I’m still extremely behind on Sundance reviews. After the jump you will find my mini-reviews for Adam, Arlen Faber and Brief Interviews with Hideous Men. Enjoy.

Fox Searchlight’s big purchase at the 2009 Sundance Film Festival is a wonderful little relationship film called Adam. I’ve been calling Adam the second part of the aspergers syndrome series at Sundance, which began with the opening night film Mary and Max. Both films are relationship pieces of men with border-line autism living in New York City. I don’t think I’ve ever seen a movie that featured a character with aspergers syndrome over the course of my entire cinematic viewing life, so it’s very strange that two such films got selected to be in this year’s festival line-up.

Written and directed by television director Max Mayer, Adam tells the story of a lonely 20-something-year-old man living with aspergers syndrome in New York City. When an aspiring writer / working teacher moves into his apartment building, the two enter into a friendship that hopes and tries to be more. But with Adam’s mental disability, can it? Extremely touching and sweet, the film hits all the right notes without crossing the lines of cheesiness. Rose Byrne has Rachel Weisz-like qualities, and Hugh Dancy delivers a wonderful performance as Adam (possibly because, he never went full retard).

/Film Rating: 8 out of 10


Arlen Faber has all the makings of a great little indie film. A great script which attracted a great cast,  including Jeff Daniels, Lauren Graham, Lou Taylor Pucci, and indie circuit cuties Kat Dennings and Olivia Thirlby. But over the past week, I’ve been hearing festival-goers complain that the result is something like a Hallmark channel movie. I’ll admit, that first-time director John Hindman’s cinematic framing is a little made-for-television in style, and while the film ends very predictably, the journey is still worth taking.

Daniels plays a reclusive author, who 20 years ago penned a book called Me & God which was a huge sensation. Faber has refused to do any interviews, or make any public appearances. And while people think he must have all the answers due to his “direct connection to God”, he’s actually a pretty miserable human being. When his back gives out on him, the injury forces him to leave his shut off world and see a back therapist. He also agrees to trade excess books he’s looking to get rid of to a recovering alcoholic independent book shop owner who has found out where he lives.

With that synopsis alone, you should be able to figure out exactly how the film ends, but as I said earlier, that doesn’t make this film any less worth watching. Hindman’s sharp dialogue is the saving grace that will keep your interest. And Thirlby and Dennings provide more than enough reason to sit through the slower moments.

/Film Rating: 7 out of 10

Brief Interviews with Hideous Men is not a movie. Or to be completely fair — it’s barely a movie. Based on the book by David Foster Wallace, and directed by The Office star John Krasinski, Hideous Men is a series of interviews, poorly strung together with a sad excuse of a narrative. The film is almost like an anthology of short films, but most of the short films lack visual storytelling.

That said, I was impressed by the performances by the ensemble cast, and enjoyed Wallace’s writing enough to possibly pick up the book, but as a movie it is just a failed experiment gone wrong.

/Film Rating: 4 out of 10

About the Author

Peter Sciretta is a film geek and popcultured fanboy living in San Francisco. He created /Film in 2005.

  • Palmer
    I've read Brief Interviews for class one time thought it was a great book. Didn't think it was filmable....and it still isn't.
  • That's a bummer about Brief Interviews--I had been looking forward to that. I'm really pleasantly surprised at the reviews of Adam, though. I always had a feeling Hugh Dancy had it in him!
  • I was hoping it would be good too. I guess this will be the first and last directed movie by John Krasinski. Well, that's if everyone feels the same way Peter does.
  • I don't have a lot to add from your reviews. Basically you summed up all of my thoughts in all three reviews. Brief Interviews was a total trainwreck, while after seeing some heavy films Adam and Arlen Faber were great movies to see. Hugh's performance in particular should be recognised come Indie Awards time next season.
  • mary
    Ugh...why did you have to use the term "going full retard?" Just because Ben Stiller got away with it doesn't make it right. Ever stop to consider how that phrase affects people living with special needs? No...I didn't think so.
    You shouldn't have to have a family member with special needs to know right from wrong. Time to stop mocking a group of people just doing the best they can.
  • How has it affected people with special needs? How? Did it bomb their countryside? I put it to you that it only actually affected uptight people who may or may not have a special needs person in their family.
    And the joke isn't mocking the group of people, it was mocking the academy.
    Please stop trying to make people feel bad for making a joke. The only reason that joke makes you feel bad is because you let it make you feel bad. That is your fault, you can either let things get to you or you can just laugh along with the rest of us. Maybe you shouldn't be lashing out at Peter, maybe you should be taking a good long look at yourself instead.
  • Jason R
    Wow, that was the most cliche filled comment I've ever seen on a thread. Bravo.
  • So many new films...
  • IAmJacksLibido
    What would an example of a failed experiment gone right be then?
  • mary
    Hi Muffin7. Guessing you didn't realize that people with special needs don't have a countryside (your words) to get bombed. Unfortunately all they have are people like you who think it's okay to mock them. I'm not interested in starting a war with you I'm a mom of a child with special needs who thinks the words retard and retarded shouldn't be thrown around lightly. I'm taking a good look at myself like you suggested. What I find is someone who doesn't think it's right to demean others. Do you actually think that in the movie Tropic Thunder it was okay to use the tagline "once upon a time...there was a retard." isn't it enough to just try and see what the other side is saying instead of being so tone deaf? Tropic Thunder stopped being an equal opportunity offender when one group he choose to pick on can't defend themselves.
    No one is trying to take away your right to use the word. I think it's just fine to use the words any time you want. All I'm saying is that if you know that they cause pain, and there are other options to use, why deliberately use them?
    I think it's great for you to stand up for Peter and his right to use the language he wrote. Just wondering why you aren't able to give people with special needs the same courtesy.

    I
  • Candi
    The thing that frustrates me is that mental retardation has nothing to do with Autism or Aspergers Syndrome and should not be used at all in this review. Also, calling Autism a MENTAL DISABILITY also implies mental retardation. AS the mother of two children on the spectrum, one with Aspergers, I would suggest Peter educate himself before mislabeling this. Autism is a developmental disorder, not a mental disability. IN fact, my two children are both abnormally bright for their ages, which is fairly common among those with Autism. While I can respect the special needs community and agree that using "retard" is not something to do lightly, in this case it is completely misapplied and that is where I have a problem. It is like calling the blind hearing impaired.
  • Candi, I am sorry, I did not mean to offend. I obviously don't know enough about Autism, and seriously will try to educate myself further about it The "full retard" line is in obvious reference to the Tropic Thunder scene. While Autism and mental retardation are two entirely different things, my point is that the acgtor treated the disorder with respect and not with humiliation. It's easy for someone to go "full retard" and tastefully portray disorders and mental disabilities, and it was just a jokey line to be clear that Hugh's performance never crossed that line. Does it make it right to use the word "retard"? No. But for right now it's more of a pop culture reference than anything else.
  • Matt
    I have aspergers syndrome. When I look at someone's face it feels like I am looking directly at the sun. If that is a mental disability then so be it for the sake of pop culture. That will really raise people's understanding. Part of autism is the inability to filter out incoming information, the 'syndrome' is the end product of that. The movement of someone's face, whether it is the mouth or the eyes is seperate according to my brain, it wont percieve it as a whole. when I try to intellectually portray someone's state of mind I have to consider every small possibility. It is known by experts to be the 'extreme male brain'. If it wasnt for people on the autistic spectrum we would all be sitting in caves casually chatting about the weather. I guess einstein had a mental disability as well :)

    The awkwardness is the result of having to process so much at any given time. It is like trying to do mental arithmatic, stare at a bright light at the same time as trying to recieve and formulate a conversation. The geeky special interest side, desire for routine is an escape towards predictability and a way of focusing. Unlike Forrest Gump, what we show on the outside is a far cry from what is actually happening inside the cranium. The ability to express what is on the inside is the key here. as well. To conclude it is not a mental disability, it is what the brain recieves and gives out which is the issue. My limbic system and cerebal cortex are very normal, they are just connected in such a way that I am far more intuitive about the physical world rather than the social world. It is a different way of thinking.
  • Bryan
    What an insighful comment. You don't know how much I appreciated it. My son had Aspergers and would be 25 years old, but was lost to leukemia when he was 19. He was still ignoring the condition, regarding it as a distraction. In his younger years, no expert could diagnose him. I would anticipate in his growing maturity, I would love to have had some conversations that encouraged him to describe what he senses, much like you just did. Thanks.
  • Jason R
    Jesus dude, lose the "full retard" at the end of your review. poor taste. Apsie's are not "retarded" in any sense of the world. Those that I know have advanced degrees in things like theoretical physics and mathematics.
  • Lesley Wells
    As a mother of a young man (12) years old with Asperger's Syndrome I am apalled by some of the comments made by Peter Sciretta in his review of the film ADAM. (ie) "But with Adam’s mental disability, can it?" " and Hugh Dancy delivers a wonderful performance as Adam (possibly because, he never went full retard)." These comments show a complete ignorance of Asperger's Syndrome. It is not a mental disability and to infer the word RETARD is an insult to all persons living with Asperger's Syndome.
  • RuthRimmer
    I would like screening passes to Adam and Post Grad.
    Please!
    Ruth
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