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Karina on SpoutBlog

  • Let’s Recycle! BlogNosh 06/30/08

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    • Some thoughts on Vanity Fair’s Bright Young Hollwood thing: the only people I recognize besides for Jonah Hill and the kids from The Wackness are on this page, but that’s because I don’t watch Gossip Girl, right? Also: is Kat Dennings, like, wearing a bat suit?
    • There are some things in No Country For Old Men that look a lot like things from Raising Arizona. Discuss.
    • Considering similar lines in Wanted and Jumper that each put the audience member in the unfavorable position of being condescended to by a pretty-boy unlikely action star, Glenn Kenny wonders, “Have screenwriters become so defensive/resentful on account of churning out quasi-nihilistic, faux-convoluted, graphic-novel-mytho-Babel tripe like this that they feel compelled to lash out at the audience that laps their nonsense up?”

    Originally posted on:SpoutBlog » Karina Longworth

  • War Inc DVD Release Delayed

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    War, Inc.  (2008)

    An addendum on this post noted that War, Inc, the satire co-written by and starring John Cusack which I loathed but which has become something of a surprise spring hit, was scheduled to come out on DVD tomorrow after just seven weeks in theaters. I wrote:

    War Inc['s DVD release] is notable only because First Look’s ridiculously tight seven week window from theatrical premiere to DVD street date looks, in retrospect, like another in a line of smart moves designed to capitalize on the film’s surprise cult appeal. Of course, the film’s box office potency faded as its release expanded, and if it had done less well in its first weeks, this would look a lot like a dumping, but that’s fodder for another, far more bitter post…

    Ah, but then the target moved: shortly after that post was published, I got an email from David Hudson informing me that the film’s DVD release has been bumped to October. The move happened apparently quite suddenly––a number of outlets have published reviews of the film in recent days, ostensibly pegged to the original DVD release date, as the film’s theater count stayed steady this past weekend. Box Office Mojo currently has the title up as a release for tomorrow, although Amazon has changed their sales page to reflect a new release date of October 14.

    So why the sudden switch? It could be due to a combination of a number of factors: the film is still doing sort of okay in theaters (though it doesn’t look like it has the legs to grow beyond its current count of 33 screens, it only dropped about 12% last week, to earn a per screen average about equivalent to that of certified summer sleeper The Visitor); there also may be a case to be made that it’ll be easier to sell DVDs of a political satire in the weeks immediately leading up to the election, than in relative lull in the campaign season (and a holiday week, no less).

    But the exact thing that looked sort of brilliant about the seven week window plan––that First Look would be able to capitalize on more or less organic serendipity about the film, due to the fact that Cusack’s tireless talking head campaigning on its behalf has sort of worked theatrically, and would thus not have to spend extra money on a campaign surrounding the DVD––now looks like money down the drain. If the DVD reviews to come out in the past week are any indication (Steve Erickson called War, Inc a lowest-common-denominator comedy, the equivalent of a Larry the Cable Guy vehicle for readers of The Nation“), the distributor will once again be forced to rely on creativity to sell their DVD in lieu of critical support. And creativity costs money.


    Originally posted on:SpoutBlog » Karina Longworth

  • “Doesn’t anyone just f*** anymore?”

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    Under discussion:

    Wanted  (2008)

    The Women  (2008)

    Sex and the City  (2008)

    Two quotes just popped out of my feed reader and clubbed me over the head; when I came to, I recalled a couple of other soundbites from my week in LAFF that sort of seem related. First, from David Poland’s eye-roll at “Tom & Jerry On Crack cartoon” Wanted:

    Wanted is more like the last of big budget porn, throwing around endless style along with massive fake boobs and enough smoke to choke a Scott. Guys still get off on it - guys can get off on anything that tells them it wants to get them off - but one simply has to wonder, “Doesn’t anyone just f*** anymore?”

    We’ll get back to that. First, a digression…

    When I was at LAFF, I met an famous gay filmmaker at a party, and he started cattily joking about how a certain extremely famous married actor and actress are always going on shows like Letterman and bragging about how they “love to have heterosexual sex.” The filmmaker said this couple had to be covering for one another’s secret gay life, because no one who is actually having heterosexual sex uses the phrase “heterosexual sex” to talk about it.

    The actress in question is, totally coincidentally, a costar in Diane English’s much-feared remake of The Women, for which Nikki Finke says she singlehandedly convinced Warner Brothers to quadruple their marketing budget. Her reasoning as to why an extra $20 million or so of ads is going to pay off:

    Forget about the merits of the movie: there’s potential for box office moolah stirred up by some savvy Sex-exploiting, Even if the movie is no good, it could reach SATC’s two-quadrant audience with ad slogans like: “If you loved Sex And The City, then you need to see The Women who started it all.” … I bet women eager for another pic about female friendships and upscale lifestyles and urban sex will open The Women for a $20+M weekend.

    Ah, the old “bad sex is better than no sex at all,” argument. Might be more feasible if English herself hadn’t, just days before at LAFF, a) implicated herself as Finke’s top informant, and b) announced that her back-up plan for the film involves the sloppy math-dependent invention of a “fifth quadrant” for gay men.

    So the boys get their porn, the girls get theirs, and if they decide they’ve already had enough this summer, gay men will be graciously offered the scraps. Everywhere you look, Hollywood’s asking us to shout our heterosexual impulses from the rooftops––or at least, funnel them into the box office, “even if the movie is no good.” To answer David Poland’s question: no, I don’t think they do.

    Related: the TCM newsletter that just arrived in my inbox informs that the original The Women will be airing on the cable channel at 10pm EST tomorrow night. Preview it above.


    Originally posted on:SpoutBlog » Karina Longworth

  • Mad Men on DVD

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    Under discussion:

    War, Inc.  (2008)

    The most notable DVD release of the week* has to be the first season of Mad Men, which hits the street tomorrow just in time for newbies to get caught up on the AMC series before season two premieres in late July (it’s been available on iTunes for quite some time). I went on YouTube looking for clips from my favorite episodes and found the above fan vid, which focuses on Betty Draper (January Jones), the miserable model-turned-housewife of mysterious ad man Don Draper. I love it, if for no other reason than that it really draws out the way the show takes mid-century cinematic archetypes and weds them to real-seeming, endlessly multi-faceted characterizations.

    This clip specifically highlights Mad Men’s Hitchcock allusions: the slate-gray, Madeline Elster-esque suit that Betty wears to therapy; Don’s spying, here symbolized by his employment of a home movie camera like something out of a cross between Peeping Tom and Rear Window; and my favorite, Betty’s fateful encounter with a flock of birds.

    Betty is clearly based on the typical Hitchcock blonde-in-peril, a cool, vaguely shallow but anxiety-plagued beauty on the run from some kind of terror. Betty rocks the porcelain face with the furroed bros as well as Grace Kelly or Tippi Hedren, but she’s got virtually nothing tangible to fear (with the possible exception of her husband’s infidelities, but it’s made pretty clear that she’s certainly not the only girl on the block with that thorn in her domestic side) beyond her own sadness. She’s also got nowhere to go but the supermarket, and her only outlets for her tensions are sexual fantasies about door-to-door salesmen and a really weird relationship with the young son of the local single mom. It’s like a hypothetical sequel to North By Northwest, where Cary Grant’s character goes back to his normal work life in Manhattan and Eva Marie Saint’s moves into his suburban split-level and starts taking care of his kids. No wonder Betty drinks during the day.

    *Unless you count War Inc, which is notable only because First Look’s ridiculously tight seven week window from theatrical premiere to DVD street date looks, in retrospect, like another in a line of smart moves designed to capitalize on the film’s surprise cult appeal. Of course, the film’s box office potency faded as its release expanded, and if it had done less well in its first weeks, this would look a lot like a dumping, but that’s fodder for another, far more bitter post…


    Originally posted on:SpoutBlog » Karina Longworth

  • Anti-Strike Activism From Temp X

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    Have you been following The Hollywood Temp Diaries? It’s an anonymous Blogger blog with the tagline, “I am one of those barnacles on the hull of the good ship ‘Hollywood.’ These are my stories.” Good stuff, especially if you subscribe to that dirty secret that most Hollywood jobs are just as glamorous and exciting as, like, working anywhere else. The blog’s author, known only as Temp X, has been drawing a direct line between the impending SAG strike and total global apocalypse for awhile. A couple of days ago, s/he posted a “videotorial” to hammer home her/his case, and for people like me who haven’t been able to get it up to care much about an actor’s strike, it’s the perfect vehicle for impressing the seriousness of the situation. More here.


    Originally posted on:SpoutBlog » Karina Longworth

  • LAFF: Sex and Place

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    Under discussion:

    Trinidad  (2008)

    Friday at LAFF brought back-to-back screenings of two very different documentaries about how sexual politics and policies within two individual communities come to define these worlds-apart spaces. Sarah Friedman and Esy Casey’s Thing With No Name follows two women in sub-Saharan African villages as they controversially begin a program of anti-retroviral drugs after having been diagnosed with full-blown AIDS.  Undeniably beautiful to look at and powerfully poetic in its depiction of a community of women stricken with poverty and sick with a virus that they don’t fully understand, the film ironically and sadly fails at its propagandist mission when tragedies of timing and fate intervene. Meanwhile, Trinidad offers a portrait of the titular “sex change capitol of the world,” a frontier town in Colorado where a male-to-female post-op transsexual rockstar surgeon named Marci is pioneering the art and science of genital reassignment surgery. In tone and content these films couldn’t be more different, but they still constitute a sort of double feature of films about real people living lives impacted by scientific attempts to customize fate.

    Trinidad begins with rapid-fire testimonials about the town from three women who look like your conservative aunt, but sound like your gay uncle. We learn that the town has been a destination for sex change operations––mostly male-to-female; female-to-male operations are also done, but far less frequently, in part because “the technology” is not as advanced on that end––since the mid-60s, when a local plastic surgeon began performing them at the request of a social worker. When that biologically male doctor retires, former gynecologist Marci moves to town and takes over the practice. With business booming, two of Marci’s former patients start building Morning Glow, a halfway house of sorts where post-op patients can settle into their new bodies with the support of those who have been through the procedure and the psychological transition.

    Trinidad suffers from a lack of consistency in tone and concern. Oddly, though the subjects themselves are treated with the utmost respect and each treats the camera with increasing confidence in return, directors Jay Hodges and PJ Raval show an overall lack of tact with some of their visual choices. We move quickly from crudely drawn diagrams to long, lingering close-ups on graphic photographs of completed surgeries; later, the camera takes us directly into the operating room for a view of a suregery-in-progress that’ll be unsettling to anyone even remotely squeamish about blood, regardless of their personal attitude towards genital reassignment. Trinidad will inevitably find a cult following amongst anyone who really wants to see various varieties of man-made vagina on a big screen; the problem is not that this stuff is in there at all, but that it’s so unexpectedly graphic, and there’s so much of it, that it threatens to overwhelm the filmmakers’ subtler, more insightful and exciting findings

    For instance: Trinidad shifts gears in its second half to examine how members of the community of transsexuals in town struggle to establish and broadcast their true identities through their new bodies, which inevitably leads to conflicts both with the other couple of thousand residents of the town and amongst one another. There seems to be a learning curve, where the girls move from endearingly tacky stylistic choices and cultural references (The Vagina Monologues is quoted as philosophy; frosted bangs and lavender abound) to a more mature sense of how to express femininity. As the daughter of one of the Morning Glow owners puts it, when these ladies get their new bodies, “It’s like they’re 13 all over again.” Adolescents at age 50, they rush to move through years of identity formation as quickly as possible.

    You’d think, as the doctor responsible for most of their surgeries, Marci would be supportive of this process, but instead she seems to look down on the girls who come out of the OR with fully-functional new genitals but gender identities still not fully-formed. At one point, she visits Morning Glow and scolds the ladies there for laying out tablecloth in the wrong color for the season, as if she’s the old pro impatiently waiting for the amateurs to catch up. It’s a completely unnecessary argument, and it’s completely revealing. If Trinidad often seems to lack serious stakes, it may be because there’s not enough of this kind of material focusing on the basic conflicts of everyday life, which say more about the day-to-day experience of living in this town than any glimpse at the surgeries themselves ever could.

    Based on stakes that are literally life-or-death,Thing With No Name immediately engrosses by dropping us straight into a land that had just begun to recover from the racial struggles of the 20th century (”Things improved,” says one of the few men seen on screen. “The police stopped arresting and beating up black people.”) when HIV/AIDS started to ravage the community. We’re taken into two rural Zulu villages, each populated by a few extended families worth of women. Husbands, brothers and fathers are either at work in Johannesburg, where they contract the virus and bring it home, or they’ve already been eliminated by sickness or crime. There’s no electricity––women sleep on mats on the floor and take their drug cocktails by candlelight––and only a handful of medical clinics to serve a wider community of a hundred thousand people.

    The crush of people fighting for these limited medical resources are one reason why neither of the film’s subjects, Ntombeleni and Danisile, are aware that they’ve contracted the HIV virus until they’ve become sick enough to be diagnosed with full-blown AIDS; another factor is the reluctance to directly address the epidemic in the community. The virus that’s systematically decimating the population is as likely to be referred to by its clinical name as by a variety of sadly poetic referents, including “Decimator of the Nation.” Women educate one another through singing traditional tribal songs that name drop the names of AIDS drugs (”We saw Stocrin/ We saw Stavir 50″) like rappers reel off brands of bling. Not entirely confident that the mysterious cocktails of pills are working in the longterm when they seem to do little but induce dementia in the short term, local nurses drum up home remedies to salve individual maladies to combat specific pains.

    The film, which tracks the progress of both women over the course of several summer months, moves slowly, and that seems fitting. These patients are essentially playing a waiting game––waiting for information, waiting for care, waiting to see how the drugs will affect them, and inevitably waiting to die. As an aid worker puts it in the film, it’s impractical to look at the current state of the epidemic as a fight against death; instead, they’re “fighting the inhumanity of silence.” But the pacing is a major reason why the tension of this place with no electricity but fledgling access to high-tech miracle drugs pops off the screen. There’s an inherent sadness to a portrait of a place where education has to focus on reacting to infection rather than preventing it, because the sanctity of these women’s sexual lives––due to a combination of rampant rape and their husbands’ cultural indifference to sexual fidelity––are completely out of their own control. With its painterly images fields on fire and patient portraits of faces in quiet pain, the film itself harnesses that tension, and joins the fight as a teaching tool played in the key of fine art.


    Originally posted on:SpoutBlog » Karina Longworth

 


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