Showing posts with label David Gordon Green. Show all posts
Showing posts with label David Gordon Green. Show all posts

14 March 2009

The Decade List: George Washington (2000)

George Washington - dir. David Gordon Green

Few directors hit their mark on their first outing, and, as David Gordon Green has shown us, few sustain the momentum of such heights (Lynne Ramsay might be the exception, but she only has two features under her belt at the moment). George Washington is spellbinding. With its Terence Malik-inspired rural beauty (cinematographer Tim Orr would shoot all of Green's subsequent features), Green crafts such unexpected tenderness and horror, a combination that usually goes about as well as oil and water. It's hard to say Green hasn't lived up to the promise of George Washington, as so many of my Zooey Deschanel-obsessed mates would list All the Real Girls among one of the best films they've ever seen. Like Ramsay's Ratcatcher, which was releasing theatrically in the US during 2000 and by no small coincidence was also released on DVD by Criterion, George Washington captured adolescence without the taste of nostalgia and romanticism so many filmmakers can't get away from. However, for me, Green, especially after the curious, though nowhere near terrible, teaming with the Judd Apatow crew last year, Green's output will probably never exceed his first feature, a glowing, poetic dream of a film.

With: Candace Evanofski, Curtis Cotton III, Damian Jewan Lee, Donald Holden, Rachael Handy, Paul Schneider
Screenplay: David Gordon Green
Cinematography: Tim Orr
Music: Michael Linnen, David Wingo
Country of Origin: USA
Studio: Criterion/Janus

Premiere: February 2000 (Berlin International Film Festival)
US Premiere: April 2000 (Los Angeles Independent Film Festival)

Awards: Discovery Award (Toronto International Film Festival)

11 September 2008

Previous 10: 11 September

Things didn't fare nearly as well this time around. Even the best entry out of all ten, Snow Angels, failed to move me like the director did with George Washington, but I've come to expect that maybe that film was David Gordon Green's finest hour.

La Crème

Snow Angels - dir. David Gordon Green - USA - Warner Independent - with Kate Beckinsale, Sam Rockwell, Michael Angarano, Amy Sedaris, Jeanetta Arnette, Olivia Thirlby, Griffin Dunne, Nicky Katt

Les Autres

Baby Mama - dir. Michael McCullers - USA - Universal - with Tina Fey, Amy Poehler, Greg Kinnear, Sigourney Weaver, Dax Shepard, Romany Malco, Steve Martin, Maura Tierney

The Fall - dir. Tarsem - India/UK/USA - Roadside Attractions - with Lee Pace, Catinca Untaru, Justine Waddell, Kim Uylenbroek, Daniel Caltagirone, Marcus Wesley, Jeetu Verma, Leo Bill

Finding Amanda - dir. Peter Tolan - USA - Magnolia - with Matthew Broderick, Brittany Snow, Maura Tierney, Steve Coogan, Peter Facinelli

Help Me Eros - dir. Lee Kang-sheng - Taiwan - Strand Releasing - with Lee Kang-sheng, Jane Liao, Dennis Nieh, Ivy Yi

In Search of a Midnight Kiss - dir. Alex Holdridge - USA - IFC Films - with Scoot McNairy, Sara Simmonds, Brian McGuire, Kathleen Luong, Twink Caplan

The Bad!

Ben X - dir. Nic Balthazar - Netherlands/Belgium - Film Movement - with Greg Timmermans, Marijke Pinoy, Laura Verlinden, Pol Goossen, Titus De Voogdt, Maarten Claeyssens

Ice Blues - dir. Ron Oliver - USA - here! Films - with Chad Allen, Sebastian Spence, Daryl Shuttleworth, Sherry Miller, Nelson Wong, Brittney Wilson

Then She Found Me - dir. Helen Hunt - USA - ThinkFilm - with Helen Hunt, Colin Firth, Bette Midler, Matthew Broderick, Ben Shenkman, Lynn Cohen

What We Do Is Secret - dir. Rodger Grossman - USA - Peace Arch - with Shane West, Bijou Phillips, Rick Gonzalez, Noah Segan, Ashton Holmes, Tina Majorino

13 April 2008

Meat Is Murder

Shotgun Stories - dir. Jeff Nichols - 2007 - USA

Like a gothic Midwestern Greek tragedy, Shotgun Stories unflinchingly looks at the family rivalry between seven men of the same father, separated by their father's ignorance toward the eldest three, who are conveniently named Boy, Kid, and Son. Michael Shannon (Bug) is remarkably good as the eldest of the first three, and even if the film sometimes goes where you expect it to in terms of plot, it's still rather remarkable in tone. Co-produced by David Gordon Green.

Bungalow - dir. Ulrich Köhler - 2002 - Germany

The aimlessness of youth has always been a cinematic obsession of mine, and Bungalow, from first-time director Köhler, is a fine addition to said sub-genre. Paul (Lennie Burmeister) goes AWOL from the military (out of boredom, we're lead to believe), only to spend two mundane days avoiding the military police, fighting with his older brother (David Striestow) and sort-of girlfriend (Nicole Glaser), flirting with his brother's Danish girlfriend (Trine Dyrholm of The Celebration), and doing a lot of swimming. Bungalow is constantly unassuming and keeps Paul's ambition and desires at an enigmatic distance, making his every move that much more fascinating. Köhler directs Burmeister with minimal emotion all to the film's benefit.

Mad Cowgirl - dir. Gregory Hatanaka - 2006 - USA

Whew. There's a lot to say about Mad Cowgirl, a black comedy/satire/slasher/martial arts film about a woman (Sarah Lassez of Nowhere and The Blackout) who works as a meat inspector and develops a lethal brain tumor, which may or may not have been caused by her meat consumption. This tumor spirals her into obsession with a kung-fu actress, a seedy sexual affair with her brother (James Duval), tormenting her former lover, a priest (Walter Koening), and going on some sort of killing spree. I refer back to the kitchen sink reference, as Mad Cowgirl really has it all, and some of it's dull, some of it's not. I can't fault it's ambition, or Lassez's strange performance, nor can I scream its praises... however, I can't resist applauding it for, at least moderately, succeeding in all its excess and blasphemy. You might also note that Lassez and Duval are joined in the cast by Devon Odessa and Jaason Simmons, all four of which starred in Gregg Araki's Nowhere. Hmm. If you get inspired to see Hatanaka's other films afterward, I can safely tell you to avoid Until the Night, which stars fellow Nowhere alum Kathleen Robertson, as well as Sean Young and (gag) Norman Reedus.

Summer Palace - dir. Ye Lou - 2006 - China/France

Oh, the sexual awakening of college. Summer Palace follows Yu Hong (Lei Hao) as she enters university in Beijing, starts fucking around with boys, writes in her journal and witnesses the massacre of Tiananmen Square. Director Ye Lou (Purple Butterfly, Suzhou River) paints Summer Palace like a dream, swirling and drifting as youth, but when the film ends up continuing for another hour and a half, it perhaps looses some of its merit. Instead of focusing simply on a young girl's sexual and political awakening, Lou spreads the film over the course of her young adulthood as well. As for the sex, I never thought I'd say so, but the prevalence of so many couplings so many times actually begins to wear. It's not a film with something intellectual to say about sex as much as it is how sex shapes the people, so in seeing the act so frequently, we might be lead to believe that they only exist in the film for shock value (which caused the film to be banned in China).

22 May 2007

Some days you just shouldn't open your e-mails

Dark Horizons is reporting that a studio called First Sun has acquired rights to remake Dario Argento's Suspiria, with talks of David Gordon Green, director of George Washington and All the Real Girls, and Scott Heim, author of Mysterious Skin, to adapt it. I really don't know what to say about this.

In other bizarre news, check here to see what Michael Haneke has planned for once he finishes the Funny Games remake.