13 April 2008

Kern, Lunch, Stealth

Not much excitement stirring on the new-to-DVD front, but there's two titles I've found that may be of some minor interest. Firstly, Music Video Distributors will have a "Video Hysterie" of that slutty Lydia Lunch on 10 June. On a similar topic, I found out a few of the shorts on the Richard Kern: Extra Action (and Extra Hardcore) DVD from MVD, though I have yet to purchase it. The shorts include The King of Sex (a Killdozer music video featuring Nick Zedd... it's fantastic, by the way), Pierce (which features Kern regular Audrey Rose getting her nipples done), Scooter & Jinx in Money Love (a saucy Sonic Youth music video), Nazi (which I know nothing about) and Goodbye 42nd Street.

Also, Water Bearer Films will be releasing Lionel Baier's Stealth [Comme des voleurs] from Switzerland on 24 June. You may know Baier from his last film the is-it-trash-or-art Garçon stupide (to which I learn more toward the 'trash' side). The film stars Baier as a Swiss gay man with an obsession with Polish culture. That's all I got.

09 April 2008

FYI

You did know Naomi Campbell is going to be the star of the new Catherine Breillat film, right? Well, consider yourself informed (and ridiculously psyched).

I Don't Want to Sleep Alone Either

Strand has announced two titles for their June DVD line-up: André Téchiné's The Witnesses [Les témoins] and Tsai Ming-liang's The Wayward Cloud, which appears to have been dumped by IFC, who (at one point) owned rights to the Taiwanese porno musical. The Witnesses streets on the 24th, The Wayward Cloud on the 10th.

I have yet to mention Koch's summer line-up, so here goes. Koch Lorber will have Nouri Bouzid's Making of from Tunisia on 10 June, Stefan Krohmer's Summer '04 [Sommer '04] from Germany on 10 June, Ramin Bahrani's Chop Shop from the USA on 8 July, and a double feature of Julien Duvivier's Don Camillo and The Return of Don Camillo [Le retour de Don Camillo] on 8 July. Though their Cinema Epoch label, Jean-Pierre Limosin's documentary Young Yakuza and James Tuchschmidt's doc The Man You Had in Mind on 10 Jun. Jessica Yu's Protagonist will also be available on that day, though it's currently available on Netflix for rent.

08 April 2008

Cliquot

Otto; or Up with Dead People – dir. Bruce LaBruce – 2008 – Germany/Canada
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Boarding Gate – dir. Olivier Assayas – 2007 – France
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Paranoid Park – dir. Gus Van Sant – 2007 – France/USA

A while back, I wrote a snarky post about Ingmar Bergman’s The Virgin Spring, in which I likened my relationship with the auteur theory with those of close intrapersonal relationships. What resulted was a tongue-in-cheek mockery of my own cinematic solidarity. Do I relate with cinema more than I do with real life? It’s a scary thought, but certainly not one that hasn’t crossed my mind before. I also alluded to a particular experience in which the film Amèlie “clouded my nihilism and filled me with a destructive sense of idealism and romance.” Said experience was no exaggeration, and yet as I’m contemplating my current personal state, particularly in relation to the films I’ve viewed recently, three films, from director’s who’ve thrilled me in the past, have sincerely moved me, in ways completely unexpected and unprecedented (maybe).

Let’s start with the sleaze. Who would have thought that “reluctant pornographer” Bruce LaBruce’s Otto; or Up with Dead People and deconstructive Eurotrash artist Olivier Assyas’ Boarding Gate would have swelled up my insides (in the good, non-sexual way)? With Otto, LaBruce sets aside his usual fetishism for skinheads and infuses the film with the gentler side of a zombie film. Otto (Jey Crisfar) is discovered by Medea Yarn (Katharina Klewinghaus), who could best be described as a science experiment meshing Gudrun from The Raspberry Reich, Maya Deren and Anne Rice gone wrong. Really, Otto; or Up with Dead People is LaBruce’s remake of his own Super 8½, his self-serving satire of a porn star named Bruce (played by himself) and the documentary filmmaker (Stacy Friedrich) who’s embarking on a “Brucesploitation film” about his rise and fall in the porn industry. With Otto, LaBruce steps away from himself, instead focusing on Medea’s intended exploitation of Otto, a lost, homeless boy who believes (whether it’s true or not) that he’s a zombie, for the purpose of her political zombie porn epic Up with Dead People.

To say that LaBruce is for an acquired taste would be an understatement, but there’s a central issue in understanding why he detracts so many people. On the surface, his explicit, unsimulated (gay) sex would be a deterrent for most audiences, but there’s also his political agenda, fiercely leftist and patronizing. The leftist “activists” of his films take their agenda as if they were on the right, using tactics of violence and manipulation to overthrow the government which has bred their wrath. It is here, in LaBruce’s depiction of these individuals (and really all others that appear in his films), where audiences just can’t penetrate (sorry for the pun) why LaBruce’s films piss them off so much. LaBruce works under the similar guise as Gregg Araki, masking appreciation with condemnation that makes his films that much more “radical.” LaBruce admires, champions, scorns and criticizes the individuals that fill his screen. For Otto, LaBruce has made evident that his take on the zombie film is best understood as a visual metaphor for consumerism and political ambivalence. Yet where Otto hits home is in the way Otto stands for so much more: the crippling ennui, disillusion and de-habilitation of the contemporary youth. Not to stretch things too far, but Otto’s conception as a zombie (to his credit, LaBruce never reveals whether it’s in Otto’s mind or not) recalls the silence of Liv Ullmann in Persona or the escapism of Juliette Binoche in Mary (two films I’ve already compared). And, strangely, Otto becomes more heartbreaking than I could have expected.

Olivier Assayas continued to send chills down my back with his latest Boarding Gate, a film, not unlike Otto, that’s proved to part audiences and critics alike like the Red Sea (there’s your Charlton Heston reference, it’ll be your last). As Otto proved to be parallel to Super 8½, Boarding Gate serves as the mirror to Assayas’ own demonlover, the salacious, Sonic Youth-scored corporate thriller that brought attention back to the director, five years after Irma Vep. I think Boarding Gate is best understood in the context of Assayas’ recent career than it is stand-alone; in fact, most of Boarding Gate’s detractors have no clue who the director is or what he stands for. Many were struck with the amoral attitude of demonlover, in which hot women (Connie Nielsen, Chloe Sevigny, Gina Gershon) in the business world delved into the underground, backstabbing, murdering and deceiving to climb that ladder. In many ways, the women’s active roles were as fetishized as the women in a Russ Meyer film, but I can’t say whatever Assayas was doing didn’t work. The director raised eyebrows with his follow-up Clean, a stark melodrama without the forced sentiment about a woman’s (Maggie Cheung) grappling with kicking drugs and rekindling her relationship with her estranged son. Clean had heart but didn’t wear it on its sleeve. Instead, it worked more as Assayas’ examination of humanism, in all its imperfections. Thus, Boarding Gate stands as the medium of demonlover’s glossy amorality and Clean’s unsentimental humanism, blending itself surprisingly well.

Sandra, played by your favorite screen siren Asia Argento, needs to pick up the pieces of her life. Her relationships with businessman Miles (Michael Madsen) and a contract killer (Carl Ng) have crumbled, and like Otto, she seems to have entered a state of detachment, unsure of herself or her own place within her understood world. I may be a little harsh on Ms. Argento from time to time, but her style of acting (mumbled dialogue, hazy-eyed, pain killer-fueled) is the true haunting aspect of Boarding Gate. It’s her gameness for shedding clothes while shielding the inner-self that keeps the film on its rails. Where the human and moral aspects collide is through her, because unlike Connie Nielsen’s Diane in demonlover, Sandra actually has a conscience. Diane’s freak-out after murdering someone is more a result of her shock than it is her morality. Sandra, instead, actually reacts to what she’s done with a flicker of a soul, as seen through Argento’s misty eyes.

The big difference between Paranoid Park and the other two is the placement of the emotional resonance. Paranoid Park doesn’t have an Otto or a Sandra, it has an Alex (Gabe Nevins), a teenaged skateboarder who accidentally kills a security guard while train-hopping. Though I didn’t go into detail on the other two, Paranoid Park is flawed just like the others, but the other two films’ faults seemed out of the way of my general appreciation. With Paranoid Park, it took two sittings to look past Van Sant’s poor casting decisions. Enlisting teenagers from Myspace, the film reeks of amateurishness, something that Van Sant likely wanted to convey as youthful awkwardness and naturalness. It didn’t work, and perhaps the lousy performances from the cast, particularly Nevins, make the film’s reverberation shift elsewhere. Though Boarding Gate and Otto both reflected a personal change in their directors, Paranoid Park did the best job of illuminating the man behind the camera.

Though I usually don’t care what he thinks, Entertainment Weekly’s Owen Gleiberman perfectly remarked upon the separation Paranoid Park has between Van Sant’s Death Trilogy in stating, “it’s the first of Van Sant’s blitzed-generation films in which a young man wakes up instead of shutting down.” It’s within this understanding that Paranoid Park cut deep inside me. Aided by Christopher Doyle’s dazzling cinematography, Paranoid Park is a mood piece, both grainy and sublime, but most of all, buoyant. It becomes a strange case of auteurism when three respected (and personally affecting) filmmakers expose their growth in humanity through their latest films, all within the same year. Back to my Bergman reference, the glimmer of hope shone through his later films, particularly Fanny & Alexander, opening up, in a sense, his entire career. I hope none of the three films I’ve spoke about mark the end of any of the filmmakers’ respective careers (I doubt it will), but I can’t speak higher of these men’s profound impact on my own self at this time, shrugging away ambivalence and ennui in lieu of the startling emergence of significance.

Masturbation

So, here's my chance to do a self-plug. Well, sort of one. A couple of friends of mine and I crafted a web serial called All the Young Dudes, which completed its first "season" with a premiere at Lemmon's this past Saturday. I'm happy with how it turned out overall. So check it out, let me know what you think. We're taking a two month break to best prepare for our second season and subsequent feature. Omg. It'll be just like Twin Peaks. And, yes, that's me playing the role of "Joe."

Check out our official website. Or myspace. Or you can download the podcast via iTunes, but I'm not sure that all of our episodes are available there.

AFI, Here's an idea

Instead of making a list of the most "inspirational" films, why doesn't AFI make a list of the 100 best film soundtracks? I mean, c'mon, you know the only reason they counted down the "inspirational" films was because they wanted to include them in the best films of all time, but felt sheepish doing so. And, I've already bitched about Harold & Maude's placement there. Anyway, I wish I had enough knowledge to make a 100 list for myself, but I have a few suggestions for AFI if they ever pick up on my idea... and I'll steer clear of the obvious ones, like that little movie The Graduate. And I'd probably add every Gregg Araki movie to the list, if only because he and I are musically parallel, but I think they'd probably focus on "Written for the Screen" music.

1. Xanadu - Olivia Netwon-John / Electric Light Orchestra [um, duh]
2. Magnolia - Aimee Mann / Various
3. Reality Bites - Various, including Dinosaur Jr. / Lisa Loeb / U2 / New Order / Crowded House / The Posies / The Knack
4. Good Will Hunting - Elliott Smith
5. Kids - Lou Barlow / Folk Implosion / Sebadoh / Slint
6. William Shakespeare's Romeo + Juliet - Various including Radiohead / Garbage / The Cardigans / Butthole Surfers / Des'ree
7. Once - Glen Hansard / Marketa Irglova [this would probably make the list, but for good reason]
8. Lost Highway - Angelo Badalamenti / Trent Reznor / Various including Marilyn Manson / The Smashing Pumpkins / Rammstein / David Bowie
9. Purple Rain - Prince [um, duh, again]

Unfortunately, upon racking my brain, I realized what a daunting task this might be. Most of the great film/music moments come from pre-released music or even simply from "scores." I mean how could I look past Ennio Morricone? Maybe a "Best Song Made for a Film" would be an easier task. You know Dolly Parton's "9 to 5" would be on top. You know it. And you know, if they actually did a best soundtracks and Whitney didn't make the top 10, there'd be hell to pay.

06 April 2008

More DVD releases for you

Warner is releasing a new(er) version of Aria on 1 July. I'm not sure why this is necessary, as the Image remastered disc was just fine, but oh well. Magnolia will be releasing Olivier Assayas' wonderful, audience-dividing Boarding Gate on 3 June. The film stars Asia Argento, Michael Madsen and Kim Gordon of Sonic Youth. Michael Haneke's Funny Games remake will be released by Warner on 10 June.

The Weinstein Company will have Wong Kar-wai's My Blueberry Nights out on 1 July. No word on whether the international cut will be available in addition to the U.S. theatrical version. Kino will be releasing Reha Erdem's Times and Winds, from Turkey, on 15 July. ThinkFilm will have out The Tracey Fragments, starring a pre-Juno Ellen Page on 8 July. The final, wonderful season of the best show that's ever aired on television, The Wire, will be available from HBO on 12 Aug. And finally, Koch Lorber/Red Envelope Entertainment will have Céline Sciamma's Water Lilies on 2 Sept.

Zombie You-Know-Who

What a dick.

03 April 2008

You put a spell on me...

Lost Highway – dir. David Lynch – France/USA – 1997

Now that your David Lynch DVD collection complete, after Universal (finally) released Lost Highway on DVD last Tuesday, you might come to the realization that Lost Highway probably isn’t as out-there as you may recall. I probably hadn’t seen the film in about seven years before purchasing it last night, and memory didn’t serve me correctly. For one, I remember disliking the film more than most of Lynch’s body of work; in fact, I’m not even sure I ever watched the whole thing, as the last twenty minutes of the film rang no bells. For two, I remember part of my distaste for the film coming from the utter incomprehensible fortress Lynch placed around it. I’m now ten years older, and I’ve suffered through Inland Empire, so I think now was the perfect time to have proven myself wrong about Lost Highway, David Lynch’s rock-n-roll noir, through my unorganized notations.

My knee-jerk reaction to Lost Highway involved something about Lynch throwing everything and the proverbial kitchen sink into his opus, but when placed side-by-side, Lost Highway looks positively Hemmingway-esque against Inland Empire. I jest, of course, as both films really do pride themselves on the inclusion of that kitchen sink, but in retrospect, Lost Highway makes a more flattering setting for it. This perhaps comes from the knowledge that, at least, there’s a lid on the whole thing somewhere (which could be a problem in some cases, but not in Lynch’s).

In fact, one of the ways in which Lost Highway’s “weirdness” becomes illuminating is when you approach it the same way one would approach Lost. Without giving too much away, there are some striking parallels in the goings-on of both places, notably the nose-bleeds and “cabin” as a result of a so-called “rip in time.” I would recommend for those into the series Lost to investigate further into the vortex theory and see how it might create a better understanding for Lost Highway (check out Lostpedia).

Does Lost Highway have Lynch’s strangest cast to date? Other than Jack Nance, most of the actors onscreen are first-timers (and likely last-timers) with the director, which is certainly unusual for him, but it’s the casting itself that’s most abnormal. Gary Busey, Richard Pryor, Robert Blake, Henry Rollins, Robert Loggia and Mink Stole? Where did that come from? Unfortunately, Lost Highway also suffers under one’s general understanding of Lynch’s repeat casting. Bill Pullman obviously plays the Kyle Maclachlan role here, most recognized in his bangs (don’t believe me? Check out the episode of Twin Peaks where “Bob” leaves his host body… you know the episode). The absence of Maclachlan could best be attributed to their falling out post-Twin Peaks and of no result of Showgirls. Natasha Gregson Wagner, daughter of Natalie Wood, is a lousy substitute for Lara Flynn Boyle, and Balthazar Getty is just lousy all-around… which leads me to Ms. Arquette.

There’s a certain distraction in Lynch’s emphasis on Patricia Arquette’s look over her performance. The robe, ankles, shoes and bangs (hair is very important in Lost Highway) of her Renee screams Barbara Stanwyck in Double Indemnity, which isn’t Lynch’s first nod to the film (see the episode of Twin Peaks where Piper Laurie is visited by an insurance salesman by the name of Mr. Neff). Arquette’s Alice is far more Veronica Lake than Stanwyck, but it’s especially difficult getting past her forced exterior to delve into Lynch’s typical duality of women. Though Arquette strikes me as a strange choice for both roles, she’s rather archetypal of Lynchian women in that the film appears to slow down when she’s not onscreen. This may also be attributed to the lack of skill both of her male counterparts (Pullman and Getty) hold, but other than the famous Loggia “tailgating” scene, Arquette is sorely missed when she’s offscreen. Additionally, Alice’s retelling of her initial meeting with Loggia’s character, set to Marilyn Manson’s cover of “I Put a Spell on You,” ranks among Lynch’s finest sequences.

Stylistically, Lost Highway often feels like a retread, even if it did come before Mulholland Drive and Inland Empire. Lynch’s aesthetic obsession with rotary telephone rings, dimly lit lamps barely lighting the wall, ominous hallways, and Angelo Badalamenti is on full display in Lost Highway, but in overall aesthetics, Lost Highway’s is as different as Wild at Heart in Lynch’s oeuvre, and much of this could be attested to Badalamenti and Trent Reznor’s production of the soundtrack, which features tracks by Manson, The Smashing Pumpkins and Rammstein (and of course Nine Inch Nails), all of which would be seemingly out-of-place in familiar Lynch environment, but are perfectly evocative here. Cocteau Twins fans might also note that Lynch finally got the rights to This Mortal Coil’s cover of Tim Buckley’s “Song of the Siren,” with vocals by Liz Fraser, which Lynch originally wanted for Blue Velvet, and when he couldn’t acquire the rights, “created” Julee Cruise. Lynch claims that Lost Highway exists in the same world that Twin Peaks does, which would make sense with the Robert Blake character, but I stumble at finding greater comparisons.

Thoughts?

02 April 2008

Zombie Jules Dassin

Oh those strange coincidences. Richard Widmark died just a week before his Night and the City director Jules Dassin. Dassin had an amazingly rounded career, born in Connecticut, became a master of the film noir, blacklisted from Hollywood, moved to France, celebrated a career resurgence, moved to Greece, and continued to work there in his later years. He was famously married to actress Melina Mercouri, whom he directed into a Best Actress prize at Cannes for Never on Sunday. He was 96.

Notable Filmography

The Canterville Ghost (1944)
Brute Force (1947)
The Naked City (1948)
Thieves' Highway (1949)
Night and the City (195o)
Rififi (1955)
Never on Sunday (1960)
10:30 P.M. Summer (1966)

31 March 2008

Ruined

Bugcrush - dir. Carter Smith - 2006 - USA

In preparation for seeing The Ruins this weekend (better known as the only hope for a decent horror film this half of the year), I visited Carter Smith's short film, Bugcrush, available through Strand's Boys Life 6 collection... and, yes, my anticipation is now high. Running just over a half hour, Bugcrush is thrice as moody as any horror film I've seen in a while, focusing on the unlikely crush of a young high school boy (Josh Caras) on a likely heterosexual bad boy (Donald Cumming). Things don't really move as you would expect them to and Smith drapes Bugcrush with a palpable sense of danger. Ultimately, it doesn't make a lick of sense, but by that point, it doesn't matter. As you probably know, films that stray from any sense of reality or proper dissection after establishing itself fantastically suit my fancy. I just hope The Ruins can restore my faith in the American horror. Sorry Carter Smith for laying such an unrealistic task on your shoulders. Also, keep an eye out for Billy Price, the subject of the documentary Billy the Kid, as one of the bad boy's friends.

29 March 2008

Oh, THAT's Why...

According to Premiere's Glenn Kelly, Chapter 27 is "the most godawful, irredeemable film yet to emerge in the 21st century." Wow! As a paid film critic, I'm sure he's had to watch all those films from the creators of Date Movie, so that's saying something. Like the quiet smirks I had when Southland Tales and Marie Antoinette were panned at Cannes, my complete and utter distaste for Jared Leto can now be shared widely. Another hilarious tid-bit, from Nathan Rabin of The Onion AV Club, "Perhaps the harshest criticism that can be directed at Chapter 27 is that it's awful even for a late-period Lindsay Lohan movie." Double yowza. Read more awful reviews at GreenCine Daily or Metacritic... better yet put on your favorite 30 Seconds to Mars album and revel in Jared Leto's awfulness.

26 March 2008

Zombie Richard Widmark

The actor passed away at the age of 93. Remember him with two of my favorites: The Night and the City and, especially, Pickup on South Street.