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Karina on SpoutBlog

  • Jeffrey Lyons Gets Fired

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    NBC has canceled Reel Talk, the Saturday morning movie chat show starring Jeffrey Lyons and Alison Bailes (formerly of IFC’s “At the Angelica”). Never exactly a stoker of the flames of the zeitgeist, Reel Talk is probably most familiar to New Yorkers, who have for the past year or so been exposed to a repurposed form of the show screening as part of the loop of noise blaring out of flat screens in the back of taxis. Because this show was useful as a repository for fluffy pull quotes for indistinguishable studio films with the consistency of oatmeal, but was otherwise considered by most people who actually care about movies to be generally unwatchable, the sort of indignation (righteous or otherwise) that accompanies the firing of most name film critics will probably not surround this story. Though Bailes and Lyons have at least temporarily lost their livelihoods as well as a platform from which to influence moviegoers, it seems unlikely that anyone will bemoan the cancellation of Reel Talk as yet another blow to the already crippled culture of film criticism, because Reel Talk’s contribution to film criticism mostly sucked.

    But still … what are the chances that the network would replace the bad move critics show with a good movie critics show, or any critics show at all? To say that they’re slim would seem to be overly optimistic. This leaves Lyons’ son Ben as the default prince of TV film criticism, by virtue of the fact that he and his partner Smart Ben are the only TV film critics who still have a show. How long do we give At the Movies before it too falls in the face of total consumer disinterest, thus rendering the post-Ebert era of advert slush branded as criticism mercifully dead? Or will the zombie corpse of At the Movies continue on indefinitely, feasting on brains already softened like ripe bananas, each needlessly hyperbolic, context-oblivious pullquote hammering another nail into the coffin of public film debate?

    Happy weekend!


    Originally posted on:SpoutBlog » Karina Longworth

  • David Lynch’s Interview Project

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    David Lynch’s Interview Project

    When the trailer for David Lynch’s new web series Interview Project premiered in early May, I was so skeptical that I mocked the repetitive banality of Lynch’s “drinking game-inspiring intro.” I’ve since had a chance to see five episodes of the series — which premieres publicly on June 1 and through which Lynch and Co. will unveil one short video each day for the rest of the year — and now I think I’ve found the method motivating the mundanity.

    We’re to take that introduction as its producer’s statement of its thesis, but it also reveals something about its form. Addressing the camera in his rumpled shirt and jacket, firing off a deliberately prosaic monologue in sing-song, with the words “people”, “interview” and “different” pushed so many times as to completely lose meaning, Lynch appears to be using that banality as a smokescreen. And why not? This is, essentially, what he’s done for most of his working life.

    In that intro, Lynch reduces the Project to its essence: “People have been found, and interviewed.” The word “found” implies that these people were lost, which theoretically could be taken to mean that Lynch’s “team”, as he calls them (led by his son Austin Lynch and Jason S., the producer of a 2007 documentary about the making of Inland Empire) have landed an exclusive with Amelia Earhart. In practice, Interview Subject’s projects are a different kind of lost. Residents of rural America living what appear to be at best lower-middle-class lives, resigned to their lack of control over the random acts of violence (at the hands of strangers, or abusive men) that seem to shape their destiny, all are lost to the dominant media picture of contemporary Americana. That’s obviously part of the point: “What I hope people will get out of Interview Project is the chance to meet these people.” Drawing a distinction between “people” as in viewers and “people” as in subjects, Lynch even seems to give the latter use of the word a slightly more emphatic inflection — “PEE-pole!” — as if he’s talking about alien species.

    Most of the PEE-pole also seem to live lives marked by loss. Lynch couldn’t have asked for a better Lynchian character than Anthony, who evenly relates a history of hardship (shotgun married too young, a son lost to random gun shots), and offers first provincial mysticism (“Can I just put it point blank to you? That old devil’s runnin’ round here real good.”) and then oddball, oblique slang (“I don’t put my flavor in nobody’s Kool-Aid.”) to describe his determination to keep to himself. Another sample episode features Lynn, a weather-beaten blonde who calls to mind a real-world equivalent of Wild at Heart’s Lula all grown-up. In a nod to another Lynch film, we fade out on Lynn riding a lawnmower.

    The common thread amongst most of the people interviewed seems to be an inability to hopefully picture the future. Of the five episodes I sampled, Lynn’s offered the most affecting example of this. After relating her various struggles mostly matter-of-factly, she closes with a loaded platitude. “I just want everything to be alright,” she says, her voice cracking. She then makes a self-deprecating face of embarassment, and rubs her eyes –– wearily, tearily. There could not be a more mundane desire than wanting “everything to be alright”, and yet it defies cynicism, especially coming from a woman for whom “alright” is something mystical and unknown, with no lived meaning. In this context, “alright” is as oblique a concept as anything in Inland Empire. (Similarly, in another episode, 17 year-old Jenny tells stories of getting out from under the tyranny of a bad man, and repeatedly says that now it’s all over, she just wants to “relax”.)

    The project of Interview Project seems to be to locate Lynch’s patented aesthetic and concerns in a real version of Americana, one where the kitsch hides a very real despair   Even if some of Lynch’s portraits veer towards caricature, this is probably for the best — in the realm of web video, caricature sells better than anything else. The segments in which over-the-top weirdos unwittingly offer themselves up for the derisive consumption of the giggling masses (see: Clinton) serve the same function as Mullholland Drive’s lesbian antics — they’ll attract an audience with pat shock, who will hopefully stay put for the genuine subversion Lynch wrenches out of less obvious targets.


    Originally posted on:SpoutBlog » Karina Longworth

  • Bad Lieutenant Trailer

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    What, you don’t have a lucky crack pipe?

    See also: “I wish these people die in Hell.”


    Originally posted on:SpoutBlog » Karina Longworth

  • Asia Argento Defends Cannes Jury Selections

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    For Vulture, Dennis Lim allows Cannes juror Asia Argento to plug 42×42, a short film omnibus series with a vodka sponsor that the filmmaker/actress organized with her husband, and then gets to the good stuff: how come a bunch of movies that critics hated won big fancy Cannes awards? Asia, perhaps unsurprisingly, eagerly takes all the credit/blame.

    “I was very happy with [Best Director winner] Kinatay,” Argento told Lim, although her subsequent praise of the film sort of seems like an insult: “It felt like the director had no idea how to do it and picked up a camera and was shooting the first movie of history. The 45-minute scene in the car where nothing happens I thought was incredible.” Argento also defended honoring the equally derided Spring Fever with the Best Screenplay prize, even though “the movie was very long.”

    So was pissing off critics part of the plan? When Lim told her that both the screenplay and director prizes were booed in the press room, Argento responded, “I know. That’s always a good sign.”


    Originally posted on:SpoutBlog » Karina Longworth

  • Who Knew Film Restoration Could Be This Sexy?

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    Who Knew Film Restoration Could Be This Sexy?

    Thanks in part to the ever-impressive professionalism of Delta Airlines, I didn’t arrive in Cannes until after Martin Scorsese’s big announcement that his World Cinema Foundation (newly executive directed by Kent Jones, who collaborated with Scorsese on Val Lewton — The Man in the Shadows) would team up with Criterion, B-Side and The Auteurs to align the cause of film restoration with emerging models of online film distribution and discussion. And not having much time to read press releases while overseas, I didn’t realize until I returned to New York a couple of days ago that fruits of the collaboration are already tangible: there are currently four WCF films streaming for free on The Auteurs. And not knowing anything about any of the four films, I decided to watch 1964 Berlin Film Festival Winner Dry Summer last night. Trying to sum up the experience of spontaneously watching that film on my laptop, completely blindly without any real knowledge as to what I was in for, two words immediately come to mind: Holy. Shit.

    The black-and-white Summer tells the story of Osman, a mustachioed farmer who builds a dam to keep the water supply on his hilltop land from flowing down to the villagers below; and Hassan, his younger, studlier brother, who marries the beautiful Bahar. Osman, a widower, is sexually frustrated to the point of psychosis; by night he sheepishly spies on his brother in marital bliss, by day he struts around shirtless, clearly wielding the dam as a surrogate for his dick. Eventually, the brothers’ conflict with the villagers over the water becomes violent, and Hassan ends up in jail. Osman manipulates his brother’s absence to get closer to Bahar, enslaving her with her own longing for Hassan. In one memorable scene, Osman asks his brother’s wife to climb a ladder while he stands below, looking up her skirt at her giant bloomers whilst lasciviously slurping yogurt; in another, Osman saves the woman’s life by sucking the venom out of a snake bite in her leg … and then keeps on sucking.

    I can’t imagine a better argument for the relevancy of this project than a film like Dry Summer, which turns any and all notions as to the stodginess of old, foreign, lost cinema on their head with good old fashioned sleaze. Yes, as the first Turkish film to earn acclaim in Europe, it’s unquestionably “important,” and with its surprisingly agile cinematography and brilliant traditional guitar-meets-freakout free jazz score, it looks and sounds like art. And yet, the film was originally released in England under the title I Had My Brother’s Wife for a reason: for large swaths of its 88 minute running time, Dry Summer’s anti-greed parable seems like nothing but an excuse on which to hang the kind of over-the-top sexploitation that marked the American B films of the same era.

    If the twin shining strengths of the Internet are its unmatched function as an archive, and its ability to cater to any prurient whim quietly, privately and efficiently, then what better way to launch the merger of museum work with Internet consumption, than with a film that’s simulataneously undeniably worthy of archival efforts and also totally, thrillingly base?


    Originally posted on:SpoutBlog » Karina Longworth

  • Cannes 2009 Wrap

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    2009 may be remembered as a “down year” for the Cannes Film Festival — certainly, some press and industry faces familiar from previous years were nowhere in sight; certainly, celebrity directors like Ang Lee, Pedro Almodovar and Quentin Tarantino showed up with new films that failed to single-handedly rescue the world economy by the end of their first screenings — but isn’t it a down year all around, not just for film but for, like, life on Earth? In a time as stagnant and depressed as this, what can we reasonably expect a film festival to do? Never once in my eight days at the festival did I question whether Cannes does or does not matter. Spending hours each day in Market badge lines composed of Cannes’ equivalent of rabble (myself included — I was standing in those lines because my coverage is not important enough to the Festival to merit press accreditation) the weight of the event doesn’t seem up for debate — you’re literally fighting over seats with too many people to whom Cannes matters to.

    Back in New York now, maybe I should have a clearer perspective, but it’s hard. Even as the bigger films failed to meet my expectations, even as Lars Von Trier stomped in like Godzilla, swallowed the press corps whole and left the festival in ruins (and I *liked* Antichrist), even if I went home without seeing anything that matched 2008’s A Christmas Tale or Modern Life as sure-to-endure masterworks international cinema … I’ll still do whatever it takes to go back next year. I spend an awful lot of time covering things out of obligation because they’re perceived to matter to someone; in return, let me be selfish. Let me have Cannes, if for no other reason than because it matters to me.

    And with that: after the jump, you’ll find my collected coverage. At right, the one photo I managed to take of “local color” - because even the coffee at Cannes this year came with unneccessary nudity.

    Air Doll and a Serge Gainsberg biopic

    Hipsters

    Like You Know It All

    Lars Von Trier’s press conference

    Go Get Some Rosemary

    A Prophet

    Antichrist

    Inglourious Basterds

    Eventual Un Certain Regard winner Dogtooth, and market gem Disco and Atomic War

    Editing Antichrist, and the Godard/Truffaut doc Two of the Wave

    Gaspar Noe’s Enter the Void and Tsai Ming-Liang’s Face


    Originally posted on:SpoutBlog » Karina Longworth

 


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