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Look Both Ways

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Look Both Ways

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Look Both Ways (2006)

April. 14,2006
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7
| Drama Romance
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During one unusually hot weekend, four friends struggle after hearing some life-changing news.

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Reviews

Lucybespro
2006/04/14

It is a performances centric movie

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CrawlerChunky
2006/04/15

In truth, there is barely enough story here to make a film.

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Senteur
2006/04/16

As somebody who had not heard any of this before, it became a curious phenomenon to sit and watch a film and slowly have the realities begin to click into place.

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Kinley
2006/04/17

This movie feels like it was made purely to piss off people who want good shows

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rowmorg
2006/04/18

There is no reason for a small budget to reduce the aims of a film production, but director Sarah Watt tries to pack too much into her filmic bag in Look Both Ways. Essentially, she just has one story to tell, and a sub-plot is always an excellent counterpoint, but Watt decides to touch on the lives of half a dozen people. The result is that none of their stories are fully developed, and in the absence of commanding central figures, the theme of death threatens to take over as the main character.The main story, a budding romance between Meryl Lee (Justine Clarke) and Nick (William McInnes) needed more detail: we needed to get to know the characters better, but Watt does not seem to know them well enough to go further. They get introduced to each other, just as we get introduced to them, but we are left wanting to know much more.It was revealing to learn in the DVD interview with Watt that the photo-montage sequences were assembled by another team altogether. They were effective, but somehow did not fit well with the director's style. The Waifs, and other Aussie pop singers were another intrusion.Watt is a gifted film-maker, but she should study the art of story-telling, in particular the skill of peeling layers off characters to reveal their inner selves. Too many loose ends were left dangling at the end of this movie, and the pay-off photo-montage sequence was at best ambivalent, and ultimately unnecessary. This is a quirky, enjoyable film, flaws and all, and highly recommended.

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nycritic
2006/04/19

LOOK BOTH WAYS dances around death so frequently, using a barrage of images -- mainly watercolor cartoons which depict Meryl, the woman who can't seem to get over her father's passing and has a deadline to meet -- that it pounds the message to the ground: death is, in fact, everywhere, even in the mundane. Death is a part of life, but you wouldn't know that Meryl would have been informed of it by now as she continues to obssess over seeing her stop-motion doppelganger caught in the most ludicrous of situations. Then again, you wouldn't blame her: she is the witness of a train accident. Now, that's all she can think about -- being stomped to the ground by a derailed train is one of them. Being eaten by sharks is another.And she's not alone: Nick has testicular cancer and is the reporter sent to interview Meryl (who later informs Nick, in a bit of unrelated information, that she is a Cancer as if to remind him he's not quite well, ha-ha). A relationship must ensue between the two of them who are battling their demons, and it all reaches a hilarious climax when they have a sexual tryst and the attack of the rapid-fire visual information hits the screen, depicting their inner thoughts. Whether it's been copied from other films, I can't say, but it made me laugh. Seeing Meryl's watercolor twin at the ends of an AIDs-related illness, as Nick sees microscopic organisms contributing to the overpopulation of the world in the form of an unwanted pregnancy, three babies who wail incessantly, and bring forth zaniness. It's hysterical.LOOK BOTH WAYS is one of those quiet films that happen but get lost in the shuffle due to the lack of name actors and an overdose of independent film status. It barely got a chance to play in New York City early last year as it was, and maybe its own quirky material is to blame. Anyway, it's a good movie -- nothing spectacular, and a neat debut from director Sarah Watt.

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fwomp
2006/04/20

Death is a touchy subject to broach regardless of the medium in which you choose to expose it. It's uncomfortable to even think about yet touches us all on many levels, and that is why LOOK BOTH WAYS succeeds.Building on death in thought-provoking, sad, and often hilarious terms, Look Both Ways binds a small Australian community together after the death of a man upon the local railroad tracks. Meryl (Justine Clarke, DANNY DECKCHAIR) witnesses the horrible event and summons the authorities. The local media shows up, including photojournalist Nick (William McInnes, IRRESISTIBLE) who's just been diagnosed with a rapidly spreading cancer. Also on the scene is Nick's newspaper partner Andy (Anthony Hayes, NED KELLY) and eventually the deceased's wife Julia (Daniella Farinacci, BROTHERS).Meryl sees the event as just another death, something that fill her thoughts and her paintings on a daily basis. Her vivid imagination surrounding death is illustrated (literally) via laughingly silly animated sequences that are sure to tickle your dark funny bone. Photojournalist Nick sees himself on the railroad tracks, having just received a medical death sentence of metastatic testicular cancer. Newspaper writer Andy battles to understand life and death while struggling to be a good father to his divorced children, and the discovery that his new girlfriend is pregnant with an unwanted child. Widow Julia tries to understand the seemingly meaninglessness of her husband's death as flowers flow into her home and she's forced to come to grips with such a sudden loss.Where Look Both Ways succeeds is in its delivery. Each person views death under their own unique umbrella, but are bound together by this one tragic event. Meryl and Nick become oddball lovers during a one night stand, while newsman Andy tries to sort through his chaotic and merciless lifestyle. Widow Julia and the engineer who was driving the train are two of the more interesting cases within the story, as they have no speaking parts until the very end, but are given ample screen time which speaks volumes on its own.The message of the flick is simple but not forced: look at death both ways. See it as a necessity but don't dwell on it. There is hope and fear within it, operating not at opposite ends of the spectrum, but as a gauge on how to live life without death looming ever present on one's mind.Meryl, the one who the film is mostly about, learns this lesson the hard way, coming to terms with her own fate, and that of Nick who's cancerous life is destined to plow into hers with the force of a padded sledgehammer.

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Glenn Nelson
2006/04/21

I don't give it a 10, because the style is not totally agreeable to me (I'm too old). But this film was a shocking surprise for all its richness. When my friend said "Australian film", I immediately said, "Yes, it's been too long since I've seen one. I always like their films".I had recently watched the older American film , Grand Canyon, and found apt comparisons. But here's what my companion and I loved about "Look Both Ways" - the characters were real, the scenery real, the main topic (death) made us squirm, but we recognized the reality that we would rather avoid. THe acting was superb, I especially believed Justine Clark as Meryl - her face IS the person who conjures those troubling cartoons. The film, the actors, the scenery was so unpretentious that we could believe it all. The cartoon flashes are peculiar, but we loved the artwork - can we buy copies? Loved the soundtrack too.Grand Canyon, by contrast, is too clearly a story by a screenwriter, it has the production values of Hollywood (the better side of Hollywood, but still slick), it has well-known, attractive and very good actors. The story flows so well ... but you KNOW you're watching a fictional story that is acted and produced by world class talent. In other words, you cannot mistake it for reality.

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