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  • Best Undistributed Films of 2008

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    Under discussion:

    Go Go Tales  (2007)

    Forbidden Lies  (2007)

    The Burrowers  (2008)

    Yeast  (2008)

    Intimidad  (2008)

    35 Rhums  (2008)

    I recently submitted a ballot for indieWIRE’s annual Critics’ Poll, which offers respondents a chance to create two separate lists of the best films of the year: one comprised of films which received theatrical distribution (which is described as, at minimum, a one week run in a commercial theater in New York City, essentially the same type of release required for Oscar consideration); and a list of the best films which weren’t distributed commercially in 2008––ie: those which screened only at festivals, and/or in other non-commercial venues, and/or outside of New York. Because I see so many films at festivals, I had a far greater pool of candidates for the latter list than the former. My “true” top ten list would combine films which were made readily available to audiences via studio subsidiaries (such as Synecdoche, NY and Rachel Getting Married), with films that I fell in love with at a festival and may never get a chance to see again, and with films which had the bare minimum New York release, but nevertheless were probably still seen by fewer people than the average distributor-less festival hit (such as Build a Ship, Sail to Sadness). That said, I understand the purpose of making the distinction––even if there was no other benefit to it, there’s always the hope that some smaller theatrical and straight-to-DVD distributors will look to the annual Best Undistributed list as a reference to films they might have missed. After all, 2007’s “winner,” Hong Sang Soo’s Woman on the Beach, was purchased and ended up in theaters barely a week into the new year.

    In fact, I think singling out films which are still on the market, and in a perfect world wouldn’t be, is so worth doing, that not only am I revealing here the ten titles I included in the poll, but I’m adding a few bonus films. The following list is presented alphabetically and should be considered unranked, with the exception of the first title mentioned — they all deserve to be seen by wider audiences, but the reception thus far bestowed on the work of one French master in particular is actually a travesty.


    Frontier of Dawn, directed by Phillipe Garrel
    Reviewed at Cannes
    Other notable festivals: Sao Paulo, Mar Del Plata
    Why it’s on this list: (from my review) “A story of amour gone so fou that the natural world becomes subject to the supernatural. Hands down the most accessible Garrel film I’ve seen, it’s still a strange, swoony, genre-bending challenge.”

    35 Rhums, directed by Claire Denis
    Reviewed at Toronto
    Other notable festivals: Venice
    Why it’s on this list: (from my review) “Rather shockingly, the new Claire Denis film is also a bittersweet family movie, and the work you put into it early on is paid back in surprisingly tender dividends.”

    The Burrowers, directed by J.T. Petty

    Reviewed at Fantastic Fest

    Other notable Festivals: Toronto, Screamfest.

    Why it’s on this list: (from my review) “Beautifully shot and tightly scripted, it’s the rare Hollywood genre film (bought and paid for by Lionsgate) that’s more concerned with human relationships and behavior than the mysterious supernatural forces that sets the action in motion.”
    Worth noting:  Lionsgate originally planned a theatrical release, but announced a couple of days ago that come April 2009, they’re dumping it to DVD. For a film that looks this good on a big screen, this is equivalent to it not being distributed at all.

    Everything is Fine, directed by Yves Christian Fournier
    Reviewed in the market at Cannes
    Notable festivals: Berlinale, Seattle International (where it won the New Directors Showcase Competition. Grand Jury Prize), Denver
    Why it’s on this list: (from my review) “With a strong sense of style and an especially inventive feel for sound design, first-time feature director Yves Christian Fournier manages to turn the story of the inner conflict of a 17 year-old boy into something almost resembling a thriller, with a final act catharsis that left several of us in the screening room in tears.”

    Finally, Lillian and Dan, directed by Mike Gibisser
    Reviewed at CineVegas
    Other notable festivals: AFI Los Angeles, Denver
    Why it’s on this list: (from my review) “The mumbling here is so stylized and disturbed that it’s like a precision bomb against the twee subtleties explored by other contemporary filmmakers––it’s more like Tourettescore. But there’s also a tenderness here, and lofty aesthetic ambitions underpinned with authentic melancholy. It’s a heartbreaker.”

    Forbidden Lies, directed by Anna Broinowski
    Reviewed at True/False
    Other notable festivals: SilverDocs, Aljazeera Film Festival (where it won the Golden Award)
    Why it’s on this list: (from my review) “Broinowski’s fabrications hardly undermine the film’s integrity––in fact, it’s through the melding of form and content that Broinowski both delivers her most potent commentary on the Khouri clusterfuck, and provides the film with some of its most crowd-pleasing moments.”

    Go Go Tales, directed by Abel Ferrara
    Reviewed at NYFF 2007
    Other notable festivals: Cannes 2007, CineVegas 2008
    Why it’s on this list: (from my review) “Go Go Tales is probably the most lovingly photographed stripper movie of all time, but it’s most exciting in the friction it finds between the gaga dream gaze of the patrons, and the behind-the-scenes scrambling that supports it.”
    Worth noting: Though Go Go Tales was rumored to have been acquired concurrent with its New York Film Festival debut in the fall of 2007, an official announcement was never made, and since the film then popped up in the sidebar for undistributed pictures at CIneVegas this past summer, I guess it’s still available…?

    Intimidad, directed by David Redmon and Ashley Sabin
    Reviewed at SXSW
    Other notable festivals: AFI Dallas, Sidewalk (where it won Best Documentary), Denver, Sarasota
    Why it’s on this list: (from my review) “At times, when [its subjects] crumble under the stress of their situation, Intimidad offers moments of genuine emotion that are miles removed from the score-saturated tear-jerking money shots that mark generic issue docs.”
    Worth noting: Intimidad had two screenings at MoMA this fall, which wasn’t enough to qualify for indieWIRE’s theatrical list, and thus it earned a spot on my undistributed list. But the filmmakers are releasing Intimidad on DVD in 2009, via their Carnivalesque Films label.

    La Vie Moderne, directed by Raymond Depardon
    Reviewed at Cannes
    Other notable festivals: None that I recognize; after theatrical runs in France and Belgium, it opens in the Netherlands and the UK in Spring 2009
    Why it’s on this list: (from my review) “Depardon’s style of inquiry certainly requires more of an investment from his audience than fans of contemporary crowd-pleaser non-fiction might be used to, but it’s an investment that pays off. Where coarser filmmakers approach their subjects with laser-guided precision, essentially turning each question rhetorical, Depardon simply sets up a camera and has a conversation.”

    Prince of Broadway, directed by Sean Baker
    Seen at Woodstock
    Other notable festivals: LAFF (where it won the grand prize), Denver
    Why it’s on this list: Dardennes comparisons are flying around fast and furious of late, but no joke: Sean Baker’s follow-up to Take Out––shot on location in Manhattan’s wholesale district for a low-mid five figure budget, using virtually all non-professional actors––is Three Men and a Baby meets L’enfant. It’s a genuinely independent crowd-pleaser that never panders.

    Sita Sings the Blues, directed by Nina Paley
    Reviewed at Tribeca
    Other notable festivals: Berlinale. Denver. Winner of the Not Coming to a Theater Near You award at the Gothams.
    Why it’s on this list: (from my review) “A strange and beautiful little film, a potentially wispy slice of autobiography smartly elevated through irresistible, orgiastic style.”
    Worth noting: As of this writing, Paley *can’t* distribute her film, because she’s still negotiating the right to use the recordings of Annette Hanshaw which comprise the bulk of the film’s soundtrack.

    Treeless Mountain, directed by So Yong Kim
    Reviewed at Toronto
    Other notable festivals: None, as far as I know
    Why it’s on this list: (from my review) “An autobiographical feature about two tiny girls sent to live with distant relatives by their caring but insolvent mother, Treeless Mountain is a sparse but incredibly moving film about love turning to longing turning to resentment,…Hands down, the thing that makes Mountain a Toronto must-see is the performances, which are all the more impressive considering the fact that the film’s two young stars are non-actors.”

    Voy a Explotar, directed by Gerardo Naranjo
    Reviewed at NYFF
    Other notable festivals: Toronto, Venice, Thessaloniki
    Why it’s on this list: (from my review) “It’s the rare love letter to influence that’s infused with enough personal style and sentiment to transform the stolen into something thrilling and moving.”

    Yeast, directed by Mary Bronstein
    Reviewed at SXSW
    Other notable festivals: Sarasota, IFFB, St. Louis (where it won the New Filmmakers Forum competition)
    Why it’s on this list: (from my review) “Even fans of Frownland (which Bronstein starred in under the direction of her husband Ronald) may not be ready for Yeast’s full-on assault on the senses. This is a film that not only seeks to dodge the audience’s comfort zone, but it actually, actively mocks it.”

    Worth noting: Yeast went straight from the festival circuit to Amazon VOD. I’m not sure if that counts as “undistributed”, but it definitely went without a theatrical release.


    Originally posted on:SpoutBlog

  • Twilight Christmas. Clip of the Day

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    Under discussion:

    The Matrix  (1999)

    Twilight  (2008)

    I haven’t seen Twilight, but from what I can tell the film only has one memorable scene. That’s the way the Twilight parodists make it seem, anyway. Everything from the puppet parody to  this new Christmas version (see below) recreates this scene, in which Bella acknowledges that Edward is a vampire and then the couple flies through the woods. It’s getting to the point where the parodies are losing their edge if only because of the familiarity. The one thing that could possibly be more tired is if someone parodied the bullet-time scene from The Matrix within a parody of Twilight.

    But it’s mid-December, and tis the season for humorous movie-related Christmas videos on YouTube (like “Rambo Bells”). Twilight fans already got their Christmas wish with the announcement that Twilight: New Moon will be out before Thanksgiving next year, but this is a little stocking stuffer (for that Edward-face stocking pictured, available from Amazon). And if those little goths like the idea of Santa being a vampire (how is this not the concept of another Christmas horror flick?), they can buy an unrelated Santa Vampire t-shirt here. Oh nevermind, they’re not going to have enough cash for unrelated items when there’s so much real Twilight Christmas crap to buy.

    [via Cinematical]


    Originally posted on:SpoutBlog

  • SXSW 2009 Announces Opening Film

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    Under discussion:

    The Baxter  (2005)

    I Love You, Man  (2009)

    We’ve still got awhile to wait for details on the full lineup, but last night SXSW announced that their opening night film. It’s I Love You, Man, a comedy starring Paul Rudd, Jason Segal and Rashida King, directed by John Hamburg. With that cast, it may sound like an Apatow thing, but it’s not; based on its IMDB listing, it actually looks like a more direct descendant of The State.

    The film co-stars a couple of State guys, Thomas Lennon and Joe Lo Truglio (both now of Reno 911) and Hamburg directed several episodes of Stella, the sitcom version of the comedy act featuring State alumns Michael Ian Black, Michael Showalter and David Wain. According to Scott Weinberg, who saw a cut of the film this part weekend at Harry Knowles’ Butt Numb-a-Thon, this “affable farce” is “just plain NICE” — which makes it sound a bit like Showalter’s 2005 directorial effort, The Baxter, in which Rudd also co-starred. It all comes full circle!


    Originally posted on:SpoutBlog

  • Holiday Gift Guide: Presents For Surviving The Apocalypse

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    As the financial markets pull the entire economy into utter despair, it’s difficult to think about Christmas shopping. It’s tempting to shove your life savings into your mattress and ride this thing out in a homemade bunker, but holiday shopping is more important now than ever before. I’m not saying this with the hope that a boost in retail sales will jolt the sinking markets, that will never work. Think about it, they’re racking up trillions in debt and you’re going to help by buying an iPod? Nice try.

    No, the reason you need to stuff stockings like crazy is because this will be the last Christmas on Earth, at least as we know it. A trifecta of economic, nuclear, and environmental apocalypses will surely befall our poor planet in the coming year, leaving a small band of survivors to fend off death in the savage wastes of our once great world. But don’t worry! You and yours will be prepared for this dark tomorrow, if you follow our handy Post-Apocalyptic Gift Guide:

    Puppy

    This is a classic Christmas gift, and it’s surprising useful in a post-apocalyptic environment. While watching post-apocalyptic movies in preparation for a life wandering the ruins civilization (cf. I Am LegendThe Road Warrior, and A Boy And His Dog), you’ll notice that many heroes keep a trusty K-9. The obvious reason is companionship, as going months without seeing another human can be maddening. While dogs do need to be fed, a tough breed can eat trash and carrion that you wouldn’t go near. The right kind of dog (larger breeds are best) can also offer protection and help with hunting, assuming natural flora and fauna still exist. Lastly, and I hate to say this, Fido can even become a meal if the situation gets desperate enough.

    Solar Gadget Charger

    Second only to clean water, a key to survival in a post-apocalyptic environment is the ability to watch movies. Classics like Tank Girl, Six String Samurai, and The Postman offer invaluable tips for survival in the wastelands. Luckily, portable solar-power devices have become more affordable. The 30 Watt Mono-crystalline Portable Briefcase Solar Panel 12V Charger is a bit pricey, but with it’s 25+ year life-span and ability to charge not only laptops but also any other gadget that can be plugged into a car cigarette lighter, it’s a must-have. Portable game systems, rechargeable flashlights, even GPS units (assuming the satellites haven’t been shot down by invading aliens), could be used for years after the collapse of the power grid.

    Towel

    This one might seem odd, or even frivolous, but hear me out. The idea comes from The Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy, which was a BBC radio show, then a series of books, and finally a film in 2005. The film was tragically brief considering the amount of source material, so I’d recommend downloading the audio of the radio show to your solar-powered laptop while you still can. One piece of advice the book gives adventurers traversing the cosmos after the annihilation of Earth, is to always carry a towel. While it’s unlikely that you’ll ever get off of our doomed planet, the towel can be just as useful in the terrestrial wastes. From the book:

    …[The towel] has great practical value. You can wrap it around you for warmth as you bound across the cold moons of Jaglan Beta; you can lie on it on the brilliant marble-sanded beaches of Santraginus V, inhaling the heady sea vapors; you can sleep under it beneath the stars which shine so redly on the desert world of Kakrafoon…

    The list of uses, including self defense and the psychological effect of seeming with-it enough to know where your towel is, goes on and on.

    A Good Pair of Shoes

    Shoes are a tricky gift, because the fit is so important. But if you’re planning on treading through the shattered remains of cities, you’ll want to think about arch support, ankle protection, and warmth. Hiking boots are probably a good choice, which can be expensive, but remember, these will need to last. Your next pair of shoes will probably be pulled off of a dead body, and they may not be the right size. If you’re still not convinced that navigating armageddon requires proper footwear, re-watch the final sequence from Children of Men, where Clive Owen struggles across broken glass and re-bar in bare feet. Ouch.

    Hazmat Suit

    This snappy Commander EX™ Brigade Level A Suit from DuPont runs about $1,900, but when it comes to avoiding the virus that wiped out the rest of humanity, you can’t put a price on safety. I tried to find the clear plastic variety that would expose your naked body and your vulnerability as a human in an unforgiving world, like the one worn by Bruce Willis in 12 Monkeys, but they seem to be unavailable.

    Mailbag/Postal Uniform

    In the much-maligned post-apocalyptic classic The Postman, Kevin Costner’s character finds a bag of mail and a postal uniform. When he assumes the identity of the letter-carrier, he spreads his sense of purpose and patriotism across the shattered land. The key here is really the uniform, not necessarily that it’s a mail carrier. It’s been proven that uniforms can have a profound psychological effect, both for the wearer and for those interacting with them. It’s no coincidence that General Bethlehem’s sinister Holnists have uniforms of their own, a key element to building their fledgling fascist regime. It may seem impractical, but uniforms will nevertheless be key to re-establishing order in the midst of anarchy, for better or worse.

    BBC’s Planet Earth

    Once you have your solar-powered laptop, you’re free to horde whatever sort of DVD collection you choose. Certainly titles that preserve a sense of the former grandeur of the world would be the jewels of any such collection. I’ve picked BBC’s stellar nature documentary series Planet Earth. This series depicts the stunning beauty and mind-boggling bio-diversity of our planet better than anything I’ve seen. While you hunker down in an abandoned meat locker to avoid the latest fallout-laden dust storm, you can watch amazing footage of the thousands of species that no longer exist, and cry yourself to sleep.

    Happy Holidays!


    Originally posted on:SpoutBlog

  • The Day The Earth Stood Stupid: Five Things Don’t Make Sense

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    The Day The Earth Stood Still managed to pull in $30 million dollars this past weekend, which you can mostly attribute to clever marketing, but it’s not a promising number for the much-loathed movie, which is sitting at 21% on Rotten Tomatoes right now. Beyond the wooden acting and the eviscerating of a beloved sci fi classic that most people are talking about, there are some moments in this movie that just make my teeth clench. Moments that are so poorly written, thought out, filmed, and constructed that I just can’t keep myself from venting. Read on to see all five, and just in case it’s not clear enough from the header: there are spoilers below.

    The Inept U.S. Government

    Okay, aliens land on our planet, including a spectacular arrival in the middle of Central Park. A huge glowing globe descends from the heavens and out comes a strange alien lifeform, and a ginormous robot with a red, glowing eye and it destroys anything that approaches it with violence. The government swoops in and takes the alien away after he tells the robot to back off.

    What does the government do with said alien? Oh, nothing much. They simply take him to a room with no windows and no cameras, and leave him alone with a guy armed only with a lie detector. The alien (Keanu Reeves as Klaatu) easily dispatches him, dons his suit, and leaves the facility after deafening everyone with some sort of sonic feedback power. Didn’t it occur to just one person to say “Er, hey wait. We might want to keep this guy under observation. With guns, maybe?”

    Silicon vs. Silicone

    There’s a scene in this movie that you’ve seen a million times before: an angry Army general marching down a hallway, asking some sort of lab-coated scientist guy to “Tell me what we’re dealing with.” Half the time that general has a cigar jammed in the corner of his mouth while he growls that out. The Day The Earth Stood Still is no different.

    This time, the “what we’re dealing with” is the ginormous robot from Central Park, and the lab scientist guy tells the Army guy, “It appears to be some sort of silicone-based life form.” Later we find out that the robot (Gort, in the original. Why couldn’t they tell us his name here?) is made out of billion of tiny nanobots. Which means to say the scientist meant he was a SILICON-based lifeform. Silicon. The stuff that computer chips are made out of. Silicone is the stuff that fake breasts are made out of. Unless Gort is made of out Pamela Anderson’s offcasts, I don’t think this is the message they meant to send. Did no one catch this during filming, post-production, ADR, and screening?

    Kathy Bates and The Invisible U.S. President

    Chalk this one up as the inept U.S. Government, part 2. As I mentioned before, it’s pretty much a big deal when aliens land on the Earth, let alone when they put hundreds of globes into orbit circling the planet, threatening devastation at any moment. You would tend to think that people would be concerned about that sort of thing going on. World leaders would be paying attention, upper level government officials around the world would be making plans, figuring out how to deal with the aliens and keep their citizens calm, that sort of thing.

    Apparently, that’s not what our own president would do. Throughout the entire course of this film, the U.S. President is nowhere to be seen. Kathy Bates plays Secretary of Defense Regina Jackson, and she says, “For all practical purposes, I am the eyes and ears of the President.” Why? Well, because he’s isolated at an undisclosed location. What, no high-tech video phones? No magic iChat video conferencing? No speakerphones, even? You never get to see the face of the President or hear his voice in this entire film, but you do get lots of extreme closeups of Kathy Bates looking concerned. What a bonus.

    Product Placement

    I was watching Band of Brothers the other day, and there was a scene featuring some of the guys sitting around a table and drinking sodas in glass bottles. After a few minutes I realized, “Oh, that’s a Coca-Cola bottle.” It wasn’t emblazoned with the words, it just had that iconic shape. That’s product placement on a level that I can deal with. What I can’t deal with is the blatant way the The Day The Earth Stood Still tries to cram it down your throat.

    Case in point: scientists have been examining the alien body that Klaatu has discarded. Kathy Bates and company march in to inspect their findings. There’s an overhead shot of an enormous Microsoft Surface table, complete with the windows logo in gigantic size, stuck right in the middle of it. I honestly expect to hear the Microsoft startup noise when they activated the thing. Also, in other slightly less obvious scenes, Keanu and company drive up to a McDonald’s, complete with enormous golden arches. Of course, the interior is spotless and filled with happy people. Even James Hong, who Keanu goes to meet, is in a good mood. We also get treated to an extreme close-up of the LG logo on one of the character’s cell phones, just in case you wanted to pick one up for yourself.

    The Inexplicable Two Keanus

    This remake differs from the classic original by saying that aliens actually visited our planet long ago, and that they’ve been living among us for decades. This steals the thunder from the title a bit. Which day are they saying the Earth stood still? The day the aliens arrived, or the day the aliens nearly destroyed our entire planet? Both of those sound good for standing still, so which is it? If the aliens have already been here for so long, then maybe the Earth has just been slowly standing still? I’m not sure.

    In the opening scene, set atop a snowy mountain in 1928, one of the glowing alien spheres comes to Earth. A mountaineer, also played by Keanu Reeves, goes over to investigate it. He’s soon absorbed by it, and then wakes up next to where it was. He’s clearly been changed, but is he now an alien meant to look like the mountain climber it just absorbed? Or is it the same man, spat out like a piece of undigested food? There’s the scene later in the film where Keanu meets with James Hong at McDonald’s, and it is revealed that Hong is an alien as well, and that he’s been living among the humans for 70 years. If you give the 1928 Keanu 10 years to explore, that makes it 1938. 70 years to live among humans, and you’re in 2008. Is James Hong supposed to be Keanu Reeves? Keanu is, and does look slightly, Asian, but him turning into James Hong is a stretch. So what happened to Keanu with Mountain Climbing Action? Is it too much asking for a little bit of explanation here?


    Originally posted on:SpoutBlog

  • Tron 2.0 Starts Up For Real. Trade Roughage 12/16/08

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    • Tron 2.0, described as a “next chapter” kind of sequel, has cast two actresses, Olivia Wilde and Beau Garrett, both of whom were in Turistas. The production, which is to start filming in the Spring and to be released in 2011, is still looking for a male lead. Wait, you ask, isn’t the male lead split between young and old versions of Jeff Bridges? Apparently that “trailer” we saw back at Comic-Con was only test footage.
    • Speaking of things that were cool in the early 80s, James L. Brooks is finally making a sixth film, tentatively titled How Do You Know?, and has just cast Reese Witherspoon as one of three leads.
    • If you’ve seen the new trailer for Dragonball: Evolution, you may fear more live-action anime adaptations, so ignore this announcement from Universal about bringing TV and toy sensation Bakugan Battle Brawlers to the big screen.
    • I can’t wait to see the look on parents’ faces when they realize they shouldn’t have brought their kids to see Cheech and Chong’s Smokin’ Animated Movie.
    • If you want to know anything about the life of Frank Lloyd Wright, there are a few good documentaries to check out, but if you want a fictional love story involving the architect, you may look forward to the adaptation of Nancy Horan’s historical novel Loving Frank.
    • Catherine Hardwicke is actually better off not directing Twilight: New Moon, which Summit has set for a November 20, 2009, release. Rush jobs like this are rarely good, yet the two subsequent sequels are also tentatively slated for the same timeframe in 2010 and 2011. I guess if you think the Saw movies kept getting better, you could be hopeful.

    Originally posted on:SpoutBlog