March 22, 2014

Links & Viewings - Feb/March

by Allen Irwin

In addition to picking up the publishing pace of content here in the site, I’m also adding a new feature: an occasional round-up of articles, online videos, films, and recommendations. The content here will reflect what I’m reading/viewing/discovering each month both new and old, though it will be neither exhaustive nor too selective, as either would require too much effort.

Let’s kick things off with some...

SHORTS


Michel Gondry has a new music video out for Metronomy’s “Love Letters”.


Celia Rowlson-Hall has been making waves lately for her short films and choreography. The Audition is super short, but packs a punch. Her first feature, a silent dance film, was just successfully kickstarted and will star Amy Seimetz. There are even more shorts on her website.

Another place to look for new shorts is Borscht Corp. - a collective of filmmakers based in Miami, FL. Perhaps not coincidentally, both Rowlson-Hall and Seimetz have produced shorts in collaboration with them. Check out #Postmodem from Jillian Mayer and Lucas Leyva.





If you missed this YouTube viral sensation, I won’t spoil it for you. Just know that in all seriousness it makes a case for best “documentary” of the year so far...


Anahita Ghazvinizadeh has received a number of glowing mentions at film festivals with her new short film Needle, but you can take watch her earlier short When the Kid was a Kid above.

Experimental filmmaker Jodie Mack has been in a lot of festival coverage lately for her films Dusty Stacks of Mom and Let Your Light Shine. You can see a number of her earlier short films and videos over on her Vimeo Channel, though.


Thanks to the AWESOME Recommended Viewing blog over at The Seventh Art (who also have TONS of interviews with directors as their main content) I was introduced to the short films of Japanese experimental filmmaker Takashi Ito, including the haunting Thunder. You can find more of his films online fairly easily.

For the Venice International Film Festival’s 70th anniversary they had 70 filmmakers create short films. Above is Athina Rachel Tsangari’s “24 Frames Per Century”. Evocative of anything familiar? Check out the rest of the shorts here.


FEATURES

Tsai Ming Liang’s new film Journey To the West is available free online for a few more days. It features the always wonderful Denis Lavant, whose past collaboration with director Jonathan Glazer for Flake chocolate bars recently made its way around the interwebs.

Avant-Garde titan Michael Snow recently came to Washington, D.C. for some screenings. While you can view some of his major 16mm films on YouTube, they really should be viewed on film in a theater, and I won't directly link them here. One thing I did find, though, was one of his more recent forays into digital filmmaking, *Corpus Collosum broken up into sections here. For a wealth of Michael Snow articles, essays, and even a lengthy video lecture by the man himself, check out this post over at the indispensable cinematic resource Film Studies for Free.

Another recent D.C. screening I attended was the 1946 film noir The Chase. Besides a delectably devilish supporting turn from Peter Lorre, this brutal little film offers a sly twist on your typical noir scenario by pulling the rug out from under the narrative half way through, and ultimately leaves you with a “was it real?” style quandary that would later be utilized in films like Total Recall. After watching the film be sure to read Nick Pinkerton’s sharp essay on it.

Retiree terrible Steven Soderbergh is up to his now usual bag of tricks, releasing a mash up of the Alfred Hitchcock and Gus Van Sant versions of Psycho on his website. He also has been doing some writing (on Chinatown, among other things) and speaking about past filming experiences.


If you’ve got an hour to spare, I’ve got an oldie-but-a-goodie for you: Thom Andersen’s must see documentary / essay film on the life and achievements of one Eadweard Muybridge (pronounced Edward My-bridge), whose work you are guaranteed to be familiar with, even if his name seems like something out of a Dr. Seuss book. Not only is it fascinating biography, it probes into the very essence of cinema. Absolutely essential, and it’s only an hour.

For a recent cinema recommendation, there’s Nandan Rao’s Hawaiian Punch - newly debuting online over at NoBudge.com - Rao’s The Men of Dodge City was a favorite of mine last year.

Some stray film recommendations NOT readily available on the web:
- Raoul Walsh’s Pre-Code Romantic Comedy Me and My Gal starring a young Spencer Tracy
- Battles Without Honor and Humanity - Kinji Fukasaku’s (Battle Royale) opening chapter of a the epic The Yakuza Papers - bloody, brutal, stylish, and nearly impossible to follow, and yet I was enthralled the entire time.
- Brute Force - Jules Dassin’s prison film is as bleak as they come. This would make for a GREAT double feature with Howard Hawks’ The Criminal Code (which can be found here)


VIDEO ESSAYS / MISC. VIDEOS

Another FSFF entry, this time a gathering together of links related to the theme of the flâneur and the cinema of Richard Linklater, as well as this video essay by Rob Stone about walking the streets of Berlin, trying to retrace the steps Jesse & Celine took in Before Sunrise.




Catherine Grant (who runs FSFF) posted this short tone poem to commemorate the recent passing of Shirley Temple Black - “Mechanized Flights: Memories of HEIDI”




Video Essayist and all around digital chameleon Nelson Carvajal has been hard at work lately putting out a number of video essays on subject ranging from Women in the films of Martin Scorsese, the films of Darren Aronofsky, and a short documentary about the return of the micro-cinema. Below is his video essay “Mise en Scène & the Visual Themes of Wes Anderson”.




Over at Fandor, Kevin B. Lee presented his annual series of videos essays arguing which films he believed should win Oscars. Below is one of the best ones.




Lastly, this short video about the Criterion Collection’s restoration process should act as a delightful little dessert after all these intense narrative & essay selections. I recommend pairing it with this article from The Dissolve on the state of film preservation.





ARTICLES & ESSAYS

The SundanceNOW blog recently (and supposedly only temporarily) closed its doors, bringing to an end two really great weekly columns: Michael Koresky’s archeological/sociological/personal reminiscence examination of cinema Here & Now & Then and Nick Pinkerton’s Bombast. Both of them use their last posts to provide indexes of their entire runs, and therefore you should beware of falling down a rabbit hole of great writing if you click either of the above links.

Pinkerton already has another gig writing at Film Comment’s blog in a new column titled “Futures & Pasts”, with a focus on dusting off older titles for reassessment. He kicks things off with a kind of mission statement of sorts:

“I will try also to save Forgotten Masterpiece hyperbole for deserving occasions, if at all. The fact is that most old movies aren’t Forgotten Masterpieces, but this doesn’t mean that they don’t have pleasures to give, that we can’t learn from their flaws and accomplishments, or that they don’t deserve to be talked about and written about.”

Sounds good to me. So far he’s covered Alain Robbe-Grillet, Darkman and The Shadow, The Carey Treatment, Richard Fleischer and Barrabas, and The Bowery and Gangs of New York.

At Reverse Shot, they have kicked off a new symposium examining the cross pollination between Television and Film, which shouldn’t need any more words from me to get you over there.

Michael Koresky on the “Painterly” films of Vincente Minelli over at Museum of the Moving Image.

Kevin B. Lee applies cinemetrics to Oscar nominated films for the New York Times.

J. Hoberman on 12 Years a Slave and a recent Sci-Fi influenced art exhibit at the New Museum.

Fandor has a dispatch from “Film Drunk” critics at True/False on their favorite films of the festival.

We may be getting a new Star Wars related film sooner than we think, and not from somewhere expected. The short Black Angel played in front of The Empire Strikes Back in the UK and Australia and was thought lost to time until it was recently found in a Universal Studios archive.

It’s been rough for cinephiles losing both Alain Resnais and Chris Marker in the span of less than two years. Here’s a look back with some footage of both of them receiving an award back in the 1950s for their collaboration Les Statues meurent aussi.

In other Marker related posts, Kevin B. Lee has a short video condensing Marker’s Remembrance of Things to Come into a few short minutes, highlighting how deftly he could organize stills to create both a compelling biography as well as a sharp social critique.

WHEW. Ok, I take back what I said about that Criterion video being your dessert for wading through this feast of linkage. This is your dessert:



March 16, 2014

How High the Moon?

by Mike Yarsky

"The Moon Song" from the film Her
















“The Moon Song” appears to be a spiritual stand-out from the other “Best Original Song” Oscar nominees: it’s a little more obscure, and it’s unpolished compared to the radio-ready sheen of the other nominees. But its lack of polish shouldn’t be mistaken for “authenticity,” at least the kind that many enthusiasts of similar, unpolished folk enjoy. Both the vocal and guitar here have a highly affected tentativeness that probably fit the director’s demands here, and the tentativeness in Karen O’s voice sacrifices a solid “hook”-esque melody for the sake of character and syncopation. “The Moon Song” might be toying directly with that issue of manufactured emotional authenticity, given that the film is addressing the boundaries of meaningful passion between a man and an operating system; in which case, the approach of this song to “be raw,” or “be real,” is well-executed, even if it is affected.1 It’s unfair to judge the merits of the song itself on the reviewer’s own ideas for its intent; these theories are unsubstantiated, projected, and, even worse, this writer hasn’t seen the film for which it was written. But let us assume that the eccentricities of the vocal performance and guitar performance are there for a reason. What do we make of the song then?

March 14, 2014

Number Wan Fan

by Adam Sweeney

The Conjuring (2013) - dir. James Wan















It was a Friday. My parents were gone for the night, off to dinner and drinks with friends. My sister was at work and I had the house to myself. I decided to get a jump-start on my homework because there didn’t seem to be a lot to do. I looked around the house, trying to find something to watch.

My living room was filled with VHS. Several movies of varying genres were on the table next to me. I considered each carefully, but settled on The Haunting with Liam Neeson. I had seen the movie the year before in the theater. I knew what I was getting into. I slipped the tape out of the case and placed it in the VCR.

March 4, 2014

Nothing is A-Changin'

by Luke Burns












At the end of Inside Llewyn Davis, the film takes a surreal turn, looping in on itself. Events from the beginning of the film are repeated, making it seem as though the titular character is doomed to relive the same series of days over and over again—a Groundhog’s Day scenario, only worse, because Llewyn is unaware of this endless, hopeless, repetition. The fear of failing—artistically, financially, and socially--is what pushes Llewyn through the film. But the end shows us that failure isn’t the worst fate that can befall an artist. The worst thing that can happen to an artist is stagnation.

March 3, 2014

Forte's Forte

by James Folta













Acting is partially the art of disappearing – the better the actor, the less of her we should be able to detect beneath the character. Many actors find a comfortable range of roles and tones and settle there. Nothing is more satisfying than to see an actor play well against their type when they are able to challenge our expectations.

This year we saw two great comedians play against their genre. Louis CK and Will Forte took more serious roles in the Best Picture nominated American Hustle and Nebraska. Both actors faced the challenge of playing against their previous work, and while Forte was very successful, Louis struggled to settle into his role.

March 2, 2014

Best Adapted Sequel

by Mark Paglia














It may not be the most exciting Oscar category, but this year “Best Adapted Screenplay” may be the most unusual. As has been noted elsewhere, this year’s nominees are notable for their source material: Before Midnight is included because it is a sequel, and the other four are all based on nonfiction books. In every other year, nominated screenplays have been adapted from novels, plays, and short stories as well1.

This being only a single year, it would be rash to declare that Hollywood has turned its back on novels and henceforth will only be adapting biographies, memoirs, and nonfiction for the screen. So rather than focus on this year’s heavy dose of nonfiction, I’d like to consider the exception in the slate of nominees: Before Midnight.

February 9, 2014

Issue 2 - 2012 Year in Review


FILMS

You Can Never Go There and Back Again
The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey (2012)
by James Folta



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Wes Anderson's New Wave
Moonrise Kingdom (2012)
by Mark Paglia




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A Map of Empathy
Cloud Atlas (2012) 
by Mike Yarsky