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  • Spout Crashes Sundance

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    Spout crashes The Sundance Film Festival! We are providing the official coverage for Myspace this year and we're bringing along Joe Swanberg and Ronnie Bronstein. These guys will offer a fresh perspective on the festival as award winning filmmakers who are first time attendees. To watch our coverage head over to sundance.spout.com and for interesting reviews and festival relfection, check out blog.spout.com where Karina and Kevin will be posting regularly to keep you in the loop.

  • Sundance 2008: Eat, For This is My Body

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    eatthelastsupper1.jpg

    The surreal, virtually non-narrative first feature from filmmaker Michelange Quay, Eat, For This is My Body is the rare Sundance title that unquestionably bears the mark of an obstinately independent vision. It’s by turns exhilarating and totally confounding, and it’s certainly not always successful, but it is always a challenge, and for that alone it pops out of the pack. It’s also incredible to look at. The opening series of arial sweeps across Haiti, from postcard-perfect coastline to inland slums to desolate mountain terrain, is absolutely breathtaking.

    The film begins and ends with slow, deliberate montages depicting contemporary Haitian life, from a sea of black faces in a marketplace to a pregnant woman sweating in a slum, to a late night dance party. It looks like ethnography, the nameless subjects eyeing the camera with suspicion, and it’s clearly delineated from the main section of the film, which takes place in a massive mansion, home to a middle-aged white woman, her aging, ailing mother, and their black servant.

    It’s in this section that the film settles into a series of dreamlike tableau, designed to illustrate the relationship between colonizer and colonized, a loosely-woven series of discreet moving paintings about the dynamics of difference. Some of these scenes and setups are more conceptually effective than others, but even those that miss their mark on a theoretic level are impressive as pure images. Imagine if David Lynch suddenly became interested in the interplay of race and power, and you’re almost there; much like Inland Empire, Eat’s blend of surreal, almost dialogue-free humor and painterly obfuscation remains compelling, even when what’s on the screen seems to drift further and further away from a discernible relationship to a concrete idea.

    (more…)


    Originally posted on:SpoutBlog

  • Sundance Video: Opening Night

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    Sundance 2: Opening Night

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    The second episode of Joe and Ronnie’s Sundance video coverage is live at MySpace, and embedded above for your viewing pleasure. In this clip, our intrepid twosome battle misinformation and confusion at the opening night premiere and Park City party.

    Previous Sundance video coverage from Joe and Ronnie:
    The Sucker and the Crank

    You can watch all of Joe and Ronnie’s Sundance coverage, as well as the trailer and promos for Butterknife, at our MySpace page.


    Originally posted on:SpoutBlog

  • Sundance Trailer: ‘Up the Yangtze’

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    Under discussion:

    Up the Yangtze  (2007)

    There are many reasons to review the trailer for Up the Yangtze today. First it was recommended viewing by one of our readers. Then it had the honor of being the first sale at Sundance. And now it’s about to have its first screening at Holiday Village (at 12:15 PM Mountain Time). The documentary, from Canadian filmmaker Yung Chang, has already played at a few film festivals, including the Vancouver International Film Festival, where it won the prize for Best Canadian Documentary, and it is now competing for the World Cinema - Documentary prize at Sundance. While it may be possible to see Up the Yangtze someday courtesy of its new distributor Zeitgeist Films (Manufactured Landscapes), the doc sounds like a safe bet for those of you looking for a quality non-fiction film to see while in Park City.

    The film deals with China’s construction of the controversial Three Gorges Dam, a hydro-electric operation located on the Yangtze River that is significantly affecting the local environment and people. But Chang’s focus appears to be on the people, who are being forced to relocate or become exploited by the tourist trade. Not being too familiar with the issues related to the dam, it took me two viewings of the Up the Yangtze trailer to somewhat get what the doc is about (I was mostly perplexed by those awful tourists dressed in Chinese costume). It’s a good thing to be left a little confused by a trailer, though, especially if it leaves one curious enough to watch the video again. Now I am intrigued enough to want to know more, which should obviously be the goal for a documentary trailer. Variety’s John Anderson has already written that the DV cinematography in Up the Yangtze is “spectacular” and the Montreal Mirror’s Matthew Hays wrote that the film, “is one of those experiences that reinvigorates and restores your faith in the documentary film medium.”

    After today’s screening, Up the Yangtze will also play in Park City tomorrow night, Sunday morning and Monday at noon. It is also screening tomorrow in Salt Lake City.


    Originally posted on:SpoutBlog

  • Trade Roughage 1/18/08

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    Under discussion:

    Atonement  (2007)

    Australia  (2008)

    27 Dresses  (2008)

    Cloverfield  (2008)

    Justice League  (2009)

    • Certainly the biggest news of the past 24 hours is the DGA’s three-year deal with the AMPTP, which could hopefully lead to a similar deal for the WGA, thereby ending the writer’s strike. It wasn’t that surprising, though, considering directors are used to walking in and not only finishing up but also taking the most credit for something begun by writers. I’m not actually sure if any of the DGA’s deal was based on outlines first made by the WGA, but a lot of times in Hollywood the writer’s original work is unrecognizable in the end product. Anne Thompson has the WGA’s statement regarding the DGA agreement here.
    • Meanwhile the writer’s strike is affecting the UK. Look for the British to retaliate by ensuring Atonement wins every one of the BAFTA awards (including Best Animated Film). Imagine how hard-hit Hollywood will be without the ability to market their films with “BAFTA Winner” plastered on posters and in TV ads.
    • Meanwhile the writer’s strike is also affecting Australia, which is being blamed more heavily than the writer’s strike for Warner Bros.’ decision to pull the plug on the Justice League movie. Look for Oz to retaliate by ensuring that Baz Luhrman’s Australia wins every one of the 2008 Australian Film Institute Awards, which would probably happen anyway.
    • Apparently it’s a big deal that Cloverfield and 27 Dresses are going head to head at the box office this weekend. It seems the trades want this to be about the boys’ movie versus the girls’ movie, but all the girls I know are going to see the monster movie. Maybe I don’t know the right kind of girls?

    Originally posted on:SpoutBlog

  • FilmCouch #53

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    sff 08

    As you may well know, the Spout team is knee-deep in Sundance, that juggernaut of American film festivals. For this episode of FilmCouch we present a conversation between the regulars (Paul, Kevin, Karina) and Filmspotting’s Adam Kempenaar about what we’re up to at the festival this year. Adam is looking forward to a pair of docs about legendary artists, Roman Polanski: Wanted and Desired and Gonzo: The Life and Work of Hunter S. Thompson. Among the many film’s on Karina’s to-see list are two movies by pairs of brothers: the Zellner brothers’ Goliath and the Duplass brothers’ Baghead. Kevin is hoping the Mexican near-future dystopian sci-fi film Sleep Dealer can live up to the expectations set by Cuar??n’s Children of Men.

    FilmCouch 53


    Originally posted on:SpoutBlog

 


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