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  • Angelina’s Tears. SoutBlog Week in Review.

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  • Confessions of a Pirate

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    Under discussion:

    I was planning to weigh in on this week’s big digital rights story, the MPAA’s lawsuit against Real Networks for releasing its new RealDVD movie-copying software, but that was at the top of the week. This is the Internet. Everybody said everything that’s to be said on the matter in the first two days or hours or minutes of this, um, controversy. It’s hard to work up any Real passion on the subject anyway, as nobody really likes Real Networks (onetime online audio pioneers, now junky iTunes wannabe) or the MPAA (aka the movie police). But it all seems kinda simple to me: big, ravenous companies trying to expand/protect revenue streams, dressing it up as a copyright/artists’ rights issue. Ancient stuff.

    I remember, years ago, making a fake split-screen trailer for In the Realm of the Senses. I had used some freeware called FlaskMPEG to rip the video from its DVD source. Back then, my frail 500 Megs of RAM groaned and cursed at having to pull and re-compress that much video at one time, but she got done. The audience of two who watched the finished product applauded and begged for an encore. Then they begged me to get some help.

    Two decades before that, I was crafting montages using two VCR’s with flying erase heads and stacks of VHS tapes from the library, redubbing the whole mess with music patched in from the audio cassette deck. If a videotape had Macrovision protection, I’d just camcorder the clip off the TV screen. The scan lines made for an “interesting” look. Five years before that, I was audio taping Star Trek reruns, because the family couldn’t yet afford a VCR, and “editing” out the commercial breaks via the PAUSE button. Sometime before that, I snapped a Polaroid of Big Bird or somesuch Muppet passing across the black-and-white 13-inch.

    So this is a confession. I’m ready to turn myself in, tired of running. I hope there’s a fair and accurate way to determine what I owe (millions of dollars), and a dignified way of setting things right with all the people I’ve hurt. Duplicating Ho’wood product under any circumstances is a crime—or it should be, or maybe it really is…? Still confused.

    Throughout the summer in East NY, I heard sirens and gunshots late at night. Surely the sounds of the drug and gang wars, but part of me wants to believe that some of that ruckus can be attributed to diligent law enforcement professionals taking down the bootleggers. And the remixers. And the media artists. And the archivists. And, sweet Jesus, the Sweders.


    Originally posted on:SpoutBlog

  • Rachel Getting Married Review

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    This review originally appeared during the Toronto Film Festival. Rachel Getting Married opens in select cities today.

    Jonathan Demme’s first fiction film since his 2004 remake of The Manchurian Candidatee (and only his second non-documentary in ten years), Rachel Getting Married is orchestrated like an extraordinarily intimate work of direct cinema. Working from a script by Jenny Lumet (daughter of Sidney), Demme shot the dysfunctional family drama on a combination of grainy, handheld 35mm and consumer video––without rehearsal, with a huge ensemble cast made up of actors and musicians, with a soundtrack consisting entirely of diegetic music performed either on or just off camera by the likes of Robyn Hitchcock, New Orleans jazz saxophonist Donald Harrison Jr, TV On The Radio’s Tunde Adebimpe (who also plays the key role of the man Rachel is getting married to) and sometime American Idol Tamyra Grey. For a film featuring not only said reality competition castoff but a tour de force performance from a two-time Teen Choice Award nominee, it’s almost unfathomably dark and emotionally tough. It’s essentially a Dogme 95 film directed by Robert Altman, which will be a frightening proposition for some, and something akin to cinematic ecstasy for others. It’s the latter for me.

    Anne Hathaway plays Kym Buchanan, a career drug addict who takes leave from her latest stint in rehab to attend the wedding of her older sister Rachel (played Rosemarie DeWitt, who moves from her breakout role as Don Draper’s beatnik mistress on Mad Men to take on what seems like her righful place as a Maura Tierney/Catherine Keener type, a no-nonsense brunette destined to be counter-cast against ingenues). The wedding is set to take place at the Buchanan family’s sprawling Connecticut manse, which, to the externally prickly but internally fragile Kym’s dismay, has filled to bursting with assorted friends and family of the bride and groom, all with a different role to play in the weekend’s festivities under the watchful eye of the girls’ fastidiously caring father Paul (Bill Irwin) and his second wife Carol (Anna Deavere Smith). Kym drops into this swirl and instantly changes its chemistry with her acid tongue and total lack of filter. As she struggles to earn recognition and some modicum of trust and forgiveness from her weary sister, Kym forges a tenuous bond with best man Keiran (Mather Zickel)––who, like Kym, sneaks out daily to attend AA meetings––while also seeking out her mother (Debra Winger), who seems to be conspicuously distant; we soon learn that this is par for the course.

    Hathaway is given the predictable cosmetic grit (homemade haircut, raccoon eyeliner, fingers constantly twitching for a smoke), but she turns Kym into something much more than a Hollywood cipher of addiction. She’s a bit of a girl who cried wolf: toxic though she can be, especially to those who are less than sympathetic to her struggles, Kym seems to be both serious about sobriety and deeply regretful regarding past, nearly unforgivable mistakes, but she’s made so many plays towards atonement in the past that anyone she’s hurt before is wary of getting fooled again. Hathaway’s vulnerability in this tricky role is stunning, but slyly so: as a viewer you can loathe her presence, as some of the personalities in the film speace seem to, and then with a single cut realize that she’s gone from a scene and not only miss her, but actually, actively worry about where she is and what she’s up to.

    As the familial conflict builds to a violent breaking point and then becomes somewhat ameliorated by the boundless romance of the wedding and the wild joy of the all night dance party that follows (if nothing else, this is a fantastic example of the Endless Party movie), Kym’s frustration, sadness and sorrow uncomfortably and unignorably seeps in from the margins, like the smoke from her constant cigarette floating over from her solitary corner of the room. The most exciting thing about Rachel may be its refusal to permanently sort out the family’s life-long problems in the space of the film. Even as practical truces are formed and a tentative romance just barely begins to bloom, we get the sense that progress will be slow, leaving a damp-eyed Rachel to smoke alone in a corner at many supposedly fun functions in the future.

    Despite the presence of star Hathaway, Rachel’s commercial prospects are probably slim, which makes it all the more puzzling that this film is having its North American premiere here in Toronto this weekend and not last weekend in Telluride. Why this film was reportedly rejected by that exclusive festival is a mystery to me. Supremely artful in its formal riskiness and at least as emotionally raw and resonant as a good deal of the Cannes holdovers that did make the line-up, its omission in favor of forgettable domestic products like Flash of Genius and American Violets is inexplicable.


    Originally posted on:SpoutBlog

  • The Pleasure of Being Robbed Review

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    This review originally ran during the SXSW Film Festival. The Pleasure of Being Robbed opens in NY today and is available on IFC Video on Demand.

    What a lark this film is, what a caustic joy! As with his shorts, Josh Safdie’s first feature film, The Pleasure Of Being Robbed, is too articulate a work to describe as whimsical, turning into a pejorative what would seem to be the best adjective with which to describe it. I could describe it as entirely unique, but then I couldn’t discuss its cinematic precedents, which are probably myriad but which I’d narrow down to the one that keeps springing to mind: Bresson.

    It’s like nothing Bresson has ever made, but the entire film, with its heightened naturalism and precise spontaneity, seems possessed by Bresson’s notion of cinematography - not the lighting and photography, but the art of cinematography with which he delineated between those films that elevate the medium and those that are restrained by the trappings of the theater. I guess means that the best compliment I can pay Safdie is that his work makes film better. And it’s here that I feel the need to quote his own synopsis of the film, which ends with this quizzical postulation: “It’s a comedy?”

    Indeed it is, although its cheerful properties mask a certain foreboding fatalistic sensibility. This is the story of Eleonore (played by Eleonore Hendricks, who also co-wrote the film with Safdie), a young woman with an acute case of philanthropic kleptomania. We meet her as she simultaneously imparts a hug and lifts a purse, and later watch as she steals DVDs, cars and a basket of kittens. She never offers a reason for her behavior, nor does she seem to acknowledge anything wrong with it. It’s simply what she does. She and her friend Josh (Josh Safdie, natch) steal a Volvo from the streets of Manhattan so that she can give him a ride home, never mind the fact that she’s never driven an automobile in her life. “Where do you live now?” she asks him as she veers awkwardly through traffic. “Boston,” he replies. That’s the kind of comedy this is. It’s also the kind of comedy that can set up an extended physical gag with a mens’ room cologne dispenser worthy of Jacques Tati, and take off on a romp with a fake polar bear that somehow ends up being very sad.

    All of this is captured on super16mm, which shouldn’t mean anything but somehow does; its grain and color saturation, in concert with the fact that Hendricks seems plucked straight from the streets of 1960s Paris, impart a marvelous sense of antiquity while never belying any actual time period or cinematic movement. Like Safdie’s acclaimed short We’re Going To The Zoo (which gets a reference here that delivers one of the biggest laughs for folks in the know), the film is both extremely tactile and remarkably fleeting; Safdie’s a very precise stylist, but he hides it all beneath a thick layer of seeming innocuousness; the entire film feels happened-upon, which is why it’s almost a surprise that it ends up feeling so moody and repressed. There’s something seriously wrong with Eleonore, and while, in the narrative sense, the film exalts in her behavior, its very form acknowledges otherwise. The Pleasure Of Being Robbed has no statement to make, no morals to impart, which is precisely why it’s so legitimately meaningful and melancholy. It’s pure cinema, and as such it’s one of the best films I’ve seen this year.


    Originally posted on:SpoutBlog

  • De Trop Debuts. Trade Roughage 10/03/08

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    • You could fill a small multiplex just with new releases this weekend, as eight movies either open nationwide or significantly expand today. And yet most moviegoers will still likely choose Beverly Hills Chihauhua over everything else. Meanwhile, Michael Moore fans are sure to go for Bill Maher’s first-person doc Religilous, Michael Moore haters are sure to go for the conservative fantasy An American Carol and teens who are too cool for talking dogs are certain to put Nick and Norah’s Infinite Playlist at #2 on the box office chart. Will adults just stay home rather than have to choose from the rest, which includes Appaloosa, Blindness, How to Lose Friends and Influence People and Flash of Genius?
    • A little bit JFK, a little bit Veronica Guerin: producer John Davis (I, Robot) will make a film about the conspiracy theory surrounding the death of columnist and TV personality Dorothy Kilgallen, who dug deep into the JFK assassination before she died mysteriously and suspiciously from a combo of drugs and alcohol.
    • George Romero has begun shooting another zombie movie, this one set on an isolated island and seemingly focused on the issue of euthanasia.
    • Still not acknowledging they’ve got a certain disappointment on their hands, Summit Entertainment continues it’s hopes that Twilight will be a blockbuster franchise. And despite it’s lack of appeal in any way to boys, the studio will attempt to woo the males with new action-centered trailers.

    Originally posted on:SpoutBlog

  • FilmCouch #90: Blindness, In Debt We Trust, I’m Gonna Explode

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    Children of Men  (2006)

    Blindness  (2008)

    Happy-Go-Lucky  (2008)

    If the titles of the three films mentioned in the title don’t evoke a sense of anxiety about the present, I’m not sure what will. At the same time, they’re all immensely different films. Fernando Meirelles’s new film, Blindness, opens tonight. Will it replace Children of Men as our favorite recent film about societal collapse?

    Karina joins us to talk about one hit and one miss from the New York Film Festival thus far. While Happy-Go-Lucky inspired homicidal thoughts, I’m Gonna Explode did not disappoint.

    The financial mayhem of the day made us remember a little known documentary from 2006, In Debt We Trust (which can be viewed for free on SnagFilms.com). We call director Danny Schechter to talk about what’s been going on in the two years since his nearly prophetic film was released.

    (Subscribe to FilmCouch–Spout’s weekly movie podcast–in the iTunes store or to our RSS feed and an episode will download each Friday)

    0:00 - Intro, is the world ending?

    3:26 - Blindness

    16:00 - Karina reports from the New York Film Festival on Happy-Go-Lucky and I’m Gonna Explode

    23:52 - In Debt We Trust, Danny Schecter interview

    filmcouch-90


    Originally posted on:SpoutBlog