Wednesday, November 6, 2013

Stream Ryan Trecartin's Center Jenny through Nov. 8 at Vdrome

Very high on my to-view list is Center Jenny, a new video by Ryan Trecartin, and one of four that he screened at the Venice Biennale.  In fact, I should probably watch it tonight, because it is only streaming on the Vdrome website channel through November 8.

As the Vdrome about page will tell you, Vdrome is "an online platform that offers regular, high quality screenings of films and videos directed by visual artists and filmmakers, whose production lies in-between contemporary art and cinema." You can consult the Vdrome archive for previous artists and films, but the streams themselves are only available for a limited time.

It is difficult to open the Vdrome Vimeo links outside of the Vdrome page itself, and I've not been able to use my previously described technique of using the myPlex Media Queue to watch Vdrome on my television. This seems like a good scenario for using Chromecast to fling the Chrome tab containing the Vdrome video to my television, because while Trecartin's work is driven by an internet sensibility, I don't want to watch it on a computer.

Quite a bit of Trecartin's earlier work is available on UbuWeb, and I feel less guilty about pointing you there in this context because unlike other work on Ubu, Trecartin's work is there with the artist's permission. As you will see Trecartin is quite prolific, and it is difficult to catch up with his work because it can be somewhat exhausting to keep up with his hyperkinetic style. One place to start might be I-BE-AREA from 2007, the first hour of which I think is absolutely brilliant, followed by a second hour that would be just as great if I hadn't been so exhausted by the first.





Center Jenny (Ryan Trecartin, USA, 2013, 53 minutes)

Vdrome: Ryan Trecartin’s movies unfold like futuristic fever dreams. Collaborating with his cast, Trecartin’s layered aesthetic reveals high-definition uncanniness, wherein digital life dynamics and gamesmanship merge with pop culture histrionics and banality. In CENTER JENNY, part of Trecartin’s presentation at the 55th Venice Biennale, his characters continuously evolve towards a post-human realm through reality show hermeneutics, prosumer rhetoric, and collegiate rituals.

Note: After November 8, the Center Jenny links will simply take you to the Vdrome main page.





I-BE-AREA (Ryan Trecartin, USA, 2007, 105 minutes)

UbuWeb, citing Electronic Arts Intermix Catalog: 

Holland Cotter, writing in The New York Times, describes the "sensationally anarchic" video I-Be Area, in which Trecartin uses what Cotter terms "very basic digital tools to create a highly personal narrative art, almost a kind of folk art."

Cotter writes: "We're in a house of many tight, messy rooms. In the suburbs? Cyberspace? Hard to say. Anyway, it's night. A door bangs open. A girl, who is also a boy, dashes in, talking, talking. Other people are already there, in gaudy attire, dire wigs and makeup like paint on de Koonings. Everyone moves in a jerky, speeded-up, look-at-me way and speaks superfast to one another, to the camera, into a cellphone. Phrases whiz by about cloning, family, same-sex adoption, the art world, the end of the world, identity, blogging, the future. Suddenly indoors turns into outdoors, night into day, and we're at a picnic, in dappled sunshine, with a baby. Then this all reverses, and we're indoors again. A goth band is pounding away in the kitchen. The house is under siege. Hysteria. Everyone runs through the walls."

"...For queer artists of Mr. Trecartin's generation, cross-dressing, cross-identifying and cross-thinking are part of a state of being, not statements of political position. Like the work of John Waters and Jack Smith, his art is about just saying no to life as we think we have seen it and saying yes to zanier, virtual-utopian possibilities."





Monday, November 4, 2013

Johnny To: 10 Films Streaming on Roku

Katherine Spring, recent author of Saying It With Songs: Popular Music and the Coming of Sound to Hollywood Cinema (congrats, Katherine!) posted an interesting link on her Facebook page to Ranked: The Films of Johnnie To From Worst to Best. Almost everyone commenting on the link agreed that there were problems with the rankings (that is true of all such lists, and that is why people keep making them), but nearly everyone agreed that the list itself was ambitious. While many fans in the West know To for his action and triad films, this list does a good job recognizing his romance and comedy output as well.  While I'm a personal fan of Running on Karma (2003), I'm not sure if I would place it at #3 among the films that I've seen so far, but then again clearly Jake Cole at Film.com has seen more of To's overall output than I have. His list has 49 titles, of which I have seen 20, most of which are the action films (and most are at the top of his list).

What inspired me to follow up on this list with a blog entry today was Cole's placement of Romancing in Thin Air (2012) at number 1 on the list. It's one I hadn't seen, or even heard of. Cole points out that while it has not been released in theaters or on DVD in the United States, it is currently available on Hulu (free Hulu in fact, not just Hulu Plus).  I did a little more digging and discovered it is also available on Amazon Prime Instant Video, for those who want to avoid Hulu's ads.

Romancing in Thin Air is certainly a charming, if somewhat predictable, romance. While watching it I was reminded how To has viewed his output as one film to keep Milkyway Studios going strong, then one film for the critics.  Certainly this film is for a general audience, it's well crafted and acted and certainly worth a look for those who are less familiar with this significant part of To's output.  I'm not as crazy about it as Jake Cole at Film.com, but it does fit in interesting ways into To's recurring themes in his non-triad work. Also streaming on Amazon Prime Instant Video is the #16 film on Cole's list, Don't Go Breaking My Heart (2011, co-directed by Wai-Ka Fai), which I also hope to catch up with in the near future.

The other recent To films hat have received more attention from the critics currently are also worth checking out. Drug War has several interesting genre twists that really get you just when you think you know where the film going, and its third act really punches you in the gut. Life Without Principle is a clever network narrative following several characters on the day of a global financial meltdown. It features some abrupt shifts in tone that only To seems to be able to pull off effectively (or perhaps only To is allowed to get a away with).

I did a March, 2011 blog entry on To films streaming on Netflix, but while those links still bring you to the film's Netflix page (the links are not broken), very few of those titles are still streaming.



Posters and Synopses from The Movie Database unless noted.



Romancing In Thin Air (Johnny To, Hong Kong, 2012, 111 minutes)

Amazon Instant Video: After a popular actor is jilted at the altar by an actress he travels to the mountainous area of Yunnan province. There, he finds true love with a heartbroken woman who is also a secret fan of the actor.






Drug War (Johnny To, Hong Kong, 2012, 105 minutes)

The taciturn police commander Zhang leads an undercover drugs team and in his continuous battle against the ubiquitous drug barons, takes up arms against his arch enemy, Timmy Choi. When he gets hold of Choi, he makes a deal with him: in exchange for his life (in China you can get the death penalty for producing only 50 grams of drugs) the young criminal will help the police infiltrate a sizeable drug network.






Life Without Principle (Johnny To, Hong Kong, 2011, 87 minutes)

A criminal, a bank clerk and a police officer find their destinies entwined when a loan shark gets assaulted after having withdrawn $10 million from the bank in the midst of the world financial crisis.






Don't Go Breaking My Heart (Johnny To & Wai Ka-Fai, Hong Kong, 2011, 115 minutes)

Mainlander & financial analyst Cheng Zixin (Gao Yuan-Yuan), who followed her then boyfriend Owen (Terence Yin) to Hong Kong, runs into her ex-boyfriend while riding the bus. Owen is now with his pregnant wife and when his wife spots Owen talking to his ex she she freaks out. Cheng hurriedly gets off the bus and, being in a daze, is almost run over by a car. A haggard drunk named Fang (Daniel Wu) then saves Cheng. Meanwhile, in a nearby car, sits CEO Cheung Shen (Louis Koo) who watches everything that transpires. CEO Cheung Shen is a playboy who also works in an office building directly adjacent to Cheng Zixin. Cheung Shen soon starts to woo Cheng Zixin by sending messages to her through the window of his office building. The drunk haggard Fang, who saved Cheng Zixin's life, runs into Cheng Zixin a few weeks later. It turns out that the drunk haggard is a Canadian-born top architect going through personal problems. They soon become friends.






Vengeance (Johnny To, Hong Kong, 2009, 108 minutes)

François Costello arrives in Hong Kong to avenge the death of his daughter and her family, who were murdered by hired killers. Twenty years before, Costello was a professional hitman... As Costello's memory is fading away, three professional killers, Kwai, Chu and Lok, are sought to help him complete his revenge plan.






Triangle (Johnny To & Ringo Lam & Tsui Hark, Hong Kong, 2007, 101 minutes)

Small-timer Fei (Louis Koo), his harried buddy Sam (Simon Yam), and antique store owner Mok (Sun Hong Lei) are all in desperate need of money. Fei wants his friend to drive a robbery getaway car but Sam backs out, throwing Fei in trouble with the triads. As the three are arguing, a mysterious man leaves them a map, leading them to an unlikely treasure under the Legislative Council building. All their financial woes seem to be solved after a late-night heist, but they are being tracked by shady cop Wen (Lam Ka-Tung), who is carrying on an affair with Sam's emotionally unstable wife, Ling (Kelly Lin), and has connections with Fei. When the twisted relationship tangles come to light, the brotherhood dangerously breaks down and the treasure ends up in the wrong hands.






Mad Detective (Johnny To & Wai Ka-Fai, Hong Kong, 2007, 89 minutes)

A rookie cop teams up with a former detective with a supernatural gift to hunt down a serial killer.






Exiled (Johnny To, Hong Kong, 2006, 110 minutes)

A friendship is formed between an ex-gangster, and two groups of hitmen - those who want to protect him and those who were sent to kill him.







Election (Johnny To, Hong Kong, 2005, 115 minutes)

A drama-thriller centered on a democratic election within an organized crime society.






The Heroic Trio (Johnny To, Hong Kong, 1992, 88 minutes)

Tung and Ching were both adopted by the same master. But later Ching was abducted by the eunuch-Chan. Ching grew up and became scientist Li's assistant and Tung married officer Lau. Chat had escaped from Chan at 15 and became a thief-catcher. During Chan's intrigue the trio united to become "The heroines of the East".







Friday, November 1, 2013

IVFF Pages: "Quick Picks," "In My Queue," and "Streaming Tools"


I thought I'd use this entry to point out some of the Instant View Film Festival pages I've been developing to help you quickly find good stuff to watch.  The "Quick Picks,""In My Queue," and "Streaming Tools" pages will always be available through the links on the top navigation bar, and I will update them periodically (and I will try to remove dead links quickly).

On the Quick Picks page I will simply list titles that I've liked that are currently streaming. Currently, the page only features Netflix and Hulu Plus titles, but I plan to add other streaming sources very soon (Amazon Prime Instant Video, in particular).  As I point out on the page, almost everything in the Criterion Collection on Hulu Plus is worth watching, so I put together a list of one film for each letter of the alphabet (more or less).  Below I have pasted the list that I updated this week to give you as sense of what you can expect and save you a click.

On the In My Queue page I will simply list titles that I hope to get around to watching soon. The difference between the two pages will be that "Quick Picks" are titles that I've seen and recommend, "In My Queue" are titles that I find intriguing but haven't seen yet, but I think you will want to know are currently available.

On the Streaming Tools page I will periodically add tips that I have discovered using the Roku Streaming Player, Chromecast, and Samsung Smart Hub apps.  For example, I just added a tip on how to watch Conan without commercials using the Roku Plex App.  In the future I will also add notes on lesser known Roku channels worth exploring.







Netflix 

Classic American / English Language Films

The Conversation (Francis Ford Coppola, USA, 1974, 113 minutes)

The Cook, the Thief, His Wife, and Her Lover (Peter Greenaway, 1989, 124 minutes)

Dead Man (Jim Jarmusch, USA, 1995, 121 minutes) 

Duck Soup (Leo McCarey, USA, 1933, 68 minutes)

The Grapes of Wrath (John Ford, USA, 1940, 129 minutes)

His Girl Friday (Howard Hawks, USA, 1941, 91 minutes)

Intolerance (D.W. Griffith, USA, 1916, 192 minutes)

The Long Goodbye (Robert Altman, USA, 1973, 112 minutes) 

Once Upon a Time in the West (Sergio Leone, USA/Italy, 1968, 165 minutes)

Slacker (Richard Linklater, USA, 1991, 100 minutes)

Slaughterhouse-Five (George Roy Hill, USA, 1972, 103 minutes)

Steamboat Bill, Jr. (Buster Keaton, Charles Reisner, USA, 1928, 70 minutes)


Classic Foreign Language Films

8 1/2 (Federico Fellini, Italy, 1963, 138 minutes)

The Bicycle Thief (Vittorio De Sica, Italy, 1948, 89 minutes)

Children of Heaven (Majid Majidi, Iran, 1997, 87 minutes)

Metropolis Restored (Fritz Lang, Germany, 1927, 148 minutes)

A Woman is a Woman (Jean-Luc Godard, France, 1961, 83 minutes)

Xala (Ousmane Sembenne, Senegal, 1975, 122 minutes) 

The Young Girls of Rochefort (Jacques Demy, France, 1967, 124 minutes)


Recent American / English Language Films

Boy (Taika Waititi, New Zealand, 2010, 87 minutes)

Compliance (Craig Zobel, USA, 2012, 89 minutes)

Fish Tank (Andrea Arnold, UK, 2009, 122 minutes)

Four Lions (Christopher Morris, UK, 2010, 101 minutes)

The Limits of Control (Jim Jarmush, USA, 2009, 115 minutes)

Old Joy (Kelly Reichardt, USA, 2006, 83 minutes)

Paranoid Park (Gus Van Sant, USA, 2007, 84 minutes)

There Will Be Blood (Paul Thomas Anderson, USA, 158 minutes)

This is Martin Bonner (Chad Hartigan, USA, 2013, 83 minutes)


Recent Foreign Language Films

Alps (Giorgos Lanthimos, Greece, 2011, 93 minutes)

13 Assassins (Takashi Miike, Japan, 2010, 125 minutes)

Certified Copy (Abbas Kiarostami, France, 2010, 106 minutes)

Chico & Rita (Tono Errando & Javier Mariscal & Fernando Trueba, Spain, 2010, 93 minutes)

Dogtooth (Giorgos Lanthimos, Greece, 2009, 103 minutes)

Exiled (Johnny To, Hong Kong, 2006, 109 minutes)

Gainsbourg: A Heroic Life (Joann Sfar, France, 2010, 121 minutes)

Holy Motors (Leos Carax, France, 2012, 115 minutes)

The Intouchables (Olivier Nakache & Eric Toledano, France, 2011, 112 minutes)

Klown (Mikkel Norgaard, Denmark, 2010, 91 minutes)

Let the Right One In (Tomas Alfredson, Sweden, 2008, 114 minutes)

Le Quattro Volte (Michelangelo Frammartino, Italy, 2010, 88 minutes)

Tabu (Miguel Gomes, Portugal, 2012, 118 minutes)

Trollhunter (André Øvredal, USA, 2010, 103 minutes)

White Material (Claire Denis, France, 2009, 105 minutes)


Documentaries

Armadillo (Janus Metz Pedersen, Denmark, 2010, 101 minutes)

Bill Cunningham New York (Richard Press, USA, 2010, 84 minutes)

Hoop Dreams (Steve James, USA, 1994, 171 minutes)

Man on Wire (James Marsh, USA, 2008, 94 minutes)

Marwencol (Jeff Malmberg, USA, 2010, 82 minutes)

Pina (Wim Wenders, Germany, 2011, 103 minutes)

The Red Chapel (Mads Brügger, Denmark, 2009, 87 minutes)

The Thin Blue Line (Errol Morris, USA, 1988, 101 minutes)

Room 237 (Rodney Ascher, USA, 2012, 103 minutes)


Television Series

Arrested Development

Doctor Who

Little Britain

Louis

Portlandia

Twin Peaks





Criterion Collection Alphabet
Okay, it is a no-brainer that Criterion films are worth watching.  Here are a few that you might not have considered, one or more for each letter of the alphabet.

L'Atalante (Jean Vigo, France, 1934, 88 minutes)

Burden of Dreams (Les Blank, USA, 1982, 94 minutes)

Chafed Elbows (Robert Downey, USA, 1966, 58 minutes)

Chronicle of a Summer (Jean Rouch & Edgar Morin, France, 1961, 90 minutes)

Close-Up (Abbas Kiarostami, Iran, 1990, 97 minutes) 

Daisies (Věra Chytilová, Czechoslovakia, 1968, 73 minutes)

Elevator to the Gallows (Louis Malle, France, 1957, 91 minutes)

F for Fake (Orson Welles, USA/France, 1973, 88 minutes) 

George Washington (David Gordon Green, USA, 2000, 89 minutes) 

House (Nobuhiko Obayashi, Japan, 1977, 87 minutes)

Innocence Unprotected (Dušan Makavejev, Yugoslavia, 1968, 119 minutes)

La Jetée (Chris Marker, France, 1962, 28 minutes)

Juliet of the Spirits (Federico Fellini, Italy, 1965, 137 minutes)

The Killing of a Chinese Bookie (John Cassavetes, USA, 1976, 108 minutes)

The Lady Vanishes (Alfred Hitchcock, UK, 1938, 95 minutes)

Mala Noche (Gus Van Sant, USA, 1986, 77 minutes)

Mickey and Nicky (Elaine May, USA, 1976, 106 minutes)

Mr. Freedom (William Klein, France, 1969, 91 minutes)

The Naked Kiss (Samuel Fuller, USA, 1964, 90 minutes)

Osaka Elegy (Kenji Mizoguchi, Japan, 1936, 71 minutes)

Pickpocket (Robert Bresson, France, 1959, 76 minutes)

Quadrophenia (Franc Roddam, UK, 1979, 114 minutes)

Rashomon (Akira Kurosawa, Japan, 1950, 88 minutes)

Schizopolis (Steven Soderbergh, USA, 1997, 96 minutes)

Shoot the Piano Player (Francois Truffaut, France, 1960, 81 minutes)

Symbiopsychotaxiplasm: Take One (William Greaves, USA, 1968, 75 minutes)

The Times of Harvey Milk (Robert Epstein & Richard Schmiechen, USA, 1984, 87 minutes)

Umberto D. (Vittorio De Sica, Italy, 1952, 89 minutes)

Vivre sa Vie (Jean-Luc Godard, France, 1962, 83 minutes)

Who Are You, Polly Magooo? (William Klein, France, 1966, 101 minutes)

Wise Blood (John Huston, USA, 1979, 105 minutes)

A Woman Under the Influence (John Cassavetes, USA, 1974, 146 minutes)

WR: Mysteries of the Organism (Dušan Makavejev, Yugoslavia, 1980, 84 minutes)

The X From Outer Space (Kazui Nihonmatsu, Japan, 98 minutes)

Yojimbo (Akira Kurosawa, Japan, 1961, 110 minutes)

Zéro de Conduite (Jean Vigo, France, 1933, 44 minutes)






Wednesday, October 30, 2013

Online Shorts: Drums West, Mute, Chocolate Bacon, Agamemnon Counterpart, Solipsist


I plan to highlight online short films as a regular feature, and here are five experimental and animated shorts that I've seen and enjoyed over the past few weeks.

Lately my two favorite resources for online shorts have been Mike Everleth's Underground Film Journal and Amid Amidi and Jerry Beck's Cartoon Brew.  I decided to avoid a Halloween-themed list, but if you're looking for one check out Everleth's "Great Underground Horror Films Streaming For Halloween." Yesterday, Cartoon Brew posted an article about the month-long National Film Board of Canada showcase, Get Animated! Both resources are worth following on their respective Twitter feeds and Facebook pages.

The final selection below, along with six other online experimental titles, can also be found in the Cultural Weekly article, "The New Innovators of Experimental Short Cinema" by Amy Cobb.

I prefer to watch online shorts on my television for a better viewing experience, and Plex and its myPlex media queue has become my go-to resource for collecting any online video for later viewing. I first discovered Plex as an app on my Samsung Blu-Ray Smart Hub, and I use it even more extensively with its channel on the Roku Streaming Device.



The procedure is very simple if you first install the myPlex bookmarklet in your bookmark bar, or add the Chrome myPlex Queue Extension. Simply find a video online, then click the bookmarklet to add it to your myPlex queue.  On pages with multiple videos, you might want to go to the video's source page first to make sure you're queueing the right video.  The videos in your myPlex queue are then available to watch on your television using your Samsung Smart Hub app or Roku Channel. Depending on the quality of the video source, the myPlex image and sound quality is very good (although it can take a little bit of time to access the video in your queue).




"Drums West" cut-paper animation from Jim Henson. This newly rediscovered short was created in Jim's home studio in Bethesda, MD around 1961. It is one of several experimental shorts inspired by the music of jazz great Chico Hamilton. At the end, in footage probably shot by Jerry Juhl, Jim demonstrates his working method.




MUTE from Job, Joris & Marieke on Vimeo.
MUTE is an animated short about a world populated by people born without a mouth. When a gory accident leads to the discovery they are able to create their own mouth by cutting themselves, this releases an enthusiastic chain reaction among the population…

This 4 minute cgi short has been created by Job, Joris & Marieke, a Dutch studio for animation, illustration, character design and music. In 2011 Job, Joris & Marieke made the music video 'I'll take you along' for Dutch rapper Gers Pardoel which has been viewed over 15 million times. The music was made by Happy Camper, and all voices were done by Fresku!

MUTE premiered at the Dutch Film Festival in the Golden Calf competition and was screened at the Anim'est festival in Bucarest. More festival news can be found on the MUTE website

http://jobjorisenmarieke.nl/mute





Chocolate Bacon (2012) from asavari kumar on Vimeo.
SYNOPSIS
Chocolate bacon is a portrait of a young woman’s experiences in the first year of grad school, presented through a series of conversations re-contextualized by abstracted characters. The film is divided into 6 episodes showing slices of life from a 7 month time period and the voices are from real audio recordings. The vignettes are interspersed with pieces where the main character talks more specifically about her trials and tribulations in making the film.

WEB : http://asavarikumar.com/chocolate-bacon/

AWARDS AND SELECTIONS
(Innovation Award) No Budget Film Festival ’12 (CA,US)
(Official selection) Ottawa International Animation Festival ’12 (Ottawa, Canada)
(Official selection) Lone Star Film festival ’12 (TX, US)
(Official selection) BUtiful Film festival ’12 (Bournemouth, UK)
(Official selection) Dirt poor filmmakers festival ’12 (NC, US)
(Official selection) Victoria Film Festival ’13 (Victoria, Canada)
(Official selection) Pune International Film Festival ’13 (Pune,India)
(Official selection) Women and minorities in media Festival ’13 (MD, US)
(Official selection) Fort Myers Film Festival ’13 (FL, US)
(Official selection) Toronto Animation Arts Festival International (Canada, 2013)





Agamemnon Counterpart from Michael Robinson on Vimeo.
Original Recipe (made in 2005):

"In 2571 in the heap of crushed stone among the ruins of that not determined turn blue planet it was found video cassette. The fact that you intend to see, has to it no relation. This is completely different record."

Music and character drawings by Jason Kovac aka Dave From 2001 (D2K1).

Free downloadable video game based on Agamemnon Counterpart created by Jason Baum aka Giz/Gizmonicgamer (PC only)-

fileupyours.com/view/127688/Agamemnoncounterpart_gamezFINASH.rar

Another way to watch:

http://www.yooouuutuuube.com/v/?rows=16&cols=16&id=ZqzESY7SIqU&startZoom=1





Saatchi & Saatchi New Directors' Showcase 2012





Monday, October 28, 2013

Lou Reed (1942-2013): Berlin, Trainspotting, Velvet Goldmine, Red Shirley


Lou Reed passed away yesterday, at age 71.  The ideal tribute would be to showcase his Warhol Screen Tests, but many of those posted online have unfortunate soundtracks added.  No longer streaming on Netflix, but still available on DVD, is 13 Most Beautiful...Songs for Andy Warhol's Screen Tests, which features Reed as well as Paul America, Dennis Hopper, Nico, Edie Sedgwick, Ingrid Superstar and Mary Woronov among others (be sure to watch the tear roll down the cheek of the non-blinking Ann Buchanan).  If you look hard enough, you might even find a copy of Raro Video's DVD of Vinyl and The Velvet Underground and Nico.

There are many official and unofficial streams of Velvet Underground and Lou Reed performances, and one in particular worth pointing out is the Ronald Nameth film Andy Warhol's Exploding Plastic Inevitable with The Velvet Underground on UbuWeb.  And, of course, the first appearance of the Velvet Underground in January, 1966 at the Annual Dinner of the New York Society for Clinical Psychiatry at the Delmonico Hotel is briefly featured in various manifestations of Jonas Mekas's diary films, including Walden: Diaries, Notes, and Sketches and Scenes from the Life of Andy Warhol.

There was a stretch in the late 1990s where Reed's songs appeared in several memorable cinematic moments in narrative features, most notably Trainspotting and Velvet Goldmine, which are currently streaming on Netflix (see below). Perhaps there could have been one more if he had not objected to I Shot Andy Warhol in 1996. He appears as "himself" in at least five feature films: Permanent Record (1988), Faraway, So Close! (1993), Closure (1997), Prozac Nation (2001) and Palermo Shooting (2008). He's credited in Blue in the Face (1995) as "Man with Strange Glasses" and in Lulu on the Bridge (1998) as "Not Lou Reed." He also provides the singing voice for some of Mok's songs in the animated feature Rock and Rule (1983).

I did not realize until surfing the internet tributes to Reed that he directed a 27-minute documentary short, Red Shirley (2010), about his 99-year-old cousin. Red Shirley is currently streaming at SnagFilms.





Jim Healy and the UW-Cinematheque Facebook page posted a memorial link to this collection of Lou Reed's scenes from Get Crazy (1983), which they screened last year.






Posters and Synopses from The Movie Database




Lou Reed's Berlin (Julian Schnabel, USA, 2007, 85 minutes)

Lou Reed recorded the album Berlin in 1973. It was a commercial failure. Over the next 33 years, he never performed the album live. For five nights in December 2006 at St. Ann's Warehouse Brooklyn, Lou Reed performed his masterwork about love's dark sisters: jealousy, rage and loss.





Trainspotting (Danny Boyle, UK, 1996, 93 minutes)

Renton is living the dream and that dream is Heroin. As Renton struggles with the agony and ecstasy of his life we follow him and his increasingly unstable mates. Drinking, fighting, drugs, sex and the most disgusting toilet in Scotland.





Velvet Goldmine (Todd Haynes, USA, 1998, 119 minutes)

In 1984, British newspaper reporter Arthur Stuart is investigating the career of 1970s glam rock star Brian Slade, who was heavily influenced in his early years by American rock singer Curt Wild, whose show was quite crazy for his time.





Friday, October 25, 2013

Singin' in the [Mise-en-]scène: The Wicker Man, La France, I Used to Be Darker


Well, after a very lengthy Monday post, I ended up missing a few days...and now here's a short list of recommendations.

This list is inspired by the current run of Matthew Porterfield's I Used to Be Darker at Sundance Cinemas, and my recent viewing (finally) of the original The Wicker Man (unfortunately I haven't seen the restored print of The Wicker Man that has been circulating in theaters).

This is a list of films that feature singing but are not musicals, properly speaking, or are very unconventional musicals.  I Used to Be Darker is not streaming yet (but I recommend putting it in your queue at GoWatchIt), so I'm adding the film that it most reminded me of, Once (2006).  Okay, Once has been easily translated into a Broadway musical, but I'm not sure if it is a film musical.

What all these films share is that they engender the unique exhilaration of simply watching someone sing, especially when you're not expecting it.  I think elaborating on that might ruin the experience, if you're not already familiar with these films.  This list certainly is not exhaustive (I considered putting Nashville and Magnolia on the list...oh, I guess I just did), so any additional recommendations on this theme are welcome in the comments section.

Posters and Synopses from The Movie Database



The Wicker Man (Robin Hardy, UK, 1973, 89 minutes)

Police sergeant Neil Howie is called to an island village in search of a missing girl whom the locals claim never existed. Stranger still, however, are the rituals that take place there.





Once (John Carney, Ireland, 2006, 85 minutes)

The Guy is a Dublin guitarist/singer-songwriter who makes a living by fixing vacuum cleaners in his Dad's Hoover repair shop by day, and singing and playing for money on the Dublin streets by night. The Girl is a Czech who plays piano when she gets a chance, and does odd jobs by day and takes care of her mom and her daughter by night.





La France (Serge Bozon, France, 2007, 102 minutes)

During the First World War, Camille (Sylvie Testud), a young woman whose husband is away fighting at the front, receives a short letter of break-up from him. Distraught, she decides to go to join him, but is driven back by the rule of the time which forbids women to move around alone. She has no other recourse than to dress herself up as a man so as to be able to take to the road on foot. As she lives near the Western Front she hooks up with a passing group of French soldiers without too much trouble. But there's something a bit odd about these stragglers, and it's not just their habit of bursting into song at every opportunity.






The American Astronaut (Cory McAbee, USA, 2001, 91 minutes)

Samual Curtis's first mission in this bizarre science fiction musical comedy requires him to take a cat to a saloon on an asteroid. There, he meets his former dance partner (the Blueberry Pirate) and collects his payment: a device capable of producing a Real Live Girl. Including music by alternative rock group The Billy Nayer Show, this film began life as a live show with a loyal following.









Stingray Sam (Cory McAbee, USA, 2009, 61 minutes)

A dangerous mission reunites Stingray Sam with his long lost accomplice, The Quasar Kid. Follow these two space-convicts as they earn their freedom in exchange for the rescue of a young girl who is being held captive by the genetically designed figurehead of a very wealthy planet.





I Used to Be Darker (Matthew Porterfield, USA, 2013, 90 minutes)

When Taryn, a Northern Irish runaway, finds herself in trouble in Ocean City, MD, she seeks refuge with her aunt and uncle in Baltimore. But Kim and Bill have problems of their own: they’re trying to handle the end of their marriage gracefully for the sake of their daughter Abby, just home from her first year of college. A story of family revelations, people finding each other and letting each other go, looking for love where they’ve found it before and, when that doesn’t work, figuring out where they might find it next.







Monday, October 21, 2013

Madison Film Forum: Museum Hours at MMoCA Spotlight Cinema, Oct. 24

As I continue to develop ideas and content for this site, most posts will be aimed at a more general web audience while some posts will address readers in my hometown, Madison, Wisconsin.  Even when I write about screenings happening here, I will provide information that readers outside of Madison hopefully will find useful.

This post is also an experiment in that the main film discussed isn't actually streaming right now, and instead I provide a link to GoWatchIt, where you can put it in a queue to notify you when it is available on one or more streaming service.  Any feedback regarding this would be greatly appreciated in the comments section.



There will be some appropriate museum hours at the Madison Museum of Contemporary Art for Spotlight Cinema's screening of Jem Cohen's Museum Hours, Thursday, October 24 at 7:00 p.m. Madison viewers might remember Cohen's earlier feature, Chain, at the 2006 Wisconsin Film Festival, which also won Cohen a "Someone to Watch" 2005 Independent Spirit Award.  Cohen's work often focuses on urban landscapes, and Museum Hours is no different as it juxtaposes the story of a man and a woman developing a gentle friendship at the Kunsthistorisches Art Museum, with what is essentially a "city symphony"-style portrait of Vienna.

Anne (Mary Margaret O'Hara) is a self-employed (or, as she puts it, "friend-employed") Canadian who must travel with limited resources to Vienna to visit her cousin who is in a coma.  After asking for directions to the hospital, she is befriended by Johann (Bobby Summer), a museum guard who shares observations about the museum with the audience via voice-over throughout the film. While Anne's visit is the catalyst for the narrative, in many ways Johann is the main protagonist for the film, because we learn a great deal more about him, ranging from his past as a punk-era band manager, to his thoughts about art, museum patrons, co-workers, and Vienna itself. Johann's actions, including his decision to provide Anna with a pass to the museum, propel the narrative forward.

Although the extent to which Johann quickly becomes involved with Anne's visit might seem a bit forced for the sake of the plot, the two leads' naturalistic performances help us forgive this as Johann and Anne develop a gentle, and to a degree mutually therapeutic, relationship.  Many of the best scenes involve Anne simply asking Johann questions or requests, and Johann providing answers or assistance. One request in particular helps highlight one of the themes of the film: the impact art can have on our lives.

There are many shots of paintings in the museum (of course), and many shots of urban landscapes in Vienna. The way these shots are put together, however, reminded me of two different experimental filmmakers, Warren Sonbert and Hollis Frampton.  Sonbert's own travel-inspired films often utilized so-called "polyvalent montage," where the element linking the shots within a sequence changes as the sequence progresses, and certain shots appearing much later resonate despite not being placed within a related sequence. The most obvious way of putting shots together in Museum Hours would be to have a description of a painting visualized with a shot of the painting. But in several important moments, that's not what we get. Instead, we need to look for the common denominator linking the shots, which might be some other kind of literal relation to dialogue, or some other kind of graphic connection.

When Anne asks Johann to visit her comatose cousin with her at the hospital, she also requests that Johann describe some of the paintings at the museum, with the assumption that her cousin might have visited the museum frequently and such descriptions might provide some kind of stimulation.  He first describes some Rembrandt self-portraits; the description is visually illustrated by some shots in the Rembrandt gallery. But while Johann describes the most famous of the portraits, in which Rembrandt wears the clothes of a poor man because he was in fact poor at the time, that detail is not shown to us. Johann follows up with a description of Giuseppe Arcimboldo's Summer (seen here at left), but we do not see it. Instead, we stay on a profile of Johann as he describes the painting and the way children react to it.  The relationship between description, visualization, and memory also will be important when I come back to Hollis Frampton, below. When the Summer description is complete, Anna requests that he describe paintings of Christ; the request is visualized at first not by paintings in the museum but by a picture and crucifix in the hospital room itself.  Johann abides by describing a painting involving Christ and John the Baptist, but instead of seeing the painting, we see a frozen river and moving train in Vienna.

Johann describes the painting as having a "blue river under a blue sky,"and we get an overcast urban landscape shot. This shot has very little narrative motivation in relation to Anne, Johann, or the comatose cousin. There are a couple of ways we might link the shots in terms of "polyvalent montage." One link might be on the word "river,"as we do in fact see a river despite not seeing the river described by Johann. Another link might be the word "blue," because despite the overcast sky the shot does have a blue hue (perhaps not immediately apparent in my frame still) due to shooting outdoors at the wrong color temperature (shooting outdoors at an indoor setting will produce a blue tone, like the old Levi's 501 blues ads).  The following shot, which has even less to do with the painting being described, does have a link to the previous shot due to its similar blue hue. (One could also argue a conceptual connection between the train in the first shot and the public transport vehicles in the second shot.) Meanwhile, after we return to a close-up of Anne, Johann continues his description of the Christ painting, which we have to continue to imagine for ourselves, and which he describes as "bluer than I could ever tell."  This sequence, then, sets up two viewing strategies that we might find productive: first, look for shifting connections between shots in a sequence, and second, think about when the dialogue is or is not explicitly visualized by the cutaways.  Also, this hospital scene develops the theme that living a life that engages with art and creating art that engages with life is important, as in this instance Johann has clearly benefited from engaging with the work he describes, and the descriptions in turn might help Anne's cousin.

Besides shifting common denominators between shots within a sequence, some shots that come much later also resonate with earlier shots. For example, we eventually do see the Rembrandt self-portrait in the poor-man's clothes, three shots after the hospital scene is over, which adds to its emotional resonance due to our memory of Johann's description. Later in the film Anne describes the experience of seeing a flock of birds looking like specks of pepper as they sat on the concrete bank of the river. In this case, her story is visualized nearly simultaneously, and her description of the birds flying away is punctuated by a shot of the birds flying away. But the shots also resonate with the earlier shot at the same (or similar) river seen with the blue hue during the description of the Christ and John the Baptist painting.


The shifting montage connections are sometimes more concrete, and at other times more abstract. One more amusing example of a concrete connection between a line of dialogue and a subsequent shot comes when Johann concludes a conversation with the observation that some people are "too worried about Turkish invasions." This is followed by what at first might seem like just another urban shot, but then we realize that inside the shop window is evidence of a kind of "Turkish invasion": hookahs. Realizing this depends on our ability to shift focus or look at different shots in different ways.  Another more concrete example comes when Anne gets off a public transport and observes a series of posters. We're not sure what we are supposed to notice in the posters, but after the next shot we retroactively know that this is actually cueing a transition to the next location: the Seegrotte underground caves.

Since there are two posters, and the Casino Admiral poster is more visually striking in terms of color and design (and words in English), we might not realize at first that we're supposed to notice the Seegrotte poster. So while this technique is commonly used in narrative films to cue transitions to a new location, it is not as common to make the viewer work so hard to recognize the cue.

Other montage links work on a more purely abstract basis. Late in the film there is a series of shots of statues, which seems like a more conventional montage based on shape or type of statue. One of the shots, in fact, contains a headrest described by a pre-recorded museum guide, so it is not too difficult to understand what we are looking at or the connection between shots. Eventually we see a shot of a statue with a long head (or headdress) in the left part of the frame, with empty space on the right.


The shot lasts longer than others in the sequence, as the camera begins to slowly pan right into the empty space next to the statue. Eventually the camera stops on a space that roughly divides into three areas of color: brown, black and grey. The camera holds on this seemingly empty area for a period of time. The following shot begins a sequence in a somewhat poorly lit Viennese bar, which provides a rough graphic match of a frame divided into thirds.  Before the new shot, holding on the empty space in the museum might not make sense to the casual viewer, but this is just another example of shifting the terms of the montage from the graphic qualities of the statues to the graphic qualities of the shot itself.



In addition to reminding me of the kind of polyvalent montage seen in the Sonbert's work, certain sequences in Museum Hours reminded me of Hollis Frampton's work, specifically (nostalgia), which is available on DVD through the Criterion Collection, and thus also available on Hulu Plus (see link below). To describe (nostalgia) briefly: we hear descriptions of photographs as we see photographs burn on a hot plate; the catch is that we hear the description of the photograph that we will see next, while we see the burning photograph that we have just heard described. So while we imagine a photograph we will see next based on the description, we also recall a description of the photograph as we watch it burn. Like several sequences in Museum Hours, such as Johann's description of paintings for Anne's cousin described above, (nostalgia) explores and experiments with the description, visualization, and memory of images.

The final sequence of Museum Hours seems to allude to this kind of experimentation (but I have no idea if Cohen meant to reference (nostalgia) itself). We hear a description of an image while Johann walks though the museum galleries. After a brief black screen, we fade into the image being described: an old woman walking as a tall building looms in the background. The image is framed in black, suggesting that we should consider it as an image rather than be absorbed in it as a narrative space. The discussion of this image continues as other images framed in black appear, so we have to remember the image of the woman as the description continues and we absorb new, different visual information. The rest of the sequence has some images which are described while others are not described explicitly.  Along with the polyvalent montage examples described above, this kind of experimentation forces the viewer to engage with the images in ways different than conventional narrative films.

While I enjoyed the range of experimentation in Museum Hours, the film does have a few mis-steps. One is a short sequence after a discussion of nudity in art where museum patrons are themselves nude in the galleries; the sequence is a bit too arty for its own good. The other sequence involves a guest lecturer on Bruegel, which contains interesting information and several thematically important points. Unfortunately the acting in the sequence, especially compared to the easy-going interactions of Anne and Johann, seems peculiarly stiff and staged.

But overall Museum Hours is a well crafted, patient and observant independent feature film, with strong lead performances and engaging experimental techniques.

For further reading about Cohen and Museum Hours, check out this interview with Cohen at the San Francisco International Film Festival.  I have also provided a link to the only Cohen film I can find officially streaming at the moment, his documentary Instrument: Ten Years with the Band Fugazi.



Posters and Synopses from The Movie Database



Museum Hours (Jem Cohen, USA, 2013, 106 minutes)

At the Kunsthistorisches Art Museum in Vienna, a museum guard and a visiting out-of-towner find refuge in life, art, and each other, in Jem Cohen’s painterly rumination on how art influences and echoes contemporary society.





Instrument: Ten Years with the Band Fugazi (Jem Cohen, USA, 1999, 115 minutes)

Shot from 1987 through 1998 on super 8, 16mm and video, Instrument is composed mainly of footage of concerts, interviews with the band members, practices, tours and time spent in the studio recording their 1995 album, Red Medicine. The film also includes portraits of fans as well as interviews with them at various Fugazi shows around the United States throughout the years.





Hapax Legomena I: (nostalgia) (Hollis Frampton, USA, 1971, 37 minutes)

In which the off-screen voice of confederate Michael Snow narrates a series of Frampton's photographs (speaking as Frampton, in the first person)—as each picture catches fire on a hot plate.