The Racked Focus Review: Your Sister's Sister (2012)
The quiet moments in life are something that should be
cherished. They come too infrequently as
we run about our lives keeping busy. We
don’t want to think about our emotions, or what is stressing us out. We want to be doing something at all
times. As a species, we no longer allow
for as many quiet moments since we’ve got different forms of technology to fill
up every waking second of our lives.
What if we took a moment and just thought about things, talked to people,
or just be? There is something special
about those kinds of moments.
Lynn Shelton made a movie called Your Sister’s Sister that
took advantage of how special the quiet moments can be. On July 6, 2012, Maxwell Haddad posted his
review of this delicate movie. The
review can be found on The Racked Focus, as most of his reviews can be. Rich with the flourishes of vocabulary that
Max tends to weave through his reviews, this is surely one of his reviews, and
one that undeniably suits the movie being reviewed.
Something about Maxwell Haddad’s review of Your Sister’s
Sister feels laid back and relaxed, even though the movie is being analyzed
just as thoroughly as any subject. It’s
an interesting detail to have within a review about a movie in which most of
the time is spent with quiet scenes of dialogue. One of the special traits of Maxwell’s
writing is how he, possibly unintentionally, adapts the style of his reviews to
fit the movie. I’ve pointed this out
before, and the review of Your Sister’s Sister is no different. The calm contemplation of the review is
similar to the feel of the movie, though, of course, the movie has some
underlying drama throughout it.
That isn’t where the commonalities between movie and review
stop, however. Max is able to infuse humanity
into his review that attracts me to the prose and keeps me reading until the
end. It’s obvious that he is simply
writing a review, but there is a life and soul that Mr. Haddad puts into his
review that lines up perfectly with Your Sister’s Sister. The analysis of the film is well articulated
and concise, yet allows for the infusion of Max’s own personal opinions. This warms up the review from feeling like a
clinical dissection of a movie and what makes the movie tick. Instead, the review feels more cerebral as
Max puts himself into it. It does not
get deep into the psyche of the man, but it does allow the reader to connect
with the writer, which is something that is sometimes missing from reviews.
Maxwell Haddad’s review of Your Sister’s Sister points out
the good and bad aspects of the film while also highlighting Max’s own opinion
in a way that does not tarnish the critical analysis. The style in which the review is presented
helps to express the style of the film without feeling out of place within a
review. It’s a wonder that there are
reviews like this that can both be a review and some strange sort of art, but
Max manages to get a mixture that works perfectly. Intentional or not, his reviews bring a
second layer that makes them all the more enjoyable. Or I find some second layer that doesn’t
exist and I write about it. Either way,
I see it, and that’s all that matters.
Maxwell Haddad’s review of Your Sister’s Sister gets 4 ½ broken
condoms out of 5.
Comments
Post a Comment