I just returned from The Telluride Film Festival which is a lauchpad for many Oscar winners as it generates significant buzz for films that build momentum for the awards season. Several films that won the best picture Oscar that premiered in Telluride include Seven Years a Slave (2014) Moonlight (2016), Nomadland (2020) and The Shape of Water (2017). This was my 3rd visit to the Telluride Film festival and there were 2 films that knocked me out and will surely be Best Picture contenders this year.
The first was Springsteen: Deliver Me From Nowhere starring Jeremy Allen White (who does his own singing) and directed by Scott Cooper. It is scheduled for national release on Oct 24th. It might be best not to read any reviews but this remarkable film not only changed my opinion of Springsteen, but will surely be heard from again when the Oscar nominations come out next year for best picture, best actor, best adapted screenplay (by Scott Cooper) and best director. Don’t miss it.
The second film that blew me away was Tuner, an ingenious film that received several standing ovations after its showings. It features Dustin Hoffman as an aging piano tuner who trains an apprentice named Nick played by Leo Woodall. Nick has hyperacousis, a condition characterized by an increased sensitivity to sound, where everyday noises that are typically tolerable become uncomfortably loud or even painful. Much to Nick’s surprise, this trait also has the unanticipated benefit of making him a gifted safe cracker. Made by first time full-length feature director Daniel Roher, this remarkable film has many physical and emotional twists and turns so hold on for a wild and thrilling ride. A fabulous script and impeccably made film, this will also be well treated when Oscar nominations are announced.
There were several other outstanding films shown at Telluride, but I thought WBF readers would have a particular attraction to the two I mentioned since they involve music and/or sound as major thematic components.
The first was Springsteen: Deliver Me From Nowhere starring Jeremy Allen White (who does his own singing) and directed by Scott Cooper. It is scheduled for national release on Oct 24th. It might be best not to read any reviews but this remarkable film not only changed my opinion of Springsteen, but will surely be heard from again when the Oscar nominations come out next year for best picture, best actor, best adapted screenplay (by Scott Cooper) and best director. Don’t miss it.
The second film that blew me away was Tuner, an ingenious film that received several standing ovations after its showings. It features Dustin Hoffman as an aging piano tuner who trains an apprentice named Nick played by Leo Woodall. Nick has hyperacousis, a condition characterized by an increased sensitivity to sound, where everyday noises that are typically tolerable become uncomfortably loud or even painful. Much to Nick’s surprise, this trait also has the unanticipated benefit of making him a gifted safe cracker. Made by first time full-length feature director Daniel Roher, this remarkable film has many physical and emotional twists and turns so hold on for a wild and thrilling ride. A fabulous script and impeccably made film, this will also be well treated when Oscar nominations are announced.
There were several other outstanding films shown at Telluride, but I thought WBF readers would have a particular attraction to the two I mentioned since they involve music and/or sound as major thematic components.
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