Tuesday, November 26, 2013

November revivals: Thanksgiving weekend edition









Hey all, Mike here with a list of revivals for Thanksgiving weekend. For the record I consider Wednesday, November 27 to be part of that list, so I'll include it. Now granted, something resembling a Nor'easter will hit town, probably as you're reading this. But I'm taking a chance that it will die down to a regular shower after 7pm, so I'll post the revival options for the 27th anyway. Now on with the list: 


 
SANDRA- Wed Nov 27 at 7:30 and 9:30- Film Forum- A new DCP restoration of Luchino Visconti's 1965 film, released with little impact in the U.S. in 1966. I don't know the film, it seems to have made a bigger impact back in the day in Europe than in America. Claudia Cardinale stars in the title role, returning to Volterra with her American husband to remember her father, a scientist killed in Auschwitz. Sandra has issues with her past, to put it mildly. Especially when it comes to her stepfather, insane mother and her brother. There are secrets that Sandra's husband doesn't know, but they may come to light when Sandra's brother returns, and something funny seems to happen when they meet again . . .
 
I wouldn't call this a direct adaptation of Mourning Becomes Electra, but Visconti seems to have taken enough of that story to make it his own. Like I said , Sandra doesn't appear to have made much impact here in the States. One possible reason is that the original subtitles were made in Spain during the Franco dictatorship, and that some "queasy" aspects of the story expressed thru dialogue were deleted. But with this 4K Digital Restoration, this should no longer be an issue. Like I also said, I don't know this film, but I liked Visconti's The Leopard and really liked his Rocco and his Brothers, so I'm willing to take a chance here:
 
 

THE HOMECOMING- Wed Nov 27 at 9- Elinor Bunin Monroe Film Center at Lincoln Center- Part of Lincoln Center's Harold Pinter retrospective of films that are (extremely dark or melancholy) comedies. And among Pinter plays, you don't get much darker than what I would say was arguably his biggest hit play, The Homecoming. The first I believe of the American Film Theater's adaptations of major plays. In the early and mid 1970s, a number of these came out to varying levels of success and acclaim. I've posted a few in the past, including The Iceman Cometh and A Delicate Balance, and now the first of these adaptations, The Homecoming.
 
When I've done write-ups in the past regarding All About Eve, I'm usually comparing the verbal attacks as being splashed with acid blood, like those creatures in Aliens. But with The Homecoming, the verbal attacks feel backed by threats of violence, and the pauses (a Pinter staple) can mean even more than some of the words. A working class family filled with two older brothers, one a brutal patriarch the other a bit of a rake, and the patriarch's two sons, one supposedly training to be a boxer while the other appears to be a pimp. The dynamic is shaken up with the return of the third son, a philosophy professor, returning from America with his wife. The wife is left to fend for herself, as each relative comes on to her. But don't think of her as powerless, as she can use words and gestures with just as much force as any single one of them could use violence.
 
This view of family dysfunction and family values might have been considered bizarre, at times over the top yet always fascinating, might seem a little too realistic today. Or perhaps, like with Network's depiction of TV news and reality TV being outrageous back in 1976 yet fully believable by 2001 at the latest, The Homecoming seems akin to other fictional dysfunctional families on TV and the big screen. Perhaps a bit more English, perhaps more eloquent or more likely to use words like hand grenades or knives, perhaps more willing to use silence as a weapon, but realistic none the less.
 
The idea was to preserve as much of the original production of The Homecoming on film as possible. The film's director and the play's first director, Sir Peter Hall, alongside screenwriter Pinter, worked to bring us closer inside this decaying house/family, while avoiding as many stage-bound story traps as possible. Bringing in acclaimed stage actor Cyril Cusack as the abusive patriarch, and four actors from the original West End production also helps greatly. Of note, Pinter's then-wife Vivian Merchant as the lone female in the film, and especially Ian Holm as the pimp son. If you think of Holm as merely Bilbo Baggins, you're in for a shock/treat. Yes, he's more violent in Alien. But in terms of a complete character with a near constant tinge of menace, as well as being the only family member who can stand up to the tough patriarch, well there's a reason why Holm's career shot up in England and The Homecoming is it. Overall, the Pinter film out of everything I've posted worth catching the most:
  
 
 
ARMY OF DARKNESS- Wed Nov 27 and (a big maybe for me) Fri Nov 29 and Sat Nov 30 at 12:10AM- IFC Center- Part of IFC Center's series of Zombie movies at Midnight, or Midnight-ish. There were other films in the series prior to this, but either they didn't hold my interest or I had no time for them. There are other films in this retrospective after Army of Darkness, but I doubt I'll post them. No time for Shaun of the Dead, I never heard of Baron Blood but the IFC Center's description of it sounds ghastly to me, and I await the rest of the schedule that runs thru January 25th. Anyway, Army of Darkness plays the entire Thanksgiving weekend; I can do Wednesday night (weather permitting), won't do Thanksgiving night, and the other two nights are maybes but I'll post them anyway.
 
Now, Army of Darkness. A DCP projection of the original 81 minute theatrical release from 1992, as opposed to the 96 minute director's cut. Director Sam Raimi's second sequel to The Evil Dead, but for those who are not into horror flicks, don't worry. Despite being in a Zombie retrospective, this stays away from most horror scares, and goes more for sword and sorcery, with tongue firmly planted in check. Raimi's presumably favorite leading man, Bruce Campbell, plays his character as possibly the most macho, and possibly the stupidest version of Han Solo you've ever seen. And since this version is only 81 minutes long (to avoid the R rating the director's cut would receive), it doesn't overstay its welcome:
 
 
 
OLDBOY- Starting Fri Nov 29 for a one week run- at 1:15, 4, 6:45 and 9:20- Quad Cinema- Yes, this just played recently at Landmark Sunshine Cinema, but those were Midnight screenings that weren't convenient. These in theory are, so post them I will (how very Yoda of me). I'm not sure exactly which days and times I can do, so I'll just post all the times and not dilly-dally with this. Coming out for a one week only run to coincide with the release two days earlier, of Spike Lee's remake. Don't ask me why that particular release date; based on the very mixed domestic gross of the remake of The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo, you would think major studios would avoid unrelentingly grim material on the holiday season. Unless they think it can make impact with the Academy Awards, a la Children of Men. Then again, it is only coming out at 500 or so theaters with no hope of wider expansion in the weeks to follow, so it might be nothing to think about. Anyway, I'll wait a while for word of mouth to decide whether I want to tackle Lee's take on the story, but I know I want to tackle the original.
 
In the States, the original Oldboy is the definition of a modern day cult film. And I mean a good cult film, not a glorious train wreck like with The Room. A South Korean film from 2003, released in the U.S. in 2005. A businessman has been mysteriously trapped in a hotel room for fifteen years, for a crime he doesn't remember committing. That assumes he committed a crime at all, but I digress. He has no human contact, including from the wife and young daughter he left behind because of the kidnapping. He sends his fifteen years plotting his revenge. He may get that chance when he's released without explanation, just an unnamed male voice mocking him on the phone. But revenge may have to wait when he finds out his wife was murdered and he's been the prime suspect all this time. With the help of a young woman, he tries to find his daughter, his captor, and his wife's murderer. But, to paraphrase Dr. Zaius from Planet of the Apes; don't look for answers, you may not like what you find . . .
 
With an ending (shot in snowy New Zealand, stop looking for Hobbits) that lets the viewer decide what will happen from there. Also, a popular corridor fight scene in a "private prison", between an almost unending amount of henchmen who are trained to fight and kill, and our hero, who spent almost his captivity shadowboxing, but has never fought or killed prior to this. Generally good reviews from critics in the States, though for every 3 1/2 star or four star review from the likes of Roger Ebert, there would be the equivalent of one or two reviews from the likes of New York Times. Did ok business overseas and not much here. Not exactly perfect art house fare, yet art houses are the only ones that might clamor to screen something from South Korea. But cable and home video sales/rentals have helped developed the cult here. Anyone of us who've seen it, only knows what the film looks like on TV or their computer screen. You've most likely never had a big screen experience of this, but now that can change, even with the windshield-sized screens of the Quad. Ok, I exaggerate about the screen size, but not by much. Comfortable theater though:   
 
 
 
A DOG'S LIFE: A ROWLF RETROSPECTIVE and FAR FROM HEAVEN and/or BOOGIE NIGHTS- Sat Nov 30 at 1(Rowlf), 4 (Heaven), and 7 (Boogie)- Museum of the Moving Image in Astoria- A potential triple feature, all for one admission. It's a long day into night if you want to do this, potentially a 12:30- 9:40 day, at least.
 
First, A Dog's Life: A Rowlf Retrospective. The first of a per monthly series of stuff from the Jim Henson archives. Now that the Museum of the Moving Image will be able to show off Henson material in a new wing of the museum (all of this supposedly by sometime in 2015), we can look forward to more of these compilations of Henson material as the months and years go by. Starting with a compilation of Rowlf material, the first popular Muppet I believe. Using the 50th anniversary of the Jimmy Dean show as a springboard, we'll see the character in the many different ways he was used. Commercials, industrials, film, and plenty of TV clips. Expect a ton of Muppet Show stuff, and maybe more than just a little bit of Muppet Babies thrown in. But the highlight, in time for the official start of the holiday season, should be Rowlf's appearance on the Jimmy Dean show, singing Have Yourself A Merry Little Christmas. Just the right amount of humor and emotion, sentimentality and just a tiny bit of pathos. One of the better TV clips from the era, and it should be a fun clipfest overall.
 
You can take the kids to see all this at 1PM, and then show them around the museum, do a little of the interactive stuff. But the next two films, part of a brief Julianne Moore retrospective (and the only two I'll have any time for in the series), leave the kids at home.
 
First, Far From Heaven, from 2002. Todd Haynes' film, doing a variation of a typical Douglas Sirk drama, with a bit of Fassbender alienation (according to Haynes). Set in the 1950s, Moore and Dennis Quaid's characters appear to be the ideal American family. But her marriage starts to go into a downward spiral when she spots her husband kissing another man. Conversion therapy doesn't help, and soon the wife develops feelings (and maybe more) toward her gardener (Dennis Haysbert), a black man which in a 1950s Sirk-esque film, tends to mean trouble for the characters. Usually in the form of violence and social denouncement.
 
A film that appealed much more to critics than to audiences. It seems like it won for something in every big and small critics' awards society, but that didn't help to generate a large audience, or even one large enough to cover the modest budget and advertising (one campaign to attract filmgoers and another to attract to the Academy). Yes it came away with 4 Oscar nominations; Moore for Actress, Haynes for Screenplay, Edward Lachman's Cinematography (for matching the color scheme of a typical Sirk film and then enhancing and building upon it), and Elmer Bernstein's Score. But in a year where the Academy was initially torn between Chicago and Gangs of New York (while leaving room for The Two Towers and The Pianist), Far From Heaven didn't have a shot. If you didn't see it back in the day or on video or cable, here's your chance.
 
Finally, Boogie Nights. Honestly, I don't know how much energy I'll have for this. Since I have more of a desire to catch the first two items I posted for this date, Boogie Nights wouldn't start till 7, and it's a little over two and a half hours, I don't know. Plus I caught this last summer at the Rubin Museum. Again, I don't know. Maybe the one hour or so break I'd have in-between Far From Heaven and Boogie Night to grab a snack and coffee might be all I need to get me through the screening. Because once I'm into it and for as long as I'm awake for the very beginning, then I know I'm good for the film, and boy is this film ever good. 
 
Yeah, it's easy to describe Paul Thomas Anderson's art-house hit as a journey from the fun loving era of 1970s porn on film, to the more streamlined 1980s era of porn on videotape, with more than a little loss of innocence. Even if their non-sexual intercourse skills would have gotten them laughed out of community theater, there's an earnestness, hopefulness and even a little naiveté in the 1970s scenes, that would take a major beating once the 80s come along. But this follows more along the lines of a family you create can mean more than the family you're born into path.This group of porn stars, director, and staff is generally not accepted within their biological families. But to paraphrase the tagline from The Big Chill, in a cold world, you need your friends to keep you warm.  

With a cast that is an embarrassment of riches, boy did Anderson do well for himself in this category. From the actors who were known as leads (Mark Wahlberg, Burt Reynolds), actors would become leads after Boogie Nights (Moore, Don Cheadle, Philip Seymour Hoffman, Thomas Jane), character actors (Luis Guzman, Alfred Molina, Philip Baker Hall, Ricky Jay, Joss Whedon/ Cabin in the Woods fave Tom Lenk), and actors who were working before and after this picture (William H. Macy, John C. Reily, and Graham who at 90 might only be thought of as Roller Girl) Oscar nominations for Anderson for his Screenplay, Moore for Supporting Actress, and Reynolds for Supporting Actor. Supposedly at the time, this wasn't considered a great deal for Burt, being cast in both Bean and this; a film about 70s porn from a director with only an art house flop (the decent Hard Eight) on the resume. He fired his agent shortly before or after filming, don't remember which. After supposedly receiving a big big check from a share of Bean's rather large grosses, and receiving his Oscar nomination for Boogie Nights, it was believed Burt's career was officially revived. After films such as The Crew, Mystery Alaska and Universal Soldier 2 and 3, that idea was put to rest real fast. Not that it should put you off from seeing this, it is his best screen performance after all.
 
I always liked the film, but seeing it with an audience about over 10 years after I did it the first time, I was blown away. That film puts you on an incredible journey, and if you can handle that not everything ends up sweet and light for everybody, you get one of the best films of 1997. Can't put up above L.A. Confidential or Martin Scorsese's little seen Kundun, but boy is it up there. And if I have the energy for it going in after such a long afternoon, I'll do it again:
 
 
 
 
 
 
Take care, and have a Happy Thankgivukkah. 
 
 

Thursday, November 14, 2013

November revials: mostly European edition













Hey all, Mike here with a list of November revivals, taking us right up to but not going into, Thanksgiving weekend. I haven't determined whether my Thanksgiving weekend list, which for my purposes will be Wednesday November 27th thru Sunday December 1st, will include holiday revivals from the first few days of December. I haven't decided that yet, but I will in the next week or so.


As for this list, I didn't intend it to be mostly comprised of European films, that's just what these theaters and/or museums are showcasing at the moment. One Italian film, one compilation that is most certainly American yet popular the world over, and the rest are British. Here we go, starting off with a film from the last list:



LORD OF THE FLIES (1965) for a 7 dollar bar minimum- introduced by Rachel Dratch- Fri Nov 15 at 9:30-Rubin Museum of Art- A cheap screening of the original Lord of the Flies, a seven dollar bar minimum. Tickets will be distributed starting at 6:45 for the 9:30 screening. Basically order your drink at the bar (doesn't need to have alcohol in it), and walk a few feet over to the easily indicated stool/desk/whatever and request your one ticket for your one drink.

The screening will be introduced by Rachel Dratch. Because of her popularity, I'm expecting tickets to move quickly. I've experienced crowds before with screenings at the Rubin, but never a sell-out. Not until last month's screening of Cabaret when I got there at 7, and by 7:10 I finally received my drink, but I was too late. So I won't be surprised if a similar deal occurs at this screening if I arrive too late.

For this night, we're getting Peter Brook's adaptation of William Golding's book. Shot in black and white, but not necessarily black and white in tone. The idea of a kid doing whatever he wants is not unfamiliar to us. Millions ran to see the light version of this story in Home Alone. Consider this a much more bitter pill to swallow. Using amateur young actors whose improvisations provide most of the dialogue, Brook successfully tells the story of a group of boys, marooned on an island with no adults. They split into 2 tribes, until baser instincts and survival of the fittest prevail. Ignore the 1990 remake and go for this:

http://www.rmanyc.org/pages/load/33


DEMON SEED with Let's Groove- Fri Dec 15 at 7- Museum of the Moving Image in Astoria- Since I'm posting films in order of screening, this should technically be listed ahead of Lord of the Flies. But I found out about this at the last minute, and I already had a kind of symmetry set up, so screw it.

Part of the Museum's Early Computer Films 1953-1987 retrospective, and the only film in this retrospective that I'll have any time to catch. Demon Seed, from 1977. Directed by Donald Cammell, adapted from a Dean Koontz novel. An underrated sci-fi film that was a little ahead of its time in terms of computers and how they much use they are in our everyday lives. In the story, advances in artificial intelligence result in a computer, Proteus IV, that is more advanced then his creator expected. It can cure cancer and help humanity in other ways, but it is developing a mental facility that said creator (Fritz Weaver) can no longer control. It's more interested in evolving then being taken over by the military, and will use his creator's wife (Julie Christie) against her will to do so. And by using her, I'm mean attempt to impregnate her with a hybrid form of life.

Creepily effective film, with bits of Rosemary's Baby and HAL from 2001 combined. Christie is good, but she's forced to play more of a victim for my taste. But considering her character had a miscarriage, isn't in a great marriage and is being threatened with rape and imprisonment in her own home by a killer super-computer of her husband's creation, you'd probably be a little hysterical too. A situation studio films wouldn't dare do two-three years later (this was made by MGM/ United Artists). Robert Vaughn stands out as the ominous voice of the computer, Proteus IV; he makes HAL 9000 sound like a benevolent choir boy in comparison.

Preceding Demon Seed will be Let's Groove, an Earth Wind and Fire music video from 1981. Aside from using early computer graphics and being directed by Ron Hayes, who did the visual effects for Demon Seed, I don't know what else it has to do with this retrospective. But hey, who's not into Earth Wind and Fire? Or to be more specific, who's not into Earth Wind and Fire that's worth knowing? And hey, this will certainly be more upbeat than the bulk of Demon Seed, and it's only about four minutes long:

http://www.movingimage.us/visit/calendar/2013/11/15/detail/welcome-to-computer-age-demon-seed-2


DISNEY MOUSE PARTY: MICKEY'S 85TH ANNIVERSARY- Mon Nov 18 at 7- Film Forum- In honor of the 85th anniversary of Mickey Mouse, the Film Forum will show a best of Walt Disney shorts. The Forum doesn't specify which shorts will be screened beyond 1928's Steamboat Willie. But there's likely to be an emphasis on Walt's early black and white animated shorts, particularly those that feature the world's most famous mouse and those shorts that may feature his supporting cast of characters more. In addition, the Forum claims they will also screen "Technicolor breakthroughs, and surprises galore". Don't know what that means, but I'm guessing this is the kind of screening that will sell out fast, so it will be best to but ahead of time and not wait for the last minute:

http://www.filmforum.org/movies/more/disney_mouse_party_mickeys


SANDRA- Fri Nov 22 at 7:30 and 9:30, Sat Nov 23 at 5:30 and 7:30, Mon Nov 25 at 9:50 and Wed Nov 27 at 7:30 and 9:30- Film Forum- A new DCP restoration of Luchino Visconti's 1965 film, released with little impact in the U.S. in 1966. I don't know the film, it seems to have made a bigger impact back in the day in Europe than in America. Claudia Cardinale stars in the title role, returning to Volterra with her American husband to remember her father, a scientist killed in Auschwitz. Sandra has issues with her past, to put it mildly. Especially when it comes to her stepfather, insane mother and her brother. There are secrets that Sandra's husband doesn't know, but they may come to light when Sandra's brother returns, and something funny seems to happen when they meet again.

I wouldn't call this a direct adaptation of Mourning Becomes Electra, but Visconti seems to have taken enough of that story to make it his own. Like I said , Sandra doesn't appear to have made much impact here in the States. One possible reason is that the original subtitles were made in Spain during the Franco dictatorship, and that some "queasy" aspects of the story expressed thru dialogue were deleted. But with this 4K Digital Restoration, this should no longer be an issue. Like I also said, I don't know this film, but I liked Visconti's The Leopard and really liked his Rocco and his Brothers, so I'm willing to take a chance here:

http://www.filmforum.org/movies/more/sandra


THE GO-BETWEEN- Fri Nov 22 at 9, and Sat Nov 23 at 6:45- Elinor Bunin Monroe Film Center at Lincoln Center- The first film I can have the chance to make in Lincoln Center's Harold Pinter retrospective. Not every screenplay of Pinter's will make the retrospective, just his comedies. Or "comedies" in the loosest and possibly most melancholy interpretation possible. You can see three movies from this retrospective for 20 dollars, and by sheer coincidence, there are three Pinter films posted on this list.

From 1970, an adaptation of L.P Hartley's novel, the last team-up of screenwriter Pinter and director Joseph Losey (The Servant). Elderly Michael Redgrave looks back at his youth. Specifically when he was 13 and stayed over a friend's home. He becomes friendly with Julie Christie's character, engaged to stiff upper lip Edward Fox's character. Yet the young man agrees to be a go-between, passing messages back and forth between her and rakish Alan Bates. We're talking 1900 for the flashbacks, that last full year of Queen Victoria. And when a young man that doesn't know things asks questions and makes assumptions in any era, never mind the end of the Victorian era.

Don't know this film either but it seems interesting. Sounds a little too close to Atonement for my taste, right down to a Redgrave looking back on something with at least a hint of regret. But a good director, screenwriter, and cast that also includes Michael Gough and Oscar nominated Margaret Leighton, means I'm willing to give this film the benefit of the doubt:
http://www.filmlinc.com/films/on-sale/the-go-between

THE SPY WHO CAME IN FROM THE COLD for a 7 dollar bar minimum- introduced by British Counsel General to New York, Danny Lopez- Fri Nov 22 at 9:30- Rubin Museum of Art- A cheap screening of the 1965 Cold War spy drama. Adapted from John le Carre's novel, the first successful adaptation of any of his works, directed by Martin Ritt. If you've seen the most recent version of Tinker Tailor Solider Spy, then you're already familiar with the world of Control and George Smiley. Both of whom are in this story, that I would say predates by around 11-12 years the events of the Gary Oldman film/ Alec Guinness mini-series. But don't look for them to be major characters in this, look instead toward Richard Burton's character; the almost classic definition of a burn-out. Burton's character has just went thru a failed mission in East Germany, and is done. Control is ready to make him a desk jockey, but Burton will have none of that. He wants to be human again, and makes steps toward that. Right down to starting a love affair with young, naive, English Communist Claire Bloom. But if he won't ride a desk or retire, then back out into the cold he must go . . .

Great cast includes Oskar Werner as an East German opponent/ possible target/ possible friend, Cyril Cusack as Control, Sam Wanamaker, Michael Horden and Bernard Lee. Oscar nominated for Burton for Actor and for Art Direction. About as grim a spy thriller as you can get, the polar opposite of the popular James Bond series. But also pretty darn good. Almost perfect for a cold November night.

The film will be introduced by the British Counsel General to New York, Danny Lopez. He'll probably fill in the blanks and give us a set-up for those of us not familiar with the history leading up to the events depicted in the film. Tickets become available near the bar on the night of the 22nd, around 6:45. Make sure you have your drink (minimum 7 dollars, doesn't have to have alcohol in it) when you request your ticket:

http://www.rmanyc.org/events/load/2341

THE FRENCH LIEUTENANT'S WOMAN- Sat Nov 23 at 1:30- Elinor Bunin Monroe Film Center at Lincoln Center- Part of Lincoln Center's Harold Pinter retrospective of films that are (extremely dark or melancholy) comedies. I guess I'm missing something if this is included, but I'll take any excuse to squeeze this one in. From 1981, Pinter and director Karol Reisz changed John Fowles' novel a bit. More than a bit actually. Yes you can still make some comparisons to the heroine of this particular book, and the title character of Tess of the d'Ubervilles. But we're talking about a book that gives us three possible endings, and goes on lengthy and semi-discussions of Darwin, Marx, and Tennyson, among others. How pray tell was that going to come off as an interesting movie?

No wonder it took about ten years, after many different directors and actors names were bandied about, before Pinter came on in 1979 to crack the nut. His and Reisz's solution: change it. As in keep the basic story that seems maybe a little too similar to Tess, have the story serve as the film-within-the-film for as we follow the two actors playing the leads engage in their own love affair, and blur the line between what is the film, what is the life of f-screen, and the lives of the actual Victorian characters. All this while never failing to compare and contrast the mores of Victorian England with England/America/ Hollywood circa 1980.

Whatever you do, make sure your director is competent, which Reisz certainly is. Make sure you have a great cinematographer to capture both periods, and this film does in the great Freddie Francis (Glory, The Elephant Man). And make sure you have talented actors who can pull off both variations. Which this film did, with the casting of two rising talents in some of the earliest lead film roles: Jeremy Irons and Meryl Streep. The film became a critical darling and did respectable business in the fall of 1981/award season of 1982. 5 Oscar nominations including Streep for Actress (no way she was beating Kate Hepburn for On Golden Pond), and Pinter for Screenplay Adaptation.
Then a funny thing happened, the film seemed to completely disappear in America. Ok, it didn't help that this was a United Artists film that was lucky to find any kind of audience after the company was sold to MGM post- Heaven's Gate. It's lack of audience and no one to champion the film here in the states in the mid and late 80s doesn't help. But this might be the least remembered of Meryl Streep's great performances. You might argue her role in Ironweed is less known, and I won't fight you there. But c'mon, more people know Streep's line of "A Dingo ate my BA-BY!" from A Cry in the Dark than actually saw the film itself. More people know the damn Dingo line than The French Lieutenant's Woman, unreal. Anyway, you got the chance to change that now. Sorry that this is the only date and time I can do:

http://www.filmlinc.com/films/on-sale/the-french-lieutenants-woman


THE HOMECOMING- Mon Nov 25 at 6:30 and Wed Nov 27 at 9- Elinor Bunin Monroe Film Center at Lincoln Center- Part of Lincoln Center's Harold Pinter retrospective of films that are (extremely dark or melancholy) comedies. And among Pinter plays, you don't get much darker than what I would say was arguably his biggest hit play, The Homecoming. The first I believe of the American Film Theater's adaptations of major plays. In the early and mid 1970s, a number of these came out to varying levels of success and acclaim. I've posted a few in the past, including The Iceman Cometh and A Delicate Balance, and now the first of these adaptations, The Homecoming.

When I've done write-ups in the past regarding All About Eve, I'm usually comparing the verbal attacks as being splashed with acid blood, like those creatures in Aliens. But with The Homecoming, the verbal attacks feel backed by threats of violence, and the pauses (a Pinter staple) can mean even more than some of the words. A working class family filled with two older brothers, one a brutal patriarch the other a bit of a rake, and the patriarch's two sons, one supposedly training to be a boxer while the other appears to be a pimp. The dynamic is shaken up with the return of the third son, a philosophy professor, returning from America with his wife. The wife is left to fend for herself, as each relative comes on to her. But don't think of her as powerless, as she can use words and gestures with just as much force as any single one of them could use violence.

This view of family dysfunction and family values might have been considered bizarre, at times over the top yet always fascinating, might seem a little too realistic today. Or perhaps, like with Network's depiction of TV news and reality TV being outrageous back in 1976 yet fully believable by 2001 at the latest, The Homecoming seems akin to other fictional dysfunctional families on TV and the big screen. Perhaps a bit more English, perhaps more eloquent or more likely to use words like hand grenades or knives, perhaps more willing to use silence as a weapon, but realistic none the less.

The idea was to preserve as much of the original production of The Homecoming on film as possible. The film's director and the play's first director, Sir Peter Hall, alongside screenwriter Pinter, worked to bring us closer inside this decaying house/family, while avoiding as many stage-bound story traps as possible. Bringing in acclaimed stage actor Cyril Cusack as the abusive patriarch, and four actors from the original West End production also helps greatly. Of note, Pinter's then-wife Vivian Merchant as the lone female in the film, and especially Ian Holm as the pimp son. If you think of Holm as merely Bilbo Baggins, you're in for a shock/treat. Yes, he's more violent in Alien. But in terms of a complete character with a near constant tinge of menace, as well as being the only family member who can stand up to the tough patriarch, well there's a reason why Holm's career shot up in England and The Homecoming is it. Overall, the Pinter film out of everything I've posted worth catching the most:


http://www.filmlinc.com/films/on-sale/the-homecoming



Let me know if there's interest. Take care.

Wednesday, November 06, 2013

November revivals: First Half







Hey all. Mike here with a revival list for the first half of November. Sorry it didn't come out sooner, but that was because of the film Nosferatu: I couldn't get anyone I knew interested in the silent original, and while I liked sections of the 1979 remake, I didn't like it enough to go and see it again. So here I am starting with November 8th, but I'm happy with this eclectic list. For the record, I plan to split November into 3 lists, with the last list handling the Thanksgiving weekend options.

Now the first 4 posts all conflict with each other on Friday the 8th, and the first 3 conflict with each other as well as the fifth post. I didn't exactly plan it that way, but I figure they'll be some form of natural selection when choosing. Here we go:
  


BIRTH OF THE LIVING DEAD and NIGHT OF THE LIVING DEAD- Fri Nov 8 and Mon Nov 11 at 8:35 (Birth) and 10:15 (Night)- IFC Center- A unique double feature that's scheduled to play only for one week at IFC Center. I'm only available for the two nights I've listed above. Birth of the Living Dead is a new documentary celebrating George A. Romero's Night of the Living Dead. Showing how college dropout Romero got a group of non-actors and mostly non-film types to make a movie on practically no budget whatsoever, and changed the horror genre and American Independent filmmaking forever. Immediately after the documentary ends, the film itself, Night of the Living Dead, will be screened in a High-Def digital projection. So the whole thing should last a little under 3 hours. If it goes 3 hours, that would be because of trailers, and they would be before the start of Birth, not between the films. If you're ambitious and don't mind a whole lot of black and white zombie action, here's your chance:
 
 
 
 
THE FRESHMAN- Fri Nov 8, Mon Nov 11 and Wed Nov 13 at 6:35- Film Forum- A DCP restoration of a Harold Lloyd classic. Lloyd plays a college freshman, desperately trying to be liked. Constantly mocked on the toney campus no matter what he does, he decides to try out for the football team. He barely makes the team as the waterboy, but when the Big Game occurs and his teammates are literally dropping like flies, there's literally only one player left for the coach to call upon . . . .
 
Lloyd's biggest hit, making fun of collegiate types long before the likes of Animal House and other college comedies. The big game itself was shot in the Rose Bowl, with a crowd with nothing better to do during halftime of the Stanford-USC game. With a new score from composer Carl Davis, conducted by Davis with the Chamber Orchestra of London. Davis himself will introduce the 6:35 screening on Friday, November 8th: 
 
 
 
SIDEWALK STORIES-  Fri Nov 8, Mon Nov 11, Wed Nov 13 and Thurs Nov 14 at 8:10 and 10- Film Forum- A DCP restoration of a film NOT AVAILABLE on DVD. Never seen all of it, but now seems like a good opportunity. From 1989, a sort of time capsule of Manhattan. But more than that, it's an homage to Chaplin's The Kid, set in then-contemporary times, mostly in black and white, and shot as a silent film. Writer-Director Charles Lane stars as a homeless man in the Village, forced to take care of a little girl (played by Lane's then two year old daughter), after her gambler father is stabbed and killed. While it tries to maintain telling the story as delicately as Chaplin did at times with The Kid and other films (including a potential love interest almost straight out of City Lights), it's not at the expense of the downplaying the realities of life on the street. Shot over 15 brutally cold days in February 1988 (I think, not sure exactly) on a shoestring budget and silent, except for one scene regarding the other homeless people around him. Plus Edie Falco in a small early role.
 
The film itself was a surprise hit at Cannes, famously receiving a fifteen minute standing ovation and winning a special award. It went on to become an art-house hit here and abroad, and aloud Lane to make a film with Disney. But that film was True Identity that, despite decent reviews, tanked in the summer of 1991. And aside from a role in Posse and being a judge at the Sundance film festival (both in 1993), I don't know what happened to Lane, or why Sidewalk Stories practically disappeared, having never been released on home video, except for some limited VHS distribution that's been long out of date. Maybe Lane can tell us what happened when he introduces the film on Friday, Nov 8th: 
 
 
 
SHADOW OF A DOUBT for a 7 dollar bar minimum- introduced by John Kelly- Fri Nov 8 at 9:30- Rubin Museum of Art- This film is only playing on Friday the 8th, as opposed to ones I posted above. A cheap screening of the classic Hitchcock film. And by cheap I mean a seven dollar bar minimum at the Rubin. Get your drink (alcohol or non-alcohol) as early as 6:45. Hopefully the tickets won't move out as quickly as they did last month for Cabaret. Got there by 7and by the time I was ready to claim a ticket at 7:10, all the tickets were grabbed! I don't expect this to be the case with Shadow, but who knows now.
 
Now as for Shadow of a Doubt, not my favorite Hitchcock of all time, but among his work from the 1940s, I would only put Notorious ahead of this. As wealthy widows keep disappearing, Joseph Cotten's lovable Uncle Charlie visits his niece "Young Charlie" (Teresa Wright) in her very average middle-American town (shot-on-location in Santa Rosa, California), but when someone mentions "The Merry Widow Murderer" . . . Often claimed as Hitchcock's own favorite, he must have got a big kick out the idea of small town Americana having evil nestled in its bosom. "Authentic Americana" (my quotes) from the screenwriters, Thornton Wilder (Our Town) and Sally Benson (Meet Me In St. Louis). The touches feel believable, which helps contrast with the wolf in sheep's clothing in the form of Uncle Charlie. And as good as Theresa Wright is, I come away admiring Cotten's performance more. Some times pleasant and gentle, sometimes incapable of keeping his hair-trigger emotions in check, with practically every shade in between. Especially his monologue at the dinner table about those wives, those little wives; very reminiscent of the monologue Orson Welles would give to Cotton's character in The Third Man.
 
The screening will be introduced by John Kelly. Sorry that I'm not aware who he is, but here's his bio via the Rubin's website:
 
"John Kelly is a performance and visual artist who creates character-driven performance works.  His subjects have included Joni Mitchell, Antonin Artaud, and Caravaggio.  He has collaborated with composers David Del Tredici, Laurie Anderson, Natalie Merchant, and Antony.  Acting credits include the Broadway production of James Joyce’s The Dead (Bartel D’Arcy), and The Clerk’s Tale (Spencer Reese), a film by James Franco.  He choreographed and performed (as Krishna) in Douglas Cuomo’s Arjuna’s Dilemma at BAM.  His awards include Bessies, Obies, the NEA, and an Alpert Award.  Fellowships include the Guggenheim, The Radcliffe Institute, Sundance, USA Artists 2012, and The American Academy in Rome. He will sing ’The Caravaggio Songs’ at Joe’s Pub on November 11th.":
 
 
 
RISKY BUSINESS- Wed Nov 13 at 7- AMC Empire and Regal Union Square Stadium 14- The film that made Tom Cruise a star gets a special run. Whether you prefer Tom dancing around in his underwear, or you prefer Rebbeca De Mornay wearing nothing at all, the sleeper hit of the summer of 83 fits the bill. And a pretty good film to boot. In Manhattan only. For the past month or so, AMC Empire and the Regal Union Square has been doing DCP screenings of some Warner Bros. hits, including Bonnie and Clyde, The Shining, and Dirty Harry. I believe this is the last of the scheduled screenings this year. Full price I'm afraid, but if you have an AMC or Regal pass, this is better than most of the other films you'd probably find in those theaters on the 13th:
 
 
 
 
LORD OF THE FLIES (1965) for a 7 dollar bar minimum- introduced by Rachel Dratch- Fri Nov 15 at 9:30-Rubin Museum of Art- A cheap screening of the original Lord of the Flies, a seven dollar bar minimum. Tickets will be distributed starting at 6:45 for the 9:30 screening. Basically order your drink at the bar (doesn't need to have alcohol in it), and walk a few feet over to the easily indicated stool/desk/whatever and request your one ticket for your one drink. 
 
The screening will be introduced by Rachel Dratch. Because of her popularity, I'm expecting tickets to move quickly. I've experienced crowds before with screenings at the Rubin, but never a sell-out. Not until last month's screening of Cabaret when I got there at 7, and by 7:10 I finally received my drink, but I was too late. So I won't be surprised if a similar deal occurs at this screening if I arrive too late.
 
For this night, we're getting Peter Brook's adaptation of William Golding's book. Shot in black and white, but not necessarily black and white in tone. The idea of a kid doing whatever he wants is not unfamiliar to us. Millions ran to see the light version of this story in Home Alone. Consider this a much more bitter pill to swallow. Using amateur young actors whose improvisations provide most of the dialogue, Brook successfully tells the story of a group of boys, marooned on an island with no adults. They split into 2 tribes, until baser instincts and survival of the fittest prevail. Ignore the 1990 remake and go for this: 
 
 
 

Let me know if there's interest. Later all.