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    Cinema Arts Festival Houston

    It's a Wrap: All the best for first Cinema fest

    David Theis
    Nov 18, 2009 | 6:00 am
    News_Cinema Arts Fest Nov. 2009_Wawo party_Mark Wawro_Guillermo Arriaga_Maru Arriaga
    Writer director Guillermo Arriaga, center, got around Houston.
    Jeff Fitlow

    The first Cinema Arts Festival Houston is in the books now, and by all accounts it was a great success. Curator Richard Herskowitz’s program was quite ambitious, especially for a start-up, but the events all ran smoothly. Most importantly, the quality of the films was very high, and good crowds turned out to see them.

    Given the fact that Herskowitz wasn’t interested in programming films with “popcorn appeal,” but instead showed films that either dealt with artists or were themselves avant-garde works of fine art, you couldn’t have blamed him if he’d settled for just a couple of venues and a shorter program.

    But instead, his venues ranged from film-festival friendly locales like the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, the Angelika Film Center and the Rice Media Center to more laid-back locations such as Warehouse Live and Discovery Green. Other locations, such as the University of Houston's Gerald R. Hines College of Architecture, were truly sui generis venues. The College of Architecture building, in particular, points to the direction that Herskowitz hopes to take the festival in future years, when he plans for screenings to take place in art galleries and even on the sides of buildings.

    The list of high-profile guests was short but selective. It’s a shame that Tommy Lee Jones dropped out, but with Tilda Swinton, Guillermo Arriaga and Richard Linklater on hand, the festival did more than fine.

    In fact, Swinton and Arriaga made a very interesting combination. They didn’t appear together, but faithful festival-goers probably saw both. Arriaga is charming and funny, but also a "manly-man" who talked about how his love of hunting teaches him “to respect the line between life and death.”

    For all I know, Swinton hunts grouse in her native Scotland (where, I’m told, she can trace her family back to the 9th century). But she is obviously an altogether different kind of presence than Arriaga. With a mane of shocking white blonde hair, she’s less ethereal in person than on screen, where she can seem a total apparition.

    But she exudes a love of beauty — which she found even here, in Houston !— that is both rare and rather inspiring. I know that she’s a highly decorated actor, but the pleasure she took in embracing the Discovery Green crowd seemed quite genuine.

    For his part, Richard Linklater got to talk baseball with former Astros skipper Larry Dierker, who showed up for the Me and Orson Welles screening. Dierker is always working on some book, screenplay or musical, so he found plenty to talk about with Linklater, a big baseball fan.

    I also watched some of the more challenging films with pleasure rather than a sense of duty. Picasso and Braque Go to the Movies gave me more to think about than any film has in some time. And while I did a certain amount of wool-gathering during the experimental film When It Was Blue, I generally found it absorbing rather than punishing.

    In fact, there was nothing I saw that I wouldn’t gladly see again.

    No one person could attend all the screenings. I most regret missing the documentary What If, Why Not? Underground Adventures with the Ant Farm at UH; the “mumblecore musical” Guy and Madeline on a Park Bench, which included the trombonist and Houstonian Andre Hayward; and the documentary The Yes Men Fix the World about the pranksters whose genius it is to present the world as it ought to be, rather than as it is. (In other words, they create a world in which Dow Chemical compensates the victims of Bhopal, rather than fighting them in the courts.)

    Luckily, Yes Men will open at the Angelika soon, as will Me and Orson Welles. (The Arriaga-directed feature The Burning Plain, which was not in the festival, will also open shortly.)

    The festival wasn’t perfect. The “portable screening room” H BOX didn’t do much for me. There were too many screens, with too much to look at, inside the black box. And the Alabama Theater isn’t the best place for public speaking. The now-empty structure swallows up speakers’ voices.

    But these observations are truly quibbles. The Cinema Arts Festival was a great success, which left me with just one important question: How are they going to top their debut?

    Dengue Fever performing to the classic film, "The Lost World," was a hit at Warehouse Live.

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    Movie Review

    Summer camp drama The Plague proves middle school is still pure horror

    Alex Bentley
    Jan 2, 2026 | 2:30 pm
    Everett Blunck in The Plague
    Photo courtesy of IFC
    Everett Blunck in The Plague.

    Anybody who’s attended elementary school in the last 100 years knows the concept of “cooties,” a fictional affliction that is typically caught when touched by a member of the opposite sex. A more updated version of the same idea is featured in the Diary of a Wimpy Kid series, this time called the “Cheese Touch,” making anyone who touches a moldy piece of cheese on the school’s basketball court an outcast.

    A much more menacing version of this “disease” is on display in The Plague, which takes place at a summer water polo camp for tweens. The film focuses on Ben (Everett Blunck), a slightly awkward boy who struggles to fit in with the “cool” crowd led by Jake (Kayo Martin). That group has no problems making fun of others that they deem to be different, especially Eli (Kenny Rasmussen), who has been ostracized because of a rash he has that the kids call “the plague.”

    Ben wants to be part of the main group, but his natural empathy leads him to reach out to Eli on more than one occasion despite Eli engaging in some uncomfortable behavior. With the camp’s coach (Joel Edgerton) not much help when it comes to the bullying tactics by Jake and others, especially those that take place at night, Ben is left to fend for himself. His vacillations between wanting to be accepted and wanting to do what’s right continue until his hand is forced.

    Written and directed by first-time feature filmmaker Charlie Polinger, the film has all the feel of a horror movie without actually being a horror. The staging used by Polinger gives the film a claustrophobic feel as Ben can’t seem to escape the psychological torture inflicted by Jake and others no matter where he goes. He also employs a jarring score by Johan Lenox to great effect, one that’s designed to keep viewers on edge even when nothing bad is happening.

    No matter how far removed you are from middle school, the film will likely bring up feelings you thought you had left behind. Much like with Bo Burnham’s Eighth Grade, Polinger finds a way to tap into something universal in his depiction of tweens, an age when everyone is still discovering who they really are. Some go along to get along, others don’t even attempt to fit in, but no one truly feels settled.

    Whether the plague is real or not in the world of the film is up for debate. While most of the time it comes off as something made up to underscore the feeling of otherness felt by Ben, Polinger does literalize it to a degree. He even tiptoes up to the line of body horror before wisely retreating, although what he does show will still make some viewers squeamish. However, because he seems to be leaning one way before pulling back, there’s the possibility that some will be disappointed by the tease of something more intense.

    The film’s biggest success is in its casting. Finding good child actors is notoriously tough, and yet Polinger and casting director Rebecca Dealy found a bunch who sell the story for all it’s worth. Blunck, Martin, and Rasmussen get the most play, but everyone else complements them well. Edgerton is the only well-known actor in the film, but he’s used sparingly and isn’t asked to do much, leaving the kids to carry the story on their shoulders.

    Fitting in as a tween is hard enough without others actively trying to find ways to cast someone out. The Plague is an effective demonstration of the dynamics that can play out in a competitive environment that also includes a group that has yet to develop into fully-rounded people. It features discomfort on multiple levels, marking an auspicious debut for Polinger.

    ---

    The Plague is now playing in theaters.

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