Alex writes about Drinking Buddies, Columbus, and more.<\/p>\n
Movie afternoon in 2013: Man enters a theatre to watch a film he has head good things about. Man exits theatre happy.<\/em><\/p>\n Movie afternoon in 2017: Man enters a theatre to watch a film he has heard good things about. Man exits theatre happy.<\/em><\/p>\n Movie night in 2018: Man watches two films he adores at home. Existential crises ensue.<\/em><\/p>\n There are many things that have changed in my life over the past four to five years. I eat a lot fewer chicken fingers, I smoke either more or less weed (but not the same amount), and I no longer fret about making rent. There are many things about life in general that have changed over the past four or five years. The iPod Classic is no longer produced, we either care more or less about Elon Musk (but not the same amount), and in general nothing about civilized society makes sense. So it goes.<\/p>\n Unsurprisingly, given the way I like to spend my time, I think about going to the movies a lot. Equally unsurprisingly, given my obsession with thinking about going to the movies, I think about my differing reactions to the experience a lot as well. Sometimes, I watch movies again to see if the same reactions exist from previous screenings, or if they have been lost to time, a fleeting emotional reaction that could only happen once and then never again.<\/p>\n Two nights ago, after a holiday weekend Sunday filled with more video editing than anybody wants, I decided to watch a couple of films. Relatively quickly, that decision morphed into, \u201cI want to watch a couple of my favourite films from this decade.\u201d I chose Columbus, a film from 2017 that has remained relatively difficult to get out of my head, and Drinking Buddies, a film from 2013 that I once talked about constantly to all who would listen (and many who wouldn\u2019t but nevertheless nodded politely).<\/p>\n <\/a><\/p>\n Columbus is the film in this pairing you know less about, because very few people seem to know about this film. It is written and directed by the mononymic Kogonada, a person who gained a small amount of internet fame for making artful* video essays about the aesthetic tendencies of various filmmakers. This turned into making a couple of pieces for the Criterion Collection and the British Film Institute, which then turned into making his debut feature Columbus. The origin story is as charming as it is encouraging.<\/p>\n *Many of these essays have no traditional narration. The ones that do have voiceover narration are often written in a thoughtfully obtuse manner.<\/em><\/p>\n There\u2019s an easily translatable description of Columbus for the non-viewer, and that description is as follows: Columbus is kind of like Lost in Translation, if Lost in Translation was a little less funny and much less racist. Jin (John Cho) returns to Columbus, Indiana to care for his ailing father, and while there meets Casey (Haley Lu Richardson) as she struggles to figure out whether to pursue an interest in architecture or stay in Columbus to care for her mother. The film is not exactly action-packed, but the amount of care put into each frame is gigantic and inspiring. Surrounded by a plethora of modernist architecture, Kogonada\u2019s approach seems to be to set the camera up and just let us stare at the relative simplicity of the story and the gorgeousness of the setting. At one point in the film, Casey describes how those who grew up miss the beauty that\u2019s around them, and that\u2019s basically the point. Kogonada focuses the camera on the same element for long enough that you have no choice but to embrace it.<\/p>\n Smoking is another motif in the film, a motif that ties our leads together. When Casey and Jin meet, they meet over the sharing of a cigarette, and they continue to smoke together throughout the film. The pair discuss all the troubling aspects of their lives, their respective relationships with the parental figures they are in Columbus for, and they both feel suffocated so they exacerbate said suffocation by filling their lungs with smoke. On their last day together, after Casey has decided to leave Columbus to pursue her own life, she and Jin swap out the cigarettes for pastries. They are still partaking in unhealthy activities together, because one always does, but at least they\u2019re no longer suffocating themselves with a cloud of smoke. (At least the pastries have some high-in-fiber strawberries worked in.) They choose to let themselves breathe together and part ways.<\/p>\n Casey has one last cigarette with her coworker Gabe, though. She sits on the steps of their shared workplace, talking to Gabe for (potentially) the last time. Casey offers him a cigarette like she has so many times before, and Gabe tells her he doesn\u2019t actually smoke. He only did so as a reason to hang out with her. While hanging with Casey, one has to engage in an activity that slowly kills you, as her suffocation spreads to those around her. As such, she must leave Columbus if only to decrease respiratory ailments in those close to her.<\/p>\n SIDE NOTE: Early in the film, Casey watches a kid playing next door to her home. In the final moments of the film, after Casey has left town, there are a variety of shots to places we have seen from earlier in the film. Cut to the same place that kid used to be, albeit now sans child, signifying that Casey has left her childhood behind. Koganada is sharp.<\/em><\/p>\n When I first saw Columbus a year ago, I knew I enjoyed it. Patient cinematography and intricate sound design is kind of my jam. The movie didn\u2019t infect me necessarily, but it stuck with me enough to see it again, and to assume I would watch it again sometime after that second viewing.<\/p>\n <\/a><\/p>\n Drinking Buddies, on the other hand, held an immediate and visceral reaction. I saw it one afternoon, loved it, then went to work at an international film festival and couldn\u2019t stop thinking about the film I had seen screened at a theatre far removed from said festival. Since Drinking Buddies was released in 2013 \u2013 in the midst of that brief period when indies did day and date releases in select theatres and on video on demand – I decided to have a couple beers and watch it again when I got home. It was still fantastic. The actual reaction to my first viewing has been lost to time*, but I obviously loved the film. Drinking Buddies has become so intertwined with how I think about my own life that I have few specific memories about seeing it. I think about it so much that specific situations of my own existence are erased by the perfection of the movie itself. To detail exactly what about Drinking Buddies works for any particular viewer is to give too much away about one\u2019s own mind state, and as such I will not do so. Instead, I will only detail the final scene, a perfect single shot that encapsulates everything about friendship and potentially failed romance and the acceptance of various rules of human existence.<\/p>\n *For some reason I remember my third viewing, the second time I saw it in cinema, in great detail, but hardly remember the first and second viewing.<\/em><\/p>\n In short, for those who need a refresher: Kate (that\u2019s the one played by the tertiary character from The OC) and Luke (that\u2019s the one played by the guy from New Girl) are buds. Kate and Luke might have a shared attraction. Luke lives with Jill (the one from Pitch Perfect). Jill goes on vacation with her girlfriends. Kate has to move. Luke helps. Luke injures himself, which spurs on an argument. Kate and Luke may or may not be able to happily co-exist with each other, but know they will see each other again at the workplace tomorrow regardless. Tomorrow comes, as is its wont.<\/p>\n The final scene of Drinking Buddies is a single shot of Kate sitting by herself in the lunchroom at work, when Luke comes in and sits next to her, handing her a stout as per her preference. The pair sit in silence, Kate gives Luke some fries, Luke gives Kate a banana, Kate rejects it and Luke throws out the potent source of potassium as they chuckle and sip their beers. They silently accept what they have gone through together, and accept that they will never talk about it. It\u2019s something that happened, but it can\u2019t be a Thing that happened. Then the film cuts to black as they sip their beers, because this is what they do together and this is what they shall continue to do.<\/p>\n In Columbus, characters come to certain realizations about themselves and one lead remains physically stagnant while emotionally in motion. In Drinking Buddies, the same thing occurs with Kate and Luke. They sit next to each other and finish their argument without words, because it\u2019s the better way.<\/p>\n