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Deep Focus: Big Hero 6

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Big Hero 6

In Disney’s Big Hero 6, a 14-year-old tech upstart named Hiro designs a “neurocranial” transmitter that deploys tiny robots—“microbots,” he calls them—to create any object he can imagine. What better metaphor is there for the computer-animation revolution of Pixar’s John Lasseter, whose teams have built entire worlds from digital bits? When Lasseter took charge of Disney animation after the mother company bought Pixar, he brought a new creative foundation to the house that Walt built, generating commercial and artistic hits like Tangled and Wreck-It Ralph as well as the phenomenon known as Frozen (that erratic, beloved mash-up of Wicked and “The Snow Queen”). Freely based on an obscure Marvel Comics title, Big Hero 6 finds the studio summoning up a fresh combination of action and whimsy. It’s swift, inventive, antic, and ardent, with virtuoso comic choreography and split-second slapstick timing. It transcends a typical third-act smack-down (and various other letdowns) with unassuming charm and pop-art poetry, drawing on cartoons as different as the lyric milestones of Hayao Miyazaki (whose last masterpiece, The Wind Rises, also salutes a precocious inventor, named Jiro) and Saturday-morning kiddie fare like Scooby-Doo.

Hiro doesn’t realize that, in the wrong hands, the microbots could re-define technology run amok. That’s what happens when a terrifying marauder in a fierce Noh theater mask steals and exploits the tiny robots. He uses them to form menacing stilts, lethal tentacles, and towers of visual babble. But Big Hero 6 is no apocalyptic saga. The character that gives the film its emotional balance and supplies “the Lasseter touch” is Hiro’s mechanical protector, Baymax—a macrobot indelibly suffused with humanity. Hiro’s older brother, Tadashi, conceives this cushy automaton as a “personal healthcare companion,” programmed for compassion. The robot maintains empathetic protocols even after Hiro armors it, teaches it karate, dubs it Baymax 2.0, and leads it into battle with four friends. (Together they make up Big Hero 6.)

Big Hero Six

You rarely think of the Stay Puft Marshmallow Man when you look at Baymax, even when a teammate compares hugging it to embracing a warm marshmallow. A small black barbell in its caplet of a face stands for two eyes and a mouth; that modest shape becomes a prime minimalist tool for conveying everything from irrepressible nurturing to resolute, unblinking courage. Even the inflating and deflating of Baymax’s vinyl skin is amusing, especially in the robot equivalent of a drop-dead-funny drunk scene. Does Hiro read too much into Baymax’s expressions? Do we? On its own funny-paper terms, the movie explores how much a thinking machine can think and feel. By the end, Baymax’s bromides about reaching out to friends to relieve grief or risking all to save a human life come off as heartfelt wisdom.

Directed by Don Hall and Chris Williams, this mix of boy-and-his-bot fable and comic-book “origin story” unfolds in a seductive environment. The Pacific Rim metropolis of “San Fransokyo” fuses San Francisco’s fog-blasted atmospheres and hilly, eccentric beauty with Tokyo-like neon and skyscrapers. The house where Hiro and Tadashi live with their Aunt Cass is a Queen Anne Victorian crossed with a Japanese cottage; curved beams from traditional Shinto gates adorn the Golden Gate Bridge; trolley cars contain filigree fit for pagodas. The film positions futuristic high-rise developments, complete with sky-bridges and floating wind turbines, next to established landmarks like the Transamerica Pyramid. San Fransokyo has found a way of developing upward and increasing its density without losing its soul, innovation, or funk. Aunt Cass runs the cozy, history-drenched Lucky Cat Café from the first floor of her Queen Anne, while Tadashi attends the cutting-edge San Fransokyo Institute of Technology and Hiro haunts back-alleys to hustle bot fights. In Big Hero 6, Fog City is once again the City That Knows How.

Big Hero Six

As in today’s most popular comic-book origin tales (see TV’s Gotham and The Flash), family death haunts the backstory—and the foreground action, too.  The brothers’ parents died a decade before the story opens. Ditzy Aunt Cass does her best to raise the boys, but Tadashi is the one who betters Hiro’s life when he diverts him from a bot fight to the SFIT science lab. That’s where Hiro meets the pals who become his crime-fighting allies: chemistry wizard Honey Lemon, laser-plasma master Wasabi, ultra-fanboy Fred, and fetching punk speed-freak GoGo Tomago, who bikes around the city on magnetically suspended wheels that later double as shields and deadly Frisbees. Hall, Williams, and screenwriters Daniel Gerson, Robert L. Baird and Jordan Roberts tap genuine adolescent volatility: it’s spot-on for Hiro to declare, “If I don’t go to this nerd school, I’m going to lose my mind!”  He engineers his microbots for a tech contest and wins a spot on campus, bowling over revered Professor Callahan and Callahan’s bête noire, tech entrepreneur Alastair Krei. But Hiro can’t savor his accomplishments. The exhibition hall explodes in flames, catalyzing vendettas that stoke the mood-swinging plot.

The movie’s enchanting mid-section starts when Hiro stubs his toe and screams “Ow.” That automatically causes Baymax to inflate up and out of his carrying case and attempt to relieve human suffering. The robot comes to the rescue no matter how difficult it is for its blimp-like body to maneuver in close quarters. On more than one occasion, Disney’s animators turn its tight squeezes into bottomless barrels of laughs. Scott Adsit gives the character an inspired airy voice, responding to Hiro’s fist bumps with fey, endearing trills like “Bata-lata-la.” Doggedness is key to Baymax’s appeal. Every time the robot hears an “Ow,” its torso lights up with smiley faces and scowling faces: “On a scale of one to ten,” Baymax asks, “how would you rate your pain?” The comedy and drama stem from Hiro’s attempts to whip Baymax into fighting trim and transform the nurse into a warrior. The initial suit of armor makes the robot look like a sumo wrestler; the final suit is like a winged version of Iron Man’s. Baymax proves to be game for anything that improves Hiro’s physical and mental health. But that does not include the revenge killing of a human being. (It’s out of the question for Hiro’s flesh-and-blood friends, too: “This is not what I signed up for,” says GoGo.) The movie nimbly plays with pop preconceptions—whether about mortal crime and punishment or the relative morality of grey-haired academics and ruthless businessmen.

Big Hero 6

It’s a funny idea for Fred to analyze the action according to his favorite comic books. Too bad the film doesn’t follow through on this ironic spin. The last half-hour feels cramped and rushed. The screen is set for Hiro’s other buddies to turn their weaknesses into strengths—for Wasabi’s OCD or Honey Lemon’s Pollyanna outlook to serve some battlefield function. Instead, Hiro simply urges them to use their brains and see things “from a different angle” (which his brother taught him). 

Happily, as filmmakers, Hall and Williams do see things from different angles. They envision a teleportation device as a kaleidoscope of fractals—the film's Day-Glo-to-gunmetal spectrum breaks up into turbulent blasts of colors. They exploit all the elements of film to deliver thrills and laughs, whether with the punk’s-eye view of the opening bot fights or the witty displays of what Baymax sees in diagnostic mode—the wiliest demonstration of technovision since The Terminator. They revel in the way their Dr. Noh of a villain wreaks havoc on visual perspectives as the microbots swarm beneath him. He’s like a futuristic Ichabod Crane and Headless Horseman rolled into one. In Baymax they create a robot like no other, achieving a comic precision that’s uncanny—a mechanical incarnation that hums with live-wire vitality.


Interview: Lucie Borleteau

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For FILM COMMENT's festival report on Locarno, see Chris Darke's article in the November/December issue.

Far from a conventional love triangle, Fidelio: Alice’s Journey is a daring exploration of monogamy and long-distance relationships. A sailor with a man in every port, Alice takes an odyssey that is thrilling, erotic, thoughtful, and exquisitely photographed. Deep in the belly of a cargo ship is where Alice is truly in her element, as an experienced mechanic with the Merchant Marine. But she leaves behind her loving boyfriend, Felix, to take a position on the Fidelio. There, on the cusp of her 30th birthday, and the only woman in the crew, she discovers that the captain is her former lover.

It’s a daring first-time feature from French director Lucie Borleteau. Having directed and starred in a number of short films, Borleteau has also worked on productions by Arnaud Desplechin, Lou Ye, and Claire Denis (garnering a credit on White Material as a writing collaborator). FILM COMMENT spoke with Borleteau in August at the Locarno Film Festival, where the film won Best Actress for Ariane Labed (Attenberg, Love Island) in the title role.

Fidelio, Alice’s Journey

Why did you choose Fidelio as the title?

It just so happened that I heard about a navy fleet named after operas—Fidelio, Carmen. And I thought Fidelio was funny, because a big theme [in my film] is fidelity. The ship is a character for me. I thought it was cool to have both “Fidelio” and “Alice’s Odyssey” in the title, because this is obviously a portrait of Alice as a sailor. I had the wish to do this particular film when my best friend went to Merchant Marine school. At first I was thinking about a documentary, but I realized it was too big! So I thought, let’s do something better, with romance, with love, with sex. I’m very, very happy it became my first movie.

What was it like to film on the ship? You were at sea?

Yes, absolutely. Not for all the shooting, but for me it was really important to shoot on a real ship. I never thought we could do that in studio. That would have been impossible—we didn’t have the budget for it. And for me it was very important that the actors could experience what it was like to be in this labyrinth—to feel the heat, to smell the strong scent of fuel, to feel the movement of the sea. It was also a challenge for the technical crew. It was really exciting for everybody. We started with being on the ship twice. We traveled for three days at a time between Marseilles and Tunis. It was very good for the energy of the movie, and it was also very nice as a way of shooting. It wasn’t easy: some of the spaces were very small. So you have to be very smart and very concentrated. Those kinds of difficulties are very good for the film.

The limitations force you see and understand scenes in a different way.

Exactly!

Fidelio, Alice’s Journey

Was everyone in the film an actor, or did you have any sailors onboard while filming?

One Filipino member of the film crew was a sailor, and he was so happy because he was really in his element. He would even correct Ariane Labed when she was working on something in a scene: “No, that’s not the way to do it!” What was nice, too, was that he could speak directly to the sailors onboard, with very precise gestures and vocabulary. And my friend the mechanic, she was also always there with us as a consultant. We had a nice mix between the film crew and the ship’s crew, and they were able to meet and mix together. It was wonderful.

How did you come to cast Ariane?

I started to think about Ariane when I saw Attenberg. She is extraordinary in that film. And it was quite late in the process of producing this film. When I was writing, I always thought of my friend, so I had no description for the character in the script. When I met Ariane, it was crazy for me because they look a little bit like each other! So it was a gift for me when I met her. It was also important for me to have a natural actress who is not yet identifiable, at least by the French audience. So you don’t have the feeling that you’re seeing a known actress.

Ariane has describing the filmmaking as a collaborative process between the two of you.

It came easily for us. We come from the same social background. She hasn’t made very many films, so her approach is very unpretentious. Everything with her was very easy. I remember, one of the first things we shot was the opening scene in the movie, on the beach. When we shot it, I was also in a bathing suit and in the water with her to show her the movements. Everything was in solidarity with her. I think the presence of my friend was also very important to her. Ariane was training a week beforehand on the ship to prepare herself. She was wonderful. Also, you see in the film Alice has a little spot on her face? Ariane has it for real. In the script it was a scar based on the one I have near my lip. When we read through the script together for the first time, she read Alice’s part and I read everything else, and we were making notes. And we discovered her wonderful birthmark, like a “spot of fuel.” That was beautiful. It was a reminder of what actors can bring to the role, not just Ariane but everyone. Some of them gave me gifts of improvisation. It’s the way I like to work, with the reality of the people I am filming.

Fidelio, Alice’s Journey

Speaking of working with the reality of people and situations, the way Alice has to constantly navigate the everyday sexism that comes with existing in a world of men was so familiar. There’s no climactic moment of overcoming anything specifically, it’s just a lived experience.

Absolutely, I did not want it to be as if it’s a fight. She’s not a young mechanic, she’s 30 years old, she has experience, and nobody can say she’s not qualified. But of course, you have sex photos all over the ship, in cabins, and when they go for a port-of-call party, there are girls and all that. But that’s from what my friend told me about. In every situation, sometimes there are harder examples of sexism, and sometimes it can be quite casual. It’s good also to make films that are close to real life today. To me, films with a big climax where the character overcomes sexism are now old-fashioned.

Alice makes a clear distinction between love and monogamy. But the film is non-judgmental.

Absolutely.

We see the emotional fallout of two people with different definitions of monogamy, but in the end it doesn’t come down on one side or the other.

No, I didn’t want any judgment. I absolutely did not want Alice to be punished. That would have been my nightmare. But I think a happy ending would have been a little bit ridiculous. I made it kind of open-ended so that optimistic people like me can think that she will go back with Felix and their love will be stronger after what happened to them. Because I really believe that it’s better to cope with desire, and it can really improve relationships between people. But on the other side, pessimistic people will think that maybe she will be alone and sad and she will end up like the dead sailor whose job she takes over at the beginning of the film. And some people will think she is going to go with another lover.

I think in a more conventional film about fidelity, the unfaithful partner would be cast as the villain.

There is no real villain. Even the chief engineer who tries to come into her bedroom at night when he’s drunk, he’s not an evil man, he’s just a person. Of course I’m very happy that he is punished and has to go. But that’s all. I believe very strongly in human beings and I think life is beautiful, but we are absolutely not perfect.

Interview: Robert Drew

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“I was at Life magazine producing picture stories, and I wondered why documentaries on television were dull.” That was something probably a lot of other people were wondering in the 1950s, when Robert Drew set down the road of re-casting documentary film as a mobile art form with a journalistic approach to story and an idealized in-the-moment aesthetic. Helping set both images and talent into motion, the Life magazine veteran was a galvanizing force through Drew Associates and his creative collaborations with Richard Leacock, D.A. Pennebaker, Albert Maysles, and others less frequently mentioned but also deserving of recognition. Many of the works he produced are classics—Primary, Crisis: Behind a Presidential Commitment—and still others await rediscovery.

Drew passed away this past July at the age of 90. Two years ago, he generously spent a long time sharing with me firsthand recollections of documentary’s historic shift in the 1950s and 1960s. All too often the history of what’s usually called cinema verité tends to coalesce around the same names and victory-lap claims to “capturing reality,” and sometimes Drew’s role seems relegated more to textbooks. In our interview, his journalism-derived criteria for what makes a good story are evident, and he’s not shy about his role in guiding progress, but he also recognizes the influences of other filmmakers and the role of money in putting obviously appealing ideas into action. He also goes into gratifying detail about the engineering knowhow behind crucial camera modifications, both the people and the parts.

It’s all part of a story that still remains to be expanded and elaborated upon with further chapters. With the nonfiction festival DOC NYC kicking off this Friday and awarding its first Robert & Anne Drew Award for Documentary Excellence to CITIZENFOUR director Laura Poitras, here are a few more stories from Drew (1924-2014), in memoriam.

Crisis: Behind a Presidential Commitment documentary Robert Drew

Crisis: Behind a Presidential Commitment

Could you talk about how it all began, and how important the changes in camera technology were? You’ve said you proceeded from the assumption that lighter cameras were possible...

The camera gets credit for making the breakthrough, but really the camera and all the films were the result of an intention—a desire to make a better film—and the camera was just part of that. It was obvious something could be done.

On a technical level, who came up with the key advances?

Mitchell Bogdanowicz was the technical genius who allowed us to change the gears in the camera from metal to plastic, which would make the camera quiet enough. Bogdanowicz was able to adapt the camera to take the zoom lens, and he engineered a device to change battery power. He had a studio in New York, which I think was mainly devoted to the CIA. It was rather a large place, and he wouldn’t talk about the work he was doing for the government. When we ran into a real problem, we had to go to him.

But I have to talk about Richard Leacock because that’s where the intention started. I was at Harvard on the Nieman [fellowship] looking into why documentaties were dull. And I saw a program on television called Toby and the Tall Corn. It was about a Midwestern kids show, and what sold me was that you had the real feeling of being there, and it was obviously not directed. That is, it was obvously spontaneous, the shooting and the editing, and I came down to New York to find out how this miracle got made. It’s a long story, but Leacock made it, and I found him to be a very frustrated man with the way documentaries were made. He made Toby and the Tall Corn with a large crew with the big cameras. So Leacock and I talked together and outlined what needed to be done to the camera. Leacock wanted Pennebaker, who was a technical person who had run an electronics company.

The Children Are Watching Robert Drew

The Children Are Watching

It sounds so straightforward when you put it that way, but I’m sure this involved a great deal of experimentation and repetition.

It was exciting and engaging by itself. It was Mount Everest: it was there to be done. The steps were complicated, but basically it was our disappointment with the way documentaries were made that drove us to try to fix the problem. I had a hope that we could fix it in a week or two, maybe months, and I’m now 88 years old and still trying to fix it.

The first steps were to get backing. I was a “picture story” man, and my job was to find the picture stories, and to get [Alfred] Eisenstaedt shooting something, get talent, and then I would write the story for Life. Later I just sat in a cubicle and wrote stories, period. And I planned a “Life magazine of the air,” and the magazine of the air would start off with stories that were short and exciting and could not be turned off. I had a mind and a desk drawer full of ideas: some were long, cinema verité types that required new cameras, and some were these short, sensational things. I went to the publisher and said, let me make some short films, and if I do, they’ll get run on television on prime time—that was a leap for me to claim that, I wasn’t dead sure—and that will help the magazine, and your job is to sell magazines.

I started making short sensational films that were run on The Ed Sullivan Show, which was the number-one show at the time. And in the process, over several years, I built up enough films, enough material, to make a rough approximation of the magazine show. I showed it to Roy Larsen [president of Time, Inc.] and Henry Luce [co-founder of Time magazine]. Luce didn’t like it. I had an ideological philosophy and a direction—he liked the words. Larsen on the other hand liked the films.

Some weeks after the screening I got an invitation from Roy Larsen to lunch. Roy drank a martini and so did I. I had expected to get fired because I was doing so much work on motion pictures, and Life in a way was paying for the work I was doing. Larsen said he wanted me to work for his broadcast division. I said why? He said: “I want you to teach those guys, teach them how to do it, how to do what you do.” I was a little doubtful, but what he said next hit me like a two-by-four: “The broadcast divsiion has a capital equipment budget.” I was a writer making $16,000 a year, and I needed a million dollars to change the technology—and this was my avenue.

I started making films for the stations [which Time, Inc. owned] and spending Roy Larsen’s money until I had a rig that one man could carry, barely. Leacock was the guy selected to do it, and eventually I had a two-man team: Leacock on the camera, and me on the sound and writing and so forth. Getting financed was the start. Once I knew what I needed to do, once I had Leacock to help me, Pennebaker and other people, and once I had the money, then we could work in earnest. And I made the film Primary which you probably know about.

What sort of impact did Primary have?

Primary had a revolutionary effect, but that film had a strange life: it began by being rejected. A friend of mine was vice president of NBC News, Elmer Lower, and he looked at it and said: “Bob, you’ve got some good footage in there...” But the fact is without voiceover and a sense of narration, he didn’t see a film. In Europe it had a revolutionary effect. It was shown in the prestigious theaters and got the highest ratings from the French critics of any film opening that year, including West Side Story. The fiction filmmakers began picking up on those things—Godard and the rest of them. The first thing they did to imitate us was to shake the camera. Everything I did was handheld. If you put the camera on the tripod, it would kill the story.

Robert Drew

Robert Drew during his time at Life magazine

How did you manage the sound?

In order to make films in the television stations, or in hotels, I needed a way to edit films with multiple soundtracks and in order to do that I needed a machine that would allow us to edit the multiple soundtracks. The way that Hollywood did it, and the way that Ed Murrow and everybody did it, was to go into a multimillion-dollar studio to mix the sound, but I needed a system to do it in a hotel room. I went to Loren Ryder, who was a Hollywood sound engineer, and I had him fly to New York from California and booked up an arrangement to make this revolutionary editing machine.

In fact, while I was shooting Primary, I had Pennebaker setting up the new system in a hotel room in Minneapolis. When Primary was shot, I moved to Minneapolis to see the new system. Pennebaker flung open the door to the hotel room—it was a ballroom, gigantic—it was filled with wires and cables and heat. Pennebaker said: “Don’t worry, Bob, I’ve wired the fuses.” So we were drawing tremendous power, and I was afraid the hotel would burn down.

On Primary, Leacock had the principal camera, and I had the principal sound, and we were bound together by a wire. But we found out the wire had been broken the whole time, and there was no way to edit the film with the sound. Until we looked into Ryder’s machinery and found this crank that would change the speed of the film versus the tape. Pennebaker found we could actually synchronize these, shot by shot—for 40,000 feet. So Pennebaker became the man at the crank, and we all stood around him, shouting: “Turn it to the left, turn it to the right, faster, slower.” For five or six weeks.

The technology is obviously very important, but it also strikes me that you chose some amazing subjects, and that’s just as important.

It is exactly. Choosing the right subject is an ignored subject, but it’s a fundamental thing. If one wants to make films, one has to find a story.

The Chair Robert Drew

The Chair

There was a lot of innovative filmmaking going on at the time in New York, much of it pursuing the same spontaneity you were interested in. Cassavetes, Shirley Clarke, and earlier, Morris Engel. What did you think of those films?

Shirley Clarke and the people like that were making do without the tools. The stuff they put together was different, but they weren’t getting anywhere near close to telling the story as it happens with people. Cassavetes is a very interesting subject to me because of how he handled the equivalent problems, but not because of the spontaneousness. The spontaneousness he was after was forced—what I wanted was a real spontaneousness. But I appreciate Cassavetes a lot. Morris Engel was a lone genius—actually, he wasn’t alone, his wife was very instrumental in his work. I looked into what he did and spent time with him, and so did Leacock. He was a central figure, but he was not in the position to make reality documentaries. But at that point, many things could develop into good things.

Leo Hurwitz is another fascinating figure in the early history of cinema verité.

Hurwitz’s stuff was very instructive, and I learned a lot. He made a big difference in my work. Take The Young Fighter [53]. He set out to tell a story of a young man deciding to stop doing something. Now, I don’t know anybody who can make a great film on that. He made a film on somebody’s mental processes regarding a problem, and that is not a story that he could take the camera to and record and edit. But he picked a good subject with the film on the clinic, Emergency Ward [52]. It was a stronger film. And there’s another man you haven’t mentioned yet. Fons Iannelli, I think, was the genius who allowed The Young Fighter to be made. It’s hard to convey the difficulty of the problems that Leo had [faced] and that he solved to a certain extent. I think a lot of people involved were a little bit like Einstein trying to solve his ultimate problem, in their attempts to free the camera.

Another hot spot of innovation at the time was in Canadian documentary. How did that fit into all of this?

The Canadians were tremendous at what they were doing. They developed candid filming with their own equivalent. They made a fascinating series of films called The Candid Eye. They went round and shot everything they could in Christmastime in Montreal and made it into an impressionistic view of Montreal at Christmastime. I traveled up there and was on their programs. Finally I began hiring their people. One of the cameramen on Primary was straight from the National Film Board, Terence Macartney-Filgate. Leacock and I alternated between Kennedy and Humphrey, and we needed people to film when we weren’t there with the other guy. We needed the second and third cameras, in complicated situations, and I was determined to incorporate some talent from the Canadian experience.

Obviously you were on the move a lot but where were you living all this time when you were in New York?

I was living in Darien, Connecticut. I took the train in every morning, train back every night. Nights I’ll often spend on the floor somewhere. I was a fighter pilot in World War II and shot down and had all kinds of adventures. Nothing was as strenuous as making these films.

Ten films from Drew Associates will be available for streaming on SundanceNow Doc Club starting December 1, including Jane, The Chair, The Children Were Watching, Mooney vs. Fowle, On the Pole: Eddie Sachs, Letters from Vietnam, and Storm Signal.

Festival: Projections at NYFF

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The Film Society of Lincoln Center’s Projections series gracefully bore the traces of its esteemed predecessor—the 17-years-running Views from the Avant-Garde section of the New York Film Festival—while also signaling some changes. The festival-within-a-festival had less than half as many programs as last year, one theater instead of three, and three programmers instead of one. And for the first time in a few years, it was once again single-stream: no simultaneous programming, no repeats. As someone who appreciates the intimacy afforded by a single venue in which audiences repeatedly mingle as well as the restraint imposed by fewer programs, I found the down-sized Projections an illuminating and immersive two-and-a-half-day experience.

Letters to Max

Letters to Max

The shift in status of the term “avant-garde” from noun to mere adjective (“avant-garde poetics”) in the festival-within-a-festival’s self-definition may be indicative of change, as is this year’s co-programming threesome (veteran Gavin Smith, Dennis Lim, and Aily Nash), for the first time including a woman. The lack of attention to truly unconventional and experimental works given by most major U.S. film festivals puts a lot of pressure on NYFF to be both exhaustive and innovative, and over the years “Views” had been both lauded and damned for such ambitions. This year’s Projections seemed to acknowledge that being exhaustive is simply impossible (and exhausting). Indeed, even the choice of its name—Projections—suggests a sense of being in process and in progress, a conjecture rather than a statement, a gesture towards something (a screen, an audience) that needs us to complete it. The 13 diverse programs provided a tantalizing sense of some of what is being made and imagined by today’s moving-image artists from various parts of the globe. Many artists’ names were familiar from “Views” years, some were not; and the emphasis was on young and mid-career artists rather than revered masters. Each of the programs felt carefully curated, with a number of thematic or formal resonances (one or two verged, perhaps, on feeling too homogeneous). As a whole weekend experience, Projections created a stimulating rhythm, with programs of short and medium-length works alternating regularly with feature-length films.

It is, of course, impossible to do justice to the experience of 63 films. Although I attempted to address about a dozen films, I found I could not do them all justice, so I will only write about half that many—a mere handful of those that stood out most forcefully over the course of the weekend. Even in that small sampling, my idiosyncratic reflections are clearly biased by personal taste and an imperfect memory as well as other factors, and I regret not being able to include more of the works screened.

Inner Worlds

Sea of Vapors

Sea of Vapors

Artists’ films often attempt to articulate states of mind and being, elusive flows of feeling and sensation. Two shorts, at opposite ends of the formal spectrum, were particularly potent in evoking and drawing me into their affective landscapes. Jonathan Schwartz’s a certain worry and Sylvia Schedelbauer’s Sea of Vapors are both built around a series of visual associations and/or memories, although their techniques and tone could not be more different. While Schedelbauer’s piece was placed at the opening of a program and immediately and aggressively sucked one’s attention into its pulsating flicker and visual and auditory rhythms, Schwartz’s delicate 16mm camera roll was almost hidden in the midst of other shorts requiring one to actively heed its gentle call. Both have central images that emerge and re-emerge, seeming, like a Proustian madeleine, to set in motion streams of associations or recollections.

Schedelbauer’s graphic black-and-white images, both her own and found, pulsate and bleed into each other and into us. Alternating with black frames and emerging from and into complex superimpositions, they feel as if they swallow each other up. Beginning with what appears to be an image of a woman’s bending head, a curl of her hair hinting at the “vertigo” about to ensue, the film takes us to a hungry, grazing horse’s mouth, fingers, naked backs, and deep into an eye that pulls us, willingly or not, into its stream of (un-)consciousness. Circular images echo or form inside each other—eye, sun, moon, embryo, and the recurring white bowl, brimming with associations that beckon and repel and hold us in their grip. A tumult of barely discernable lips, pounding surf, forests, landscapes, accompanied by a powerful dissonant and disturbing score, overwhelms and exhausts the viewer as if we, too, are caught up in some traumatic flow of sensation and memory emerging from the simple act of holding, contemplating, raising, and drinking from that bowl. The incessant flicker of Schedelbauer’s images seems to bare the black holes (frames) of memory and time that alternately tear all of our images/recollections/sense of self apart or hold them/us together.

2012

2012

Schwartz’s a certain worry, on the other hand, is as unassuming and whimsical as its title. Made as part of a series of miniatures, it is a camera roll with cuts and multiple superimpositions done in-camera, visible to the eye. It opens with a mysterious image, both delicate and dangerous. What appears to be the jaw of a small shark lies on a flat surface beautifully lit by sunlight, as if a piece of jewelry, an object of adornment. This image of the shark teeth also closes the film, but now the frame-within-a-frame created by the warm light coming in through the window shifts—nothing is the same. After teeth come a series of shots, many single-framed, of ice. Superimposed, and appearing as if they are in another world behind this ice, are partially visible traces of other images: a child’s big smile with front teeth missing, a child in boots struggling to hold on to a dog, a child fast asleep, breathing with his mouth open, a flower. Like the worry potentially evoked by the bite of a shark, the ice, uneven and irregular, part solid part liquid, suggests worries of its own: possibilities of slipping, slippage, slippery-ness; surface instability; and the always failed attempt to “freeze” time. Thus the fleeting glimpses of children, with expressions trustingly open to the world and teeth that come and go, as well as what appears to be a miniature of a domestic scene under melting ice, suggest constant transformations, the sense that nothing (ever) stays the same in spite of a longing to hold on to moments of joy. A bright red geranium appears, reminding us of the coming of spring but also evoking the rhythms of a natural world that both soothes and constrains us. a certain worry’s minimal music track—repeating lines of a mournful melody—accentuates the ephemerality and transience of all we see. Each gesture, each cherished object and person, is inextricably bound to its own impermanence, liberated and limited by its potential transformations.

Another striking work was the highly abstract 2012 by Takashi Makino. Impossible to describe in language, the film may be, according to its maker, “everything [he] saw in 2012,” but it is also a stunning half-hour experience of a constant in-between state, a pervasive and inexorable becoming where no settling of any sort is possible. I hesitate to say much about it without being able to experience it again, yet the sensation of being between layers of consciousness, of existing inside abstraction (rather than just looking at abstraction from a distance), was powerful. Viewed with a filter in front of one eye, the three-dimensionality of the abstract yet sensual layers (both cinematic and digital) of verticals and horizontals, with barely discernable traces of some natural world in between, were particularly powerful. Fascinating and exhausting, 2012 was a highlight of the Projections weekend.

Outer Worlds, Essay Forms

The Measures

The Measures

Many works featured at Projections turned instead to our shared outer world, whether of landscapes natural or manmade, cultural or political belief systems, or traces of historical events. Two particularly interesting works—again wildly divergent from the point of view of form—explore human attempts and failures at scientific documentation. Jacqueline Goss and Jenny Perlin’s essayistic The Measures looks at the travails of two French astronomers/mathematicians as they measure the earth’s meridian arc from Dunkirk to Barcelona as part of an attempt to determine the appropriate length of a meter at the end of the 1700s, while Rebecca Baron’s Detour de Force re-tells the story of Ted Serios, infamous for his ability to transmit thoughts—bypassing language—directly onto Polaroid film. While the French scientists Jean Baptiste Delambre and Pierre Méchain use telescopes, rulers, and stars to quantify the Earth’s meridian from pole to equator, Serios and his Denver psychiatrists use the Polaroid camera, 16mm camera, and cassette tape recorder in trial after trial of Serios’s ability to produce pictures from his brain. In both works it is the (male) affective investment in the process of scientific or quasi-scientific inquiry that seems to be of prime interest to the (female) filmmakers.

Running at 46 minutes, The Measures was presented live. While the filmmakers could have included their text in recorded voice-over, their presence on opposite sides of the screen added a poignancy to the parallel narratives of collaborating astronomers in the 1790s and collaborating filmmakers in the 2010s. Goss and Perlin follow in the steps of their subjects. Planning to meet in the middle, Delambre started in Paris while Méchain started in Barcelona; Goss and Perlin move together along both their routes, encompassing the Mediterranean as well as the Channel, but with parallel cameras (similar but not the same in their framing and movements) often presented as double projection on the screen. Through the correspondence between the two men during their seven-year venture—extended first due to the French Revolution and its violent aftershocks, then due to Méchain’s diffidence and hesitations—we get a sense of their personalities: Delambre’s dogged perseverance (lining up rulers for 40 days, sleeping in haystacks while waiting out weeks of fog) and Méchain’s endearing but paralyzing self-loathing due to insecurities about his telescopic triangulations. Goss and Perlin question the attempt to standardize (the whole point of Delambre and Méchain’s odyssey is to standardize the meter which has been declared to be one ten millionth of the pole-to-equator meridian), comment on method—both the 18th-century scientists’ and their own—and suggest the impossibility of any two human visions/measures being truly the same. Occasionally their reflections tend towards the exceedingly digressive—choosing a color for each of the men; inserting a long scene of sleepers on the NY city subway reminiscent of a scene from Chris Marker’s Sans Soleil; quoting Bresson’s Notes of a Cinematographer—yet it is the idiosyncratic unpredictability of such digressions that is the essay film’s life force.

Detour de Force

Detour de Force

If The Measures comments on human anxieties about scientific method and truth as the flipside of the drive to create accurate standards, Rebecca Baron’s half-hour Detour de Force provokes reflection on the homosocial pleasures of research undertaken in the name of (ostensible) science. Ted Serios was a jack-of-all-trades employed by a Denver psychiatrist due to his uncanny ability to occasionally (and the film suggests only very occasionally) transmit images from his brain directly onto Polaroid film. Without any voiceover or explicit insertion of Baron’s perspective, the film deftly deploys a broad range of video, 16mm, and audio documentation of Serios with psychiatrists and electrical engineers as they repeat experiments in offices, private homes, and a television studio. We enter a world of tie-wearing doctors and professors jovially engaged in research with their beer-drinking, working-class, sometimes shirtless, and clearly charismatic subject. The professors, seemingly intent on at arriving at some statistically significant success rate, document each test with extensive notes (that they also film) while Serios is fully corporeally engaged in attempting to project his thoughts. He jerks, shouts, drinks, and commands the camera operators as he physically directs his mental energy through his “gismo” (a paper funnel) or directly at the lens of the Polaroid camera.

Without articulating any judgment, Detour de Force suggests the somewhat perverse pleasures of this all male world of “scientific” inquiry engaged in cross-class, quasi-erotic observation with the help of a variety of recording equipment. When Serios performs well (discernable images do appear on the Polaroids) he is “hot,” and when no images come through after numerous trials it is because he is “tight” according to the observers. Skepticism seems to become irrelevant compared to the pleasures of collectively smoking, drinking, watching and recording their captivating subject perform. In Baron’s elegant piece we are left only with questions, not only about the paranormal, but also about the rapt attention of the professors with their devices and our own fascination with Serios’s odd gestural performance.

Atlantis

Atlantis

Among the hybrid documentary/fiction/essay films at the festival was Ben Russell’s Atlantis, which seemed to mark a return (for the moment) to what one might call his imaginary (in the broadest sense of the term) ethnographies. Here Russell’s lucid and idiosyncratic camerawork links depictions of landscapes and people in Malta to three very different visions (Plato, Thomas More, 1970s science fiction) of an imagined Atlantis or utopian society. This linkage is curious and compelling, since, rather like the visions inspired by the mythical Atlantis, we too can only project our imagination onto the fragments of landscape, architecture, and religious and vocal traditions that Russell offers us. The recurring image of a person holding or walking with a mirror suggests such a play of reflections (as opposed to access to any “real”) as well as the desire for the framed and “contained” image a mirror can offer but that Russell never gives us. The use of texts (including a lengthy passage from Plato) can be disorienting, especially in an early scene of a group of men in a bar singing with a TV behind them. As the men informally sing a traditional form of music in which each in turn presents a verse, subtitles appear in time to the lyrics, for instance: “Utopians are utterly convinced that happiness after death will be beyond measure” and then continuing on to elucidate various kinds of bodily pleasure, one that floods the senses, another that accompanies discharges and intercourse, etc.

This scene is brilliant but disturbing: we realize Russell is playing with us, with the men whose lyrics he probably doesn’t understand either, and with nonfiction expectations and ethics. The remainder of Atlantis, with its beautiful images of the sea, of gestures and rituals that are both centuries old and modern, both caught and staged by Russell’s camera, and even a brief interview with a monk on happiness, is rife with this tension between what we see and the awareness of our possible projections onto it. As with many of Russell’s films, we are reminded that despite the alluring beauty of the landscapes and people he places in front of his camera, and despite the curiosity he elicits, these films are never about “others,” but about ideas, about him—and, of course, about us.

Long-Form Nonfiction, Politics, Subversion

Sauerbruch Hutton Architects

Sauerbruch Hutton Architects

The feature-length works provided a timely respite from the dense programs of short films. All works of nonfiction, if not directly then by analogy, they did not, however, have the formal breadth or complexity of some of the shorter works. Harun Farocki’s Sauerbruch Hutton Architects, one of his explorations of contemporary workplaces, follows an architectural design firm as they discuss and analyze the forms of chairs, window hardware, and the interior and exterior design of a number of large-scale building projects. Since much of the creative process is invisible with little drama or affect evident in meetings, we are left to reflect on the significance of the architectural design and the power dynamic between architects, assistants, and clients. Due to Farocki’s unexpected death last summer, the screening had an elegiac quality, but Sauerbruch Hutton Architects isn’t one of his more challenging or innovative works.

The longest piece of the weekend was Eric Baudelaire’s epistolary documentary Letters to Max. Baudelaire’s Abkhazian correspondent Max is a one-time diplomat of a disputed country that claimed independence from Georgia in a bloody post-Soviet secession. The film paints an evocative portrait of this corner of the world, and the epistolary form is intriguing (Baudelaire sends questions via the post, Max answers in taped voice-overs, and the filming was done over several visits) if also problematic. While Max describes his political and personal life and reflects on the situation of Abkhazia, Baudelaire’s voice is expressed first in his questions, and secondly—most forcefully toward the end—through images that suggest possible alternate interpretations of the political realities. Like many documentaries that attempt or claim to give voice to their subjects, the film doesn’t, in my opinion, assert its challenges strongly enough. Those who take Max’s biased perspective at face value may end up with a skewed sense (or no sense) of Abkhazian-Georgian relations, and ultimately I’m not sure the personas Max and Baudelaire create for us are worth a full 100 minutes of attention.

Ming of Harlem

Ming of Harlem: Twenty One Storeys in the Air

Phillip Warnell’s Ming of Harlem: Twenty One Storeys in the Air also felt excessively long. Warnell ambitiously combines straightforward documentary sections featuring Antoine Yates, who had successfully raised a 500-pound tiger in his Harlem home until his 2003 arrest, with artfully re-created scenes of a supple tiger pacing through the drab rooms of a low-income apartment, and with philosophical meditations on the nature of the animal. Both the documentary sections and the stunning, slow-paced, choreography of tiger-in-the-apartment are successful for what they are, but their combination is awkwardly paced, and the addition of voiceover reflections by French philosopher Jean-Luc Nancy (whom I love in other contexts) makes the work feel downright oppressive. Yates (the documentary subject) is already eloquent when he articulates his vision of animal-human relations, and the addition of the philosopher seems, regrettably, to displace and devalue, rather than show respect for, Yates’s voice.

Luis Lopez Carrasco’s El Futuro is probably the film that most polarized audiences (at least those sitting near me). Purportedly set in the 1980s and featuring an all night party of twenty and thirty-somethings (who basically had a party that was filmed), the film is envisioned as political commentary on post-Franco Spanish political realities. While the intimacy of the roving camera and the ways in which it holds on faces as they subtly transform from posturing to drunken release to posturing again is remarkable, the experience is of being inescapably trapped in self-absorbed conversations for 80 minutes when one desperately wants to leave after fifteen. Audience members seemed divided on whether this endurance test was interesting—I personally felt it was excruciating, yet I did stick it out till the end and thus got to see a titillating scene of a young woman offering her breast milk to fellow partiers.

Seven Signs that Mean Silence

Seven Signs that Mean Silence

Some of the most politically and narratively subversive films, however, were featured in the final shorts selection. In fact, much of the irony and humor of the Projections weekend was packed into this single program that included How to Make Money Religiously and the wonderfully playful Seven Signs that Mean Silence. My own favorite of these was the first part (originally an installation I believe) of Andrew Norman Wilson’s Sone S/S 2014: Chase ATM Emitting Blue Smoke, Bank of America ATM Emitting Red Smoke, TD Bank ATM Emitting Green Smoke. The piece essentially illustrates its title, accompanied by a calm voice instructing us in the art of meditation. The paradox of transforming these emblems of our interactions with capital into objects worthy of aesthetic and/or moral contemplation and attuned detachment (as well as the commentary on the fact that money and meditation are, indeed, not seen as contradictory) was profoundly amusing and provocative.

There is much more to say about Projections and the pleasures elicited by many of the films and filmmakers that comprised it this year. But for now I end with my only regret: that there could not be a Q&A session after each of the programs. Of course, Q&As can be disastrous when a dozen filmmakers are present for a shorts program and only topical questions can be responded to. On the other hand, having the opportunity to engage in dialogue with artists, even if not always successful, is one of the great joys and unique privileges of festival-going. This year only the feature-length films had Q&A sessions; in each case they added enormously to my appreciation and expanded my understandings of the film. I would suggest that it is more important to risk boring an audience with a mediocre post-screening discussion (audience members can always leave) than to deprive both filmmakers and viewers of the possibility of a shared, thoughtful, and sometimes profoundly generative, exchange.

Thanks to all the filmmakers whose work was presented and to the three programmers who brought it together so elegantly.

Irina Leimbacher is Assistant Professor of Film Studies at Keene State College and writes on nonfiction and experimental film.

Rep Diary: Shark Monroe & To the Last Man

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Every film contains its own private history: of career trajectories, artistic temperaments, and the texture of its landscapes. When the film is lost or unseen, that history goes dark with it. The To Save and Project film preservation series at the Museum of Modern Art is an annual attempt to preserve and illuminate some of what has disappeared from view. On a single evening during the 12th edition, I discovered William S. Hart putting his persona to the test in the high-seas adventure Shark Monroe (1918), slotting his phenomenally popular Western stoicism into different kinds of action; and Henry Hathaway shepherding nascent stars Randolph Scott and Shirley Temple in the pre-code B-Western To the Last Man (33), a sprightly Romeo and Juliet–Zane Grey mash-up shot in the California mountains.

Shark Monroe

Shark Monroe

By 1918, Hart was one of the biggest draws in Hollywood. His “good-bad man” persona was defined in Hell’s Hinges (1916) in a shot where his outlaw Blaze Tracy reads the Bible with a bottle of booze at his side. Though born in Newburgh, New York, Hart had grown up in the West for parts of his childhood, and revered the mythology of Westward expansion and the self-made man. He had a long, stone face, and audiences reacted to his sincerity, and his brutality. But though the fans still loved him, the critics began to agitate for something new.

In a 1918 issue of Picture Play magazine, Peter Milne reported the thoughts of one theater manager: “Someone ought to steal Hart’s guns and sombrero, and then maybe he’d give us a change.” That same year The New York Times wrote: “There is no doubt that Hart can do well the part he almost invariably plays, but one would think that artistic ambition, if nothing else, would prompt him to try something different.”

Producer Thomas Ince and his distributor Artcraft Pictures planned eight Hart films for the 1918-19 season, and Shark Monroe was a test that stretched the Hart persona into a different genre. The story, written by Hart’s frequent collaborator C. Gardner Sullivan and directed by Hart himself, concerned a rough-hewn sea captain who falls in love with the self-reliant Marjorie (Katherine MacDonald), who cares for her alcoholic brother Webster (George McDaniel). Shark quits life at sea to follow Marjorie to the Yukon gold rush, where he battles a smarmy saloon owner (and possible white slaver) for her affections.

The Hart persona remains intact—a violent outsider domesticated for civilization by a warm-hearted woman—but he’s thrown into a new kind of wilderness. Shark’s schooner, the Indiana, makes a white-knuckle journey up the California coast; then comes his trek to the Pacific Northwest, actually shot against the snow-capped mountains of the Sierras. DP Joseph August would later work with John Ford on The Informer and They Were Expendable, and here he pulls off some extraordinary nighttime photography aboard the Indiana, capturing a glowing, fairy-tale kind of twilight. In the Yukon sections, Hart is dwarfed by the landscape, no longer master of his domain. But the movie’s arc is about how Shark gets pleasure out of this loss of power. He falls in love with Marjorie after she whips him with a rope, the so-called “breaker of men” getting happily broken.

The adventure was profitable, earning more than $125,000 on a budget of $63,289. Hart stretched his character even further the same year in Branding Broadway, a knockabout comedy in the Douglas Fairbanks vein. But he never really intended to stray that far from what made him famous. The shoot had to be rushed because he was barnstorming the country promoting the purchase of Liberty Bonds to support the war effort. When asking for cash from his audience in person, he wore his cowboy garb. He became increasingly unwilling to change his style to suit the modernizing 1920s audience, and after making more than 70 shorts and features, he made his final Western, Tumbleweeds, in 1925.

To the Last Man

To the Last Man

As Hart’s career was fading out, Henry Hathaway’s was just beginning. Hathaway cut his teeth as an assistant to Victor Fleming, and one of the features they worked on was the 1923 prestige picture To The Last Man, starring Richard Dix. A decade later Hathaway was tasked to direct a series of low-budget Zane Grey Westerns for Paramount, intended to be the top half of double bills. One of them was the 1933 remake of To the Last Man, which incorporated effects shots from the 1923 version to save money. These cheap programmers were proving grounds for both cast and crew, and Hathaway’s To the Last Man bursts with youthful energy.

Previously mired in public domain hell, To the Last Man was restored by MoMA after an article by New York Post critic Lou Lumenick advocating for its rediscovery. Luckily Paramount had donated the negative (though missing a reel) to MoMA in 1990, so the majority of the material is in spectacular condition. The missing reel was patched in from a 16mm print. Shot at Bear Valley and Pine Knot, California (now a ski resort and campground, respectively) by Erich von Stroheim’s frequent cinematographer Ben F. Reynolds (Greed, Foolish Wives), this little movie about a family feud looks like an epic.

The Haydens and the Colbys have been feuding for generations, their war traveling from Kentucky to California. Jed Colby (Noah Beery, reprising his role from the ’23 version) gunned down the Haydens’ Grandpa Spelvin, but instead of escalating the violence, the new, mild-mannered patriarch turns Jed into the police. When he’s released from the clink, Jed tracks down the Hayden family to their ranch in California, and wants to pick up their hatred from where it left off. But young Lynn Hayden (Randolph Scott) falls in love with Ellen Colby (Esther Ralston), and the families might kill each other off before they have a chance to get married.

Made before the production code was enforced in 1934, To the Last Man is rich with ribaldry, the Lynn-Ellen courtship rippling with erotic tensions. They are equally objectified. First it is Ellen, cliff-diving nude as Lynn spies her from a distance. Later that evening, Ellen sneaks into Lynn’s campground as he is shirtless, shaving. Disapproving of his smooth cheeks, she says: “I’d think you were soft, if I didn’t see the strength in your arms.” They devour each other with their glances before she invites herself to sleep over. Lynn can only marvel that she’s “a disturbing sort of girl.” They are both flush with first lust, and Hathaway has them burn off their energies in shockingly physical brawls. In the finale, while Scott is sitting wounded and limp, Ralston manhandles the villainous Jack LaRue, treating him like a rag doll. This was the last leading role for Ralston, a star of the silents, and it is one of indomitable strength.

The Last Man

To the Last Man

Even little Shirley Temple, uncredited and all of five years old, gets a bit violent. In one scene, she has a tea party outside with her pony, but the little horse gets too nosy with the sugar. In a DGA oral history Hathaway recalled: “So she stood up and pushed him, and he did something and she kicked him, and he looked at her turned around, went on two feet, and with the two feet he kicked at her and missed her about that far. Oh jeez, I was scared to death. And she stood there and she said, ‘You ever do that to me again, I’ll kick you.’” Hathaway kept that impulsive improvisation in the film, and tried to get Paramount to sign her to a long-term deal, but Temple became a star at Fox. Hathaway would go on to direct over 50 more features.*

The path from William S. Hart to Randolph Scott, and from Shark Monroe to To the Last Man, spans an enormous gulf in the possibilities of the Western. Hart is almost Victorian in his morality, with love a spiritual more than a physical ideal. For the lantern-jawed Scott, the physical is all there is, as plain as the muscles in his arms that Esther Ralston eyed so hungrily. Both men filmed in the California mountains, maybe within a few miles of each other, 15 years apart. That distance is etched in their films, and can only be excavated through the preservation efforts supported by MoMA and archives around the world.

* To the Last Man would have been Hathaway’s last feature if The Hollywood Reporter had its way. The paper’s editor, Billy Wilkerson, would rent out space for reviews, essentially accepting kickbacks for positive notices, but Hathaway refused to pay. After the rejection, the following pithy review was filed in the back pages: “Too low to even be a Western.” Hathaway never forgot that line.

Deep Focus: The Homesman

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The Homesman

Tommy Lee Jones, who reached a midcareer high in the Coen Brothers’ adaptation of Cormac McCarthy’s No Country for Old Men (and later directed McCarthy’s “novel in dramatic form,” The Sunset Limited, for HBO), has made a movie that declares the Nebraska Territory in the 1850s no country for women of any age. In The Homesman, Jones plays a claim-jumping saddle tramp and Hilary Swank a pious pioneer woman who team up on a risky, arduous trek across the Great Plains. With moments of excitement, revelation and stark humor scattered among harsh visual and emotional textures, it’s an erratic, idiosyncratic adventure, based on a groundbreaking historical novel by Glendon Swarthout (who wrote a half-dozen other novels previously turned into movies, including Where the Boys Are, They Came to Cordura, and The Shootist).

Swank’s Mary Bee Cuddy has proven herself a more capable farmer, homemaker, and citizen than her single or married neighbors, male and female. Still, the only way she can woo a man is with a vision of wedlock as a solid business. Farmers think her bossy, and the drifter played by Jones—who goes by the moniker George Briggs—considers her blunt speech poisonous. They all deem her, in Briggs’s demeaning phrase, “plain as an old tin pail.” Her life alters after three nearby farmwomen go insane during a grueling, isolating winter. Cuddy volunteers to transport them across the Missouri River and into Hebron, Iowa, where church people have vowed to escort them to relatives back East or to an asylum. Cuddy declares she can ride, handle a wagon, shoot, cook, and care for the women better than any of their husbands. But when she seizes the reins of the mule team for a primitive “frame wagon”—it looks like a single padded cell without the padding—Cuddy knows she needs help. That’s when she stumbles into Briggs dangling from a rope after an aborted claim jump. (Vigilante farmers put the noose around his neck and sat him on his horse, hoping it would amble off and hang him.) She cuts the miscreant loose on condition that for a $300 fee, he’ll help her deliver the women. Briggs insists throughout that he’s doing it for the money. (His conditions include cartridges and whiskey.)

The Homesman

Boomers who sang “The Cowboy’s Lament” in grade school—“Oh bury me not on the lone prairie / Where coyotes howl and the wind blows free / In a narrow grave just six by three”—will get a charge from the way Jones and his cinematographer, Rodrigo Prieto, capture the piercing austerity of landscapes where the wind blows free and carries with it dirt, ice, snow, and sand. The movie’s fascination comes from the way Jones reclaims the countryside from picturesque nostalgia and makes crossing it a crucible for Cuddy, a strong woman who hides her desperation, and for Briggs, a frank, modest scalawag who shrewdly works around his limitations. Individual episodes cut to the bone, especially a tense faceoff with a string of Indians sporting U.S. Cavalry garb and paraphernalia, and an eerie sequence starting when Cuddy reburies the remains of a girl whose grave has been scavenged by Indians and wolves.

But the screenplay Jones has written with Wesley A. Oliver and Kieran Fitzgerald never gets to the bottom of these characters. In Swarthout’s novel, Cuddy realizes that she courts nervous collapse long before she and Briggs hit the trail. In an inspired passage, Cuddy finds herself thinking of Genesis: “And the earth was without form and void; and darkness was on the face of the deep.” Swarthout writes: “What had happened to her lately she thought of as going void, absolutely void. In her was a great, dark deep.” The country’s loneliness and barrenness spread into her soul and harden there like crystallizing ice. Knowing this from the outset heightens a reader’s awareness of Cuddy’s subtle shifts in mood, her ultra-protectiveness toward afflicted women, and her self-doubt when she realizes that Briggs is simply better at managing their perilous journey. The movie offers a different, more contained experience. You marvel at Cuddy’s resilience and bravery, so you cringe at her compulsion to beg even an old cuss like Briggs to marry her. Swank is superb at taking a smart, practical woman to her limits. Given this cramped, uneven adaptation, it’s impossible for Swank to suggest how close Cuddy comes to an emotional abyss. A climactic, movie-changing event brings the audience up short; as shot and cut, it’s not worthy of Cuddy’s anguished would-be odyssey. The script undercuts Briggs, too, by deleting the character’s perceptive analysis of how a take-charge masculine presence could unhinge a woman as proud and confident as Cuddy. 

The Homesman

It’s a tribute to Jones as a director of actors—himself included—that Briggs believably grows on Cuddy while winning over viewers, too. In mainstream hits like The Fugitive and Men In Black, Jones has such a distinctive persona, treading the line where Old School meets ornery, that it’s easy to underrate his versatility. As Briggs he brings surprising range to a man prone to shedding commitments and running away, whether from domestic ties or the Dragoons (Company C, First U.S. Fort Kearney). Jones embodies the comic pathos of a small-scale rogue, and perfectly calibrates just how much decency an audience should read into his baleful manner. Few actors are so adept at conveying the mental energy that goes into physical exertion, especially in life-or-death crises. And few actors-turned-directors treat their co-stars so cannily and generously. It’s wonderful to see Jones cede the screen to sardonic masters like Tim Blake Nelson as a seedy, menacing mule driver, and James Spader as a windbag speculator selling bogus shares in a “paper town” (empty acreage marked off into streets and fronted by a fancy yet flimsy hotel). Even Meryl Streep shows up, mercifully restrained as a genteel, unflappable pastor’s wife.

Unfortunately, these one-scene actors fare better than a trio that’s rarely out of sight. Grace Gummer, Miranda Otto, and Sonja Richter, as the insane women, are reduced to playing tragic ciphers. Jones’s co-writer Oliver contends that in the novel, “Swarthout sometimes shows results without describing the steps it took to get there. So we had to imagine background moments.” That’s simply not true. The book gives each woman a full family history, while the movie renders their breakdowns with thumbnail sketches of terror and catastrophe.  One loses three children to diphtheria, another kills her own newborn, and in a Gothic cinematic invention, a husband forces himself on the third while she lies in bed with her own mother. (The parent’s death triggers the woman’s breakdown.) The moviemakers perversely accentuate the negative in an already traumatic subject. They erase Swarthout’s fourth lunatic, who enjoyed a loving household and cracked only after killing a wolf pack that invaded her home over the course of two lonely, frigid nights—a sequence that might have been heroic as well as harrowing.  I chalked up the existential bleakness of The Sunset Limited and The Three Burials of Melquiades Estrada to Jones’s peculiar appetite for severe, oracular material. What’s worrisome in The Homesman is that he takes distressing twists, like Briggs’s revenge on the real-estate man, and makes them more brutal than they have to be.

The Homesman

Visually, this film is stunning, and not just on the plains: in masterly swift strokes, Jones depicts the “paper town’ as an alien intrusion on real life. Still, I vastly prefer Jones’s sunny, exuberant first movie, Good Old Boys, a rambunctious salute to a free-spirited Texas cowboy (played by Jones) who helps his farmer brother and his family secure their land before striking out for Mexico with a drifting buddy (Sam Shepard). Based on a first-rate comic Western by Elmer Kelton, it boasts elating performers (including Sissy Spacek, Frances McDormand, and Matt Damon) and an atmosphere that wafts off the screen. You believe these men and women are working through their lives when the cameras aren’t running.

By the time The Homesman reaches Iowa, its characters no longer add up. The final half-hour rambles between ambiguous sentiments and savage ironies. With Jones’s multiple talents, and a deeper, sharper adaptation, he could have made a great Midwestern.

Kaiju Shakedown: Jimmy Wong Yu

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One-Armed Swordsman

The One-Armed Swordsman

In 1967, The One-Armed Swordsman burst onto Hong Kong screens as anti-colonialist riots swept the city. The carnage unleashed in that year turned the city into a war zone: in 12 months, 8,000 bombs, many of them dummies, were defused by the police. Up until then, martial-arts movies had been discreet, delicate affairs, usually starring women. But director Chang Cheh channeled all the righteous anger and bloody fury erupting in Hong Kong’s streets onto cinema screens with a film that attacked audiences like a rabid dog. The hero of the movie, a blue-collar bruiser who gets his arm chopped off by a teenaged girl in a snit fit, and who then has to turn himself into a left-handed human mutilation machine, was Jimmy Wong Yu*, who could convey an encyclopedia’s worth of badassery with a single glower. 

“I was going to Hong Kong College and I was on the swimming team,” Jimmy Wong Yu said in an interview this Tuesday with Kaiju Shakedown. “In 1964, I was in a water-polo game and got in a fist fight with some of the other players. My punishment was a six-month suspension, so when the summer came, I had nothing to do. Then I saw in the paper that Shaw Brothers was holding an open audition for martial-arts actors, and I decided to go.”

The auditions were organized by Chang Cheh, then a low-level flunky at Shaw Brothers, angling for his big break, but it didn’t look likely since the only person who saw any talent in Chang Cheh was Shaw’s head of production, Raymond Chow. Shaw Brothers wasn’t a democracy, it was a dictatorship, and the only decision-maker was Run Run Shaw himself. At the audition, after making Jimmy Wong Yu do some karate, some high jumps, and a few forward rolls, Chang picked him (and three others) from the crowd of 4,000 hopefuls. In August of that year, Jimmy Wong Yu signed an eight-year contract with Shaw and was in a few forgettable movies, but then the stars aligned. In 1965, Shaw’s film magazine, Southern Screen, ran an article bragging that the studio was launching a “color wu xia offensive.” “Shaws will break with tradition,” it cried. “Creating a new vista for martial arts films. The fake, fantastical, and theatrical fighting and the so-called special effects of the past will be replaced by realistic action and fighting that immediately decides life or death.” 

Chang Cheh and Jimmy Wong Yu soon realized that this was just corporate hype. Their collaboration, Tiger Boy (66), part of the new “offensive,” was in black and white. 

Come Drink With Me

Come Drink with Me

“The boss, Mr. Run Run Shaw, had no confidence in Chang Cheh,” Wong Yu remembers. “There was no budget. It was black-and-white. Very, very, very low budget.” The rest of the movies in the “color wu xia offensive” didn’t do so well, either. The first three flopped, production on the fourth was delayed, the fifth was completed but shelved, and only King Hu’s Come Drink with Me (66) was a hit. 

But the seventh was The One-Armed Swordsman

“I was a new face,” Wong Yu says. “I knew nothing about movies. But everything Chang Cheh asked me to do felt right, it felt comfortable. We all felt like something was different with this movie. Before we made it, the swordplay in the films was like Chinese opera—one, two, left, right, bow your head, do a jump. But we were doing real fighting.”

Released with almost zero support from Shaw, The One-Armed Swordsman caught the spirit of the times and became a huge word-of-mouth hit, raking in HK$1 million at the box office, a massive sum. Chang Cheh was given free reign to do whatever he wanted, and what he wanted was to make more movies with his pissed-off star, and his other two collaborators: action directors Lau Kar-leung and Lau’s partner Tong Kai. UUtilizing an arsenal of slow motion, whip-crack zooms, freeze frames, double exposures, and blood squibs, Chang Cheh, Jimmy Wong Yu, Lau Kar-leung, and Tong Kai  (together or in some combination) made The Assassin (67), The Trail of the Broken Blade (67), Golden Swallow (68), The Sword of Swords (68), and Return of the One-Armed Swordsman (69). 

One-Armed Swordsman

The One-Armed Swordsman

That didn’t mean Run Run Shaw liked them. “At Shaw Brothers, every time I needed help, Raymond Chow took care of me,” Wong Yu says. “But Run Run Shaw only had one answer: no. He was a typical businessman. Even when I was a box-office success, my pay was HK$200 basic salary per month, then when I made a film I got an extra HK$400. I lived at home with my parents.” 

Jimmy Wong Yu thought he could do better. Noticing that Japanese films were always pitting one martial art against another, he said “If you can make a film about judo against karate, why couldn’t I make a film about Chinese iron fist against karate?” Though he’s killed a lot of Japanese people on the big screen, Wong Yu was also a fan of Japanese films. So he sat down and wrote a script, and gave it to Run Run Shaw. 

“I told him, this script will make you a lot of money, but he said no. He had no confidence in me. ‘You are a young boy, you’ve only made a few films, you have no experience as a director.’ But it was my idea to star and direct. So I showed it to Chang Cheh, and he didn’t agree either. He said, ‘No, no, Jimmy. Stay with swordplay. You’re at the top in swordplay. If you try something new, and it doesn’t work out, you’ll just be a failure.’” 

The Chinese Boxer

The Chinese Boxer

So Wong Yu quit Shaw Brothers. Desperate to hold onto his latest moneymaker, Shaw gave in and Wong Yu agreed: he would stay at Shaw, and Shaw would let him direct and star in The Chinese Boxer (70). At the time, the demand for fight choreographers was high and there weren’t enough of them, so only Tong Kai was available. Wong Yu tailored the movie to Tong Kai’s style (“He’s very good at organizing big fight scenes with many opponents.”) and shot The Chinese Boxer, a movie about a young guy whose teacher is killed by evil Japanese caricatures wearing cheap wigs. Wong Yu learns iron fist and kills them all while wearing a surgical mask. It was the very first modern kung fu movie, exchanging the wu xia sword for the kung fu fist. And it was a massive hit. 

Despite its success, Wong Yu only made a few hundred extra dollars as his salary for wearing three hats on the production. As long as his eight-year contract was in effect, he was a slave to Shaw. When Raymond Chow left the company to start Golden Harvest—the studio that would sign Bruce Lee, the Hui Brothers, and Jackie Chan, and eventually pound the nails into Shaw Brothers’ coffin—he asked Wong Yu to come with him. 

“He was like an elder brother to me,” Wong Yu says. “He offered me a contract and I took it. He gave me much more money.” This sparked a dispute with Shaw Brothers, Golden Harvest, and Wong Yu, the details of which are still murky. But the outcome wasn’t: Wong Yu left the Shaw Brothers, and his contract was torn up, but he had to agree not to make any movies in Hong Kong for three years. 

Wong Yu headed for Taiwan, and became director, producer, and star of his own movies, many of which were released by Golden Harvest—and many of which were tweaks of Shaw Brothers films. Copyright was violated extensively in Zatoichi Meets the One-Armed Swordsman (71), a Golden Harvest production shot in Kyoto that pitted Daiei’s blind swordsman against Wong Yu’s one-armed bladesman. (The movie was shot with two endings: in Japan, Zatoichi won; in Hong Kong, the One-Armed Swordsman claimed victory.) Shaw’s One-Armed Swordsman spawned Wong Yu’s One-Armed Boxer (72). There were Wong Yu–produced One-Armed Swordsman sequels, including One-Armed Swordsmen (76) co-starring another Shaw Brothers refugee, David Chiang.  And, most famously, One-Armed Boxer vs. the Flying Guillotine (76). 

The One-Armed Boxer

The One-Armed Boxer

“I saw one of Shaw pictures, The Flying Guillotine (75) and I thought maybe I can’t fight another fist again, but maybe I can fight a guillotine.” Wong Yu’s movies in Taiwan weren’t exactly good, but they had a purity and outrageousness that can only be compared to early heavy metal: raw, serious to the point of macho camp yet smart enough to be in on the joke, they’re equal parts ridiculous and thrilling, depending on how many beers you’ve had. One-Armed Boxer vs. the Flying Guillotine is basically one long fight scene set at a martial-arts competition that has pretty much influenced every fighting video game to come after, from Street Fighter to Mortal Kombat. Featuring an Indian fighter who comes complete with an attack owl and stretchy arms, a blind assassin disguised as a Buddhist monk who appears on screen to bursts of heavy Krautrock (the score is basically wall-to-wall Neu!), the movie is wonderfully ridiculous and doom-laden, with a finale set in a coffin shop featuring spring-loaded axes, gallons of blood, and a finishing move that rockets the loser through the air to land in a coffin.

Wong Yu was set to co-star with Bruce Lee in a movie, but Lee’s death put an end to those plans. Then Golden Harvest sent him to Australia to co-star with George Lazenby in The Man From Hong Kong (75), a movie that might be the most Seventies of all Seventies action movies, with car chases that won’t quit, action choreography by Sammo Hung (Wong Yu says he shot the Sammo’s action scenes himself, and gets credited in some places as co-director), grind-house lensing by exploitation auteur Brian Trenchard-Smith, and an earworm of a theme song (“Sky High” by Jigsaw). As for the rumors that Wong Yu ate flies before kissing the female lead in order to gross her out, he says that while he is 100 percent capable of catching flies with his bare hands, he would never eat one.

In 1975, Wong Yu was hired to shoot a movie called New Spartans with co-stars Toshiro Mifune, Patrick Wayne (John Wayne’s son), Fred Williamson, and Oliver Reed. Film historian Chris Poggiali calls it “a Blazing Saddles-style spoof of ‘men on a mission’ films.” He goes on to write:

“It was a troubled shoot from the get-go, as the production had to be moved from Ireland to England when the IRA threatened to kill all the English in the cast (which also included Susan George and Harry Andrews). The tabloid press was quick to imply that Patrick Wayne and Susan George were having an affair and they flocked to the set . . . Wang Yu was basically playing himself in the movie—a martial arts movie star—but his character's name was ‘Wang Fu.’ To give an idea of the level of humor, Patrick Wayne's character was named ‘Bigdick McCracken,’ Williamson was ‘Lincoln Jefferson Washington IV’ and Reed played ‘Colonel Lancelot,’ a commando leader with one arm, one leg, and one eye.”

Due to problems with the financing, the movie was shut down after only nine days, but not before Wong Yu got into a fistfight with Oliver Reed. Drunk in the hotel bar one night, Reed got belligerent and began to insult the director. Wong Yu tried to calm him down, so Reed began to insult him. As Wong Yu put it in an onstage Q&A after receiving a Lifetime Achievement Award a few days ago at the Film Society of Lincoln Center: “People had to get between us, or I would have spent the night in jail.” 

It wasn’t always action, as Wong Yu also made films like A Cookbook of Birth Control (75) and My Wacky, Wacky World (75). “I don’t think any of my films are good,” he said in our interview. “I’ll take the money and then it’s already done. Film producers offered me a lot of money, they’d say ‘Hey, Jimmy!’ and they would offer me one million dollars, which was a lot of money. Shaw only paid me a few hundred dollars each month, and here they are offering me a hundred times more for one movie. Of course, I would take the job. You would, too.” 

One of Wong Yu’s biggest contributions to film was way, way behind the camera. In the late Seventies, Jackie Chan was trapped in a terrible contract with a low-rent director and producer named Lo Wei, who paid him HK$3080 per month with an additional HK$3080 for each completed film. Raymond Chow wanted to bring Jackie to Golden Harvest and give him a huge salary, big budgets, and creative freedom, but Jackie was stuck in cheapo movies with Lo Wei, who saw him as a big-nosed Bruce Lee impersonator. 

Snake in Eagle's Shadow

Snake in Eagle's Shadow

Lo Wei loaned Jackie out and instantly he became a huge star with Snake in Eagle’s Shadow (78) and then Drunken Master (78), leading Lo Wei to lock down his contract and double his salary. Even doubled, Jackie’s take was still less than US$1,000 for every movie, even though they were earning millions at the box office. In late 1979, Jackie defied Lo Wei and shot The Young Master (80) for Golden Harvest, and war erupted between Lo Wei, Golden Harvest, and the Sun Yee On triad who were backing Lo Wei. Desperate, Golden Harvest turned to an actor rumored to be enough of a badass that even the triads respected him: Jimmy Wong Yu. According to Jackie’s autobiography, I Am Jackie Chan, Willie Chan, his manager, told him: “Jimmy is going to try to broker a peace agreement between the Sun Yee On—that’s the triad group we’re dealing with—Lo Wei, and Golden Harvest. If he succeeds, we’re off the hook. If he fails, it really doesn’t matter because you won’t be around to find out.”

According to I Am Jackie Chan, “The summit meeting between Lo, Jimmy Wong Yu, and the Sun Yee On had apparently not gone well. The news wasn’t clear, but there had been some sort of altercation that had ended with the gathering being broken up by the police.” Whatever it was that happened, according to Wong Yu, everything worked out, Lo Wei got paid, the triads backed off, and Golden Harvest was happy enough to pay Wong Yu HK$2 million for his trouble. 

But the Eighties and Nineties weren’t kind to him. In 1972, he claims to have made 22 movies. Between 1983 and 2011 he only made eight. What happened in those years? “I opened a department store,” he said in the onstage Q&A. “I went into business. And I failed.” 

Wu Xia

Wu Xia

In 2011, he was lured back to filmmaking by director Peter Chan Ho-sun to play the ultimate bad dad in the action flick Wu Xia, where he went up against his errant surrogate son, played by Donnie Yen. Even at 68 years old, he refused to use a stunt double, causing great stress to the cast and crew. “I can do it myself,” he told them. “I don’t want a stuntman.” Almost immediately after shooting wrapped he suffered a stroke that paralyzed, ironically, the left side of his body. 

When Chang Cheh had approached Wong Yu about appearing in One-Armed Swordsman all the way back in 1967, Wong Yu had protested that his hero had his right arm cut off. He was righthanded, so why not cut off his character’s left arm? No one will care if you lose your left arm, Chang Cheh explained, and so Wong Yu spent a decade and a half with his right arm tied to his stomach in movie after movie, learning how to eat and fight with his left. Now the stroke had rendered his left arm useless. Throwing himself into rehab, even starring in two films soon afterwards, he took out a new lease on life, and today the effects are only slightly visible when he’s exhausted. But Jimmy Wong Yu is never exhausted. 

At 71, he brags: “I’ve never lost a drinking competition. I had two solicitors in Hong Kong witness that I can drink three bottles of Hennessy XO cognac in three hours with no bad effects. Even afterwards, I can still walk from the nightclub back to the hotel.” 

A few months ago, he had to fly coach and wound up punching out three kids who kept kicking the back of his seat. After the police explained to the young punks who Jimmy Wong Yu was, they declined to press charges. Asked if he’s ever lost a fight, he thinks for a minute then says: “About five years ago in Shanghai, I got in a fight with four policeman. I was very drunk. Anyways, I was winning. Then they tased me.” 

*More commonly known as “Jimmy Wang Yu” the man has “Jimmy Wong” on his business cards, and Kaiju Shakedown respectfully believes that a man is allowed to determine the spelling of his own stage name.

Review: Dumb and Dumber To

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Dumb and Dumber To

Twenty years off has not dimmed the dimwittedness of Lloyd Christmas (Jim Carrey) and Harry Dunne (Jeff Daniels), the morons of Dumb and Dumber and now its sequel. Though their faces have become riven with wrinkles and folds of fat since their debut in 1994, age has granted them not wisdom but instead short-term memory loss, allowing them a kind of radical freedom to forgive each other’s formidable flaws. The only thing they never forget is their affection for each other, lending their infantile bond a sweetness that is central to Peter and Bobby Farrelly’s bodily-fluid-rich oeuvre.

The Farrelly Brothers’ central characters are invariably obsessed with the freakishness of their own bodies—whether it’s Woody Harrelson’s hook-hand in Kingpin (96) or the conjoined twins of Stuck on You (03). Lloyd and Harry’s entire existence is based on investigating their various odors and emissions, and expecting everyone else to be as fascinated as they are. Their insular codependence is neatly portrayed in Dumb and Dumber To’s opener, which explains their 20-year absence as the result of a decades-long prank: Lloyd has pretended to be comatose at Baldy View Psychiatric Hospital, where Harry loyally visits every week and artfully changes his diaper.

Lloyd only stops the ruse when Harry confesses that one of his kidneys is failing and needs a transplant. Their tortured search for a donor leads them to funeral director Fraida Felcher (Kathleen Turner, having a good time) and the revelation that Harry has a grown daughter, Penny (Rachel Melvin), who has gone to give a speech at a tech conference in El Paso. Lloyd and Harry plan to track her down, earn her love, and take her kidney.

Dumb and Dumber To

The opening scenes play awkwardly and off tempo, as if Daniels and Carrey were pausing for laughter in between each line. There’s also a regrettable “funny Chinese accent” sequence that would have been offensive even in the original. But the Farrelly’s sacred space is the road trip, and once the two idiots fire up their hearse’s engine the movie finds its slapstick sweet spot. The Farrellys have great affection for dingy off-ramp America, and on the Rhode Island–Maryland–El Paso jaunt we are treated to The Blue Crab Motel (with crustacean headboards), Three Finger Eddie’s Fireworks (self-explanatory), and the hockey-themed Mr. Pants’ All Nude Cabaret (“No high sticking”).

Along for the ride to El Paso is Travis (Rob Riggle), a suspiciously hands-on handyman in Penny’s wealthy household. Penny’s adoptive father, Dr. Pinchelow (Steve Tom), is a world-renowned scientist whose wife Adele (Laurie Holden) has a plan to knock him off. Needless to say, Lloyd and Harry undermine their devious plan with a toxic brew of farts, fireworks, and obliviousness. Jim Carrey slides right into character as if no time has passed, his frightening physicality on full display. At one point he inhales a hot dog like a baby bird slurping a worm. Jeff Daniels remains a superb reactor, his blank, doughy face a repository of dumbfounded glares. Riggle, an ex-Army man, can be hilariously aggro (see: Step Brothers), and excels as an exasperated criminal (the same straight-man role played by Mike Starr and Karen Duffy in the first). He also plays Travis’s over-camouflaged twin brother, whose elaborately pointless spy games provide some of the finest visual gags in the Farrellys’ career.

The most difficult task is given to Rachel Melvin as Harry’s supposed spawn Penny, asked to mimic Daniels’s spaced cadences while also being “cute.” This is her first big movie role, having worked mostly in television (Days of Our Lives, Heroes) and DTV exploitation (her other major role this year is in the “horror comedy” Zombeavers).  Carrey and Daniels don’t have to worry about desirability, allowing them to be as shamelessly disgusting as they like, but Melvin is immediately sexualized, the latest object of Lloyd’s schoolboy crush. This plot position doesn’t allow her to take the same risks.  She has the right staggered intonation and wide-eyed idiocy for this kind of slapstick, but is not given the opportunity to exploit it. It’s not as if the Farrellys stifle female performance—Eva Mendes gives one of the great modern screwball turns in Stuck on You—but here Melvin is allowed to be little more than a very talented prop.

Dumb and Dumber To

The most fully fledged performance by a woman in Dumb and Dumber To is the undersexed hearing-impaired grandma (Jo Helton, who made her debut smooching John Wayne in North to Alaska) who tricks Lloyd into giving her some much needed stimulation. Seizing on Lloyd’s gullibility, she uses him for what she can and pays him off with her hearing aids (and the gifting of the term “Grangina”). She’s as lowdown and self-obsessed as Lloyd and Harry, and all the more hilarious for it. It’s a further example of the Farrellys’ interest in physical limitation, and bodies that subvert expectations.

There is a bit of the freak show in the Farrellys’ work, something confrontational in how they present their characters’ disabilities without pity or condescension. This attitude has its origins in their childhood friendship with Danny Murphy, who broke his neck diving as a teen and became a quadriplegic. As reported in The New York Times, after Murphy watched the first Dumb and Dumber, he asked Peter Farrelly “why it didn't include anyone in a wheelchair. ‘I'll never forget Pete's face,’ Mr. Murphy said. ‘It was as if I had just told him that his parents had died.’"

From then on disabled actors were cast in regular supporting parts, up to and including Dumb and Dumber To. Rene Kirby, who lives with spina bifida, appeared in Shallow Hal (01) and Stuck on You (03), while the developmentally disabled Rocket Valliere was in Me, Myself & Irene (00), traded jabs with Matt Damon and Greg Kinnear in Stuck on You, and watched the Red Sox win the pennant in Fever Pitch (05). Eddie Barbanell, an actor with Down syndrome, was in Hall Pass (11), and shows up in Dumb and Dumber To as an unamused orderly who kicks Lloyd and Harry out of a nursing home.

Dumb and Dumber To

Murphy himself acted in nearly all of the Farrellys’ films from Kingpin on, playing everything from a sadistic bowling-alley employee to a kindly community-theater actor. He makes what would become his final appearance in Dumb and Dumber To, having passed away this past August from cancer. He is given a final moment of pratfall grace, tipping over in his wheelchair.

Dumb and Dumber To is about a deep, abiding friendship that can survive any indignities. After Harry and Lloyd’s journey is over, they’ve tossed away fortunes and frittered away kidneys, but they need each other to survive. As each momentary acquaintance slinks, or runs, away, it’s up to Harry and Lloyd to forget and move on. Or as is the case for Lloyd, to think about ninjas and wake up licking the grill of a big rig. Either way they can’t live without each other. And though they could never admit it, or even form the words in their desiccated cortexes, what they have is something like love.


Film of the Week: Foxcatcher

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Foxcatcher

A story can feel entirely different depending on whether you know the ending in advance; that’s implicit in the nature of tragedy, which addresses your awareness of watching the inexorable workings of the “infernal machine,” as Cocteau put it. So Bennett Miller’s Foxcatcher felt like an entirely different film to me on my two viewings. The names of John E. du Pont and the Schultz brothers may well ring a bell with you (and if not, here’s a major spoiler from The New York Times).

When I first saw Foxcatcher, in Cannes this year, I knew nothing about the real-life background to the story. The film felt maddeningly elusive: I couldn’t really tell how comic the comedy was meant to be, couldn’t quite tell how unequivocally the film was meant to be read as a sports movie… In short it seemed to be one of those films that keep you asking, more than a little impatiently, “Just where is all this going?” Well, maybe I was being obtuse, or suffering from that festival fatigue that can severely numb your perceptions, but on a second viewing, with everything now seeming to point irrevocably towards the outcome, Foxcatcher felt a lot more focused and coherent, and I appreciated the film’s qualities more. And yet conversely, it become slightly less intriguing: once you know the specific incident that’s coming, Foxcatcher becomes a coherent, outcome-focused true-life drama, whereas if you don’t, then it’s something oddly fragmented and perplexing, and certainly the damnedest—most eccentric and melancholic—sports movie you’ve ever seen. I’m glad I got to see both versions, if you see what I mean.

Set in the Nineties, the film opens with Olympic gold-medalist wrestler Mark Schultz (Channing Tatum) giving a glum, inert motivational speech to a group of schoolchildren, for a $20 fee; he’s standing in for for his older brother Dave, also an Olympian, and more of a star attraction. Dave (Mark Ruffalo, bulked up and bearded like Popeye’s nemesis Bluto) runs a team and is a more forceful, canny, balanced family man; whereas Mark is sullen, solitary, and inarticulate, his whole being somehow defined by lack. That lack (possibly associated, in Mark’s real life, with the early death of his father, although the film never mentions it) is only filled in by Dave, seemingly the missing part that allows him to function. Their relationship is spelled out early on by a very eloquent scene, as the brothers greet each other with an embrace that’s also a battle hold—it begins with hugs and a tender “How you doin’ buddy?” before passing through various shades of violence and tenderness. It’s a superbly choreographed and performed pas de deux in which Tatum and Ruffalo become a piece of living statuary. If there were an Academy Award for Physicality, the pair would win it hands down.

Foxcatcher

Then Mark acquires a guardian angel. A phone call summons him to meet “John E. du Pont, of the du Pont family”—the multimillionaire scion of blue-riband grandees going back to the 18th century. Mark sits waiting at the august family mansion in Pennsylvania, in a vast stately library (the sort that doesn’t seem to have many books on view), and in walks John Eleuthère du Pont himself—at which point the film’s weirdness quotient shoots up several notches. Du Pont is a strange enough character in himself—detached, stiffly courteous, yet also oddly informal, shuffling in with no ceremony in a short-sleeved shirt and announcing: “I’m a wrestling coach and I have a deep love for the sport.”

But then there’s the strangeness of Steve Carell’s performance—and the strangeness of the very fact that it’s Carell in there, entirely unrecognizable, even down to his eyes, under the prosthetics. It’s the most thorough facial transformation of a normally recognizable star—perhaps beyond Charlize Theron in Monster’s Ball, De Niro at the end of Raging Bull, Nicole Kidman in The Hours. In fact, that seems to be Kidman’s Virginia Woolf nose itself staging a comeback on Carell’s face, and the effect can be a little distracting (not least for Carell himself, who’s required to squint past it).

And yet the brilliance of Carell’s performance is that it emphasizes its own oddness all the way, along with du Pont’s. For this is a portrait of a man who might be an ordinary example of the eccentricity that accompanies wealth and privilege (the rich and powerful often coming across as all the stranger when they try to act normal). Or alternatively, du Pont’s disturbance may be far more extreme than the sort that ordinarily accompanies the assumption of entitlement. You have to reach the end of the story to know for sure.

Foxtcatcher

At any rate, Mark is dazzled by du Pont’s quietly rousing talk of patriotism and Valley Forge, and agrees to sign up on Team Foxcatcher, named after the patron’s farm. He is soon in thrall to the great man, who’s determined that his protégé should see him as a father figure. For du Pont is obsessed with adulation, and with creating his own myth. In one of the film’s most excruciatingly comic moments (so effective because so dryly handled), he tells Mark: “Most of my friends will call me Eagle—Golden Eagle. Or John.” He later has himself videotaped giving a pep talk in a golden satin jacket, in front of an eagle statue and the Stars and Stripes. And, en route to an event in his private plane, he runs Mark through a speech he wants him to make, paying tribute to his noble mentor—a hilarious mantra of “Ornithologist, philatelist, philanthropist!”

The drama racks up several notches when du Pont insists on adding Dave to his team—or rather, his collection. By now Mark is a changed man, traumatized or jealous that he has to share the glory, or du Pont’s attentions. Precisely what happens to erode Mark’s already damaged psyche, and precisely why he starts rebelling against du Pont, is never spelled out but left for us to piece together—a mark of narrative intelligence and restraint on the part of Miller and screenwriters E. Max Frye and Dan Futterman. There’s one notable jump, and on first viewing, I wondered whether a whole chapter had been jettisoned in the edit, although I’m now inclined to think that this ellipsis is integral. It involves a fade to black, shortly after Mark’s tribute speech. Du Pont has, for the first time, been plying him with cocaine on the journey there; and now, after the jump, we can see that Mark’s body is no longer a temple, and neither is his psyche. He’s highlighted his hair, is surrounded by beer bottles, and now seems to have become an intimate personal attendant-cum-confidant to du Pont. The wrestling holds that the pair practice together now seem more sexually charged than you’d expect, even by the usual standards of male mano-a-mano tussling.

Exactly what’s going on here is left to us to gauge. But there’s certainly a powerful sense of two lonely men, neither properly grown up, responding to each other’s need, even if the playing field is hardly level. A constant theme is du Pont’s petulance and his simmering resentment of his mother Jean. She’s played as a chilly, ever-so-graciously castrating grande dame by Vanessa Redgrave (whose passionate left-wing convictions give a tart poignancy to her portrayal, the character’s regal dowdiness uncannily recalling Britain’s reigning monarch).

Foxcatcher

Mrs. du Pont shudders at wrestling as a “low” sport, while her son loathes her favored equestrian pursuits: he has his team clear away her hunting trophies, bleating contemptuously, “Horse are stupid. It’s all very silly.” Later, when mother and son finally sit down together, she asks what he intends to do with his old train set. He snorts at such fripperies: “I am leading men! I am giving America hope!” But clearly he’s a man for whom life is about turning everything he fancies into his personal train set, whether it’s buying a tank from the U.S. Army or assembling a team of blue-collar males as possessions. Which makes Foxcatcher the most explicit American film in a long time about the wealthy riding roughshod over the working class.

Inevitably, it’s the rich man, in his flamboyant weirdness, who hogs the limelight in this story, not least because Carell’s performance is so magnificently odd, both troubling and touching in its creation of a vulnerable monster. It’s far more than a catalog of tics—the quiet, ruminative “Ohhhh…”, the dead eyes, the way du Pont carries his head as if it’s a little too heavy, and the sing-song sourness of his killer line, “Did you catch the foxMotherrrr?”* It’s a wonderful portrayal of delusion and vanity, and as the story progresses, of something more troubling. And the film very elegantly lets the strangenesses crop up, without making a big deal of them: like du Pont’s sudden appearance in a Civil War jacket, which is never commented on.

But Carell’s performance shouldn’t overshadow the less demonstrative roles. Ruffalo is solid and tender, putting some warm new inflections on the gentle-giant routine that he’s been perfecting all these years. And I fear I underrated Tatum’s achievement on first viewing. It’s the hardest thing in the world to give life to a character that’s so much about inarticulacy, interiority and repression, but the subtle, sometimes enigmatic changes that Mark goes through make this a very nuanced performance indeed.

Foxcatcher

With its leisurely pacing and the austere muted palette of Greig Fraser’s photography, this is a rich, serious film, but it doesn’t quite overcome a certain academic solemnity—you sense a rather dogged determination to be a Great American Film, not least in its earnest questioning of some of the totems of Americanness. Yet there’s plenty of subtly handled excess to hold you aghast—and whichever way you slice, I maintain that yes, it is the damnedest sports movie you’ve ever seen.

* If you will, this film’s show-stopping Milkshake Line, after There Will Be Blood’s “I drink your milkshake!”

Rep Diary: Tropicália

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The Red Light Bandit

The Red Light Bandit

Observed through the prism of the 20th century, the avant-garde, be it artistic or cinematic, is usually associated with the Western hemisphere. A mix of provincial ignorance and patronizing presumption has prevented the “civilized world” from looking at the “third world” as capable of deconstructing its own culture, of consciously tweaking its representational codes. While “we” usually are makers of culture, “they” often are prisoners of their own culture, which can either be backward or naïve, pure or foul, scary or amusing—in any case, never self-aware. Such views are not necessarily or inherently discriminatory, they simply reflect a Western culture that has more often imposed itself on others. Conversely, cultures that had to deal with, resist or fight foreign influxes are presented with unique, synergetic possibilities that are anthropologically unavailable to dominant cultures. The cultural DNA of Brazil is in this respect a case in point.

Modernism, for Brazil, meant carnal hybridization, transcultural exchange, and multi-lateral assimilation. Equivalents of early 20th-century avant-gardes such as Dada, the Surrealists, or the Futurists manifested itself in Brazil in the form of a movement called cultural anthropophagy. Penning its manifesto in 1928, Oswald de Andrade takes up metaphorical arms “against all importers of canned consciousness,” advocating a “spirit that refuses the bodyless [sic] spirit.” What the "Anthropophagous Manifesto" and the artistic movement it ignited called for was the cannibalization of foreign cultures that made up Brazil: devouring the invaders, digesting their folklore and vomiting up a cultural multi-verse of myriad influences. As the Sixties neared their turbulent end, Brazil witnessed its own version of countercultural upheaval, which, in tune with the country's history, was of a polyphonic and crossbreeding kind. Named after an art installation by Hélio Oiticica, Tropicália was both an umbrella term under which a multitude of "cre-active" practices found refuge, and the name by which that cultural chapter of Brazilian history is now remembered.

The Red Light Bandit

The Red Light Bandit

Oiticica's installation was a porous, conceptual journey to be physically experienced; an allegorical trip through the many faces of Brazil that, from the slums, brought you in front of a TV set. The labyrinthine dimension and its multi-layered possibilities were reflected in the diversity that the movement it was named after produced. Music electrified the folk tradition, theatre merged the ritual with the experimental and cinema was traversed by violent shockwaves, dialectically opposed yet part of the same magmatic whole. “On the Edge: Brazilian Film Experiments of the 1960s and Early 1970s”, a series that ran at MoMA in occasion of an exhibition dedicated to Brazilian artist Lygia Clark, sampled some of the offerings that came out of Brazil's cinematic underbelly in the Sixties and Seventies. Very much like the days and time it covers, the selection is heterogeneous, almost schizophrenic, but fruitfully (in)coherent. What distinguishes the anthropophagic spirit, which was the archetypical backbone of Tropicália, from other avant-gardes is its trajectory. While experimental art (avant-garde is a military term referring to an act of preliminary, forward exploration of the battlefield) usually negates or sets out to overcome traditions, cultural anthropology moves both backward and forward. It in fact recuperates tradition and infuses it with the new, the experimental, thus overturning hierarchies rather than setting new standards. It doesn't reject tradition; it critically incorporates it into a new practice.

It is rare for avant-garde/experimental films to be traversed by the carnal immediacy that characterizes popular cinema. Theory usually eclipses libidinal fruition. But the work of Brazilian filmmakers Rogério Sganzerla and Júlio Bressane (showcased last summer at MoMA) represent a very rare and precious instances of avant-gardistic B movies in which popular appeal coexists with unconventional theoretical and poetic elaboration. The Red Light Bandit (68) by Rogério Sganzerla, who was only 21 when he made it, truly is a work of savage audacity, of exhilarating, lucid insanity. It recounts the exploits of a mass-mediated criminal on the run—the titular bandit that terrorizes the very same society that created him. Though the film temporally chronicles the rise and fall of the bandit, the elliptical montage creates a chronological vacuum in which the spectator no longer senses the linear passing of time but gets caught up in a dizzying whirlwind of immoral pleasures. The protagonist's magnetic personality challenges the ethical position of the audience, torn between complicity and repellence towards the red light bandit's criminal acts. In “Outlaw cinema,” an intervention written for the magazine Cavalo Azul, Sganzerla describes his own film thus: “My film is a western about the third world, a musical documentary, a sci-fi comedy . . . the red light bandit pursues the police, while the cops meditate on solitude and the incommunicable. I wanted to make a magical rogue film with characters who are sublime and idiotic.” He then goes on to list a series of cannibalized influences: “Orson Welles taught me not to separate politics from crime. It was Fuller who showed me how to deconstruct traditional film through montage . . . Never forgetting Hitchcock, Eisenstein, and Nicholas Ray.” He concludes suggesting that “the departure point of Brazilian films should be the instability of cinema—of our society, our aesthetics, our loves, and our sleep.”

Killed the Family and Went to the Movies

Killed the Family and Went to the Movies

A similar convulsive thrust is found in Júlio Bressane's Killed the Family and Went to the Movies (69), a rapturous and criminally insane hymn to the Seventh Art and its irrepressible power to inspire, deviate, corrupt, and elate. This is cinema as the crazed totem of modern civilization in whose name any sacrifice is conceivable, for its industrial ab-originality absorbs and reflects the endless range of human (im)possibilities. Bressane's black-and-white film recounts the imaginary genesis of a neo-tribal film community doing away with familial ties only to get lost in the perdition of the senses. Bressane merges the labyrinthine trajectories of theoretical elaboration with the basest instincts of the cinematic unconscious in a reckless and hysterical film-spasm. It is a film of intuitive formalism, in which the molecular morphology of the photography, rather than following the plot, hijacks it. Scenes exceed their expected length and from this exasperating gaze emerges another way to comprehend the latent and infinite meanings that every image possesses. Sapphic love, murder, and the emptiness of life are accorded the same aesthetic respect. Images are transfigured into metaphysical allegories; dialogue expresses the “de-lyrical” essence of the characters instead of narrating their movements.

While experimental cinema is usually cerebral and conceptual, the films of Bressane and Sganzerla have a material concupiscence that engages the spectator both “intellectually” and physically. Often compared to and surely inspired by the Nouvelle Vague, Godard in primis, their work is characterized by a bodily dimension, which is completely absent from the films of the famed Swiss filmmaker. Their provocation knows no calculations; profanity is embraced remorselessly; and their films are devoid of any ornamental intellectualism. They are the blazing proof that experimental and popular cinema are not two different genres but potential elements of a single, aesthetic experience unsuitable for passive consumption. A felt, imaginary tension between time and space in the constellation of world cinema, a series of wavering, luminous points to follow in order to not find an answer, but to discover the question. As Bressane often claimed: “I make films because I don't know why I make them. I make them to find out why.”

The series On the Edge: Brazilian Film Experiments of the 1960s and Early 1970s ran May 10 through July 24 at the Museum of Modern Art. 

Fassbinder Diary #1: Rio das Mortes

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Fassbinder: Romantic Anarchist (Part 2) continues at Film Society of Lincoln Center through November 26.

Rio das Mortes

“I couldn’t relate to the characters.” That statement is probably the fastest way to get me to stop reading a review with interest and switch to hatefully skimming it. Why not save yourself and everyone else a couple hundred words and simply write: “I am unwilling or unable to step outside of my limited, lived experience for 90 minutes”? (It reminds me of Louis CK’s response when his daughters complain about being bored: “You live in a great, big, vast world that you’ve seen none percent of.”) I’ve found complaints about “relating” crop up most often in writing about movies, but besides being a critical cop-out, the notion has very little to do with some of the films I love most.

Fassbinder’s films give me life precisely because they don’t reflect my beliefs or experiences but make me feel so much more intensely—so much more—in a way that brings the universe into sharper focus. One of the things that make film (and theater) so remarkable is when a director can express complex psychology and deep truths in purely visual terms, whether through gestures, color, mise en scène, or an actor’s physicality. And Fassbinder’s style is pretty hard to beat at bringing us into a character’s world. (Taking in the full range of his films—as Fassbinder: Romantic Anarchist at the Film Society helps make possible—it’s exciting to see how he gradually figured out how to most dramatically employ a mobile camera: I watched Chinese Roulette [76] last week and was pleasantly surprised to see a mulligan of Martha’s 720-degree shot two years earlier, in both cases centered on Margit Carstensen.)

Rio Das Mortes

I find some of these truths to be evident even of his “minor” works: there’s always some impassioned camera movement, or line of argument, worth considering. Made for German television, Rio das Mortes—one of the seven films Fassbinder made in 1970, the year before his Sirk conversion—is rarely screened, and hard to come by outside of BitTorrent. Like many of Fassbinder’s films, it’s a multivalent work that makes for uneven viewing. But as former Antitheater actor and assistant director Harry Baer says in Chaos as Usual: Conversations about Rainer Werner Fassbinder, it was “the first time that Rainer was fully in charge as director. He stylized Hanna [Schygulla] and Günther Kaufmann not just on film but right there in real life. The way those two acted—nobody talks that way and talks that way. I finally understood that he used this artificiality as a tool.”

I’m inclined to agree with Mr. Baer, but not simply for the film’s promising performances or the foreshadowing of elements Fassbinder used in subsequent projects. (This is the first Hanna Schygulla dance scene (to Elvis’s “Jailhouse Rock”), and, like Herr R. from the same year, the story flirts with rousing submerged homosexual desires between “old school chums.”) In Rio das Mortes Fassbinder pursues a feminist-Marxist critique of marriage: it opens with Münchnerin Hanna (Schygulla) getting dressed as her mother rants at her over the telephone. The receiver lies on the bed, and the audio of her mother’s droning voice is heard played in reverse; when Hanna does pick up the phone, her mother becomes intelligible, accusing her of not listening. Hanna patiently assures her: “I already told you, Mom. We’re going to get married soon . . . Whenever we speak, you always bring up marriage.” It’s hard to know what arguments her mother was making in favor of traditional mores, though we can probably imagine them, and the one-sided Peanuts-like treatment of the conversation portrays them as nonsense. But the reasons Hanna so doggedly values marriage and truly believes it’s imminent also remain a mystery. 

Rio das Mortes

That small detail foreshadows the entire film’s ambivalence about ideology and its discontents: Hanna’s groovy furs and go-go boots conceal a Forties-era black-lace garter belt, even as she undertakes a program of undoing society’s indoctrination. While she’s applying her makeup, she attempts to recite from memory a passage from a book about childhood learning mounted next to her mirror. She’s a member of the USSA feminist collective, the acronym a meaningless mashup of USA, USSR, and Nazi SS (the group uses the same lightning-bolt “S” typography); their well-intentioned meetings consist of milling around a chalkboard with a giant phallus drawn on it while vaguely discussing the future. After Hanna calmly explains that she just wants to be there for her husband and children, the camera zooms in on a pale, broad-faced woman who states: “The repression of women can best be recognized in women’s own behavior.”

But then, that’s clear in the film long before it’s explicitly stated. Hanna’s yippie, tile-layer boyfriend Mike (Michael König) is uncharismatic and boring, but he’s an arm for her to hold onto—all the way to the altar. That may be all Hanna wants, but her trajectory illustrates how such mediocrity in mates is toxic, and why it takes more than a little sloganeering with your girlfriends to undo. (This inability to change such core values so quickly could also be understood as critique of German disarmament, reparations, and social reforms in the Sixities.) Whereas lesser narrative would’ve made Mike physically abusive, as an argument against marriage; here, they’re both just dumb. Mike’s not terribly interested in her to begin with, and after he meets up with an old friend, Günther (Günther Kaufmann), and gets into a fight—a lengthy grappling match that’s only missing the oil—Hanna’s basically out of the picture. The two men become obsessed with traveling to Peru in search of buried treasure, after finding a map that looks like it was drawn in crayon. The homoeroticism of their dedication perhaps comes into sharpest focus when Hanna asks Günther to join her in bed as part of her flirtation with liberation (or perhaps as old-fashioned, vengeful cuckoldry), and, as they lie together naked, he tells her a long story about when he was in the navy.

Rio das Mortes

Of course, take away the feminist and Marxist critiques of marriage (and Latin American economies), and you’ve got your typical man-child comedy from the past 10 years: two childhood friends abandon their jobs and ignore their girlfriends in order to follow some dunderheaded macho scheme. (Though it’s never explicitly stated, “Rio das Mortes” means River of Death, and the real thing is actually located in Brazil, not Peru.) One sells his beloved sports car for the journey, while the other makes his mom pony up money she was saving for his wedding. (They’re so doggedly obsessed with Peru that they forget their change at a gas station run by Kurt Raab.) After those schemes fall far short of generating enough cash, they throw together an idiotic business plan using business “research” from a book published in 1871 that’s clearly about slavery; along the way, they make a payphone call to the Peruvian embassy, during which they’re constantly grabbing the receiver out of the other’s hand and trying to shout over each other. In the end, the idiots realize their dream—without any chicks tagging along—thanks to kismet: they overhear some other longhairs talking about this older woman who’s willing to give money to just about anyone without guarantee of repayment. (She also happens to be a Catherine Keener–level fox.)

This oddly prescient vein of humor in Rio das Mortes is inseparable from its critique: these people are being exploited by how silly they’re acting, but they’re still proving a point. There are several instances in which a valuable, beloved possession gets sold for substantially less than what it’s worth. (Right after Mike humbly walks off of the lot, we see the used-car dealer write a price on the windshield that’s 1,400 more marks than what he offered Mike.) Capitalism exploits the poor and the emotionally foolhardy, and you come away feeling one thing clearly: never sell yourself short for what you think is love, or what you think you ought to do. 

Film of the Week: A Girl Walks Home Alone at Night

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A Girl Walks Home Alone at Night

A term beloved of French film critics—and one I never tire of borrowing, just because it pinpoints its referent so well—is OVNI, meaning “UFO.” It’s used to refer to a film, usually a first feature, that’s next to impossible to categorize, that seems to have come out of nowhere, to have been made entirely against the odds—a film that appears to originate if not actually from other planets, then from some parallel cinematic dimension where the usual rules don’t apply.

Little could qualify more for OVNI-dom than an “Iranian vampire Western,” as Ana Lily Amirpour’s first feature has been dubbed. In fact, the skewed quality of A Girl Walks Home Alone at Night is accentuated by the fact that it both is and isn’t “really” Iranian. That is, the film is in Farsi, and stars a cast of Iranian or Iranian-American actors, but was shot in California, not far from Bakersfield, where writer-director Ana Lily Amirpour grew up. Taft stands in for Bad City, as the subtitles call it—or “Shahr Bad,” which may possibly be a Farsi play on words—a run-down, isolated burg where weird things happen by night, and nothing too ordinary takes place by day.

The Girl of the title (Sheila Vand) is a gamine-ish music fan who likes to dance alone in her poster-decorated den. But when she steps out onto the streets, she’s not the imperiled victim that the title—misleadingly, cleverly—would have you expect. She’s a figure of menace: a marauder who wears a chador over a very Gallic stripy matelot top, adding a curious dash of indie-kid chic to her image as a ghost figure who glides rather than walk. In fact, her gliding gait comes from the fact that she’s commandeered a terrified child’s skateboard. Spreading her robe like black wings, the Girl haunts the night like an Islamic descendant of Musidora’s Irma Vep, lawless masked heroine of Louis Feuillade’s silent serial Les Vampires.

A Girl Walks Home Alone at Night

The Girl is indeed a vampire, and more than a match for supposedly the scariest presence on this city’s mean streets—thuggish drug dealer Saeed (Dominic Rains), who has “SEX” tattooed across his neck, a sleazy drooping moustache on his chops, and a pad filled with big-bad-hunter tat (deer’s heads, tiger-print throws…). The predatory Saeed practically licks his chops at the thought of feral sex when the Girl’s canines pop out to full length with an almost comical sound effect; he doesn’t look so happy once she snaps his finger off.

The Girl can be downright terrifying: the young boy who loses his skateboard probably hasn’t done anything to merit being chilled to the bone by her, when she leans in to ask him if he’s been good, then warns him (in one of the most authentically ghoulish horror-movie rasps since Mercedes McCambridge did voice duty for Linda Blair), “I can take your eyes out of your skull and give them to the dogs to eat.” We don’t, by the way, see the dogs of Bad City, but the local cat is unsettling enough: a naturally charismatic starer which looks like it’s taking a break from sitting in a Bond villain’s lap, and which gets the best close-up in the film.

Meanwhile in Bad City, a devilishly handsome young man named Arash (Arash Marandi) is coping with the depressed excesses of his overweight junkie dad Hossein (Marshall Manesh), and working as gardener and handyman to a rich family whose spoiled daughter, the recent recipient of a nose job, sees him as her latest toy.

A Girl Walks Home Alone at Night

Things take an overtly comic turn when Arash—something of a sweet-natured dork despite his quiffed rebel demeanor—attends a Halloween party as Dracula. Walking home the worse for wear in a too-baggy cape and really ill-fitting fangs, he meets the Girl, who "lures" him to her den—or rather, wheels her decidedly floppy prospective beau back to her place on the skateboard. Things turn romantic, at once chastely and very sensually, in a beautiful extended take, as Arash approaches her and she closes in—not, as you’d expect, on his neck, but on his chest. It all happens in swoony slow motion, but with a mirror ball spinning round and filling the room with sparkles at crazy speed: a magnificent, and inexplicably romantic, paradox of pacing that adds to the eerie romance of the scene.

The couple later tryst at dead of night at the local power plant, itself lit up like a jeweled city. Why at the power plant? For the chiaroscuro, of course—that seems to be what motivates Amirpour most. This is one of those films that are shot in black and white because a director is genuinely in love with the affective and expressive possibilities of that visual choice, and especially with its ability to draw magic out of night scenes: I’m reminded of another piece of black-and-white small-town dream romance, Eric Mendelsohn’s Judy Berlin (99), which used an eclipse as the narrative excuse for its midsummer night’s encounters. In her own nightscapes, Amirpour doesn’t mess around with half-measures: DP Lyle Vincent saturates his shadows with the inkiest of blackness (as does the graphic novel that Amirpour has created to accompany the film).

A Girl Walks Home Alone at Night is a wayward, genuinely oneiric creation—look at its sudden arresting focus-pull on some oil derricks, and its graceful, gratuitous interlude of a transgender cowgirl figure dancing with a helium balloon. It manages to be tender, chilly, comic, and willfully bizarre all at once, but never has you wishing it would choose one register and stick to it. In his very enthusiastic recent review, David Thomson invokes not only David Lynch, but Vigo, Cocteau, and Buñuel, no less. Perhaps more modestly, A Girl Walks reminded me most of early Jarmusch, and of the general spirit of  late-Seventies/early-Eighties punk-influenced U.S. cinema (names like Scott B and Beth B, Amos Poe, Slava Tsukerman of Liquid Sky), because of Amirpour’s brisk disregard for genre norms, for the sense that she’s up for telling whatever story she wants to tell, any way she wants to tell it. While manifestly very polished and composed, the film nevertheless gives the impression that it’s making itself up—or dreaming itself into being—as it goes along.

A Girl Walks Home Alone at Night

There’s an oddly innocent blazing-youth romanticism about it, especially when the Girl and Arash bond over music. That feeling comes across all the more strongly because non-Farsi speakers will depend on the subtitles: it adds a tender but absurd irony to the revelation that the last song the Girl listened to was, of all things, Lionel Richie’s “Hello.” Fortunately, there’s cooler stuff on the soundtrack: the Tom-Waits-in-Tehran opening number by Iranian band Kiosk, and some Morricone-ish fanfare by Federale, a group from Portland.

A Girl Walks Home Alone at Night is bound to cause a stir in academic circles for the way that it blurs its Eastern and Western codes so thoroughly: making manifestly American settings stand in for an imaginary Iran, playing provocatively on the chador as Islamic garment and as vampire-cape substitute, having its heroine at once tender lover and murderous monster in a way that neither Anne Rice nor Stephenie Meyer would quite recognize. Overall, Amirpour’s film feels like an elaborately punkish code-scrambling gesture rather than a fully formed organic statement, but that doesn’t matter—it has style, grace, and imagination, and as artistic gestures go, could hardly be more devil-may-care. By the time it takes a final Aldrich-esque drive into the shadows, A Girl Walks Home has more than earned your attention—and got you wondering where that shadow-steeped road leads, either for its romantic duo or for Amirpour as audacious writer-director.

Deep Focus: The Hunger Games: Mockingjay—Part 1

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The Hunger Games: Mockingjay Part 1

Francis Lawrence’s The Hunger Games: Mockingjay—Part 1 features several stirring set pieces, but it’s mostly an epic of inaction. I mean that as a compliment. This unusual and affecting entry in the Suzanne Collins–based series is the opposite of blockbusters that set out to pop eyes and pound eardrums. As it continues the saga of the girl who survives gladiator games on her own terms, upsetting the oligarchy in the Capitol of Panem and fomenting rebellion in its 13 districts, Mockingjay 1 whips up both mordant and melancholy moods. The movie’s power comes from keen observations of its one-of-a-kind heroine, who barely manages to pick her way through political minefields and pitched combat. As Katniss Everdeen, Jennifer Lawrence embodies a quality rare in American pop movies: heroic confusion. Both Lawrences, director and actor, pull the audience into Katniss’s inchoate longings, shriveling sorrows, and conflicting loyalties.

This film lacks the visual richness and momentum of the second Hunger Games film, Catching Fire (also directed by Lawrence). At two hours and three minutes, it covers only half of the climactic book in Collins’s trilogy, and still, at a crucial turning point, feels truncated and jerky. But director Lawrence, with first-time Hunger Games screenwriters Peter Craig and Danny Strong, improves on the previous film in one critical way. He achieves the intimacy of first-person storytelling by tuning into the heroine’s slightest shifts in thought and feeling. (Katniss narrates the books, not the movies.) Her maturing, fluid perspective freshens up a series whose themes and tropes have come to seem familiar.

That familiarity is due to the series’ popularity and its roots in reality. The film’s depiction, in hard-edged montages, of an insurmountable gap between rich and poor and a budding proletariat revolution should excite series fans. One sequence filled with public executions of hooded citizens is so close to current TV news that it’s tough to watch. The film’s view of torture, black-ops missions, sabotage, and secret weapons—moves and counter-moves in a deadly geopolitical game—isn’t far removed in tone or detail from, say, Zero Dark Thirty. What makes it all distinctive is the wild-card protagonist. Katniss’s honor is personal, not political; her behavior is ethical, not tactical. She can foster revolution only if she feels defiance in her gut. Lawrence comes through with so much range and potency that both her vulnerability and her strength seem boundless.

Mockingjay Hunger Games

Lawrence starts the movie with an extraordinary display of a deeply engrained sadness that never completely disappears, even when Katniss acts headstrong or feisty. As with the greatest silent movie stars, Lawrence’s emotions seem to come through the camera without mediation. The audience feels what she feels, not just heart to heart, but also marrow to marrow. Her rapport with viewers is visceral.

While still recovering from the PTSD she suffered in The Hunger Games: Catching Fire (the final running of the games was a perilous all-star edition), Katniss confronts the ghastly remains of friends and neighbors who’ve given up the ghost in District 12. She strives to save endangered comrades, including her beloved Peeta Mellark (Josh Hutcherson), and she enters the world of our postmodern, digital phantoms—false images spread as propaganda. Along the way she stumbles, pauses, commits errors, and hurts the other hometown boy who loves her, Gale Hawthorne (Liam Hemsworth). All the while, she rises to the task of growing up in tragic times. She learns how to function in an environment filled with behavioral booby traps. She comes to sense how much she can trust the flawed, agenda-driven men and women who become her closest allies. This is the only futuristic YA fantasy that reminds me of Hamlet: in Michael Almereyda’s 2000 version, the film student hero (Ethan Hawke) obsesses over a video diary full of family memories, sees the ghost of his father on closed circuit TV, then struggles to navigate a world in which high-tech media are a third strand of human DNA.

Like Hawke’s brooding prince of the Denmark Corporation, Lawrence’s Katniss can be maddening. Panem’s oppressed citizens accept her as “the Mockingjay,” their symbol of revolt against tyrannical President Snow (Donald Sutherland). Yet Katniss isn’t ready. She resents trainer Haymitch Abernathy (Woody Harrelson) and rebel mastermind Plutarch Heavensbee (Philip Seymour Hoffman) for manipulating her and whisking her away from the Capitol while leaving others like Peeta there to suffer. She chafes at the secrecy and regimentation of District 13, a region that was thought to be destroyed. It’s actually functioning underground because of a non-aggression pact with its enemy, the Capitol. Ruled by President Alma Coin (Julianne Moore), District 13 subjugates individual expression for the common good. When Coin and Plutarch try to mold her into a studio-built, agitprop star, Katniss can’t summon genuine fervor and emotions when ordered, and the actor turns her failure into sharp, funny self-parody. (Only very few scenes properly exploit Lawrence’s rueful humor.)

The Hunger Games Mockingjay

Neither Hutcherson’s Peeta nor Hemsworth’s Gale comes off as worthy of Katniss. Peeta appears mostly in propaganda broadcasts from the Capitol, acting like President Snow’s poodle and enraging District 13 with strident calls for a cease-fire. He’s supposed to be acting under duress, but Hutcherson isn’t skilled enough to suggest why Peeta is near his breaking point; his scenes become unbearably clumsy because they over-rely on Katniss screaming out her analysis of his deteriorating looks and increasingly tic-ridden behavior. Hemsworth, for his part, lacks ardor and dash. Natalie Dormer has a matter-of-fact slyness as Cressida, the director who follows Katniss into rubble for propaganda footage, and Elden Henson has a refreshingly gentle presence as Pollux, the mute cameraman who inspires her to sing a song her father taught her called “The Hanging Tree.” (It’s a folksy, doleful tune that Lawrence imbues with Katniss’s bruised feelings; you believe that Plutarch can turn it into a rebel anthem.)

Several other performers are sensational. Julianne Moore is charismatically ambiguous as President Coin; with steely-grey straight hair and matching contact lenses, she transforms her beauty into an impenetrable mask. Walking and talking with zero wasted effort, she’s 100-percent certain and efficient, the perfect counterpoint to Katniss. Elizabeth Banks again turns a conceit into a character as Effie Trinket, the flamboyant Hunger Games escort for Peeta and Katniss who has been surprisingly loyal to them. The way Banks plays her, with high-pitched, off-kilter humanity, she sees the comedy in bringing a style maven like herself into jail-like District 13, and rises above her own alienation to serve as Katniss’s one-woman prep team. (The expansion of Coin’s and Trinket’s characters are the biggest changes from the book.) Harrelson makes sure that after Haymitch dries out, he’s never merely sober; he interjects some droll effrontery into District 13’s grim brain trust. Hoffman is hit-and-miss this time around as Plutarch. He plays the character’s knowingness, cynicism, and fear way too broadly, though he does have moments of lowdown wit, especially when he’s clashing with Coin—or possibly, by the end, pulling her strings. (He mouths her climactic rallying words as she speaks them, signaling the movie audience that his character wrote them.)

In the compartmentalized world of District 13, where everything is shades of grey, including the food and the uniforms, director Lawrence doesn’t match the eeriness or the striking geometric design of the workers’ quarters in Metropolis. Aboveground, there’s no Goya-like charge to his vision of shattered buildings and slaughtered populations turning into a rubble of concrete and bones. But Lawrence never lets the oversized settings swamp his talented performers. He keeps the action lucid in the trickiest scenes, such as Katniss reacting to the atrocities of total war while Cressida’s propaganda cameramen record her responses. Lawrence’s stylistic discipline ultimately pays off big-time, especially in the image of District 13 citizens scurrying down thousands of stairs to reach their bomb shelters before a Capitol raid. Suddenly the diagonal lines on the screen come alive, and Lawrence achieves a visual fury worthy of Fritz Lang.

Mockingjay The Hunger Games

The director’s signal achievement in Mockingjay—Part 1 is showcasing Jennifer Lawrence’s ability to bring her expansive personality into close quarters. Mockingjay—Part 1 has already been interpreted as a commentary on itself, with the rebels serving up their greatest asset, the Mockingjay, the way this movie serves up its greatest asset, Jennifer Lawrence. Lawrence, like Katniss, generates real emotion despite artificial demands. (Lawrence’s career so far does have a unique poetic rightness: After breaking through just four years ago as the resilient Ozarks girl in Winter’s Bone, she’s become a mainstay of comic-book and fantasy franchises — the X-Men films as well as The Hunger Games — without losing her indie roots. She functions as an earthy, cock-eyed muse for writer-director David O. Russell, and she’s acted at the top of her game in his Silver Linings Playbook and American Hustle.)

I think the irony goes deeper. Even an ideological egalitarian like President Coin eventually sees that artistic gifts are not distributed equally. For Coin and the movie to mount their smart attacks on the way plutocrats dominate 99 percent of the population, they must rely on a star who’s in the top one percent of talent. By the end, every righteous soul in Panem is rooting for the Mockingjay to spread her wings. By then, not only fans but also lovers of great acting in any genre will be aching for Katniss to bring the battle to her enemies in Mockingjay—Part 2.

Bombast: Carole Eastman

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Writing about Monte Hellman’s 1966 deathtrip Western The Shooting in the pages of FILM COMMENT in 2000, Chuck Stephens refers to the name of Warren Oates’s character, “Willet Gashade,” as “a moniker Nabokov might have dreamt, its constituents breaking one way into Nietzschean determinism, the other into the elements, where sunlight, or a vapor from Hell, might tear holes in a soothing shadow.” It wasn’t Nabokov, however, but screenwriter Carole Eastman who thought of it—and it’s hard to imagine the Wizard of Montreux coming up with a piece of pure prairie poetry like “I don't give a curly hair, yellow bear, double dog damn if ya did!” or “For all the dirty rotten gallin’ hate of a thing that ought-never-above-the-ground be called a woman! Nossir!”  

The Shooting

The Shooting

Filmed when Eastman was 32 years old, The Shooting was the first of her scripts to go into production. Her own invented moniker, used here and many times again, was “Adrien Joyce”—according to Nicholson biographer Marc Eliot, a nod to her literary hero, James. Her debut would be followed by Five Easy Pieces, Story of a Downfall Child (both 1970), and The Fortune (1975), movies which taken together constitute her brief heyday as a screenwriter.

Along with Ride in the Whirlwind, also filmed with Roger Corman’s money in the wastes of Utah and also produced by and starring a young Jack Nicholson, The Shooting is newly available on Blu-ray from the Criterion Collection. On the commentary track, Hellman takes a moment to honor Eastman’s contribution to the film, noting her script had the quality of a J.M. Synge play, and that she “was aware of the Germanic influence in the early settlers, and the grammar reflects that… There’s a kind of poetry, very much, about her dialogue.”

Hellman goes on to half-recall that Eastman had had a frontier-type background, though this would appear to be untrue, judging from the scanty biographical information on her that can be found. She was, we know, never much for the limelight. A May 2, 1971 profile of Eastman in the Los Angeles Times by Estelle Changas begins “Judging from the total lack of information on screenwriter Adrien Joyce (Carole Eastman), Academy Award nominee for her original story and screenplay of Five Easy Pieces, I could have concluded that she did not exist.” This article, to the best of my knowledge, is one of the few if not only interviews with Eastman which does confirm her existence.

Carole Eastman was born on February 19, 1934 in Glendale, California, then still relatively countrified, and she died 10 miles away at the Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles, a week shy of her 70th birthday, purportedly from Epstein-Barr virus. Per the obituary that ran in The Los Angeles Times, Eastman’s family were industry people. Her uncle was a cameraman, her father was a grip at Warner Brothers, and her mother worked as a secretary for Bing Crosby. She had brothers; one, a few years older, was named Charles. He’s the burly, bearded fellow who appears in both The Shooting and Ride in the Whirlwind, and he would also become a screenwriter, with credits on the films Little Fauss and Big Halsy (1970) and Second-Hand Hearts (1981).

The Fortune

The Fortune

If we go looking for little pieces of Eastman’s youth in her films, a scene in The Fortune, in which Stockard Channing’s character Fredrika is discovered amusing herself by dressing in drag, is of interest: “One time, I dressed up in my brother’s clothes. Very late at night, after everyone was asleep, I went promenading around the streets, devil-may-care, y’know, with my hands in my pockets. Of course there wasn’t a soul around to see me—they would’ve packed me off to an alienist—but… I did feel like a real individual.” There is also a perhaps-pertinent statement by Faye Dunaway’s shell-shocked ex-fashion model in Puzzle of a Downfall Child: “How I loved being out when I was young. I’d leave my family and run up into the hills alone. I had the best time being miserable… I was always a recluse.”

Eastman attended Hollywood High School, but didn’t matriculate, preferring to focus on studying ballet with Gloria Dance and Eugene Loring, a choreographer whose credits include The 5,000 Fingers of Dr. T, Silk Stockings, and Funny Face. (Eastman appears as a “specialty dancer” in the last film.) From the late Fifties and into the early Sixties, she simultaneously conducted careers as a fashion model and actress. She appeared in the pages of Vogue, in little plays written by Charles, and can be seen in a Robert Bloch-penned 1962 episode of Alfred Hitchcock Presents, “Bad Actor,” as the much-deceived girlfriend of the titular struggling, alcoholic ham, played by a young Robert Duvall. He murders a rival for a part and dismembers his corpse, so to more easily dissolve the pieces with acid, but when the little lady shows up at his hotel and interrupts the process, he’s forced to stow the telltale head in a handy ice bucket. Duvall gets to do quite a bit of gutty emoting, while Eastman is mostly limited to unconsciously fingering the implicating bucket in front of a police detective. Between commercial breaks, Hitchcock bickers with an elephant.

Eastman appears spindly, frail, and angular here, her head, just as Robert Towne described it, “shaped like a gorgeous tulip on a long stalk.” Towne and Eastman had both attended the acting class that the blacklisted Jeff Corey taught out of his garage, and presumably met there. This was also where Eastman met Nicholson in 1957, some time before he would become a contract actor for Corman. In 1965, Nicholson and Hellman were preparing to embark on their second back-to-back location shoot for Corman—the first, in the Philippines, had produced 1964’s Back Door to Hell and Flight to Fury. Nicholson wrote the screenplay for one of the proposed westerns, Ride in the Whirlwind. For the other, he called on Carole, whom he’d nicknamed “Speed.” According to some sources this was a bit of irony, a crack about the excruciating pace at which she worked, though The Shooting was reeled off in a matter of six weeks, and Five Easy Pieces took a hair over seven.

Carole Eastman

Eastman in "Bad Actor"

The role of Gashade, a bounty hunter-turned-unsuccessful prospector, went to Warren Oates. Will Hutchins played Coley, Gashade’s partner, slow on the draw and slow on the uptake. The drama, such as it is, begins when an unnamed young woman, played by Millie Perkins, arrives at their camp to hire them as guides, though in time they discover that they are acting as trackers—and being tracked themselves, by a gunman named Billy Spear (Nicholson).

“Carole had injected a lot of herself into the [Perkins] character,” Hellman says on The Shooting’s commentary track, “so Millie actually used her knowledge of Carole the person to help her understand the character she was playing.” This included, he says, “Millie’s aversion to being touched and things like that.” In Easy Riders, Raging Bulls, Peter Biskind’s 1998 chronicle of the rise and fall of “New Hollywood,” Biskind writes that “[Eastman’s] sexual orientation was a matter of endless debate… men hit on her all the time, but she never seemed to have a lover, of either sex.” When free love was the rage, she kept herself free of love. “Carole had a distrust of a lot of men,” Hellman concludes. And uneasiness between the sexes is at the center of every completed film from an Eastman screenplay, particularly her and Nicholson’s next collaboration, a study of a man who hardly trusts himself.

The Shooting led to work on the TV Western Run for Your Life, and then to Five Easy Pieces, which has Nicholson running for his. “I move around a lot because things tend to get bad when I stay” Nicholson’s character, an often-loutish guy identified in the closing credits with the grandiose handle “Bobby Eroica Dupea,” says to his comatose father, by way of confession. When we meet Dupea he’s just plain ol’ “Bobby,” working as a hand in the California oil fields, but when his father’s illness draws him back to the family compound on an island in Washington State, we learn that Bobby was trained from the cradle to be a piano prodigy, before he dropped the concert hall for the honky-tonk. “Auspicious beginnings, I guess…”

Five Easy Pieces

Five Easy Pieces

Bobby is trailed along the way by Karen Black’s Rayette “Ray” Dipesto, a hash-slinger waitress whom he learns that he’s knocked up, though this doesn’t prevent him from double-timing her with impunity. Ray annoys him. He’s annoyed by her tone of voice and her homey little turns of phrase—“the ball just keeps goin’ cocky-wobbly on me,” she protests during an outing at a bowling alley, after she rolls yet another gutter ball. He’s annoyed by those gutter balls, because as hard as he has tried to forget himself, he can’t unlearn the demand for perfection that was drilled into him from an early age. He’s annoyed by Ray’s Tammy Wynette records, and by the fact that she really seems to believe that all she needs to do is Stand By Her Man for things to be alright. More than anything, he’s annoyed by his own unconquerable annoyance, because it’s a proof that the elitism he’d like to believe he left behind is still in him.

As the movie ends, the best Bobby can figure to do is leave Ray behind—he leaves her his wallet and car and ditches her at a gas station, himself lighting off for parts unknown. Eastman wrote the ending as a compromise—she’d originally killed her protagonist off in a car crash. Today it’s hard to imagine the movie any other way, though some of Eastman’s comments on her conception of the script are intriguing, particularly with regards to Catherine Van Oost, the character played by Susan Anspach. “I had originally conceived Catherine as an [older] European woman,” Eastman told the Times, “capable of having an affair with a man like Bobby without it altering the course of her life. She is not swept off her feet; she has the capacity that only men in our society are supposed to have.” As for Bobby, the article reports that he was a composite of Nicholson, one of Eastman’s brothers, Teddy Kennedy (!), and the writer’s “own deep personal beliefs.” I imagine that this extends to Dupea’s discomfort with attachment, as well as his perfectionism which manifests itself as surrender—“You know I don’t believe in doing something if you can’t do it right,” as Dunaway’s character in Puzzle has it.

If I set my mind to finding Eastman in her script, she turns up everywhere. She might, for example, be having a little sport at her own expense in the character of a highbrow party guest (Irene Dailey) at the Dupea estate who goes into ecstasies over Ray’s lower-class patois (“The choice of words, ‘squashed flat,’ juxtaposed against the image of a fluffy kitten…” she coos), before Bobby jumps in and cuts her off at the knees. And perhaps there is something of Eastman in the hitch-hiker who Bobby picks up, an intense, severe, paranoiac woman (Helena Kallianiotes, a friend of both Eastman and Nicholson’s) who’s thumbing her way to Alaska. (“I saw a picture of it. Alaska is very clean. It appeared to look very white to me...”) All descriptions of Eastman tend to emphasize her cocktail of anxieties. She was an agorophobe. According to Biskind, she “wouldn’t leave Los Angeles, wouldn’t ride in someone else’s car unless she drove. She was phobic about having her picture taken, obsessive about food at the same time that she coughed continuously from chain-smoking. Even in Los Angeles, she rarely went to places with which she was not already familiar.”

Puzzle of a Downfall Child

Puzzle of a Downfall Child

Jerry Schatzberg, who filmed Eastman’s script Puzzle of a Downfall Child for his feature debut, doesn’t like the choice of words. “I don’t know why people call it neurosis,” he told me when we recently spoke at his Upper West Side apartment. I’d e-mailed him to the effect that I was writing something about Eastman, and he was quick to clear a spot in his schedule. “She was a private person, she worked most of the time, but everybody who knew her loved her. Other people might’ve thought it was neurosis, but maybe she just didn’t want to be with people.”

A renowned commercial photographer just getting his start in films, Schatzberg conceived of Puzzle of a Downfall Child as a vehicle for his then-paramour, Faye Dunaway. It’s a character study of former top model Lou Andreas Sand, employing a radical, back-and-forth chronology. After a crack-up, Sand has retired to a secluded island cottage—accessible only by ferry, like the Dupea homestead. She is visited by a friend (Barry Primus), a photographer who’s known her since she was just starting out, and as she spills her life story, he tape-records her monologue with the stated intention of making some kind of film from the results. This is, presumably, the movie that we’re watching, another layer of fiction added to the proceedings by the fact that the flashbacks prove Sand a highly-unreliable narrator. I mention to Schatzberg, who worked with Joan Didion and John Gregory Dunne on his next film, Panic in Needle Park (1971), that there’s much in Puzzle that reminded me of Didion’s novel Play It As it Lays, published within months of the movie’s release, and he confirms that Didion and Eastman were friendly, and shared a mutual admiration for one another’s work.

Puzzle of a Downfall Child is the only finished film from an Eastman script with a female protagonist, and I’d rather lazily assumed that the character’s hang-ups were Eastman’s own. She is uneasy with intimacy and, as Eastman was said to be, mortified of airplanes. (“She wouldn’t step on a plane if you put a gun to her head,” Buck Henry is quoted as saying in Easy Riders, “She was born to be an eccentric old lady.”) Schatzberg dissuaded me of this notion. The origin of the film, he said, was three and a half hours of audio recordings he’d made of the model Anne St. Marie speaking extemporaneously, taken as she was “coming back to herself” from a breakdown. He’d met Eastman when he and Dunaway were out in Los Angeles from New York, looking for a writer who could make something out of this raw material. A chance acquaintance, producer Ray Wagner, who’d read Eastman’s (ultimately unused) work on Richard Lester’s Petulia (1968) recommended her, and Schatzberg and Eastman set up a meeting. She dropped by while on her way to—so she said—take Kallianiotes to the dentist, and wound up staying to listen to the full length of the recordings. It is unclear what happened to Kallianiotes’ toothache, but a fine film came out of that powwow. American audiences, unfortunately, don’t at present have the means to see it—despite containing one of Dunaway’s finest performances, Puzzle is currently unavailable on domestic DVD.

Model Shop

Model Shop

Puzzle of a Downfall Child and Five Easy Pieces were both released at the end of 1970. This period would turn out to contain the largest cluster of successfully completed, credited projects in Eastman’s career. Along with director Jacques Demy, “Adrien Joyce” was credited for the “English dialogues” of Model Shop, released in the spring of 1969, some of which presage Five Easy Pieces in their air of lovelorn frustration: “I expected a lot from you, George, I don’t know why. I really thought it was possible, a simple, happy life. I didn’t know that you didn’t want it, that you didn’t love me anymore. I’m a little bit stupid.” The next completed film from an Eastman/Joyce screenplay didn’t appear until 1975.

The film was the unfortunate The Fortune, starring money-in-the-bank guarantees Nicholson and Warren Beatty and directed by the late Mike Nichols. It was meant as a sure thing for Columbia Pictures, so much so that Beatty had included it as part of a package deal with his “risky” proposition, Shampoo—if you wanted The Fortune, you had to take both. In retrospect, it’s difficult to see what about the project, other than the star casting, was ever considered a sure shot. Beatty and Nicholson were to play two perfectly vile men, Nicky Wilson and Oscar Sullivan—Nicky a gruff bully, Oscar a feckless jackanapes—united by an equally unlovable woman, and by their shared greed and duplicity. As the film begins, Nicky is preparing to run off with Fredrika Quintessa Bigard (Channing), the scion to a ladies’ sanitary napkin empire. Because Nicky is already inconveniently married, he “buys” small-time con-man Oscar by paying off his debts, and hires him to sham-marry “Freddie,” so that they can all travel to the other side of the country without risk of prosecution under the Mann Act. Once arrived in Greater Los Angeles, they set up an uneasy ménage-a-trois in a courtyard apartment complex where the grass is so dead you can scarcely believe it was ever alive—the film depicts Los Angeles as less promised land than miserable, dusty, drought-parched backwater—and Nicky and Oscar set about scheming on how to knock off their shared wife before she can give away her money.   

As with the cowboy-speak of The Shooting, Eastman obviously had a gas with period lingo here: “Frenchies” (condoms), “cream-catcher” (moustache), “up in the saddle” (having “monthlies”), and so forth. The film suffers somewhat from an unresolved tension between intention and execution, the sour satire at the heart of the script rubbing up against the rather more knockabout farce that has been put before us—the buoyant jazz soundtrack seemingly a deliberate attempt to recreate the tone and success of The Sting (1973). Nevertheless, the movie has a great deal to recommend it—Nicholson is very funny with his light bulb dome and crown of clownish hair, and there are a half-dozen intricate, irresistible gags—and has gradually grown its small cult, with Joel and Ethan Coen, perhaps unsurprisingly, expressing a particular fondness for it.

The Fortune

The Fortune

For Biskind, however, box-office success is very often the absolute measure of success, and so The Fortune was a failure, and the onus for that failure, in his telling, seems to rest on Eastman’s shoulders. She’d submitted an “unfinished” 240-page script with “no third act.” She “refused to rewrite,” and “had an extremely high opinion of her abilities, [regarding] herself as a Virginia Woolf.” She quarreled with Nichols, as she had with Rafelson. Biskind quotes line producer Hank Moonjean: “If the director had been Jesus Christ, I don’t think she would have been pleased.”

When Eastman refused to write an ending, Biskind continues,

“The only thing Nichols could do was try to reduce the length. He had hired Polly Platt to design the production, and she was in on the meetings between Nichols and Eastman at the Beverly Hills Hotel. ‘He kept cutting all the good stuff out of the movie,’ recalls Platt, who took Eastman’s side. ‘She would suffer over it, but she couldn’t do anything about it. She had this curious habit of putting both of her hands inside of her t-shirt and grabbing each of her tits, like she was protecting herself. Mike was trying to make the movie for a price—he’d gone very far over budget on those other movies, and they were flops—so this time he was going to prove to the studio that he could bring it in on budget.’ Platt argued with Nichols, as was her way, and he fired her, hired Dick Sylbert.”

Given the “Virginia Woolf” crack, it seems evident who Biskind believes. Schatzberg, for his part, remembers Eastman’s overwriting. She’d submitted a 300-page first draft of Puzzle of a Downfall Child, and made him promise to destroy it. (He didn’t.) But while Schatzberg calls Eastman a “perfectionist in her work,” he also remembers her as a good collaborator who winnowed down her script to order, and who was delighted at the final product.

The Fortune

The Fortune

The abovementioned Polly Platt, of course, was the ex-wife of Peter Bogdanovich. In many quarters she is believed to have been responsible for a great deal of what distinguished Bogdanovich’s early directorial outings, including the Depression-set Paper Moon (1973), the success of which almost certainly influenced her hire om The Fortune. After divorcing Bogdanovich in ‘72, Platt continued a successful career of her own as a production designer and producer. “She’s Done Everything (Except Direct),” ran the title of a 1993 Premiere Magazine profile of Platt by Rachel Abramowitz, who writes that Platt was “of a certain generation and temperament, and… she plowed all her energy and brilliance into making men brilliant.”

For all the touted barrier-toppling that went on in New Hollywood, it was no more common then than now for women to achieve sustained directorial careers—as Changas writes in her profile of Eastman, “you can count on the fingers of one hand women [directing]—Elaine May, Barbara Loden, Susan Sontag, Shirley Clarke.” May, of course, was Nichols’ old comedy partner, and in the back-and-forth of their films one can almost see a continuation of their stage dialogue. If May’s The Heartbreak Kid (1972) may be taken as her reply to The Graduate (1967), than The Fortune is Nichols’ answer to May’s A New Leaf (1971), which she wrote, directed, and starred in, both being films concerned with mercenary men marrying for money, their homicidal intentions only foiled by their incompetence.

Of course someone would have to answer for incompetence when The Fortune failed, and while Beatty and Nicholson would emerge from the film unscathed, it was a catastrophe for both Nichols and Eastman. He wouldn’t direct again until 1983’s Silkwood, while she didn’t have another screen credit, under any name, for the better part of two decades. (It is unclear as to if she needed to—Beatty had bought The Fortune for $350,000.) When she finally reappeared on the scene, the experience was less than blissful. A 1992 Los Angeles Times postmortem of Man Trouble, Eastman’s reunion with Five Easy Pieces collaborators Nicholson and Rafelson, her first completed project in 17 years, and her last of any note, quotes her at length. “There were four or five volatile personalities on the shoot,” Eastman tells the paper, “and knock-down, drag-out fights over certain issues. Maybe it was inevitable. A male director has a very different set of eyes and experiences which lead to distortions in the translation.”

Man Trouble

Man Trouble

Given Eastman’s distrust of directors, it’s natural to wonder if she’d given some thought to taking a shot at the job herself, as brother Charles did with 1973’s The All-American Boy. Schatzberg says he “never got the feeling” that Eastman was a thwarted director. The Los Angeles Times profile, however, states that she was then developing a film to star Jeanne Moreau, at the behest of Warner Brothers producer John Calley, which Eastman would direct herself. This arrangement, she says, grows out of her “basic dissatisfaction with writing which is not at the same time made complete by directing.”

Neither this unnamed Carole Eastman/Jeanne Moreau Project, nor the sundry other projects mentioned in the piece—“another western, a script based on prison life, and a treatment titled Interval, dealing with political paranoia, which excited the interest of Universal’s Ned Tanen and Monte Hellman”—ever came to pass. Schatzberg recalls that, after decades of working uncredited on re-writes for the likes of Scott Rudin, Eastman had finally found another project which she believed she could collaborate with him on. The property was Boomer: Railroad Memoirs, a 1990 book by Linda Niemann, in which the author recounts her decade as a brakeman for the Southern Pacific line. “She just liked the idea of a woman working in the railroad yards,” says Schatzberg, who remembered Eastman envisaging a scene where we see the women’s lockers decorated with “giant penises,” in contrast to the men’s Playboy collages.

This, and much more, was left undone, and the specter of unfinished work haunts us. When Nicholson spoke for 20-odd minutes at Eastman’s funeral, there wasn’t a dry eye in the house. She was, in the words of Fredrika Quintessa Bigard, “a real individual,” and I have a feeling that what I’ve gotten down here is even a fraction of the story. The Carole Eastman Papers are housed at the University of Texas’ Harry Ransome Center. Get cracking.

Living Cinema: Experimental Film and the Academy

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James Benning Ruhr

James Benning's Ruhr

The first creative challenge faced by the inaugural class of Master’s students in Experimental & Documentary Arts at Duke—the first MFA degree to be offered at the university—was more practical than artistic. Students were assigned a giant room in the former university carpentry shop to use as studio space, and they had to come up with a method of sharing it. They assembled dividers, but these didn’t make the room sufficiently private for some students, and not everyone used it. But this is indicative of how much the class, which enrolled in 2011, was involved in shaping its own program. The 15 student filmmakers effectively taught their instructors, who until then had only worked with undergraduates, what they wanted in terms of their critiques, and they joined in discussions about how their course sequences should be structured and, in many cases, who should be teaching what courses. Not surprisingly, the students became an extraordinarily tight-knit bunch. They assisted with each other’s projects and gave feedback, and, because most came to Durham from out of state, they also formed their own core social world. What could have been disastrous in another program has continued to work well at Duke: the students’ hands-on approach, and a faculty responsive to their input, has made the fledgling program unusually strong. Despite graduating only two classes of MFAs to date, many alumni have shown work in film festivals, had solo exhibitions in galleries, and gained university teaching positions.

The story at Duke is not unusual for schools that train students in the making of experimental film, whether art schools like Mass Art, the School of the Art Institute of Chicago (SAIC), CalArts, and the San Francisco Art Institute, or universities and colleges that offer studio art instruction, such as Duke, Harvard, the University of Illinois at Chicago (UIC), UC San Diego, and Bard, at the undergraduate or graduate level. These are what programmer Mark McElhatten calls “places of freedom and protection,” where students can try out their ideas in relatively supportive environments. Often they are a world apart, located in the woods of upstate New York like Bard and Binghamton, or forming small enclaves within dense urban centers like SAIC, but they also leverage their isolation with visiting faculty and touring filmmakers. For faculty, too, themselves often working artists and filmmakers, such places provide security, particularly in the form of steady employment.

Invariably, some schools stand out. There’s a perception, not entirely unfounded, that certain programs are overrepresented in experimental film festivals or prestigious grant recipient lists. Though many talented filmmakers are certainly drawn to and trained at places like Bard and CalArts, their work can appear to dominate the festival circuit. It’s hard to say whether this lopsidedness is a result of unambitious selections, favoritism, the excessive influence of certain programs and faculty, the quality of the films, or something else entirely. Certain aesthetic trends might at times seem prominent—a year or two of talky essay films, a wave of experiments in durational attention—and it can be tempting to pin this to the common denominator of one MFA program. Reputation, of course, matters, and the standout programs are often built around renowned faculty members. Well-established filmmakers like James Benning at CalArts, or Peggy Ahwesh at Bard, attract a self-selecting intake of students, in part because they themselves continue to make work that circulates widely on festival and art-world circuits.

I suspect, however, that it would be difficult to discern the imprimatur of a particular school or teacher if festivals took the approach of a blind taste test and left off the names of filmmakers from their programs. Those anxious about influence may be less concerned with individual schools, stylistic or otherwise, than taken with a more general hostility toward art instruction as a whole. As exemplified in Chad Harbach’s recent book on creative writing programs, MFA vs. NYC: The Two Cultures of American Fiction, there is a prevailing attitude, common among art-school detractors generally, that talent can’t be taught. In American criticism and culture, broadly speaking, we revere the outsiders, the autodidacts, the eccentrics, and the obsessives who make beautiful termite art burrows. If it can be taught, the logic goes, then it cannot be original. Worse is the view that MFA programs only reproduce their own stylistic tics—Tolstoy called such works “artistic counterfeits”—and the most sycophantic tendencies of their institutional cultures. (Fredric Jameson dissects the anti-intellectualism that underlies the symbiotic relationship between art schools and the academy in “Dirty Little Secret,” his incisive contribution to the MFA vs. NYC collection.)

Peggy Ahwesh She Puppet

Peggy Ahwesh's She Puppet

In experimental film, the suspicion may run deeper. Since the late Sixties and early Seventies, when filmmakers were first hired for university teaching positions, the academy has become crucial to the sustaining of experimental film in the United States. Colleges and universities serve as hubs to which renowned filmmakers and their circles gravitate, and, for most of the country, they’re the only places where avant-garde films can be viewed. With the decline of public funding for the arts, and lacking substantial means of support from the art world or otherwise, the academy provides a structure of employment and production resources that allow many filmmakers to continue making work. The grants, fellowships, and residencies that would otherwise offer an alternative tend to give preference to MFA degree holders. Experimental filmmakers today have grown dependent on the academy, more than the museum, the film festival, or any another institution. Unlike the writers who can turn to the New York publishing establishment in the “MFA vs. NYC” dichotomy, artists who sometimes gain a foothold in the gallery scene, or even filmmakers who make crossover mainstream fare, there are few viable means for experimental film artists to support themselves outside of the academy. The closest model would be that of poets who, unable to finance their careers through book sales alone, have long since moved into the university to sustain their practice.

The negative attitude towards art schools dovetails with the worst stereotypes associated with the experimental film community more generally: the cult of certain styles and personalities can seem to dominate the relatively closed world of the university circuit, where filmmakers and their students seem to speak only to themselves. Adding to this sense of insularity, avant-garde films are often difficult to comprehend, especially for newcomers unaccustomed to non-narrative work, and that barrier has only gotten higher with the increasingly academic language used to discuss it in some quarters. At the same time, and despite the political connotations of the term, some sections of the avant-garde have been resistant to change, stubbornly clinging to celluloid, maintaining a distance from video and digital technologies, and adhering to its traditional preoccupation with formalism and aesthetics. Perhaps most troubling is the persistent fact that experimental film circles tend to be predominantly white, and to a lesser extent, male. The underrepresentation of race, gender, class, and sexual politics, among filmmakers and onscreen, remains a serious issue the community has not yet adequately addressed—a problem that is hardly limited to the avant-garde film world.

Apart from the issue of racial representation, most of these stereotypes don’t hold up to scrutiny. In college towns, there’s often substantial local interest in experimental film, related to but not dependent on the university, such as the Haverhill Experimental Film Festival in Durham; the Milwaukee Underground Film Festival, which is run by students at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee; the Ann Arbor Film Festival near the University of Michigan; or the Basilica Hudson, a multi-use performance space near Bard.

Meanwhile, the introduction of video and digital technologies has been more compatible with existing analog practices than initially thought. Many filmmakers whose careers were once deeply rooted in the material of celluloid film—Ken Jacobs, Phil Solomon, James Benning, and Ernie Gehr, among many others—have successfully transitioned to digital media. The anxiety underlying these concerns is that experimental film is a world that exists only to perpetuate itself. The root of this is not aesthetic conservatism, as many fear, but economic reality. Experimental film must produce, in tuition dollars and cultural capital, its own rationale. The image of its sustained significance is a matter of survival, as experimental film programs must prove their worth and relevance, often to university administrators. This is not to suggest that good films can’t be made within this system, because they surely can; few, however, can be made outside of it, at least in the United States.

A Spell to Ward off the Darkness

Ben Russell and Ben Rivers's A Spell to Ward Off the Darkness

Alternative models do exist. Filmmakers in Europe, where there is far more funding for the arts, don’t teach nearly as much as their American counterparts. Ben Russell, who collaborated with the British filmmaker Ben Rivers to make A Spell to Ward Off the Darkness, left his American teaching position and moved to Europe to “try my hand living and working as an artist full-time.” Since then, and with programmer Aily Nash, he’s begun a multi-year project called the Colony of Light, a communal living and working environment that has had week-long “residencies” at MoMA PS1 and the Basilica Hudson. Russell, who is moving to Los Angeles with plans to create an intentional community of filmmakers and artists, explains: “I’ve become interested in producing other structures or systems outside of any institution.”

Funding filmmaking has become increasingly difficult in the United States. Outside of university support, which is the way most filmmakers in this country survive, there are scarce grants, film sales, or, rarer still, the artist possessed of independent means. Many share the desire for alternative models like the one Russell is exploring. Erin Espelie, a graduate of and current teacher in Duke’s MFA program, says: “Beyond having more federal or larger social support for artists, I would like for the community to find different models for sharing work and to have gatherings and places to see work. I feel conflicted myself about the academy because of all those wonderful things it has to offer, but it’s a shame there isn’t more support for artists to survive outside of it.” Russell offers a more enlarged view of the dependency of all arts on the academy in the U.S.: “The academy is not so much a space in which work is created out of necessity, but the only place that supports culture in the U.S.”

Today, there are more programs that teach experimental film, or some form of moving image art, than ever. The sociologist Gary Alan Fine, who has been studying the culture of art on college campuses, estimates there has been a fourfold increase in the number of visual art MFAs over the past 50 years, with around 300 MFA programs today. For experimental film, which is usually taught adjacent to visual art (as opposed to the more industry-oriented film schools like those of NYU or USC), this has meant more faculty positions for working filmmakers, more students, and ultimately more films being made.

These trends are reflected in the expansion of experimental film festivals like Migrating Forms, the Images Festival, the Ann Arbor Film Festival, and the new Projections at the New York Film Festival, whose programs are largely filled with younger ranks of filmmakers, including those showing work for the first or second time. The change has happened gradually but no less dramatically. In the past 15 years, ’there has been an explosion of talent, including Deborah Stratman, Ben Russell, Kevin Jerome Everson, Michael Robinson, Fern Silva, Jodie Mack, Laida Lertxundi, Lee Ann Schmidt, and Jesse McLean, to name just a few. Though it is possible to identify some stylistic tendencies among their work—observational documentary, landscape study, essay film, hand-processed work, and experimental narrative—it would be impossible to fit any of these filmmakers within a single avant-garde tradition, much less lump them under a single aesthetic or thematic concern or “school.” Many of these younger filmmakers leap over the medium-specific hurdles of their teachers’ generation, switching easily between 16mm and digital video, and traversing both the cinema and the gallery. The field of experimental film hasn’t seemed this vital, diverse, or complex since the flourishing of underground film and its art-world extensions in the Sixties and Seventies. Though the Eighties saw considerable momentum in what Tom Gunning called “minor cinema,” the field was nowhere as large, ambitious, or geographically dispersed as the current crop.

The surfeit of art schools isn’t necessarily a good thing. As with all of higher education, the cost of attending one of these programs has also risen. Art school has always been a risky endeavor, but it is all the more perilous now given the burden of debt that falls on a growing group of jobless graduates. The most common route, and often the only one available to MFAs in experimental film, leads to scarce university teaching positions, for which an MFA (and sometimes a PhD) has also become a requirement. Teaching is hardly the ideal vocation of a filmmaker, of course. As a secondary occupation, it means time and attention away from one’s own films, which must otherwise be squeezed in during school breaks and the infrequent sabbatical. Nor is everyone well-suited to the job. Professors can be as devastating as they are encouraging, sometimes unaware—or all too aware—of the power they yield over their students.  

Lewis Klahr Lethe

Lewis Klahr's Lethe

It is worth examining what is taught, or what actually happens, at experimental film programs. At the most basic level, students learn technique. They take classes on cinematography, lighting, editing, and sound mixing, receiving much of the same training provided by a more traditional film school. These skills translate readily to careers in the film industry. At CalArts, for example, a school founded by Walt Disney and his brother Roy through the merger Los Angeles Conservatory of Music and the Chouinard Art Institute, many students apply what they learn in classes taught by Lewis Klahr or Betzy Bromberg to production jobs in Hollywood. (There is a small contingent of experimental filmmakers who have supported their practice by working in the industry, including Pat O’Neill, Morgan Fisher, and Nathaniel Dorsky.) Students also come to receive instruction in teaching. As Talena Sanders, a member of Duke’s first MFA class, explains: “I’ve always been creating work that isn’t easily sellable, even before I considered myself an experimental filmmaker. So going for an MFA and being qualified to teach has always been a plan for the sustainability of my practice.”

All programs teach digital technologies for reasons having to do with economic practicality (the equipment is cheaper) and commercial viability for students interested in working in the film industry. Yet the schools that are most abundantly represented at experimental film festivals—CalArts, Bard, SAIC, and Mass Art, among a handful of others—are also the only programs that continue to provide 16mm film instruction. Bérénice Reynaud, who has been teaching at CalArts since the early Nineties, gives two reasons for maintaining celluloid as a core part of the CalArts curriculum. The first is aesthetic: digital cinema, in her view, “renders things too clearly” whereas film, its grain fuzzy and sometimes obscure, allows a range of expressivity that includes “shadow and uncertainty.” The second is pedagogical. It’s expensive to buy 16mm film stock, as are laboratory developing fees, and magazine reels limit the length of shots that can be taken. Working in 16mm forces one to be economical; shots need to be storyboarded or otherwise planned in advance. At CalArts, Reynaud explains, film instruction, despite its increased cost and logistical difficulties, is about “taking a stance—not grandstanding—but investment.” Dan Eisenberg, a professor at SAIC, maintains a more practical approach. There, 16mm will continue to be taught so long as there is student interest and community resources to support the processing of film. “It’s not a medium-specific issue,” he says, “as all moving-mage media will eventually map similar trajectories.” Frédéric Moffet, also at SAIC, concurs: although “the technology has changed dramatically, the way of teaching is the same,” rooted in an approach that values “risk and freedom.” At Duke, where 16mm is taught alongside digital technologies, Espelie maintains that “each project should have its own visual signature,” and to accomplish that, students learn multiple forms of image-making.

Working filmmakers do most of the teaching in these programs. Peggy Ahwesh, who came to Bard in 1990, describes the faculty there as distinctly “not teacher-like.” They are, as she says, “approachable, struggling artists similar to them,” making films and exhibiting them on the festival circuit alongside their students. In her classes, Ahwesh shows films with the aim of examining the filmmaker’s choices. “It’s important to see things you could actually make,” she says. Experimental film, moreover, demands a certain resourcefulness. “Students are used to thinking for themselves,” Ahwesh notes. “You have to do it all yourself—shoot, write, edit. This lends itself well to experimental film”,” where students in such programs tend to be engaged. Like the first group of MFAs at Duke, the group of students at CalArts in 1987, when Thom Andersen joined the faculty, were agitating for better and more rigorous classes. He described this group as “quite able politically and capable of self-organization,” and their efforts led to the hiring of James Benning that same year.

David Gatten, who teaches at Duke, emphasizes the values of filmmaking over the technical skills learned in art school. “Making films does not make you a filmmaker,” he says. “Being a filmmaker, you make work, you enter into conversation with other contemporary works, and you advocate for works you believe demonstrate the things that are most important about cinema.” Part of this notion of being a filmmaker means participating in a broader community. In experimental film programs, students often enter into close collaborative relationships with each other and with faculty. Having close relationships with his instructors is what drew Moffet to SAIC, first as an MFA student, and later as an assistant professor. “You have this intimate relationship with your mentor, and conversations about your work with other people,” he says. Unlike his previous program, where the division between students and teachers was especially rigid, “the Art Institute was liberating. People weren’t afraid of risk, failure, things that were different.” Gatten, who studied with Dan Eisenberg and Shellie Fleming at SAIC, notes the influence his teachers had on him, and the legacies they carried from their own teachers. “The family tree is important to me, and I continue to care about those questions of lineage, tradition, and continuities. I have always valued that as much as or more than the radical break idea, that each generation was enacting oedipal revolt.”

Ernie Gehr Surveillance

Ernie Gehr's Surveillance

Art schools also serve as hubs where experimental filmmakers gather, especially when anchored by prominent faculty members. Stan Brakhage’s seclusion in Boulder is indissociable from his tenure at the University of Colorado, just as Ken Jacobs and Ernie Gehr, among many others, molded a generation of filmmakers, programmers, and critics at Binghamton in the Seventies. Eisenberg, a former graduate of Binghamton, remembers his time there as “a powerful moment in the history of film. You’re among the first generation of people to really take media in their own hands, to create a subjective space in media. The trajectory then was about producing a movement.” Scott MacDonald, who is writing a history of the first decade of the Cinema Department at Binghamton, describes the period as one having “no recognized pedagogical rules for the new field.” At Bard, where he taught for 40 years, Adolfas Mekas carved out what Ahwesh describes as an “alternative universe of film” with a club, a signature flag, and a shrine to St. Tula, his patron saint of cinema. Famous graduates, too, contribute to the reputation of a school, and since SAIC graduate Apichatpong Weerasethakul won the Palme d’Or at Cannes, numerous students, many of them international, have come to his alma mater to make experimental narrative films.

Gatten affirms that schools are less about institutional character than the energies of the people who happen to be located in one place. “The hubs change as people come and go. I do think they tend to be less based in institutions than based in the particular enthusiasms, dedications, generosities of particular individuals.” Gatten’s own lectures, meanwhile, have become legendary at Duke. His courses fill with students and community members who frequently drop in, and after class is over, the group migrates to a local bar and keeps talking into the early hours of the morning. “I really loved having this social aspect,” Sanders says of his classes, “this secondary informal thing that you can get together and talk with everyone.”

Though not every program is open to the local community in the same manner as Duke, many extend themselves in other ways. CalArts students have gone on to found alternative screening spaces in Los Angeles, and many pass though the Echo Park Film Center, an independent filmmaking resource and screening space, before entering the school. Bard students cluster at UnionDocs and Light Industry, two microcinemas located in Brooklyn, while SAIC has close collaborations with numerous venues in Chicago, including the Nightingale Cinema, Chicago Filmmakers, and Conversations at the Edge, a series co-sponsored by the Film Center and Video Data Bank. It’s no accident that relationships form between these organizations and the schools from which many of their founders and employees graduated. This isn’t exactly nepotism; in a small and close-knit world such as this, personal connections are often the only mode of operation. These experimental arts organizations, then, become welcoming places for more recent graduates seeking work, and they serve as important outposts of the experimental film world.

Despite the size and intensity of this community, the field of experimental film is as geographically dispersed as it’s ever been. Where once it was possible to identify someone by region—say, a New York structural filmmaker or a San Francisco landscape lyricist—increased mobility (also a result of fewer full-time positions) and ease of online distribution have all but eradicated those distinctions. Schools, as well as festivals, make up the many nodes of an increasingly global network. Though dense clusters still exist in New York and San Francisco, there are now many places to encounter experimental film along the way, from Columbus to Portland, not to mention London, Lisbon, Bangkok, Rotterdam, and Taipei.

The Lost World

Ken Jacobs's The Lost World

It can be difficult, then, to determine the particular imprint of one school, especially when most filmmakers receive training at multiple institutions. Though as McElhatten argues, these programs offer “a hundred things at a vulnerable time,” this is nowhere near the full picture of what makes a complex artist. What is the weight of one two-year program in comparison to the other locales and residencies a filmmaker might pass through, the influence of friends and colleagues, or all the accumulated experiences that indirectly shape one’s practice?

Today, higher education generally is being steered toward professionalization. Studio art programs have turned increasingly vocational, emphasizing the preparation of students for specific careers. Eisenberg notes: “We’re living in a time where everyone wants to instrumentalize education, but when we were students we didn’t feel that way. We wanted to do new things, explore new territories. The enterprise of being a media maker had very few models and now it’s much more defined.” Yet the experimental film programs I’ve been discussing try within these administrative imperatives to remain undefined. In his classes, Eisenberg stresses “comfort with failure, comfort with experimentation. I tell my grad students I’m not interested in what you’re going to do in the next five years. Twenty-five years is more important.” Ahwesh is similarly reluctant to steer her students in any particular direction: “We never talk about making filmmakers.”

Gatten insists that the university allows experimental film to thrive as “a living community.” He continues: “I am quite content for experimental cinema to live as a subculture in the nurturing environment of university systems, in which there is care, conservation, and a way for people to gather around enthusiasms. I am not anti-academia in that way. I think they are the needed shelters in our culture.” That protected state of remaining undefined might be essential to experimental film, which often lacks the clarity and coherence of narrative cinema, and can be difficult to understand. Though “people are hungry for explanation,” as McElhatten puts it, experimental film requires time to “puzzle over—you need to live with things a bit.” Such patience is usually rewarded, but it doesn’t come readily, especially not in the increasingly utilitarian atmosphere of higher education. Fortunately there remain places like Duke, which is responsive to and nurturing of its students, even when they themselves express uncertainty. Sanders recounts her first meeting with Gatten, before she decided to enroll, and well before she’d turned to filmmaking from gallery-based work. “It was supposed to be a 30-minute meeting, and we sat for three hours. He watched everything I’d ever made. During the course of the meeting he said: ‘Well, you don’t know it yet, but you’re a filmmaker.’”


Festivals: Scary Movies 8

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A song by the punk cabaret troupe The Tiger Lillies begins with ringleader Martyn Jacques cackling in his inimitable falsetto: “I could’ve been a killer.” You might say many of the protagonists in this year’s Scary Movies are living the dream. In the series’ eighth installment, there’s a killer who kills in canals, a home-invading killer, a killer who just wants to leave home, a killer who kills everyone at home, and a killer who murders just because.

Among the Living

Among the Living

Julien Maury and Alexandre Bustillo, the directors of Among the Living, are to splatter what Hélène Cattet and Bruno Forzani are to giallo. Their latest film is a perverse pastiche of Seventies exploitation and Eighties kids adventures: three boys stumble upon an abandoned film set where a gas mask-wearing father sics his hairless, hulking, paler-than-pale freak-child on them. With their latest, as with Inside (07) and Livid (11), writer-directors Maury and Bustillo embrace artifice, stripping horror of any semblance of character depth or logic. They value its brute mechanics: shock, disgust, madness, fury, abjection. Men, women, and children are summarily dismembered—meat puppets, one and all. The filmmakers shove morality out the door, leaving only a relentless, pulverizing spectacle.

Amsterdammned

Amsterdamned

Dick Maas’s Amsterdamned (88) was one of this year’s revivals of rarely screened films. A detective (Huub Stapel) tries to track down a wet-suited killer lurking in the Dutch city's canals, in a film that melds slasher and detective thriller, with some broad comedy thrown in. The fusion could have been a jumble, but Maas controls the shifting tones that accompany those genres—and doesn’t pussyfoot around. The editing is precise, allowing no time for pauses; gestures are split-second, creating dynamism within each shot. The film keeps moving, moving, moving all the way up to and including a speedboat chase that rivals anything in Bullitt or Friedkin.

When Animals Dream is Amsterdamned’s opposite: a slow burn. For his debut feature, Jonas Alexander Arnby entwines moods of desolation and sensuality, which are only undermined by some uneven rhythms in the editing and needless cut-ins. Marie (Sonia Suhl) is a teen living on a Danish island in a fishing village with her catatonic mother and caring father. When overwhelmed by emotions or driven by impulses, she undergoes mutations: bulbous fingertips and bleeding fingernails, a patch of hair on a breast, and (during sexual climax) yellow eyes.

In other words, her coming-of-age is to become a werewolf, and this creates a problem for the community. At first, POV shots put us in Marie’s shoes, but with the film’s second half, as the villagers try to destroy Marie, the focus widens. Everyone knows she’s a werewolf, even if the word is never spoken in the film—she is the foreign body in this homogeneous community and therefore must be eliminated. Despite some formal hiccups, When Animals Dream makes a fine addition to the werewolf genre by using it as a vessel for ideas about ostracism and discrimination.

A Reflection of Fear

A Reflection of Fear

William A. Fraker’s A Reflection of Fear (73) doesn’t backload its killings, spreading its mysterious murders at a mansion throughout the story. Neither a mystery nor an “old dark house” film, the film falls in a void between the two. Played by a 29-year-old Sondra Locke, Marguerite is a teen with an ethereal voice and elfin face. She wears white lace dresses, looking like a figure in Renoir’s paintings. Her mother and sister shelter her from the outside world; without friends, Marguerite only has her dolls for company. When her estranged father (Robert Shaw) arrives, strange, incestuous, and deadly goings-on follow. “A haze of fear” is a more appropriate title: here is what happens when an esteemed DP (Fraker shot Rosemary’s Baby) recruits another esteemed DP (László Kovács). You get lush, soft-focus images for every shot; light twinkles off doll’s eyes or a cross around Marguerite’s neck. That look, together with a gentle editing tempo reliant on dissolves, give the film an oneiric quality. Fraker balances full shots of the mansion’s deep space with decentered close-ups of faces in fright or anger. If Marguerite Duras had made a horror film, it might look something like this.

Angst

Angst

This year’s Scary Movies closer, Angst (83), follows a serial killer (Erwin Leder) as he murders a family in rural Austria. He’s a bug-eyed man, acting on impulses. To be sure, he’s calculating, but his desires sidetrack his plotting. Besides a pre-title sequence in which an omniscient narrator recounts the killer’s backstory, Angst occurs in the moment, capturing the killer’s erratic actions. Shots either evoke a detachment or a nauseous intimacy, or both: floating high above the killer as he runs through woods or stalks through the rooms of his victims, or inches away from faces, eyes, lips, and skin. The camerawork creates the sense that the killer lives in his own world, to which we bear uncomfortable witness. Meanwhile, in voiceover, we hear the killer’s stream of consciousness as he recalls his horrid childhood and plans his next moves.

In one scene in Torn Curtain, Hitchcock showed the messiness of killing, the sheer exhaustion and exertion it induces. Angst extends such a concept to an entire film: for 83 minutes, you’re with the killer, witnessing the planning and execution of murders for his own mad, obscure reasons. Morality is gone, and its absence is deafening.

Interview: Chienn Hsiang

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Exit, the debut feature of longtime director of photography Chienn Hsiang, is startlingly accomplished. In scenes that play out with scant dialogue, the daily rhythms of Ling, an isolated, middle-aged Taiwanese woman (Chen Shiang-chyi), repeat themselves with increasing desperation. While her husband is away working in Shanghai, she loses her factory job; her daughter actively avoids her, and, having no social life outside of work, Ling restlessly fills her evenings with dressmaking and anti-aging regiments from Shiseido. While visiting her aloof mother-in-law in the hospital, she develops feelings for a young man severely injured in an industrial accident. She explores her desires by fantasizing about dancing the tango, in a dream life that’s shown in impressionistic, color-coded sequences. But Ling’s struggle to discover who she is, independent of her roles as worker, wife, mother, and caregiver, has mixed success at best.

On Saturday, Chen, who’s worked with Edward Yang, won the Golden Horse for Best Actress (beating out Gong Li). FILM COMMENT’s Violet Lucca spoke with Hsiang a few days after the film had its European premiere in Locarno.

Chienn Hsiang Exit

This seems like a very unlikely subject for a male director. Can you talk a little bit about how you developed this project?

A few summers ago, I was on a bus. There weren’t many people on it. A middle-aged woman sat beside me and looked straight ahead with her eyes empty. It was very hot, but she was wearing a coat. I looked at her face, and saw her wrinkles. I thought that she must have been a pretty girl 20 years ago. Then I thought: “Where is that girl?” She must be hiding somewhere inside, because of the age, because of the environment—a shell, layers upon layers. Then I thought about this little girl coming out. What would happen? That’s why I wrote this film.

I think that middle age is the same for men and women: it’s the last moment… The first two characters in the Chinese title, [迴光奏鳴曲], mean that when someone is dying, at the last minute, he will become lucid and die. A direct translation to English would be “returning light.” I think the protagonist of Exit is at the line before menopause, and before this last-minute moment, she wants to grab something—she’s just woken up.

It’s handled very realistically. How did you work on the script?


We did a lot of interviews, with hundreds of middle-aged women. We asked: “What do you want?” “What do you think about love?” “What can you say about desire?” Most of them didn’t want to talk about desire, but some of them were very direct. And [there’s] my team: my producer is a middle-aged woman, my costume designer is a middle-aged woman, my main actress is a middle-aged woman. So I had a lot of people around me, showing me what to do. The funny thing is, if I did something politically wrong, everybody jumped on me: chauvinist! Yeah, we had a lot of discussions, but I think it’s the same—a little different [for men], but the same…

For instance, the mask: I originally wrote that after peeling off her facial mask, she threw it into the garbage bag. And everyone jumped up: no! This woman, of this social status, will use all of it. She’ll rub it on every part of her body. And I thought: “That’s beautiful!”

I loved that moment. When you were doing the interviews with women, did they actually say “to me, desire is tango,” or was that an element you added?

No, I added that. For me, tango is a very sexy music. And I think tango hides something… the inside desire. Especially in Piazzolla’s tango. It’s so sensational. You can feel the thirst, the heartbeat—everything. I like that.

Chienn Hsiang Exit

When she’s on the roof, or trapped in her apartment, or even when she’s pulling the curtains in the different hospital beds, there’s a real continuity of space and a real continuity of color. How much of that did you create?

When we went the locations, they were totally empty.

Where did you shoot?

Kaohsiung. I liked the way the hospital curtains curved, I liked the bookshelves, the cots, that light blue color. We tried to transform the space into a home that was also a trap.

So when you were dressing the set, when you were putting things into the apartment, was the title already in your mind?

It was. You know old houses: you cannot throw anything away because they still work, so they’re still there, old things, like the shelves. The whole room is set up like this.

Just before the shoot, we stayed there and talked to the neighbors. We talked to the hair salon mama and the street food vendors. The location truly is project housing; it’s a very lower-class area. It’s a very old community, about 50 years old.

Ling feels obligated to look a certain way, to preserve her beauty, and her husband feels obligated to preserve a certain economic stability.

Too many things can be solved by money. You can buy something, you can transform your feelings with money. But you’re cheating yourself. What I wanted to say was, if she doesn't have money, she will have no choice but to face her problem. We set up the plot this way so that it’s an extreme environment to face the truth inside.

The story may be about the lower classes, but in Taiwan right now, the middle and lower classes share the same problem. All the men go to China to earn money. They have to leave their house, their home, and only the women and children stay home. The whole biological environment has changed; everything has changed. Taiwan, Hong Kong, Korea, Singapore, and Malaysia: the same problem. In this situation, she has the chance to face herself—without her husband, without kids, only her.

Chienn Hsiang

That’s scary for everybody.

And sad, too. When I go to the Hong Kong Film Festival, what people are most interested in is films about husbands going to live in China. It’s very different here in Europe.

How did you work with Chen Shiang-chyi, and build up a rapport?

First, there was preparation. We sent her to the factory, the clothes factory, to have her use the sewing machine and make her look like a real worker there. As you know, she’s a college professor, so she’s far away from looking like someone from the low levels of society. So we talked a lot about what these people will be and look like. We talked a lot about how this woman could move around inside her house, do things. Every day before shooting, we had a long discussion. I was also the cameraman, so when we did shoot, there were no other actors, just us. That means I see and watch her, and let the whole thing happen.

So not much was written down?

No. I wrote a script, but it only deals with action. In most of the scenes, I want the action to tell people what happens. With the whole story, I tried to achieve something. True relationships, true emotion, true things are not verbal. It’s what we do.

There’s a saying in English: “It’s not what you say, it’s what you do.”

Yeah. I think by doing something. Even though the man at the hospital cannot see, hear, or speak, he can feel it—it translates.

Chienn Hsiang Exit

What motivated you to move from being a cinematographer to directing?

Good question. A chef is cooking, and I’m always standing there, watching and helping them cook. I watched for 20 years. I learned a lot of ways to make food, but I never did it by myself. That’s a triumph. I work with a lot of famous Taiwanese directors, and I learned a lot from them. But I want to cook my own food.

Are you satisfied with the film?

I am, because it’s such a low-budget film, and a lot of people helped me. For me that’s very touching. Also, Chen Shiang-chyi is very experienced and talented, and she gave me a lot of advice. The art director gave me a lot of good advice. My editor is a college professor; he was my college classmate, and he also studied at UCLA. He gave me a lot of good advice.

Do you have any other projects in mind that you’re working on right now?

I’m trying to write now. It’s difficult. I want to do something about a man who’s the same age as Ling, something about what love looks like for men at this age. For women, menopause is a line, and puberty is a line. Before that, I don’t think there’s a difference between sexes. After 60 and 70, I think that difference goes away again.

Fassbinder Diary #2: In a Year of 13 Moons

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Germany in Autumn Fassbinder

Germany in Autumn

I was a sophomore in college when I saw In a Year of 13 Moons for the first time, and it was my introduction to Fassbinder. The year prior I had excitedly highlighted David Bordwell and Kristin Thompson’s half-exalting, half-exasperated descriptions of his work in Film History: An Introduction; out of anything in its “Young German Film” section, the still from Germany in Autumn in which Armin Meier leans against Fassbinder, eyes turned towards him cherub-like, as the director makes a phone call, remained burned in my mind for a long time afterward.

Coming to Fassbinder’s work cold, I had no idea how significant that particular image is in relation to In a Year of 13 Moons: Meier was the director’s lover for three years, and he committed suicide in the apartment they shared, after learning Fassbinder was going to end their relationship. Completed three months after Meier’s death, the 1978 film follows the anguished transsexual Elvira (Volker Spengler) during the four days leading up to her suicide; a few other biographical details from Meier’s life are also incorporated into Elvira’s character. Watching it again recently, I’m shocked by how much else I missed in addition to the personal history: references to Fellini, Godard, Jerry Lewis’s persona, composer Gustav Mahler’s life, and Fassbinder’s other films. 

In a Year of 13 Moons

In a Year of 13 Moons

Fassbinder’s filmmaking—from the dialogue to the set design—is typically direct and profound. The narrative of In a Year of 13 Moons feels like a transposed torch song, something along the lines of Roy Orbison’s “Crying.” It opens on feet shuffling along a litter-strewn park trail, followed by the title “Frankfurt, July 24, 1978.” In the early morning light, it soon becomes apparent that the figures milling around are cruising, and as two of them wordlessly agree to have sex, more text appears explaining the significance of a year that has 13 full moons: there are more suicides, those who suffer from depression do so more intensely, etc. As soon as the text disappears, the encounter goes wrong, and Elvira—dressed as a man—gets a severe beating, crawling away with pants around her legs. Shortly after Elvira arrives home, her longtime, intermittently interested paramour Christoph turns up and begins gathering up his things.

According to him, their relationship was ruined by Elvira’s drinking (which has made her fat) and empty-headedness; in no condition to defend herself, she explains how lonely she is while stripping down to her underwear. Christoph isn’t the only person in the film who will tell her that she’s fat, ugly, and used up; it’s seemingly on the tip of everyone’s tongue. Like Fox in Fox and His Friends (75) or Emmi in Ali: Fear Eats the Soul (74), Elvira is inferior to her lover by society’s rules, and she’s internalized this hatred. Elvira couldn’t pass for a woman, and judging from her frame and height (accentuated by her penchant for high heels), it seems as if she never could. But as her exchange with Christoph makes immediately clear, there’s a feminine softness in the way she pronounces words, and a gentleness in her gestures and gait.  

If Elvira’s a victim of her sex, unable to pass as a woman, she’s also a victim of love, and unable to exist independently. After unsuccessfully trying to stop Christoph from driving away in a taxi, her friend Red Zora (Ingrid Caven, a longtime collaborator and former wife of Fassbinder’s) scoops her off the pavement and buys her a coffee. Zora, who occasionally skips instead of walks, pairs a furry jacket with short, blonde hair like Fellini’s indefatigable Cabiria; her appearance is twice accompanied by the theme from Amarcord, evoking a sense of hope only to yield its opposite. (According to critic Charlie Fox, a later scene in which Zora watches TV while Elvira naps is a reference to Vivre sa vie, but unlike Anna Karina’s Nana, Zora doesn’t cry.) Elvira’s friend serves as her confidante, the conduit through which we are told her tortured past: Elvira used to be Erwin, an unwanted “Lebensborn child” who was raised by nuns. He apprenticed to a butcher, got married, and had a child. But he fell in love with Anton Saitz (Gottfried John), a Jewish criminal mastermind who “grew up in Bergen-Belsen” and tells Erwin that he’d love him if Erwin were a woman. When Erwin gets a sex change in Casablanca, Anton laughs at Erwin’s transformation into Elvira, and bereft of a job, family, or love, she attempts suicide, then dabbles in whoring, and eventually settles in with Christoph.

In a Year of 13 Moons

As Thomas Elsaesser has written, the core of the film is predicated on a series of  “impossible” desires that go unfufilled: the impossibility of a straight man loving another man, of becoming someone’s object of love, of an Aryan loving a Jew; and finally, the assertion of identity that the immutability of the body denies. Rather than a Hollywood rom-com “dialectic” stumbling block to romantic coupling—he’s messy, she’s sophisticated!—or “the vicious circle of A loving B, but B loving C, and C only loving/hating himself” as in Sirk’s Written on the Wind or Ali: Fear Eats the Soul, this is one of Fassbinder’s most pessimistic statements on the possibility of love. Or connection of any kind: as Elsaesser also notes, the various groups of “outsiders” shown here—be they the gay men who beat up Elvira at the park, a group of Turks at an arcade, a North African man who hangs himself in an empty building—fail to find solidarity, and treat their fellow “outsiders” with incredulity or outright hostility. Instead of the ample cynicism about marriage and coupling shown in a myriad of his other films (from Why Does Herr R. Run Amok? to Martha to The Marriage of Maria Braun), In a Year of 13 Moons replaces it with a powerless feeling of barrenness.

The impossibility of love extends to loving oneself: like a Romantic protagonist of old, Erwin/Elvira had been born pure and reshaped by the world, but only on the outside. Alternating between sentimental fool (“What would life be without sentiment? Pretty sad, I'd say,” she murmurs) and slave to love from another, Elvira is perpetually undercut by her physical appearance, despite her best attempts: her bedroom mirror is tilted at a 45-degree angle, eliminating chance reflections; she wears hats with veils, one of which she pairs with a tight black dress (slimming!) when she finally dares to see Anton again after so many years. Her final spiral into darkness, marked by a haunting, chiaroscuro descent down a staircase, follows three rebuffed attempts to simply be with somebody, if only for a little while; her insecurity metastasizes into utter self-hate. It’s hard not to see that Fassbinder’s own self-loathing, enhanced by Meier’s suicide, at play here. Erwin/Elvira is therefore less rooted in Fassbinder’s own self-image or who Meier was and more a general composite of ill feeling and bad impulses. 

In a Year of 13 Moon

A lingering question: how could anyone so softhearted truly fall in love with someone so ruthlessly devoted to capitalism as Anton? We finally see Anton, in what is the film’s only sort-of funny moment, one which comes right after Elvira has correctly given the ghoulish, all-access password “Bergen-Belsen” to Anton’s security guard. Anton, dressed in tennis whites, demands that his lackeys act out the “I Like to Hike” musical number from the 1955 Martin and Lewis film You're Never Too Young. This scene (and the act of performing it) begs comparisons to the mass gymnastic displays of the Hitler Youth, and the choreography and pageantry of Nazi ceremony. However, at its center is Anton, playing the Jerry Lewis character, a light-hearted, infantilized spastic. If underneath his character’s merciless Jewish stereotype exists this benign, cheerful persona, it makes sense why Erwin/Elvira is attracted to him. Perpetually physically uncomfortable and prone to second-guessing each sentence as soon as it has left her mouth, she sees past their superficial differences and finds a kindred, awkward spirit with his own mode of escape.

In a Year of 13 Moons is elegiac and complex, allowing a panoply of potential readings. (There’s probably even more to the Nazi references, for one thing, but that line of interpretation tends to straitjacket the film. Also, I’m not an expert, and I certainly don’t want to be.) If nothing else, it’s the most elegant release of grief transfigured into film, embodying its indiscriminate effects. This active grieving is most pronounced in the scene where Elvira and Zora visit a slaughterhouse (out of nostalgia for Elvira’s old profession), and Elvira is forced to shout her sweet remembrances of Christoph over the butchering. The single-tracking shot softens the blow of the twin aural and visual bombardment, the same sort of feeling that comes from seeing how Francis Bacon could so exquisitely render screaming mouths. The use of the Adagietto from Gustav Mahler’s “Fifth Symphony,” which plays under various scenes throughout the film, also provides a sweet counterpoint to the braying of German Christmas songs (which Elvira plays when she masturbates) or the shrieking in Suicide’s “Frankie Teardrop” (which plays while a gay man speaks about his time in a mental institution). The orchestral movement, which supposedly symbolizes the love Mahler felt for his wife, wordlessly imparts a tender sense of longing—again, Fassbinder’s earnestness, but made austere through music. Would that any of us were so lucky—or unlucky—to be loved by someone so talented so much.

Deep Focus: The Imitation Game

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The Imitation Game

The Imitation Game is a tremendously engaging work of historical fiction about Alan Turing, the British mathematical genius who was key to cracking the military codes of the Nazis’ “unbreakable” Enigma machine. Unlike self-consciously unconventional biopics, The Imitation Game melds fact and invention with lucidity and sweep. The movie time-jumps among three periods in Turing’s life: his misfit schoolboy days, his top-secret service as a trailblazing code-breaker, and, a half-dozen years after the war, his arrest for “gross indecency” as a gay man because of homophobic laws. In his first English-language film, Norwegian director Morten Tyldum (best known for the sardonic thriller Headhunters) forges the three-prong structure as firmly as the tines on a trident. Played as a boy by Alex Lawther and as a man by Benedict Cumberbatch (both are brilliant), Turing becomes heroic because he strives to maintain his integrity in a world eager to exploit his gifts without accepting him. The sections snap together to form a crackling, tragicomic vision of a complex protagonist.

It’s easy to overrate a dreary, expository drama like the best-known telling of Turing’s story, Hugh Whitemore’s play and teleplay Breaking the Code, in which every line is factual and few are captivating. It’s even easier to underestimate the care and intelligence that go into transforming a portrait of an alienated intellectual into a movie as exciting as The Imitation Game. Without making a fuss, director Tyldum and Graham Moore, in his first produced script, introduce and vary their themes in a pop-symphonic way. The scenes set at Sherbourne School in Dorset root Turing’s belief that people like violence “because it feels good” in terrible incidents of hazing, and dramatize the way his outsider status and possible Asperger’s syndrome fuel his fascination with cryptography. Turing’s one pal, Christopher Morcom (Jack Bannon), describes it as the science of “messages that anyone can see, but no one knows what they mean, unless you have the key. ” Turing asks: “How is that different from talking?” (Young Alan goes on to explain: “When people talk to each other, they never say what they mean. They say something else. And you’re supposed to just know what they mean. Only, I never do.”) While foreshadowing Turing’s conquest of Enigma, these scenes movingly suggest that Turing’s one close friendship triggers his interest in human and mechanical brains. In the film’s most emotionally charged conceit, Turing names both his massive code-breaking device and his attempt to create a “universal” machine—or computer—“Christopher.”

As an adult, Turing turns his own personal logic into a complete and sometimes self-destructive modus operandi. At the government’s code-breaking capital, Bletchley Park in Buckinghamshire, his intense tunnel vision and intellectual super-confidence instantly annoy the military chief, Cdr. Alastair Denniston (Charles Dance). He is about to end “the shortest job interview in British military history” when Turing stops him by proclaiming the Enigma codes nothing more than a puzzle he can solve. Turing confounds his more traditional teammates (including Matthew Goode as championship chess player Hugh Alexander) with his disdain for social niceties. Goode puts a snide/suave spin on the unsolicited advice: “You know, to pull off this irascible genius routine, you actually have to be a genius.” But everything about Turing intrigues MI6 chief Stewart Menzies (Mark Strong), who pegs the mathematician as a man who can keep secrets.

The Imitation Game

The military-intelligence scenes derive edgy comedy from the friction between this eccentric Cambridge intellectual and the strictures of life during wartime. Tyldum and company also summon turbulent emotion from the building of an offbeat (if fleeting) esprit de corps among the games-players and numbers men who make up Turing’s final team—including one woman, Joan Clarke (Keira Knightley), his peer and confidante and, briefly, his betrothed. The claustrophobia of their confidential mission, the antagonism of their higher-ups, and their irreverence as they strive to unpack all of Enigma’s mysteries bring the pressure-cooker tension and gallows humor of a POW adventure to the code-breaking sequences. Like Turing’s sophisticated machines—including the one that cracks Enigma codes—these scenes accomplish multiple tasks with startling rapidity. Among other things, they compel Turing to devise strategies that sacrifice some lives to save many others. By the end he confronts the violence he knows—a force that makes people feel good—and the violence he doesn’t know: the kind used as political tools by friend and foe alike.

Turing tells Clarke: “It is the very people who no one else imagines anything of who do the things that no one else can imagine.” He coins that aphorism when persuading her to come to Bletchley Park despite her experience with institutional chauvinism. Turing’s offhand wisdom replicates a dominant theme of Marcel Ophuls’s The Sorrow and the Pity: that loners and pariahs were most likely to rise up against authority to save society at large. The Imitation Game rouses patriotic fervor in a sly and semi-subversive way. It roots the defeat of global fascism in the war efforts of a handful of crossword enthusiasts hunched over papers and wires. Clarke later repeats the line about “people who no one else imagines anything of” doing “things that no one else can imagine” after Turing has accepted, as punishment for his “crime,” hormone treatments that unman him in more ways than one. Suddenly, words that could have been the tagline for an “inspirational” melodrama take on a terrible irony. The country that benefited from his impossible accomplishment has criminalized him because of his sexual orientation.

In the early-1950s part, the movie concocts an Everyman policeman, Investigating Detective Robert Nock (Rory Kinnear), who is put off by Turing’s casual insults and intrigued by the erasure of his war records. He has no idea that he’ll cause a mathematical eminence to be charged with gross indecency: He thinks he’s uncovering a Soviet spy ring. Only midway do we realize that Nock’s interrogation of Turing frames the entire the film. It’s to Nock that Turing articulates his essential plea: “A machine is different from a human being; hence it would think differently. The interesting question is, just because something thinks differently from you, does that mean it’s not thinking?” Turing is not speaking only about machines.

The Imitation Game

If there’s a prime auteur to this film, I’d say it’s the screenwriter, Moore, who earlier wrote the winning 2008 pastiche novel The Sherlockian, marrying the historical characters of Arthur Conan Doyle and Bram Stoker to his own wild riffs on an actual, contemporary Sherlock Holmes–themed murder case. In The Imitation Game he meshes hard-edged characters, true occurrences, and dramatic fabrications with similar éclat. He even inserts a notorious Soviet spy into Turing’s code-breaking group. It’s a typically bold Moore touch, unexpected but never arbitrary: it trenchantly underlines the risks of ideological wrestling among allies.

Tyldum has visualized the script with density and verve. It’s no small accomplishment to conjure titanic cataclysms in flashes of the same muddy armies and bomb-packed planes that Turing mocks, or to mold Turing and Clarke’s lonely figures so that you can feel the burden of their shared knowledge while they trek to MI6 in London. Tyldum and his cinematographer, Oscar Faura, recall John Boorman’s Hope and Glory as they light and color wartime England to evoke a time of heightened feeling. Most important, Tyldum has handled the cast impeccably—they act with veracity and dash. Dance is nonpareil at being imperious, Strong balances charm with menace, and Goode creates a brainy version of a hail-fellow-well-met as a chess champion and ladies’ man. Even better, Knightley depicts Clarke as a shrewd judge of character and a middle-class woman of the world—for her time. This heroine’s artless intellectual ardor is unlike anything Knightley has done before. In Clarke’s heart-to-hearts with Turing, she merges passion and compassion.

Lawther and Cumberbatch come through with critically acute performances—they fold into each other as seamlessly as Hugh O’Conor and Daniel Day-Lewis did in My Left Foot. Lawther’s Alan is more than a persecuted wonk. His glimmers of mischief and tenderness, along with his mental strength, indicate a complicated sensibility. Cumberbatch brings it to fruition with a portrayal of idiosyncratic genius that bears little resemblance to the actor’s “functioning sociopath” Sherlock or narcissistic Julian Assange.

The Imitation Game

The linchpin to Cumberbatch’s Turing is his sensitivity. Though ruthless in pursuit of intellectual goals, he registers anxiety—within and without—in the high-pitched register of his voice and the signal flashes of his eyes. Because of Cumberbatch’s élan, Turing’s implacability is magnetic and his mental dexterity thrilling. But that’s not what makes this performance extraordinary. In The Imitation Game, Cumberbatch conveys Turing’s continuous aching to put thoughts into code and his soul into words. He expresses the inexpressible. 

Film of the Week: The Babadook

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The Babadook

Strange, isn’t it, how in films about haunted houses, the TV always seems at some point to be tuned to a station that’s showing old black-and-white cartoons about the Big Bad Wolf; I guess the Primal Fear Channel never stops broadcasting. This cliché can be forgiven in Australian chiller The Babadook, not least because writer-director Jennifer Kent is nodding so wryly at the convention and, through it, at another film that made its own pointed use of the wolf trope, The Shining. Few horror films equal Kubrick’s—or now, indeed, Kent’s—for intelligently addressing terror’s source in childhood-related nature of terror, and for depicting the family as an inescapable place of terror rather than a shelter from it. Among bad-parenting frighteners, The Babadook earns a place of honor, steeped as it is in a history not just of horror cinema, but of Freudian interpretations of horror narrative in general (you can bet Kent is up on her Bettelheim). The Babadook, you might say, imagines how things might have been if Wendy Torrance, rather than her husband Jack, had been at the center of The Shining.

Kubrick echoes aside, Kent’s film hits an emotional nerve in its depiction of family trauma, specifically of a damaged relationship between a single mother and her young son. In Kent’s story, Amelia (Essie Davis) and six-year-old Samuel (Noah Wiseman) have plentiful cause to be troubled. As the opening sequence shows, through a (presumably recurring) nightmare of Amelia’s, her husband was killed in a violent car accident while rushing her to hospital to give birth. Samuel’s very existence is a token of his father’s death, his every birthday a dreadful reminder of loss; Amelia both treasures the boy, her only consolation in life, and bitterly resents his very existence. Dad, meanwhile, is never spoken of, all his belongings locked away in the basement of the family’s gloomy house; little wonder that the Repressed is announcing its imminent return, with nerve-jangling fanfares.         

As the film starts, Amelia and Samuel are already having a rough time together: he’s hyperactive, desperate for her constant attention, and terrified of monsters; her own restless nights are further disturbed by the boy’s terrors. Samuel’s frenzied agitation and his dangerous behavior around other kids—he’s manically inventive, building a fearsome catapult to ward off threats—further isolates the pair. Add to this Amelia’s sexual frustration: a night in front of the TV, which seems to be targeting her with ads for sex, romance and chocolate, leads to a brief oasis of release with a vibrator before Samuel comes running in with his nightly heebie-jeebies.  

The Babadook

Things could hardly be worse for the pair—until a pop-up book entitled Mister Babadook mysteriously appears in the house, as insomnia-inducing as the darkest imaginings of Edward Gorey and Maurice Sendak. The book, strikingly created by designer Alex Juhasz, depicts a top-hatted, black-cloaked, Freddy-clawed bogeyman: “If it’s in a word or in a look,” the accompanying verse goes, “You can’t get rid of the Babadook.”

Sure enough, once let into the house, the Babadook—like those marginally less baleful childhood visitors the Cat in the Hat and Gorey’s Doubtful Guest—is in no hurry to leave. But while it’s clear that this grim entity is staking claim to his hosts’ home and souls, Kent doesn’t actually show too much of the thing; it only manifests in physical form just short of the 50-minute mark, then appears sporadically in different guises, all chilling because so briefly glimpsed. It’s variously a thing scuttling across a ceiling, like a bat or a demonic umbrella; a lurking shadow in a neighbor’s house; an unexpected guest in a Georges Méliès film. What makes the Babadook so much more terrifying than the ghouls routinely conjured up in today’s mundane haunting tales of the Parasidious Conjuring school is Kent’s grasp of the uncertainty principle that makes for great horror. While a certain amount is depicted graphically enough—especially when Kent lets rip with the Poltergeist-like fireworks in the final act—overall The Babadook is a film that Val Lewton and Jacques Tourneur, screen horror’s high priests of the unseen, would approve of. Like David Robert Mitchell’s ingenious It Follows (to be released next year), it represents a welcome survival of the horror of suggestion.

Above all, we can’t be certain what’s going on, or what the monster is. Kent plays on the possibility that the book is not real in the first place; at least one of Amelia’s attempts to get rid of the thing is cleverly placed so that it could well be an episode she dreams. The Babadook—resembling a denizen of the child-scaring bedtime book to beat them all, Heinrich Hoffmann’s Struwwelpeter (1845)—appears to be an autonomous wraith bent on maximum harm. Perhaps the very people it terrorizes have created the thing: on one hand, the Babadook seems a concrete projection of Samuel’s terrors (pointedly, we’re told that he’s a boy who “speaks his mind”). Or maybe it’s an embodiment of the boy’s developing Id, a projection of omnipotence fantasies: Samuel too wears a top hat and cloak to practice his magic tricks, and the Babadook’s rasping voice (“Baba-dook-dook-dook!”) has definite overtones of The Shining’s Danny summoning forth his invisible familiar Tony.

The Babadook

On the other hand, the creature appears to embody Amelia’s repressed urge to avenge herself on Samuel: a writer who’s had to give up her work, she has possibly “written” the ghoul into existence (the Babadook is later identified with a gush of inky black liquid). And of course— phallically top-hatted like a Victorian paterfamilias or Mr. Hyde—the Babadook is also dead Dad, punishing the survivors for living on without him, and for the mother-son bond that excludes him.  

The real horror story in The Babadook is an everyday one, familiar to every parent who’s ever known chronic sleep deprivation, or who feels their offspring are over-possessive, or threaten their adult autonomy. (Add to that the further horror of the guilt that affects a parent feeling such resentment.) The Babadook brilliantly keeps all these possibilities active, spinning from them a variety of horror-scenario variations, with the emphasis constantly shifting. Thus, Kent variously gives us mother and child terrified by interloper; mother threatened by child; child threatened by mother.

It’s in this last register that the film is most alarming (spoiler alert for this paragraph!): at times, Amelia’s and Samuel’s determination to protect each other becomes almost a mutual threat, a self-destructive folie à deux: at what point does over-protection of a child become deadly stifling? Eventually they go off the rails altogether—whether possessed by the Babadook, or just running out of psychic defenses—Amelia becomes the house’s resident monster. The Shining was scary enough, but the idea of the murderous ogre father was already familiar, going back in popular horror at least to 19th-century Gothic fiction and European fairy tale; what the once-nurturing mother becomes here is more perverse. In one sequence, the overtones of The Shining come to the fore as Amelia tries first to sweet talk, then to force herself into her terrified son’s locked room. But perhaps the film’s creepiest frisson is the subtlest, a shot in which Amelia is eerily transplanted into a TV news item, this film’s version of what happens to Jack in the final shot of Kubrick’s film.   

The Babadook

There are many other echoes of screen horror here: clips of Maria Bava’s Black Sabbath; portents of domestic madness in the mode of Polanski’s Repulsion; a general sense of claustrophobia that’s more than a little reminiscent of The Exorcist; a use of grey paint and an overall color-leeched palette to rival The Sixth Sense; and as female-centric psychological horror, it also recalls the evocation of shadow-steeped nocturnal anxiety so chillingly staged in Robert Wise’s The Haunting (63). Note to self and others: this might be a good time to go back and look at another Australian woman director’s take on horror and childhood, Ann Turner’s superb Celia (88).

Undeniably brilliant as it is, The Babadook at moments feels a little overdone: that greyness too overwhelming, the telegraphic precision of Simon Njoo’s editing at times a little emphatic, the eerie angles of Radek Ladczuk’s photography at times overstressed (although there’s a wonderful way in which he and designer Alex Holmes give the house a horrid elasticity). And in the final stretch, when Kent unleashes her full arsenal of funhouse effects, there’s a distinct touch of “Now what?”

But ultimately all this—together with Frank Lipson’s abrasive sound design—adds up to a peculiar neurotic intensity that makes The Babadook feel all the more truthful in its ambivalent depiction of breakdown. The film’s very funny too: there’s a grotesque visit to a little girl’s “princess party” and a nicely stiff visit from some social workers.

What makes The Babadook so effective is that it’s as much character study as a chiller. Essie Davis’s Amelia is a superbly uncomfortable portrayal of pathological denial that seems to be sucking the blood and life out of her body: initially mumsy in a fragile way, Amelia looks increasingly waxy and pallid, which is why it comes so much as a shock when she musters a savage fury later on. And Noah Wiseman, wide-eyed and disheveled, shows a mischief and energy that only emphasizes Samuel’s vulnerability: it’s an astonishing, fearless performance, certainly one of the more startling child debuts of recent times (it’s hard to imagine that Wiseman wasn’t traumatized, but you can only imagine that Kent has been very ingenious about shooting him and Davis separately in certain scenes). At any rate, both actors make a very affecting, and sometimes tartly funny duo. It’s their rapport that makes the grim fairy-tale ending all the more poignant—a picture either of triumph over lethal adversity, or of two people imprisoned together in a new delusion that seems set to continue forever. But for some people, no doubt, that’s family. 

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