Wednesday, January 14, 2009

I Don't Want to Sleep Alone (Hei Yan Quan) A Film by Tsai Ming-Liang (2006)


A celebration of Mozart's 250th birthday in 2007, marked as the New Crowned Hope Film Festival, comprised of some challenging films including Apichatpong Weerasethakul's two-part Syndromes and a Century, Bahman Ghobadi's Half Moon, and Tsai Ming-Liang's ninth feature, I Don't Want to Sleep Alone. Strand Releasing issued the film in 2007 with gaudy design, but Ming-Liang is a brilliant auteur, so his dreamy film naturally makes up for it. Lee Kang-Sheng plays both a lethargic vagabond rescued from the streets by a group of immigrant construction workers and a bald comatose son being nurtured by a waitress (another Ming-Liang regular, Chen Shiang-chyi) that is bossed around by the mother. It's difficult to tell at first that both characters are Kang-Sheng - given that the homeless man's hair is like a mop as opposed to the paralyzed man - but their situations and demeanors are suspiciously congruent as to perhaps suggest a dual personality or "two sides of the same person", or perhaps something different altogether: both the men are being cared for by another, and both are emotionally repressed. Kang-Sheng's performance is typically silent and pensive, with his wandering mannerisms on constant cruise control as he drifts through the hazy Malaysian streets (the backdrop of the film being Tsai's native country).

Much of the film ebbs and flows almost randomly, deeply establishing its destitute characters before finally advancing its laconic narrative about an hour and a half through. Therefore, much of the film is viewed as a moment-to-moment appreciation that eventually gets tiresome, but this slow fizzle is reciprocated in the engrossing final act. A toxic smoke, the result of a fire, begins to capsize the city streets and acts as a powerful counterpoint to the character's suffocating longing for one another; gas-masks and all, Kang-Sheng's homeless man gropes at the passionate Shiang-Chyi as Rawang, the homosexual construction worker forging a connection with him, accumulates humid jealousy. Ming-Liang uncharacteristically reveals himself as an adept, if still faint, dramatist here, even imparting a brief scene of reverse close-ups.

Aside from this interjection, Tsai's visual style is still his miraculous formalism. The compositions are immaculate in I Don't Want to Sleep Alone, capturing the creaky dwellings of claustrophobic Malaysian alleyways, the impersonal immediacy of the Kuala Lumpur's urban culture (restaurants, apartment complexes, and a football stadium), and most ravishingly, a flooded construction site with sunlight seeping in. Tsai works mindfully with the frame, filling it up tastefully with dead space or entrancing appliances (such as a fan or radio), and often splits it into two scenes: one a smooth vanishing point and the other a tight point of stasis which often comprises an odd human behavior. Although almost all of the words in I Don't Want to Sleep Alone come from either radio broadcasts, music, or off-screen comments, the film speaks poignantly about love and alienation (two common Ming-Liang themes), and like most of his films, leaves a viewer swarmed by thoughts for days.

Friday, January 9, 2009

Los Muertos (2004) A Film by Lisandro Alonso


The New Argentine Cinema has been thriving in recent years, and the most exciting newcomer is undoubtedly Lisandro Alonso. After his debut film La Libertad in 2001, which began a trilogy of poetic realist works, Alonso has made a name for himself on the festival circuit. Los Muertos - the second film in this loose "trilogy" - is certainly no easy endeavor, but through its lush longueurs and aural delights, it creates a tranquil atmosphere of unease that periodically reveals arduous metaphors that Alonso allows you to take or leave. If one engages with the former, the film is a disturbingly affecting "road movie" that takes fundamental genre conventions (a path towards freedom or absolution, pushing aside the past in favor of the future...) and conceals them to startling effect.

Rural folk, the underprivileged, and "simple" people, have been on the forefront of Alonso's mind throughout his career, and they are a direct influence on his stories and characters. Los Muertos specifically concerns Argentino Vargas (who also plays the main character in his third film, Fantasma), a manual laborer who determinedly took the leading role despite his complete lack of acting experience. Vargas - who indeed plays a man named Vargas in the story - is what Lee Kang-Sheng is to Tsai Ming-Liang, and what Anne Wiazemsky was briefly for Robert Bresson: a personal, under-the-radar performer whose existence in these unique works is so plausible that it almost goes entirely unnoticed. In fact, Bresson would likely give Vargas' dull corporeity in Los Muertos' his greatly admired stamp of approval. Vargas embodies an upper middle-aged man imprisoned for (as we are discreetly informed) the murder of his two brothers. The film's hushed, floating opening frames perhaps imply this, and so does a point towards the middle of the film when a man explicitly asks Vargas about the murder, to which he mutters with forgetfulness. His character is mysterious and self-contained, almost stubbornly becalmed even, yet withholds a virility that is on shocking display when his actions become wholly uninhibited (such as in a protracted shot of his routine slaughter of a young goat at riverside, or his immediate and casual sexual encounter with a prostitute).

The first few chapters of the film show Vargas being released from prison (few formalities are shown in this exoneration, what matters to Alonso is the state of his protagonist as reflected by this crucial change in environment) and directed out into the Argentinian jungle with a canoe in a seemingly motiveless trip to see his daughter. Vargas' travel downriver is the poetic monument of the film; the canoe, the chirping jungle, and the river could all be taken as symbols for Vargas' isolated behavior during his transformation, one that includes a hope for salvation and an apparent denial of his past. However, Alonso offers no help, crafting a film that is one dynamic throughout. There are no scenes that necessarily stand out dramatically, nor are there ever moments of overly prolonged tedium; Alonso prefers his long, painterly images to evoke a rhythmic, transcendent, yet oddly realistic quality. Los Muertos comes to an unexpected halt in its final frame, and with its thought-provoking use of two dropped children's toys on the dirt beside two swaying fabric sheets, it may suggest Vargas as a fetishistic killer (shades of Angelopoulos' Landscape in the Mist, in which a similar composition deals with unseen malice). However, nothing can be taken as fact in this enigmatic film by Lisandro Alonso.

Saturday, January 3, 2009

The Curious Case of Benjamin Button (2008) A Film by David Fincher


F. Scott Fitzergald's whimsical fable - which is the basis of David Fincher's latest film, The Curious Case of Benjamin Button - is not something I have read, but simply given the fact that it is a short story, I assume it deals less with the inexorable flow of time and mortality than it does with comic fantasy. While Fincher was likely not entirely loyal to the prose, his expansion of it into a fantastical two and a half hour rumination is impressive. Fitzgerald's story, adapted by screenwriter Eric Roth, is of a man who is born an elder and ages backwards. The premise is absurd and seemingly unfit for feature-length cinema, but fortunately Fincher seems to have been aware of this fact, and therefore has created a film that is often very casual in tone (in fact, it even involves a hilarious running joke) rather than emotionally overblown.

Brad Pitt plays Benjamin Button, a character whose psychological makeup is about as simple as can be; he continually accepts life's misfortunes with complacence, a trait that has already elicited several comparisons to Forrest Gump (not surprising given that Roth wrote that film too). As a squealing, horrendously wrinkled infant, Benjamin is left on the front steps of an African American home where he is taken in by the woman whom he eventually believes to be his true mother. Through digital processes, Pitt's artificially aged face is tacked on to a short, frail old body, a transformation that curiously balances an almost Pixar-like artifice with a confounding credibility; surely this manifestation of a toddler with geriatric features is exciting to behold.

Benjamin spots a young love in Daisy (Cate Blanchett), and the relationship evolves into the main dramatic thrust of the film. Naturally Benjamin and Daisy head their separate ways for a time, but there is a simmering tension that is created by their inconsistent romance, especially due to the fact that it is chronologically fleeting. The two share several ups and downs in the film, but when they finally come together at similar ages, it undeniably picks up steam. A scene several years after Benjamin leaves Daisy following the birth of their daughter (he feels incompetent as a father, wanting to be her parental figure rather than her "playmate") involving Benjamin seeing Daisy with her new husband for the first time accounts for an extremely emotionally awkward moment.

The ambitious concept of The Curious Case of Benjamin Button inevitably results in a fair share of shortcomings. The whole story is told in a manner that is very familiar in sweeping epics; a woman accompanying another on her death bed reads her diary, the sentences of which are completed in voice-over by Benjamin. Towards the middle of the film, we realize the identities of these two characters and how important the technique is to the story, but nonetheless it feels like a formality that Fincher found himself required to intercut into the fantasy. Whenever the scene wallops back into the harsh hospital room color scheme (blue and grey mainly), it detracts from the sepia-toned tale we are just beginning to engage with. Also, Fincher, who deals with an entire lifetime in telling his story, drifts in and out of melodrama at times; he shows us several of Button's personal adventures (a stint in the Navy) but fails to provide the ramifications they have on him. There is one action sequence at sea that has little noticeable effect on Benjamin in the long run, so it felt too much like story fluff. Thirdly, Fincher resorts to the tired use of a hummingbird as a metaphor for hope, a device that certainly was distracting and unnecessary.

Despite these seemingly integral missteps however, the film remains compelling and never drags. Pitt is showing, as he ages (forward of course, unlike in the film), his seriousness as a performer; his character is no scene-stealer, but there is certainly a subtlety that can be admired. Blanchett also does a fine job, and there's no doubt that the pairing is the greatest dramatic aspect in the film. The nearly flawless cinematography is a welcome ingredient in a film that is a monolithic attempt at something powerful, which it may not entirely achieve, but is nonetheless fascinating to experience.

Wednesday, December 31, 2008

Manufactured Landscapes (2006) A Film by Jennifer Baichwal


Manufactured Landscapes, another, yet far more interesting, essay on the threatening state of ecology in the world, kicks off with a superior eight minute tracking shot. The subject? A Chinese factory as long as several football fields. The scene is boldly transfixing partly because it finds the sublime in an activity so alien to Western culture yet so pertinent, but also because it is a shocker to see a documentary open with the kind of visual bravura one would expect from either a cinema giant like Kubrick or Greenaway, or a modern minimalist. A narration arises after about six minutes; the voice is of Edward Burtynsky, the photographer whose work is the crux of the documentary.

His photographs are aesthetically striking to begin with but are also telling of humanity's inevitable "manufacturing" of natural landscapes: strip mining operations, oil drilling, and the building of the largest dam in history, the Three Gorges Dam. China is the featured setting of the film, which finds director Jennifer Baichwal following Burtynsky as he works, but as Burtynsky mentions, these environmental changes are actually universal. They are merely exemplified best by the thriving urbanization in modern China. Burtynsky, whose mission is to merely reveal without bludgeoning his audience (he is neither applauding the situation nor "damning" it), creates fine works that rely heavily on the fact that they are persuasive and open-ended. This is largely what Baichwal attempts to do with her film. She succeeds in avoiding a didactic approach, aiming for a more ambiguous, visceral documentary (which uses moody mid-frequency noise as a soundtrack, courtesy of Dan Driscoll).

Suffice to say, the film loses a bit of its visual intrigue after the opening, when it begins to weigh the slideshow presentation of Burtynsky's photographs more heavily than the moving images. The film offers no more handsomely filmed tracking shots; instead it simply contextualizes the world of Burtynsky's photographs by charting the meticulous, often times dangerous work of the Chinese laborers who utilize Earth's resources to create products that fuel nearly every commonplace deed in the world. Fortunately Baichwal accomplishes this, however, she falls slightly short of the frightening power of the original photographs (in order to magnify the force of a scene where Burtynsky reveals a panoramic image he just shot involving some Three Gorges workers, Baichwal zooms in on the photograph and hangs on it to revel in its grandiosity rather than capture it with her moving camera).

It's interesting to see how both the film and the photographs that are documented reflect the cinéma vérité theory, sanctioned by documentarist Jean Rouch which stated that the camera does indeed affect its subjects, and therefore its presence should me made known. In the opening tracking shot, several workers pause to stare at the camera as it glides by, and later on a frozen photograph shows a whole room of workers gazing into the lens. A fascinating aspect of a film dealing with photography. There is a fine moment in the film when a withered old woman knits steadfastly in her stripped home, refusing to leave her familiar lifestyle as the world around her falls apart. Although she is a fitting metaphor for nature and the old world, an entity that has shifted towards the new, man-made forces, this may have been the moment that Baichwal became persuasive rather than evocative, a conflict Burtynsky has sought out to avoid.

Sunday, December 28, 2008

Index of Reviews, Sorted by Director's Last Name

(Disclaimer: This index includes almost every review published on this site since its inception in 2008, also the point at which I began writing film criticism. Ever since, I've thought of writing as a natural extension of viewing, and therefore this blog has been a convenient catalogue of my responses to films. My earliest entries – which, in hindsight, look slapdash and ignorant – nonetheless constitute a part of my collective memory of cinema and trace my developing cinephilia over the years. Please proceed accordingly. Only truly abominable pieces are removed from the site.)

A

ABRAMS, J.J.

Super 8


ADLON, Percy

Bagdad Cafe


AKERMAN, Chantal

Jeanne Dielman, 23 Quai du Commerce 1080 Bruxelles


Jeanne Dielman: Analysis


AKIN, Fatih

The Edge of Heaven


ALFREDSON, Tomas

Let the Right One In


Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy


ALLEN, Woody

Love and Death


Midnight in Paris


Sleeper


Stardust Memories


ALONSO, Lisandro

Liverpool


Los Muertos


ALTMAN, Robert

The Player


ANDERSON, Lindsay

If....


ANDERSON, Paul Thomas

Punch-Drunk Love


The Master


There Will Be Blood


ANDERSON, Wes

(see Peter Bradley Show)


Bottle Rocket


Fantastic Mr. Fox


The Grand Budapest Hotel


The Life Aquatic with Steve Zissou


Rushmore


ANDERSSON, Roy

World of Glory


You, The Living


ANGELOPOULOS, Theodoros

Landscape in the Mist


Ulysses' Gaze


ANGER, Kenneth

SHORTS: Scorpio Rising, Kustom Kar Kommandos, Invocation of My Demon Brother, and Lucifer Rising


ANTONIONI, Michelangelo

L'Eclisse


Red Desert


ARONOFSKY, Darren

Black Swan


The Wrestler


ARRIAGA, Guillermo

The Burning Plain


ARNOLD, Andrea

Wuthering Heights


ASSAYAS, Olivier

Summer Hours


B

BAICHWAL, Jennifer

Manufactured Landscapes


BAUMBACH, Noah

Frances Ha


Greenberg


BAVA, Mario

Black Sunday (or the Mask of Satan)


BERGMAN, Ingmar

Cries and Whispers


Fanny and Alexander


Sawdust and Tinsel


Scenes from a Marriage (TV, Episodes 1, 2, and 3, and Episodes 4, 5, and 6)


The Seventh Seal


The Silence


Through a Glass Darkly


Winter Light


BERTOLUCCI, Bernardo

The Sheltering Sky


BIGELOW, Kathryn

The Hurt Locker


Zero Dark Thirty


BOGDANOVICH, Peter

The Last Picture Show


What's Up, Doc?


BOYLE, Danny

Slumdog Millionaire


BREILLAT, Catherine

Bluebeard


The Last Mistress


The Sleeping Beauty


BRESSON, Robert

Diary of a Country Priest


L'Argent


Pickpocket


BROSENS, Peter

State of Dogs (w/ Dorjkhandyn Turmunkh)


BUNUEL, Luis

Age of Gold


The Great Madcap


BURNETT, Charles

Killer of Sheep


C

CAPRA, Frank

It Happened One Night


CARAX, Leos

Boy Meets Girl


CARNAHAN, Joe

The Grey


CARPENTER, John

The Thing


CEYLAN, Nuri Bilge

Distant


Three Monkeys


CHABROL, Claude

A Girl Cut in Two


CHARLES, Larry and BARON COHEN, Sacha

Bruno


CIANFRANCE, Derek

Blue Valentine


CIMINO, Michael

The Deer Hunter


COEN, Joel and Ethan

No Country For Old Men


True Grit


COOK, Brian

Color Me Kubrick


COPPOLA, Francis Ford

The Conversation


CORBIJN, Anton

The American


CORMAN, Roger

A Bucket of Blood


COSTA, Pedro

In Vanda's Room


Ne Change Rien


Ossos


CRONENBERG, David

The Brood


Camera


Eastern Promises


D

DASSIN, Jules

The Naked City


DE SICA, Vittorio

Umberto D.


DEITCH, Gene

Zlateh the Goat (Short Film)


DENIS, Claire

35 Shots of Rum


Beau Travail


The Intruder


White Material


DOCTER, Pete

Up


DOLAN, Xavier

Heartbeats


DOMINIK, Andrew

The Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford


DöRRIE, Doris

Cherry Blossoms


DREYER, Carl

Ordet


Vampyr


DUMONT, Bruno

Outside Satan


DUPLASS, Mark and Jay

Cyrus


The Puffy Chair


DURKIN, Sean

Martha Marcy May Marlene



E

EASTWOOD, Clint

Changeling


ECKMAN, Dan

Mystery Team


ENGLUND, George

The Ugly American


ERDEM, Reha

Times and Winds


F

FEDORCHENKO, Aleksei

Silent Souls


FELLINI, Federico

Amarcord


And the Ship Sails On


La Strada


FINCHER, David

The Curious Case of Benjamin Button


The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo


The Social Network


Zodiac


FRAMMARTINO, Michelangelo

Le Quattro Volte


FRAMPTON, Hollis

Zorn's Lemma


FRICKE, Ron

Samsara


FULLER, Samuel

China Gate


G

GATTEN, David

Secret History of the Dividing Line (First Four Films)


GIRARD, Elise

Belleville Tokyo


GLAWOGGER, Michael

Whores' Glory


GLAZER, Jonathon

Birth


GODARD, Jean-Luc

Contempt


Film Socialisme


Made in U.S.A


Pierrot Le Fou


Two or Three Things I Know About Her


GOEI, Glen

That's The Way I Like It


GONDRY, Michel

Be Kind Rewind


La Lettre (Short Film)


The Science of Sleep


GRANIK, Debra

Winter's Bone


GREEN, David Gordon

Snow Angels


GREENAWAY, Peter

The Cook, The Thief, His Wife, and Her Lover


GUERIN, Jose Luis

In the City of Sylvia


H

HADZIHALILOVIC, Lucile

Innocence


HANEKE, Michael

The White Ribbon


HAWKS, Howard

Bringing Up Baby


HAYNES, Todd

I'm Not There


Safe


HELLMAN, Monte

Two-Lane Blacktop


HERZOG, Werner

Fitzcarraldo


Heart of Glass


My Son, My Son, What Have Ye Done?


HILLCOAT, John

The Road


HIROZAKU, Kore-Eda

Still Walking


HITCHCOCK, Alfred

Vertigo


HOU, Hsiao-Hsien

Flight of the Red Balloon


ESSAY: Millennium Mambo, Café Lumiere, Three Times, Flight of the Red Balloon


HUSTON, John

Reflections in a Golden Eye


Under the Volcano


HYAMS, John

Universal Soldier: Day of Reckoning


I

IANNUCCI, Armando

In the Loop


J

JIA, Zhang-ke

Still Life


JODOROWSKY, Alexandro

Fando Y Lis


The Holy Mountain


Santa Sangre


JONES, Duncan

Moon


JONES, Tommy Lee

The Three Burials of Melquiades Estrada


JONZE, Spike

Where the Wild Things Are


K
KATZ, Aaron

Dance Party, USA


Quiet City


KARI, Dagur

Nói albínói


KAUFMAN, Charlie

Synecdoche, New York


KAZAN, Elia

On the Waterfront


KECHICHE, Abdellatif

Blue is the Warmest Color


KIAROSTAMI, Abbas

Certified Copy


Close-Up


Like Someone in Love


KIESLOWSKI, Krzysztof

The Double Life of Véronique


Three Colors: Blue


KIM, Ki-Duk

Samaritan Girl


KORINE, Harmony

Spring Breakers


KOSINSKI, Joseph

Tron Legacy


KUBRICK, Stanley

2001: A Space Odyssey


Barry Lyndon


Eyes Wide Shut


KUROSAWA, Akira

Rashomon


L

LAMORISSE, Albert

White Mane


LANTHIMOS, Giorgos

Alps


Dogtooth


LECONTE, Patrice

My Best Friend


LEE, Ang

The Ice Storm


LEIGH, Mike

Naked


LINKLATER, Richard

Before Sunrise


Before Sunset


Bernie


Dazed and Confused


It's Impossible to Learn to Plow by Reading Books


LYNCH, David

Blue Velvet


The Cowboy and the Frenchman (Short Film)


Dune


Early David Lynch Shorts: Six Men Getting Sick, The Alphabet, and The Grandmother


The Elephant Man


Eraserhead


INLAND EMPIRE


Lady Blue Shanghai (Short Film)


Lost Highway


Mulholland Drive


Mulholland Drive: Informal Discussion


Premonition Following an Evil Deed (Short Film)


The Straight Story


Twin Peaks: Fire Walk with Me


Twin Peaks (TV)


Wild at Heart


M

MADDIN, Guy

Brand Upon the Brain!


My Winnipeg


The Saddest Music in the World


MAJEWSKI, Lech

The Mill and the Cross


MAKAVEJEV, Dusan

WR: Mysteries of the Organism


MALICK, Terrence

Badlands


Days of Heaven


The New World


The Thin Red Line


To the Wonder


The Tree of Life


MALLE, Louis

My Dinner With Andre


MANN, Michael

Collateral


The Insider


The Last of the Mohicans


Public Enemies


MARKER, Chris

The Case of the Grinning Cat


La Jetee


MARSHALL, Neil

The Descent


MARSHALL, Rob

Memoirs of a Geisha


MARTEL, Lucrecia

The Headless Woman


The Holy Girl


MCCAREY, Leo

The Awful Truth


MCQUEEN, Steve

12 Years a Slave


Hunger


Shame


MIYAZAKI, Hayao

Ponyo


MIZOGUCHI, Kenji

Ugetsu


MOSTOW, Jonathan

Breakdown


N

NARUSE, Mikio

Late Chysanthemums


NELSON, Gunvor

My Name is Oona


NGAI, Kai Lam

Riki-Oh: The Story of Ricky


NOE, Gaspar

Enter the Void


Irreversible


NOLAN, Christopher

The Dark Knight


Inception


The Prestige


O

OLIVEIRA, Manoel de

The Strange Case of Angelica


OPLEV, Niels Arden

The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo


OSHIMA, Nagisa

Empire of Passion


OZU, Yasujiro

An Autumn Afternoon


Late Spring


Tokyo Story


P

PASOLINI, Pier Paolo

Salò, or the 120 Days of Sodom


PECKINPAH, Sam

The Wild Bunch


PELI, Oren

Paranormal Activity


PENN, Sean

Into the Wild


PIALAT, Maurice

L'Enfance Nue


We Won't Grow Old Together


POLANSKI, Roman

Repulsion


POROMBOIU, Corneliu

Police, Adjective


PORTERFIELD, Matthew

I Used to be Darker



Putty Hill

Q

R

RAMSAY, Lynne

Morvern Callar


RAY, Nicholas

Bigger Than Life



Rebel Without a Cause



REED, Carol

The Third Man


REFN, Nicholas Winding

Valhalla Rising


Drive


REICHARDT, Kelly

Meek's Cutoff


Wendy and Lucy


RESNAIS, Alain

Hiroshima Mon Amour


Last Year at Marienbad


REY, Nicolas

Schuss! and Differently, Molussia


REYGADAS, Carlos

Post Tenebras Lux



Silent Light


RIVERS, Ben

Two Years at Sea


ROHMER, Eric

Claire's Knee


La Collectionneuse


Love in the Afternoon


My Night at Maud's


ROMANEK, Mark

Never Let Me Go


S

SAFDIE, Josh and Benny

Daddy Longlegs (Go Get Some Rosemary)


SATRAPI, Marjane and PARRONAUD, Vincent

Persepolis


SAURA, Carlos

Cria Cuervos


SCHERFIG, Lone

An Education


SCHNABEL, Julien

The Diving Bell and the Butterfly


SCORSESE, Martin

After Hours


Hugo


Shutter Island


Taxi Driver


SCOTT, Ridley

Alien


Prometheus


SIRK, Douglas

All That Heaven Allows


SKOLIMOWSKI, Jerzy

The Shout


SLUIZER, George

The Vanishing (1988 version)


SNOW, Michael

Wavelength


SODERBERGH, Steven

Contagion


The Girlfriend Experience


The Informant!


The Limey


Magic Mike


Out of Sight


Sex, Lies, and Videotape


SOKUROV, Aleksandr

Alexandra


Father and Son


SPIELBERG, Steven

A.I. Artificial Intelligence


Lincoln


Minority Report


SPIELMANN, Götz

Revanche


STILLMAN, Whit

Metropolitan


STONE, Oliver

W.


T

TARANTINO, Quentin

Inglourious Basterds


Pulp Fiction


TARKOVSKY, Andrei

Andrei Rublev


Ivan's Childhood


Mirror


The Sacrifice


TARR, Bela

Almanac of Fall


The Man From London


Prologue (Short Film)


Satantango


Satantango: Take 2


The Turin Horse


Werckmeister Harmonies


Werckmeister Harmonies (Analysis)


TATI, Jacques

Play Time


TESHIGAHARA, Hiroshi

Antonio Gaudí


Pitfall


Woman in the Dunes


TODD, Robert

Selection of 2012 Shorts


TOURNEUR, Jacques

I Walked with a Zombie


Stranger on Horseback


TRAN, Anh Hung

Cyclo


TSAI, Ming-Liang

I Don't Want to Sleep Alone


The River


What Time is it There?


TSCHERKASSKY, Peter

Essay on Motion Picture, L'Arrivée, Outer Space, Dream Work, and Instructions for a Light and Sound Machine


TURMUNKH, Dorjkhandyn

State of Dogs (w/ Peter Brosens)


U

V

VAN PEEBLES, Melvin

The Watermelon Man


VAN SANT, Gus

Last Days


Paranoid Park


VARDA, Agnes

La Pointe Courte


VINTERBURG, Thomas

The Celebration


VON STROHEIM, Erich

The Wedding March


VON TRIER, Lars

Antichrist


Dogville


Europa


Melancholia


W

WATKINS, Peter

Edvard Munch


The Freethinker


WEERASETHAKUL, Apichatpong

A Letter to Uncle Boonmee


Uncle Boonmee Who Can Recall His Past Lives


WELLES, Orson

Citizen Kane


The Lady from Shanghai


WENDERS, Wim

Paris, Texas


Wings of Desire


WILDER, Billy

Sunset Boulevard


WINTER, C.W. and EDSTROM, Anders

The Anchorage


WONG, Kar-Wai

Happy Together


In the Mood for Love


WRIGHT, Joe

Anna Karenina


X

Y

Z

ZEMECKIS, Robert

Beowulf


Flight

Saturday, December 20, 2008

Love and Death (1975) A Film by Woody Allen


Love and Death marks the moment in Woody Allen's early career when he had perfected his craft of strictly comedic filmmaking and was prepared to move on first to comedy/dramas and then eventually to the thematically parallel human dramas that epitomize his later work. As such a description should suggest, it is indeed his most hilarious film. Structurally the film is no different than much of his work in which he plays the protagonist; as a youngster he is curious and ahead of his time and as an adult he is ridiculously witty, neurotic, and feverishly attracted to women (however incompetent he seems wooing them). The film begins a la Allen's characteristic voice-over, slyly introducing his character's early life in montage. He is Boris Grushenko, a fearful Russian ignored by his parents and in love with his beautiful friend Sonja (Diane Keaton). When he comes of age and fails to marry Sonja, he is forced into becoming a soldier, a "militant coward" as he remarks, in the Napoleonic Wars. Allen reworks his uncommonly heroic role in the Latin-American army in Bananas by playing a fearful contributor who sees no harm in losing to the French, given the better food that will result. As usual though, Boris somehow finds his way off the battlefield and back with Sonja, ready to propose. What results is Sonja desiring strongly to assassinate Napoleon and Boris getting caught up in the plot.

Allen draws influence from a wide variety of Russian literature, music, and film, as well as using several visual parodies from the work of his idol Ingmar Bergman (visions of "Death" and a two-shot of women in crisis). He finds the perfect balance between physical and verbal comedy, succeeding most in the latter due to his modesty; much of his one-liners are quick offhand comments. A continuous joke throughout the movie is the entertaining philosophical quarrels between Allen and Keaton's characters: they playfully discuss ethics and morals, saying crazy things like "subjectivity is objectivity", and when Sonja attempts to accuse Boris of being jejune, he replies by pronouncing that he is the most "june" of the both of them. There's little more to say without beginning to list off the gags, so I will just strongly recommend Love and Death because it is non-stop laughter.

Thursday, December 18, 2008

Best Albums of 2008

I am aware that I write primarily about cinema, but I feel ill-suited to make any sort of "best of 2008" lists for films because I haven't seen a great deal of 2008 films this year. I tend to simply watch whatever comes my way; perhaps next year I will attempt to follow the new releases a bit more and finish with an end of the year list. However, I do indeed listen to a multitude of music, so I am ready as ever to deliver a list of the Best Albums of 2008 and a couple of major disappointments (within my opinion and range of tastes of course).

1. The Walkmen: "You and Me"

A more subdued, melancholy album than most of their work, this set of tunes from The Walkmen is more evocative than ever. I could do no better this year than to swoon in the reverb-soaked guitar lines set to Hamilton Leithauser's ethereal screech that continuously alternates between shockingly high pitches and drunken romantic longing.

2. Fleet Foxes: "Fleet Foxes"

I saw Fleet Foxes a few months back and was absolutely floored. There is no better emerging band out there, and this LP, their debut, is persistently heavenly.

3. Department of Eagles: "In Ear Park"

With great help from a soaringly dreamy opening track, I found myself unable to stop listening to Department of Eagles for two weeks upon my discovery of them. This album is even more impressive than Grizzly Bear's "Yellow House", and Department is their side project. I sure can't wait for Grizzly Bear's new disk, because this group of creative musicians seems incapable of failure.

4. Conor Oberst: "Conor Oberst"

Oberst enjoyed a relaxed recording session for this effort and because of his ability to avoid the pressures of the music industry, he produced an album that is ripe with freedom and festivity. This collection is a fine response to the style of alt-country that he emerged with on his recent album, "Cassadaga". Hearing Oberst's brilliant lyrics is always a pleasure, and fortunately I can stick to my belief that he is the greatest living lyricist.

5. Sigur Ros “Með suð í eyrum við spilum endalaust”

Upon my first listen to Sigur Ros' latest album, I was disheartened by their shift away from the colossal lugubriousness of their previous work and towards a new, spontaneously joyous, almost Animal Collective-style sound. However, eventually I realized that Sigur Ros can never go wrong, and in fact as well as being the most emotionally and spiritually draining band, they can also be the most uplifting. "Gobbledigook" makes me yearn to be another member of the music video.

6. Why?: "Alopecia"

His satirically imbued spoken word poetry is indicative of a true artist with a knack for not only writing sentences that will flabbergast you with their in-your-face rhetoric, but also for creating tantalizingly gloomy beats.

7. Frightened Rabbit: "The Midnight Organ Flight"

I have to thank Shawn over at A Blog Ain't Too Much to Love for bringing this stellar album to my attention through his end of the year list. Never before have I enjoyed a Scottish accent in a vocalist.

8. The Acorn: "Glory Hope Mountain"

A thumping and clicking percussion section is what sticks in the mind with "Glory Hope Mountain", The Acorn's debut. The band's oneness with the natural world peppers this set of chanting, acoustic-based ditties.

9. Talkdemonic: "Eyes at Half Mast"

Routine stuff from this talented two-piece; smooth melodic refrains with super tasteful drumming. "Eyes at Half Mast" doesn't one-up "Beat Romantic" or "Mutiny Sunshine", but it does sustain their wonderful streak.

10. Wolf Parade: "At Mount Zoomer"

If anything, this is the album that I was skeptical of placing here. Although their music satisfies me very much, I have a difficult time attributing their from-the-gut style to seriousness; instead they sound like a band that would always greatly prefer rocking out wildly in a cramped room to crafting interesting songs. Nonetheless, "At Mount Zoomer" does make me happy, and if anything, "Kissing the Beehive" brushes with musical genius when it climaxes.

DISAPPOINTMENTS...

Kings of Leon: "Only by the Night"
Kings of Leon completely abandoned their dirty Southern roots and set their sights on the corporate world. Honestly, there are probably a solid three good songs on this whole album; most of them are grossly sentimental and recall the status quo work of rock and roll superstars like Snow Patrol. Despite the flawless production and the fact that Caleb Followill's voice is still substantially unique, "Only by the Night" is the biggest disappointment of 2008.

My Morning Jacket: "Evil Urges"
The epic, rootsy "Z" could never have prepared listeners for this amateur AC-DC/Prince collision. Unlike Kings of Leon, they took not a commercial direction but an extremely odd, trivial one.

Of Montreal: "Skeletal Lampings"
What I heard of this album did not please me and when I saw them this year for the fourth time, I was bored out of my mind. "The Sunlandic Twins" and "Hissing Fauna" were sophisticated pop albums; this is just an irresponsibly silly trifle.

Cold War Kids: "Loyalty to Loyalty"
Cold War Kids' second effort is by no means bad. About half of the album lives up to the interesting clumsy sound they introduced with their great "Robbers and Cowards". However, songs like "Avalanche in B" and "Cryptomnesia" showcase lazy songwriting too bent on being rambling and lo-fi. Also, the catchy tracks tend to die right when they're beginning to get going.