Animals with the Tollkeeper (1998) Poster

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9/10
an independent film fan's dream
spaceace-73 August 1999
it's one of those unknown gems that just stand there and wait to be discovered. intelligent, sensitive, wise, artistic, funny, weird... excellent.

what? at least four lines per comment? well, here they are:

some movies should be seen, not talked about. the surprise in this case is very important. just see it.
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10/10
Animals to be shown April 14, 2008 7:30PM at Palm Beach International Film Festival
sean-8077 April 2008
Reviewed as "...one of the most visually stunning independent films I have ever seen" by Geoff Gilmore, Sundance Film Festival Catalogue. While the film won many awards and earned great reviews when it debuted at festivals 10 years ago, it subsequently became enmeshed in legal issues and disappeared into obscurity. Now Screen Time Images, a Chicago-based company known for film restorations, has acquired distribution rights. The movie will be shown at the Palm Beach International Film Festival on April 14, 2008 with a first-run theatrical release to follow. Mickey Rooney will be present at the screening, and will be receiving honors for his career. As a special feature at the festival, selected scenes from "Animals" and other examples will be shown in 3D using new technology that requires no special 3D glasses.

Tim Roth stars as a broken dreamer who finds new meaning in the pursuit of an elusive love (Mili Avital) after a trio of elderly French documentary filmmakers hijacks his Checker cab to drive from New York to South Carolina. Praised as intelligent, sensitive, wise, artistic, funny and weird, Animals captures the story of three wayward souls guiding one man's search for happiness and love. The film starts with a 13-minute B&W set piece, "The Tollkeeper", which finds the Frenchmen, led by Lothaire Bluteau, in the Utah desert in 1933 filming Mickey Rooney as a cranky tuba player manning a way station to nowhere. Back in present-day New York, Roth's driving a cab and contemplating suicide when the French doc crew appears again. International proponents of Animals include Roman Polanski, Jeremy Irons, Tchecky Karyo, Kazuko Kurosawa, Isabelle Pasco and Gilles Jacob of Cannes Film Festival.

Through all the film's legal issues, the film was held by the now-closed, film completion bond division of the CNA insurance company. John Flynn from Hollywood Classics, an international distributor of major studio titles, contacted CNA's attorney, and became aware of 'Animals' newly cleared legal status. Flynn approached Sean McKee, President of Screen Time Images, to acquire rights and partner with on a first-run theatrical release of the film. McKee's company has enjoyed an 11-year status as a premier provider of film restoration services to the major studios, networks, home video distributors, actors' estates, and archives. In recent years, They have expanded operations with new divisions to include licensing and rights acquisition, distribution, and new content development.

After previewing a poor-quality, 9-year old VHS copy as the only starting point for reference, McKee and company poured through boxes of film, containing various rolls of original camera negative, work prints, audio tracks and outtakes. The elements were in varied condition, with some rolls of film exhibiting some shrinkage and warping. The proper sequence of the movie was reassembled, and after a chemical bath, the film was scanned in to computers at 4K resolution.

Time was not kind to the original negatives. The scanned frames of film were treated to an exhaustive, 6-month restoration process, typically reserved only for 'A-List' classic films with massive revenue potential during a re-release. According to McKee, "Although 'Animals' is only now about to reveal itself to the market, because I own not only the distribution rights but also a restoration company, I was in a unique position to muster the resources required to ensure that this unique and wonderful film is shown at its best."

The bulk of the remastering was performed using specialized tools made by da Vinci Systems, as well as proprietary software and techniques developed in-house by programmers at Screen Time Images. Each frame was manually restored to perfection, and a new surround soundtrack was created.

After the restoration was completed, the next step was to perform color enhancement. The original film lab's printer lights timing settings were discovered, which the da Vinci color corrector was able to emulate. Since color enhancement technology has come a long way in the decade since the film was made, these settings were used as merely a starting point in the palette with which to 'paint' and enhance the colors with, bringing deeper visual emotion to the film than was possible ten years ago. A special pleasure was having director Di Jiacomo sit in for final color adjustment and approval.

For the showing at the Palm Beach Film Festival, Screen Time Images has partnered with Xtreme Electronics Systems (XES), maker of autostereo 3D displays and software, to bring to life several scenes from "Animals" in three dimensions. Clips demonstrating this amazing new technology will be displayed throughout the week long festival. In addition, Screen Time's McKee will join representatives from XES to host a seminar at 4 p.m. April 15 at the Marriott Delray Beach, 10 North Ocean Boulevard, Delray Beach, Florida, to discuss restoration, and emerging 3D display technologies.

McKee concludes, "This film is so beautiful in story, direction, performance and cinematography, that I feel very strongly it will be a contender for an Oscar nomination this year. After one of my first viewings, I noticed some very subtle Salvador Dali-esquire visual themes at several points in the film, which being a fan of and owner of several of his pieces, truly intrigued me. When I mentioned this to Michael Di Jiacomo, he confirmed my observations, and went on to tell me that he first met Tim Roth while discussing a Dali painting at the Sundance Institute. This only solidified my feelings of what an artistic masterpiece this film is. Every frame is drop-dead gorgeous, especially (in my opinion) after Tim's character Henry meets the girl Fatima (played by Mili Avital). And when it comes out on home video and you're watching it on your flat screen on the wall, you can hit pause at any time and leave it there, because it is pure art."

Screen Time Images is located at 974 Estes Court, Schaumburg, IL 61093. Phone is 847- 534-9000. Web site is www.screentimeimages.com.
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Beautiful underviewed first work
russellcraigr16 August 2001
Several years ago I had the privilege of reviewing new scripts for a major production company in Europe. Of the 2,000 scripts I read, only a literal handful have stuck in my mind, and only one of those offbeat few actually made it onscreen. That was 'Animals'. For unknown reasons (because this is a wonderful film) no-one has seen Michael di Jiacomo's first work, the limited release it obtained in France was for purely contractual reasons, and occurred in the 'boom' time slot between Christmas and New year when nobody at all goes to the movies. So, the question is not how strongly to recommend this film (which also has its flaws... but so does every director's first feature) but 'where can it be seen?'. Keep your eyes peeled, but I suspect it will take the first success of di Jiacomo (his next film?) to open distributors' eyes for a re-release.
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4/10
independent certainly
asbury-29 April 2001
i rented this last weekend, because it had tim roth in it and i think he is brilliant. this film, however, was a tad too weird for me. the beginning is interesting, but then somehow the thread gets lost and the end is just strange. things do come together, but then again, some pieces seem missing. and i felt bored in the end. sorry.
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Great photography and lack of control...
sarpedon16 April 2000
As it was written in the festival brochure "Animals" has breathtaking scenes. Also it is quite entertaining and witty in the beginning, but after the first quarter it turns into a long, artsy European TV commercial. DiJiacomo creates few interesting characters but they don't come alive as the overmystified plot wanders aimlessly. We can't even sympathize with Henry's passion for Fatima and his suffering becomes unconvincing.
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