• Reviews
    • RANDOM
    • RECENT
  • Interviews
    • RANDOM
    • RECENT
  • Other Publications
    • RANDOM
    • RECENT
  • Shorts & Vignettes
    • RANDOM
    • RECENT
  • Creative Corner
    • RANDOM
    • RECENT
  • Archives

cinephile, noun ~ cine·phile \ˈsi-nə-ˌfī(-ə)l\ a devotee of motion pictures

Where I write.
alex.arabian89@gmail.com
Login

Login
Making a CinephileMaking a Cinephile
Making a CinephileMaking a Cinephile

Cinephile, n


| cine·phile | \ˈsi-nə-ˌfī(-ə)l\ |


a devotee of motion pictures

Menu   ≡ ╳
  • Reviews
    • RANDOM
        RANDOM
        • ‘Brightburn’ Terrorizes With Gleeful Gore As An Allegory For The Hypocrisy Of The American Way [Review]‘Brightburn’ Terrorizes With Gleeful Gore As An Allegory For The Hypocrisy Of The American Way [Review]October 9, 2019
    • RECENT
        RECENT
        • How Color Is The Key To Unlocking Netflix’s Subversive Cult Body-Horror Hit ‘The Perfection’

          How Color Is The Key To Unlocking Netflix’s Subversive Cult Body-Horror Hit ‘The Perfection’

          January 24, 2022
        • ‘The Velvet Underground’ review: Music doc from Todd Haynes brilliantly reintroduces important counterculture voices to a new generation [Grade: A] (Mill Valley Film Festival)

          ‘The Velvet Underground’ review: Music doc from Todd Haynes brilliantly reintroduces important counterculture voices to a new generation [Grade: A] (Mill Valley Film Festival)

          January 24, 2022
        • Why The Shimmer in ‘Annihilation’ is an allegory for the U.S.’s foreign policy [Retrospective]

          Why The Shimmer in ‘Annihilation’ is an allegory for the U.S.’s foreign policy [Retrospective]

          January 24, 2022
        • Martin Scorsese’s timeless ‘Boxcar Bertha’ and the Marxist undertones of his often overlooked early classic [Retrospective]

          Martin Scorsese’s timeless ‘Boxcar Bertha’ and the Marxist undertones of his often overlooked early classic [Retrospective]

          January 24, 2022
        • Free Guy’s Marxist Parallels To John Carpenter’s They Live

          Free Guy’s Marxist Parallels To John Carpenter’s They Live

          January 24, 2022
        Read More
  • Interviews
    • RANDOM
        RANDOM
        • Interview With Jason James, Director Of ENTANGLEMENTInterview With Jason James, Director Of ENTANGLEMENTFebruary 10, 2018
    • RECENT
        RECENT
        • ‘Entertainment right now can be sinister’: Jane Schoenbrun on ‘We’re All Going to the World’s Fair’

          ‘Entertainment right now can be sinister’: Jane Schoenbrun on ‘We’re All Going to the World’s Fair’

          May 30, 2022
        • Interstellar improv: Don Lake spills on the stars behind Netflix’s ‘Space Force’

          Interstellar improv: Don Lake spills on the stars behind Netflix’s ‘Space Force’

          May 30, 2022
        • Interview: Pamela Adlon on Bringing Out the Dead for the Final Season of Better Things

          Interview: Pamela Adlon on Bringing Out the Dead for the Final Season of Better Things

          May 30, 2022
        • Interview: Kristen Stewart on Channeling Princess Diana for Pablo Larraín’s Spencer

          Interview: Kristen Stewart on Channeling Princess Diana for Pablo Larraín’s Spencer

          May 30, 2022
        • Interview: Jane Campion on The Power of the Dog and the Myth of the American West

          Interview: Jane Campion on The Power of the Dog and the Myth of the American West

          May 30, 2022
        Read More
  • Other Publications
    • RANDOM
        RANDOM
        • How the Music of Elliott Smith Lives on in Film and TelevisionHow the Music of Elliott Smith Lives on in Film and TelevisionNovember 17, 2020
    • RECENT
        RECENT
        • Read an excerpt from an SF Indiefest award-winning local screenplay

          Read an excerpt from an SF Indiefest award-winning local screenplay

          May 30, 2022
        • 12 Best Original Netflix Movies, Ranked

          12 Best Original Netflix Movies, Ranked

          January 24, 2022
        • Jurassic World: Why There Can Never Be Another Park

          Jurassic World: Why There Can Never Be Another Park

          January 24, 2022
        • 13 Scariest Scenes from The Haunting Series That Terrified Us on Netflix

          13 Scariest Scenes from The Haunting Series That Terrified Us on Netflix

          January 24, 2022
        • 10 Scariest Horror Movies of All Time, Ranked

          10 Scariest Horror Movies of All Time, Ranked

          January 24, 2022
        Read More
  • Shorts & Vignettes
    • RANDOM
        RANDOM
        • Spontaneous Saturday Shaving SchtickSpontaneous Saturday Shaving SchtickJanuary 9, 2017
    • RECENT
        RECENT
        • Watch The Trailer For My New Short Film, “Dave’s Last Night on Earth”

          Watch The Trailer For My New Short Film, “Dave’s Last Night on Earth”

          November 19, 2018
        • The Berlinale 2017 Highlight Reel

          The Berlinale 2017 Highlight Reel

          June 8, 2017
        • “DISCREET” Berlinale Interview

          “DISCREET” Berlinale Interview

          June 8, 2017
        • Roasted Chicken Recipe (Trading Post, Cloverdale, CA)

          Roasted Chicken Recipe (Trading Post, Cloverdale, CA)

          June 8, 2017
        • LA LA LAND takes field-leading 8 ACCA wins, including Best Picture and Best Director for Damien Chazelle

          LA LA LAND takes field-leading 8 ACCA wins, including Best Picture and Best Director for Damien Chazelle

          February 9, 2017
        Read More
  • Creative Corner
    • RANDOM
        RANDOM
        • Moby on ”Punk Rock Vegan Movie,” ”Stranger Things,” Politics, and MoreJanuary 26, 2023
    • RECENT
        RECENT
        • Emily Mkrtichian on New Artsakh Documentary, “There Was, There Was Not

          Emily Mkrtichian on New Artsakh Documentary, “There Was, There Was Not

          December 17, 2024
        • David Dastmalchian Discusses Career, “Late Night with the Devil,” Dream Collaborations, and More

          David Dastmalchian Discusses Career, “Late Night with the Devil,” Dream Collaborations, and More

          August 22, 2024
        • June Squibb and Josh Margolin Dish on “Thelma”

          June Squibb and Josh Margolin Dish on “Thelma”

          June 29, 2024
        • Boots Riley Talks ”I’m a Virgo,” ”Sorry to Bother You,” Oakland, Gaza, & Leftist Politics

          Boots Riley Talks ”I’m a Virgo,” ”Sorry to Bother You,” Oakland, Gaza, & Leftist Politics

          November 9, 2023
        • Marc Turtletaub Talks ”Jules,” Sir Ben Kingsley, Producing, Directing, & More

          Marc Turtletaub Talks ”Jules,” Sir Ben Kingsley, Producing, Directing, & More

          September 1, 2023
        Read More
  • Archives

Making a Cinephile

Frank & Lola

Making a Cinephile: ‘Frank & Lola’ Overcomes Occasionally Lazy Storytelling

Making a Cinephile: ‘Frank & Lola’ Overcomes Occasionally Lazy Storytelling

December 16, 2016 Posted by Alex Arabian Film Reviews 1 Comment

Michael Shannon is one of the best actors working today. That is not an opinion. That is a fact. He is not somebody that chooses his roles recklessly just to earn a paycheck. He is a thespian devoted to his craft. At first glance, I thought “Frank & Lola” was somewhat of a peculiar choice for Shannon, especially since he was putting his trust in first time writer and director Matthew Ross. However, after viewing Ross’s script, one can understand why Shannon chose this role; although tonally uneven and, at times, lazy, the script equips his character with a strong vehicle that allows him to flex his dramatic chops significantly. Ross’s film provides a multifaceted, complex look at the inveterate root of sexual desires, flawed masculinity, jealousy, and love.

Shannon plays titular character A: Frank. Frank is a Las Vegas chef who starts a steamy romance with titular character B: The mysterious but alluring Lola (played by the tragically underutilized Imogen Poots). Minutes into the movie, we find that Lola has a fetish with being held down forcibly during sex. Shannon goes along with her desires, albeit uncomfortably.

He soon realizes Lola is not quite who she says she is. She cheats on Frank, citing the fact that she was raped by her mother’s old French ex-boyfriend for her reason to act out sexually. This causes Frank to go into an obsessive inner battle among conflicting emotions of jealousy, anger, hatred, and love. He becomes paranoid that Lola might sleep with her new boss, Keith (Justin Long), and fixated on her rapist, who he’s now tracked down in her phone book as Alan (Michael Nyqvist). Just to pause and break the fourth wall here for a second, what person under the age of 30 still has a hardback handwritten contact book in the age of iPhones? I suppose it is a convenient pivotal plot point to add, but it is a bit lazy and unrealistic, from my millennial perspective. Now, back to my review.

Shannon displays inner conflict (watch “Take Shelter”) better than any actor in the film industry today. His character in “Frank & Lola” exhibits such an unsettling calmness on the exterior, but subtle facial twitches, grimaces, body language, and grunts collectively convey to the viewer how severely these mixed emotions are affecting his mental wellbeing. There are considerably long scenes of closeups of Shannon, in which he is trying to find out how to deal with his emotions, and when he looks at a given focal point with his characteristically piercing gaze and haunting eyes, it’s enough to raise the hairs on the back of anyone’s neck.

Keith, in an effort to earn Frank’s trust, uses his connections to get him an interview for a famous French chef (again, another very convenient plot point to move along the story). So, naturally, when Frank gets to France, after his interview, he pays Alan a visit, and, after confronting Alan about the rape, Alan shows a video of Lola and an unknown girl seemingly, willingly performing sexual acts on him. After this, he takes Frank, who, at this point, the viewer has to assume is on some sort of existential journey to understand both his mind better and that of Alan and Lola’s, to the same club where they picked up the anonymous other girl in the videotape. He takes a rich woman home with another woman and does the exact same things he saw in the video, as if he had a desire to know what it was like, at the same time despising it. He wanted to “corrupt” himself. He wanted to get even with Lola.

Upon his return to Las Vegas, he tells Lola he got the job, and confronts her about the video. She finally comes clean, and, to Imogen Poots’s immense credit, who portrays Lola’s shattered psyche uncompromisingly, it is an emotionally resonant scene in which she tells Frank the entire truth. She studied abroad in France in college, and stayed at her professor’s house (Alan, who was never her mom’s boyfriend) in a guest room, where she was tied up and raped by him. She explains that the rape itself did not make her the way she is, but the fact that she stayed and fell in love with him did. In psychology, this is referred to as the Stockholm Syndrome, wherein the victim develops feelings of affection toward their captor. She then tells Frank that the man she cheated on him with was Alan, and that Alan played him by making his wife, who was the aforementioned rich woman, seduce him to distract him from his jealous rage. After they breakup, Frank is not finished with Alan; he refuses to accept Alan’s actions and his subsequent refusal accept the consequences.

After going back to France to visit his new boss, he gains leverage on Alan buy learning that his wife doesn’t know Alan continues to sleep with Lola. He learns that Alan is on another business trip, and assumes (lucky guess?) that he is back in Las Vegas with Lola. After creepily standing out front of Lola’s apartment complex, he finally see’s Alan pull up in a chauffeured card. Alan gets out to greet Lola with flowers, but she stops him at the door. This is the moment where Frank finally trusts Lola, realizing they are equally flawed after no doubt having a “what am doing right now?” moment. His last charade is to send a letter as Lola to Alan’s hotel room, asking to meet “her” at his restaurant. When Alan shows up and realizes he has been set up, a fight breaks out, which Frank wins, and Alan takes off back to France with his ego in his hands.

I will not reveal the ending, but it is by far my favorite part of the film. It is an emotionally resonant final conversation between Frank and Lola after all of the whirlwind of events that took place over the course of the 88-minute film. It is the calmest part of the movie. It is a conversation with little dialogue, characterized by Shannon and Poots’s inherent, respective abilities to convey so much emotion using only their faces as tools to communicate.

With a strong cast and assured direction to overcome an uneven screenplay, Matthew Ross’s feature debut proves to be a considerably watchable sexual thriller. It is essentially the grown-up, realistic version of “Fifty Shades of Grey”. It is everything “Fifty Shades” is not, and that is a good thing. Unabashedly sexual movies intrinsically walk a fine line of acceptability due to society’s historical tendency to suppress sexual desire and any expression thereof. Ross wobbles a bit on that line, but never falters. At the age of 40, Ross has plenty of time to evolve as a filmmaker and storyteller and work out some of his kinks, pun intended.

Share this:

  • Click to share on Twitter (Opens in new window)
  • Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window)
  • More
  • Click to share on Reddit (Opens in new window)

Like this:

Like Loading...

Related

Tags: blogFilmFilm reviewfrank & lolaimogen pootsmatthew rossmichael shannonSan Franciscowriter
1 Comment
Share
0

About Alex Arabian

My name is Alex Arabian, and I am a freelance writer, film critic, and filmmaker. I possess an obsessive, endless, encyclopedic knowledge of film.

You also might be interested in

Interview With Matt Schrader On The Making Of SCORE: A FILM MUSIC DOCUMENTARY

Interview With Matt Schrader On The Making Of SCORE: A FILM MUSIC DOCUMENTARY

Jun 16, 2017

[Published at Film Inquiry] Approaching the release of his debut[...]

Making a Cinephile: Chris Kelly Finds His Voice in “Other People”
source: Netflix

Making a Cinephile: Chris Kelly Finds His Voice in “Other People”

Aug 27, 2017

It is January 21, 2016. I am on my way[...]

HOUNDS OF LOVE: Queasily Effective, Genre-Defying Horror

HOUNDS OF LOVE: Queasily Effective, Genre-Defying Horror

May 24, 2017

[Published at Film Inquiry] Brace yourselves, for Hounds of Love[...]

1 Comment

Leave your reply.
  • cindy bruchman
    · Reply

    December 16, 2016 at 2:02 PM

    Nice review! I agree Michael Shannon is a superb actor. I don’t have access to this film yet, but I’m looking forward to renting it as soon as possible.

Leave a Reply to cindy bruchman

Your email is safe with us.
Cancel Reply

Search Site

Subscribe and stay tuned for more early reviews and interviews to come!

Enter your email address to subscribe to this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

Join 867 other subscribers

Recent Posts

  • Emily Mkrtichian on New Artsakh Documentary, “There Was, There Was Not
  • David Dastmalchian Discusses Career, “Late Night with the Devil,” Dream Collaborations, and More
  • June Squibb and Josh Margolin Dish on “Thelma”
  • Boots Riley Talks ”I’m a Virgo,” ”Sorry to Bother You,” Oakland, Gaza, & Leftist Politics
  • Marc Turtletaub Talks ”Jules,” Sir Ben Kingsley, Producing, Directing, & More

Categories

  • Film News
  • Film Reviews
  • Interviews
  • Original Films
  • Professional Publications
  • Uncategorized

Archives

  • December 2024
  • August 2024
  • June 2024
  • November 2023
  • September 2023
  • July 2023
  • May 2023
  • April 2023
  • March 2023
  • February 2023
  • January 2023
  • December 2022
  • May 2022
  • January 2022
  • August 2021
  • March 2021
  • February 2021
  • January 2021
  • December 2020
  • November 2020
  • March 2020
  • January 2020
  • November 2019
  • October 2019
  • May 2019
  • March 2019
  • February 2019
  • January 2019
  • December 2018
  • November 2018
  • July 2018
  • June 2018
  • May 2018
  • April 2018
  • March 2018
  • February 2018
  • January 2018
  • December 2017
  • November 2017
  • October 2017
  • September 2017
  • August 2017
  • July 2017
  • June 2017
  • May 2017
  • April 2017
  • March 2017
  • February 2017
  • January 2017
  • December 2016
  • February 2016

Contact Us

We're currently offline. Send us an email and we'll get back to you, asap.

Send Message
Follow me on Twitter to see the film world through my eyes. Tweet Me

Original Short

Memorial Day Tribute

Original Short

Touristy Views of SF

Original Short

Trading Post Restaurant

Original Short

Berlinale 2017

© 2025 · Making a Cinephile. Theme by HB-Themes.

Prev Next
 

Loading Comments...
 

    %d