Archive | May, 2009

AFR Weekend reading #5

30 May


"If I stare at this goat hard enough...errrhhh"

"If I stare at this goat hard enough...errrhhh"

Interesting article on a personal feud in Melbourne’s art scene at the moment. {link}

They are reworking Jon Ronson’s hirarious book, The men who stare at goats, (which is a factual book about bizarre Military experimental divisions) into a movie. {link} {imdb}

Christian film review site, surprisingly insightful and open minded. {link}

Woody Allen has resolved his legal battle with American Apparel. {link}

One of the child actors from Slumdog Millionaire has had their Mumbai dwelling demolished in a slum clearance. {link}

Synecdoche: I loved the movie, but how do you say it? {link}

Keanu Watch: The many stoney faces of Keanu Reeves: Pictorial from LA Times. {link} 

Terry Gilliam speaks about his new film, The Imaginarium of Doctor Parnassus{link}

Sequel watch: Flight of the Navigator 2? Oh noes! {link}

 

 

Link Update: May

27 May

Here is a list of the sites to be added to our links list (found to your right):

The film company that produced the brilliant Synecdoche (2009) {link}

Media artist, Jeff Scher’s site ‘fez films’ has lots of insightful commentary and great shorts {link}

The pretty Chauvel cinema in Sydney, named after the controversial director of Jedda(1955). {link}

Canadian distributor, Mongrel Media, fantastic list of films {link}

Brad Nguyen, Film reviewr from RRR breakfasters, has a film blog over here: {link}

For wordier diegesis on an eclectic range of films: catabloguing. {link}

Our regular reviewer and poet laureate, Anna Sutton, has a new (non film) blog. Its lovely: {link}

LittleWhiteLies is great film review website, with a spunky design. That’s right spunky: {link}

Film Production company, Killer Films. {link}

Synapse films distributes some pretty bizarre titles, including Executive Koala. {link}

Good resource of images from MGM films. {link}

Applause Pictures, Asian film producers with a handsome website: {link}

Encyclopedia of Fantasy, Film and Television, (EOFFTV), is home to a huge range of articles and production details on genre films and various froms of ‘ploitation flicks {link}

Film distributor, Kino {link}

That’s all for this month.

DVD Review: Bustin’ Down the Door (2008)

25 May

Bustin’ down the door shows that sports documentaries aren’t necessarily about the sports, so much as the characters and stories around them. This well edited, sonically appealing (Iggy, Bowie, Cohen) and well shot account of the birth of pro-surfers examines the motivation of three of the sports pioneers who, in 1975, really shook up the scene. Director Jeremy Gosch manages to establishes an intimate atmosphere which allows these men, now in the fifties, the space to open up, philosophise and at times break down. They tell similar tales of impoverished beginnings, an escape in the waves, and (eventually) the satisfaction of being acknowledged for their talent.

 

hello

hello

 

weeeee

weeeeeeeeee

Despite the talking heads approach feeling a little dull and indulgent at times, these guys paint an inspiring and authentic picture of passion and persistence. The sport is now a multi billion dollar industry, but in their time being gnarly surfer dude often got you dismissed as hippy, counter-culture no-hoper. There were feuds with Hawaiian gangs, clawing your way from one tour to the next on zero budget, guaranteed bank loan refusals, and a fledgling industry that might throw a pair of shorts your way if you were lucky. 

The focus on just three, albeit outstanding, players in this international scene does limit the documentary somewhat and, as a result, it fails to spark the imagination in the way the similar, but more wide ranging, documentaries Bra Boys and Dogtown and Z-boys did. It makes a great accompaniment to those films and I’m sure sports fans will find plenty to pique their interest in the highly detailed accounts from three of its legends and the archival footage of the seventies surfing scene is pretty stunning. The average viewer, however, might find their eyes glazing over at times. Edward Norton’s mono-tonal narration certainly doesn’t help, and, dare I say it, is outdone by Rusty Crowes effort for Bra Boys. Don’t worry, I still love you Edward.

 

Wanna make love?

Wanna make love?

What really makes the documentary work, apart from its first rate production, are the universal themes of human character. The desire to pioneer, self-belief and achievement, rebellion, and determination are all present here in a very pure way. It’s hard not to be slightly envious that of these guys for pulling it off and not having submit to the drudgery of a job they want to escape.

Ronan MacEwan

Official Website: {link}

Available on DVD from June 3rd through the always brilliant Madman {link}

Not available on Laserdisc. Aww man!

Not available on Laserdisc. Aww man!

 

 

DVD Special Features

Fuel TVs Blue Carpet Special


Dan Merkel Slide Show


Santa Barbara International Film Festival

Deleted Scenes

Over 30mins of bonus surfing footage


Surfrider PSAs


Teasers and trailers


Package contains 32 Page Booklet featuring photography of famed surf photographer Dan Merke

Weekend reading #4

23 May

And so another weekend is upon, each disappearing like so many grapes down a Roman emperors alimentary canal. What interesting things have happened this week?

gnglHere is an illuminating interview with a film poster designer gifted with a wry humour and humbleness about his craft. {link}

Some great looking new films coming from England with Film4 funding. Including one from my favourite comedian, Chris Morris, and other one about Scottish aliens!  {link} 

 

While the shoot is a wrap, Spike Jonze’s blog for Where the Wild Things Are lives on. {link}

And here is the HD trailer in case you haven’t seen it yet: (I personally think the monsters aren’t menacing enough)

 

David Lynch has a promising looking interview project, here is the introduction by the silver fox himself {link}

 

The Other State: Film news and etcetera from New Zealand.

20 May

The Man

nzfcAfter Dr. Ruth Harley left the New Zealand Film Commission (NZFC) for Screen Australia last year, one of the biggest roles in the NZ industry was up for grabs. It lay vacant for quite some time – until Graeme Mason was announced as her successor in March. The press release gives a slice of his CV and he’s had a solid international career and seems likely to bring a commercial eye to the industry. What gets me about the press release is the films he has been involved with – The Usual Suspects, Trainspotting, Lock Stock and Two Smoking Barrels, Spice World – The Movie, and When We Were Kings – wait. Go back [rewind?]. Spice World? Either the NZFC publicist has a sense of humour or this may be a mark of things to come…{link}

The Buzz

The Strength of Water is a NZ/German co-production that is doing the rounds on the international film festival circuit – apparently to much acclaim. This is good news for one of NZ’s most established independent producers Fiona Copland (Topless Women Talk About Their Lives, The Price of Milk) and for the creative talent behind the film – first time director Armagan Ballentyne and playwright Briar Grace Smith. It tells the tale of two young Maori twins in a relatively remote North NZ town whose lives are interrupted when a stranger comes to town. Perhaps drawing obvious Whale Rider comparisons (coming of age/Maori youth/remote NZ) will benefit the film and help it turn a profit for the NZFC. And maybe nab another young Kiwi an Oscar nomination. Who knows?

 

The Peter Jackson Empire

I can’t really talk about New Zealand’s film industry without mentioning Peter Jackson. Well I could, but might have my citizenship revoked. Jackson has released a pretty pic from his upcoming film adaptation of The Lovely Bones. I’m thinking this one’s going to be more Heavenly Creatures than Meet the Feebles…{link}

lovely-bones-picture00

Lovely bones

The Quick Link

The Quiet Earth. I love a good kiwi post-apocalyptic film. Now available on DVD it seems. [God knows we all need a cheerful distraction from the GFC -Ed] {link} 

The Rant

And whilst the NZ film industry may be flourishing, making money from US investors and getting recognition from overseas festivals – back home we seem to be stuck in a screen culture stasis. Auckland in particular lacks any kind of screen/moving image scene. Though having stated that – I will now have those that disprove it (please, I welcome it).

In an effort to undermine my own theory – I searched for a cinema event or screening that offered something outside of the current releases – to no avail. No cult film or classic film screenings. No interesting events tied in with screenings. I figure it mustn’t be there if I don’t know about it – I should be the target audience, no? – A true cinephile with a largely disposable income. A last minute search revealed the Human Rights Film Festival is on this week. THIS week. How come I didn’t know about this before?

Unfortunately for Auckland, Melbourne is my point of comparison here – from ACMI to Rooftop Cinema to the Astor to MIFF* to smaller privately run or student run festivals – there never seemed to be a cinematically dull patch on the calendar.

This, my dear Auckland will have to change. Even if I have to do it myself.

Morgan Stewart  

*[not to be confused with the Malaysian International Furniture Fair -ed]

 

 

Staying up late: Some thoughts on Luis Bunuel, to coincide with the retrospective at the Spanish Film Festival.

17 May

bunuel_o8mo

I have been on a Luis Bunuel bender for what seems like many days but before now had not realised just how incredibly prolific this Spanish filmmaker was. Not to mention completely and wonderfully outrageous!

Anyone who studied art or drama or English at even high school level knows about the surrealist movement. But how many of Bunuel’s films have you actually seen?

BunuelLuis oldI’m not going to go into the biographical details of how the man divided his time between Spain, Mexico and France. Or a chronology of his films. That’s what Wikipedia is for. Ok, he was born 22 February 1900 and died 29 July 1983. I’m just going to talk a bit about his incredibly diverse body of work in the general terms reserved for a bog entry (sorry, I meant blog) on a Friday night.

A major influence on cinema, Bunuel’s films nearly always disrupt narrative convention in their efforts to mine the unconscious and hold it up against reality’s representation through social rituals. Like when you’re at a dinner party politely enduring the arrogant stranger next to you while outside on the street their shiny BMW convertible turns into a crocodile.

Bunuel depicts the characters’ inner worlds through dreamlike archetypes and complex symbolism, but in doing so he goes beyond the personal: he explores the hypocrisy of bourgeois values and examines the nature of class conflict.

Milky way

Milky way

It is this social commentary throughout his films that sets Bunuel apart from other surrealist filmmakers. His ongoing interest in themes of death and the stages preceding it (ie illness, misery and poverty), his belief in social rebellion and abhorrence of oppression, and his exaggeration of reality rather than distortion of it, allow us to define him as a realist as much as a surrealist filmmaker.

Bunuel’s obsession with catholic dogma and rituals is a prominent theme as is his preoccupation with fetishistic sexuality, obviously a by-product of a strict religious upbringing (what a burden but it makes for great creative material). As he once stated, “sex without sin is like

Milky way

Milky way

eggs without salt”. I know there’s some of you out there who are going to use this line in the future, it’s such gold. In fact you might just use it today.

Bunuel’s films give us a  unique aesthetic experience, despite the fact that they are technically relatively simple and stylistically unadorned. They are often peopled with aristocratic women and tall moustached men who exude a touch of the palace syndrome. They swan about in mink stoles and

Belle de jour

Belle de jour

dinner suits in aristocratic mansions where French chandeliers weigh more than the mortar, or the morals. There are Hitchcockian blonde (but ascetic, that’s what makes them more appealing) nuns straight out of a sort of literary erotic fantasy 101 and women being stylish and elusive in the way only European women can. Or they are devils and brides in disguise. Or smartly suited soldiers. Ok, so there’s a lot of films starring toothless peasants and dehumanised industrial workers, too.

But Bunuel always moves beyond these often beautiful surfaces to reveal the underlying social decay and contradictory social mores. The bizarre, circus -like scenarios that evolve in Bunuel films are part of a brilliant dark satire on humanity’s fundamental absurdity. And the more seriously it takes itself, the more ripe it is for a kicking.

Bunuel injects irrational logic into the recognisable structures of daily life, and the consequences are a civilised society undone. By the time you’re finished with one of his films, the idea that we’re somehow evolved seems rather silly.

Bunuel -el Angel exterminadorBunuel also subverts the limitations of gender stereotypes – is there anything this man couldn’t do? I heard he also dabbled in cross-dressing, just for starters. While many of Bunuel’s female characters may use their sexuality to control men, they continue to oppose patriarchal control with feminine consciousness. Watch some of his films and you’ll see what I mean. I can’t stop thinking about those delicate stockinged legs…

Since we were teenagers we’ve been wanting to liberate our consciousness! And god knows we’ve tried every way how.

This week my nocturnal fantasies have been overrun by new and welcome additions, such as a dinner party that’s invaded by an army of Spanish soldiers who are chased away by lamb who take me to a barn where I act out an eroticised version of ‘My life as a Spanish milk maid, by Luis Bunuel’.

“Life is amusing and strange”, Bunuel once observed. And no other filmmaker captured that wonderful duality quite like he did. I thank him in my dreams.

un chien andalou

un chien andalou

The Spanish Film Festival is on now and runs until the 24th of May at the Palace Cinema Como and the Kino Melbourne and from the 20th in Brisbane and Perth. {link}

See also:

Fantastic feature article in slant ‘The savage poetry of Luis Bunuel’ {link}

Banned film L’age d’or

37 minute doco on Bunuel

By Anna Sl(oops)utton..

Weekend reading #4: Fantastic Four, Sony hates the internet, Gilliam no longer lost in La Mancha?

16 May

fantastic four

Terry Gilliam to revive his trouble plagued project The Man Who Killed Don Quixote for a 2011 release  (see Lost in La Mancha (2002) for the backstory). Depp said to be involved. {variety} {imdb}

Sony hates the internet.”It seems to have done damage to every (part) of the entertainment business.” Are they talking about us? {link}

The very sad story of the unreleased Fantastic Four film made by Roger Corman for 1 million dollars. The studio made it to renew their licence on the title and never planned to release it, only they didn’t tell anyone involved. Heartbreaking for the young actors who thought they were getting their big break {article} {wiki}

White Lillies is a great film review site. Nice design too. {link}

Star Trek (2009)

13 May

star trekThe latest Star Trek film is the eleventh in the franchise’s history or the forty-seventh if you count the thirty-six unofficial films made by Coburg resident Darren Kaulic. Shot mainly on video and bits of string, Darren’s films frequently broke the mould of the conventional Trek saga. Captain Kirk was often played by one of, (or several of) Darren’s cats and Ohura was voiced by Darren screaming into a cup even though the actor portraying Ohura could mimic the original TV incarnation of the character flawlessly.

Darren’s most renowned film “The Wrath of My Landlord” featured Darren in a hand knitted Star Fleet uniform trashing his squalid hovel of a home. Shunned by the Academy time and time again, Darren moved toward a more artistic approach to his Trek films. His twenty-first film “Star Trek The Motion Picture” bore none of the hallmarks of the series, did not include any of the original characters and was technically just a drawing of his Medicare card.

After being released from a brief stint in prison in 1983, Darren went back to basics and reintroduced many of the characteristics of his earlier work. “Star Trek, Ignore the Dark Stains on My Driveway and Something About An Antenna” was a return to form for Darren, who played every character ever seen on screen in the TV series and films. Kirk confronting Bones about his desire to marry the front lawn was one of the more memorable moments of the piece.

Darren ceased making Star Trek films in 1997 when during the filming of “Star Trek vs Batman”, Darren fell out with the executive producer, which was himself.

Although the new Star Trek picture doesn’t have the finesse of Darren’s work, it still should be seen post haste.

By Simon Godfrey


Weekend reading #3

9 May

 Stupid idea of the week & Keanu update: {Jekyll and Hyde}

Mia Farrow’s Darfur hunger strike: 10 days and counting {link}

DVD review: Cinema 16 – American Short Films

7 May

cinema-16Cinema16: American Short Films. Part of a series of short film compilations including European, World and British Cinema.

One of the presents I gave my  boyfriend for his birthday this year was a Fassbinder box set, as he had once remarked that he would like it if I gave him one of my favourite films as a gift (in this case, Martha). A week later he ordered each and every DVD in the newly released Cinema16 collection from JB HiFi, and all I could think was, ‘I wish I had given  you THAT for your birthday!’

I’ve just finished the American part of the collection, which I enjoyed thoroughly. What makes this set a particularly worthwhile purchase is the inclusion of illuminating and informative audio commentaries on each film. There are 16 great films included here so I have only gone into a few of them. There are also films by Maya Deren, Andy Warhol, Tim Burton and Mike Mills, to name a few. 

daybreak-clip23

What really stood out to me was the essential simplicity of these evocative films. Mostly completed when the Directors were film students, they are often crudely made without professional use of sound or lighting, yet show a craftmanship and originality that overcomes technical and budget restrictions to create rich characters and stories. This is reinforced by the fact that many of the films feature non-actors such as the directors’ classmates to star in the films. Rather than giving the films an amateurish quality, this resourceful use of real people lends an unmistakable authenticity to the work. One last thing, there’s an overwhelming number of films set in NYC in this set. While it raises the question as to why there’s a distinct lack of  films included that were set in other parts of the USA, if you’re a fan of The Big Apple like me, you’re going to just love it! It’s all skyscrapers, Brooklyn street scenes, diners and Coney Island baby now.

Terminal Bar uses photos taken by the filmmaker Stefan Nadelman’s dad in his bartender days during the 1970s and early 80s. Using flash animation, Nadelman forms a unique narrative of the legendary New York bar’s regulars based on creative compositioning of black and white portraits and sound. 

 

 

Freiheit - George Lucas

Freiheit - George Lucas. In his first live action film Freiheit, the then student George Lucas deals with the meaning of freedom at the time of the Berlin Wall. The ghostly imagery of a young boy running through the forest to the sound of birds singing and machine guns firing gives a glimmer of insight into the early vision of a legendary filmmaker mastering the extremely simple means at his disposal.

Pennebaker with dylan on Don't Look Back

Pennebaker with dylan on Don't Look Back

D.A. Pennebaker’s Daybreak Express captures the beauty of the New York City subway in a free form visual poem whose life force is brought to the fore by the insistent locomotive rhythms of a Duke Ellington score and kaleidoscopic imagery that pulses with the beat of daily life in the big city. The result is a distillation of NYC’s transcendence of time through its continual trafficking of life and movement. This atmosphere is captured by one of the filmmaker’s influences, Ezra Pound’s two line poem, “In a Station of the Metro”:

The apparation of these faces in the crowd;

Petals on a wet, black bough.

(I’d love to see someone transform the slow and dull tedium of Melbourne’s tram system into such an enduring and dynamic piece!)

In Alexander Payne’s Carmen, a modern hicksville re- interpretation of silent film comedy, a Spanish siren assails a moronic console operator with her beauty and becomes the central figure of his operatic Bizetian dreamings. It’s all hand-held petrol bowser ejaculations and slow-motion running across sand until reality sets in at the trailer home where our modern day doofus lives. 

 

The Discipline of D.E. - Gus Van Sant

The Discipline of D.E. - Gus Van Sant

One of the stand outs (and there are many) from this set is Gus Van Sant’s kooky The Discipline of D.E, based on a William Burroughs story. In this narrated instructional film we learn the principles of D.E, or “Do Easy”:  “Doing whatever you do in the easiest most relaxed way you can manage”.  The art of practising efficiency in everything you do (“how can you pilot a spacecraft if you can’t find your way around your own apartment?”) is explored in a comically deadpan, off the wall take on self-discipline and its ultimate useability through abstract images that pay homage to sources as diverse as DIY videos and spaghetti westerns.

In The Wraith of Cobble Hill, a down and out teenager, Felix,  is given the keys to look after the neighbour’s dog while the convenience store manager is on hiatus. After raiding the shelves for spam roast tv dinners, he forms an unlikely connection that breaks away from his experience of domestic neglect. Director Adam Parrish King’s film is a great example of the power of stop-motion to create dramatic, self-contained worlds for its characters. While imitating reality with precise timing and authentic writing and voices, the film manages to transform the world of the story into a series of dreamlike moments that would be out of place beyond their original setting.

For fans of Todd Solondz, Feelings is a melancholy, awkward, kind of twee student film that Solondz made in 1984 during his student days at New York University. Set on the beach at Coney Island, this grainy black and white testament to a young man’s heartbreak features Solondz himself in the starring role. Did I mention that the song in the film, ‘Feelings’ by Morris Albert, is also sung by Solondz? What an angel. (Video Below)

Lunch Date - Adam Davidson

Lunch Date - Adam Davidson

Adam Davidson’s formidable The Lunch Date depicts a middle class white American woman’s confrontation  with her own prejudices  played out over a meal with a homeless person at Grand Central Station. The interesting thing about this film is that although it addresses class and racial issues, the woman does not seem to learn from her mistakes; in fact at the film’s end she appears unchanged. This complex and humane film uses minimal dialogue, with each scene and action contributing to the telling of the story. Just as in real life, we learn about the characters’ attitudes by how they react to the people around them. The screenplay’s clever twist and reversal lead to an unforgettable resolution.

The Director chose black and white film so he could  make use of available light at Grand Central, providing a timeless atmosphere to a film that doesn’t waste a single second of screen time. The film went on to win the 1991 Academy Award Oscar for Best Short Film.

 

Anna Sutton.