Sharp eyes. Thanks for the confirmation!
A couple of 2023 films I recently got around to watching:
Sometimes I Think About Dying, starring Daisy Ridley, along with a cast of mostly unknowns, currently playing on the Mubi streaming service, as well as Amazon Prime. It's about a withdrawn, harmlessly unpleasant woman working in an office in a drab town in Washington State (can't remember if they named it explicitly but they did say it was just south of Seattle). She too leads a drab empty life, even in comparison with her peers. Seemingly her only source of entertainment is to fantasize about dying under various bizarre circumstances. "
It's her scientific speciality," as will become apparent at a pivotal moment in the action. She avoids any kind of emotionally open interactions with her coworkers, and appears to have no friends. Then a new employee is introduced to the office and his slightly quirky affectations manage to pique her interest. She's too reserved to actively engage with him on her own, but he turns out to be an extremely friendly and outgoing guy and she finds herself responding to his attempts to interact in spite of herself. And the story picks up from there. I've never seen Ridley in anything outside of the last Star Wars trilogy and
Murder on the Orient Express (2017), so I was surprised that her American accent was impeccable and for me, she was entirely convincing in the role.
Overall, I found the film fairly enjoyable, although imo it falls into that trap typical in motion pictures, of condescendingly painting the lives of people outside of major metropolises as inherently uneventful and uninteresting, poor souls struggling to find meaning in their daily existence, unlike the rest of us (supposedly) exciting big town people.
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The Teachers' Lounge is a German film starring the award winning actor Leonie Benesch, who also played Abigail Fix Fortescue in the BBC miniseries
Around the World in 80 Days, as a youngish middle-school (?) teacher named Ms Nowak. The film starts
in media res as some teachers in the lounge are talking about a theft that has taken place, for which they assume that a student must be to blame. The student council members are pressed to rat on their classmates, and eventually point fingers at one boy of Turkish ancestry. He is questioned and vehemently denies the accusation, as do his proud and defiant parents. Ms Nowak is shaken by the school's attempt to railroad the young Turkish boy and starts to wonder if the thief is a child at all. She then surreptitiously starts her own investigation to try to uncover the real culprit. Subsequently things get much more harrowing for her than I expected for a story about 7th grade kids. Benesch plays the role to perfection, and the supporting classroom kids, many of them who are playing characters named after themselves, are convincingly naturalistic in their performances. This was a great movie.