to make the transition from art house films to mainstream cinema easily, Larson is something of a chameleon prone to stealing scenes, and I’m glad she’s finally getting her credit.

Here are five of her best performances yet.

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The Diary of a Teenage Girl (2015) [Blu-Ray/Digital]

diaryteenYou have to appreciate the gutsy turn “The Diary of a Teenage Girl” takes when it dares to enter in to a coming of age tale that is about as realistic as it can get. When our character Minnie begins realizing her own sexual attraction to her mother’s boyfriend, it comes off more as creepy and awkward, no matter how much dreamer Minnie tries to romanticize it. She paints the dynamic between her and her mom’s boyfriend Monroe as something of a realization of her adulthood, when really it’s downright hedonistic self satisfaction with absolutely no thought toward the consequences she and her would be lover may face.

Though Minnie finds it fun to tempt Monroe by sucking his finger during a play fight, it’s about as gross as you’d expect with a thirty year old man hitting on a fifteen year old girl.  When they finally do sleep together, director Marielle Heller drives the point of Minnie’s coming of age, when post-coitus, Monroe proudly smears Minnie’s blood along his thigh. A lot of Minnie’s own affair with Monroe is pure pleasure, and its eventual fall out is very real, causing her to sink somewhat in to a darker world of drugs and drinking. It becomes especially harrowing when she begins to dabble in darker corners of her city as a means of coping with her pseudo-affections for Monroe.

Alexander Skarsgård is very good as the slimy Monroe who presents opportunities for Minnie to dabble in to areas of her life she’s always been afraid to visit. All the while star Bel Powley handles the material like a champ, providing a very unique turn as main character Minnie whose actions eventually transform in to self destruction and self inflicted punishment. Her own moral code and decisions will cause the viewer to consider time and time again whether they really like Minnie or not, and even when we close the film, it’s never a surefire bet that she’s a good person that will redeem herself in the future. For her it’s something of a dreamy fantasy she’s fulfilling, while it looks to the objective viewer, like an older man preying on something of an idyllic young girl.

If I have any complaints it’s that Christopher Meloni and Kristen Wiig are wasted and never given a chance to really shine; especially Wiig who is given a smaller role that doesn’t compliment her ability to be funny or complex. “The Diary of a Teenage Girl” is nonetheless an entertaining and often compelling drama comedy that dives head first in to the coming of age of a young woman, warts and all.

Featured in the stuffed blu-ray is an audio commentary with director Marielle Heller and Actors Bel Powley and Alexander Skarsgård. The commentary is fine enough with some fun anecdotes, and information about the filmmaking process. There is a trio of deleted scenes all of which clock in at an average of two and half minutes.

“Marielle’s Journey: Bringing the Diary to Life” is a twenty three minute look at director Marielle Heller’s history with the source material, the look at the stage adaptation and the transition to feature film. There are interviews with the cast and crew, a look at the themes and details of the narrative, including characters, the process of casting, the process of including the sex as a plot element, the film’s tone and so much more. There’s a twenty five minute Q&A with Marielle Heller, Alexander Skarsgård and Bel Powley with moderator Jenelle Riley who engages in a very informative Q&A. Finally there’s the original theatrical trailer.

World of Tomorrow (2015)

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The crude animation for “World of Tomorrow” seems like something that would distract from the overall experience, but thankfully Don Hertzfeldt’s short is still very powerful. The impact of the message and the ideas about time travel and unchangeable destiny still resonate, and the crude animation and simplistic voice work almost seem to compliment the abstract ideas presented here.

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Ex Machina (2015)

Ex-Machina

Alex Garland’s “Ex Machina” is a brilliant often mesmerizing amalgam of “2001” and “Frankenstein” in where man has once again reached the ability to create life, albeit artificial. Garland chronicles the ever enduring battle of artificial intelligence and human intellect and how the lines can sometimes be blurred by the geniuses seeking to create actual life. “Ex Machina” is a consistently enigmatic and stunning science fiction tale of humanity, and the god complex that entrenches us in a deep and very bleak mystery as well as introducing us to a slew of characters, all of whom may not particularly be devious at first glance.

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La Belle et La Bête (2014)

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In this telling of the tale as old as time, Belle lives with her salesman father, three troublemaker brothers, and two greedy sisters. Belle prefers to lead a calmer, simpler life than her siblings. As her father’s business goes badly and her brother loses a lot of money gambling, the father becomes indebted to the Beast and so in a trade, Belle agrees to live with the Beast. Once at the castle, she is cared for by a group of tadums, fairy tale animals who look a bit like dogs. She is given all that she could need and more, she however, has to have dinner with the Beast every single night, which does not go well at first. With time and patience, Belle and the Beast become closer and closer.

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Martyrs (2008)

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I think if it weren’t so obsessed with its own self-indulgent pseudo-spiritualism and didn’t stop to tell four different stories simultaneously, “Martyrs” may have been a decent film. It begins as a solid revenge picture, but then devolves in to an absurd campaign in torture and pain. It’s a grueling sadistically boring horror drama with a narrative so convoluted I stopped caring about what was unfolding after the first half hour. “Martyrs” loves to pretend it’s this transcendent statement about our questioning of the afterlife, but in reality it’s just misogynist torture porn painted as art house dribble that will make you feel dirty.

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The Shorts of Horrible Imaginings 2015

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[Horrible Imaginings Film Festival San Diego 2015]

Every year, Horrible Imaginings Film Festival in San Diego offers a carefully selected collection of genre short films. At this festival, the shorts are organized by blocks instead of being each paired with a feature length film each. The blocks at this year’s festival were “Child’s Nightmares”, “Horror-Comedy”, “Creature Features”, “Youth and Student Showcase”, “Horror for Humanity”, “LGBT”, “Natural Born Killers”, “Supernatural”, and “Animation”. Due to prior engagements and obligations, it was not possible to see all of them. Missed were the “Child’s Nightmares”, “LGBT”, “Natural Born Killers”, “Animation” blocks and most of the “Supernatural” one. 30 shorts were viewed and enjoyed and 33 were missed. Here are the best ones, the ones you should track down from the ones viewed (in no specific order):

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