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  • Tributes, “Tributes” and Takedowns: SpoutBlog Week in Review

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    Under discussion:

    The Dark Knight  (2008)


    Originally posted on:SpoutBlog

  • Kanye gets Kar Wai and Herzog eats boot

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    Under discussion:

    2046  (2004)

    A post from Big Screen Little Screen turned me onto a music video created by Kanye West’s editor, Derrick Lee, using footage of 2046 for Kanye’s “Flashing Lights.”

    It’s almost sacrilege to not watch this in High Definition, but the video remix still shames the original Spike Jonze helmed spot.

    I couldn’t say it better myself. Wong Kar Wai’s 2046 is a long, visually indulgent meditation of love in bad timing, grief and the futility of anything else in life to play love’s substitute. In some way, Derrick Lee’s editing was able to grab the essence of love lost in what you might call a world of “affluent dystopia.” A hyper-realized city, like Tokyo or LA, where lives and opportunity are crammed together so tightly it would seem that making connections would be easy, but it’s only become harder. Human intimacy is the new luxury nobody can afford, but people spin their wheels faster. They collide but never connect. In short, repurposing footage from 2046 for “Flashing Lights” brought new meaning to a song I’d normally switch off.

    Halfway through the video it was obvious Wong Kar Wai’s footage made the original Spike Jonze video–which Kanye and Co. probably paid a small fortune for–obsolete. I immediately tried to investigate whether or not the rights holders for 2046 had sanctioned the use of the footage, but I found nothing. If it was used “illegally,” that means an amazing music video cost Kanye the price of a smart editor’s day rate.

    Considering slow, visually sumptuous work, like Kar Wai’s, is relegated to the art house, it would serve pop music to repurpose more artistically outstanding footage for their videos and expose their audience to a new visual language. In turn, directors like Kar Wai would reach new audiences and fulfill Werner Herzog’s directive laid down in Werner Herzog Eats his Boot (see below).

    A civilization is doomed or going to die out like dinosaurs if it does not develop an adequate language or adequate images.


    Originally posted on:SpoutBlog

  • James Cameron to Make 3D Drama

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    Under discussion:

    Citizen Kane  (1941)

    Titanic  (1997)

    300  (2007)

    Atonement  (2007)

    Avatar  (2009)

    James Cameron is the sort of director who can make a movie just to prove a point. And he’s going to do so by making a straight drama that will be shot and exhibited in 3D — or as he calls it, in stereo (short for stereoscopic) — just to let the industry know that 3D is not only for special effects and animated pictures. He discusses the project in an interview with Variety:

    I plan to shoot a small dramatic film in 3-D, just to prove this point, after “Avatar.” In “Avatar,” there are a number of scenes that are straight dramatic scenes, no action, no effects. They play very well, and in fact seem to be enhanced by the stereo viewing experience. So I think this can work for the full length of a dramatic feature. However, filmmakers and studios will have to weigh the added cost of shooting in 3-D against the increased marketing value for that type of film.

    Cameron even points out that he sees a number of films made these days that would have been really great if filmed in the format, specifically citing 300 and Atonement as two examples. But then he also argues against the notion that Citizen Kane, because it is shot in such deep focus, should be a model for filmmakers thinking about how to shoot for 3D.

    I think it’s a myth that you want deep focus in 3-D shots. I find the opposite is true. Selective focus, created by working at low f-stops with longer lenses, evolved as a cinematic technique to direct the audience’s attention to the character of greatest narrative importance at a given moment. With 3-D, the director needs to lead the audience’s eye, not let it roam around the screen to areas which are not converged.

    The guy has all his bases covered, acknowledging the commercial problem of spending money on 3D technology for a genre that isn’t as bankable as blockbuster types, like action, animation and science fiction, which is what Avatar, his first “stereo” feature, is. And also weighing in on the issue that 3D is currently not a good format in terms of home video sales.

    He’s certainly a smart guy, but we already know that. Of course, it’s easy to forget when recalling some of the dialogue from Titanic. Still, anyone who can intelligently challenge such a widely beloved statement like Godard’s “cinema is truth 24 frames-per-second” by referencing the artificialities of filmmaking and then upping the ante by developing new technology that further supports his view, is at least admirable, if not easily likable (at least for us Godard fans).

    I believe that Godard got it exactly backwards. Cinema is not truth 24 times a second, it is lies 24 times a second. Actors are pretending to be people they’re not, in situations and settings which are completely illusory. Day for night, dry for wet, Vancouver for New York, potato shavings for snow. The building is a thin-walled set, the sunlight is a xenon, and the traffic noise is supplied by the sound designers. It’s all illusion, but the prize goes to those who make the fantasy the most real, the most visceral, the most involving. This sensation of truthfulness is vastly enhanced by the stereoscopic illusion.

    Apparently, because being “king of the world!” is not enough, Cameron is attempting to be the winner of this Bazinian prize. He’ll probably succeed, too.

    [via Aint it Cool News, where Quint calls for a Cameron-directed 3D period piece]


    Originally posted on:SpoutBlog

  • Clip from The Fall: Where’s the Eye Candy?

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    Under discussion:

    Cinema Paradiso  (1988)

    Titus  (1999)

    The Fall  (2006)

    As I mentioned back when I reviewed the film’s trailer, I will be seeing Tarsem Singh’s The Fall for the eye candy alone. But now Roadside Attractions has unveiled a clip from the fantasy drama (via Yahoo!), and there’s not one bit of that sweet, delicious spectacle I crave. Fortunately, the scene actually works for the film because it has none of the flashy visuals. The young actress here is terrific, seemingly working off her costar with a combination of innocence and improvisation (the miscommunication at the end is priceless, whether it was off the cuff or scripted that way). It gives us a sense that this isn’t a film only for the eyes, but is also for the heart, as in a Cinema Paradiso or (2008 Sundance-winner) Captain Abu Raed or something. In fact I kind of wish the man in the scene was a much older fella.

    In the film, which opens May 9, the girl (played by Catinca Untaru) and the man (Pushing Daisies’s Lee Pace) featured in the clip are both bedridden in a hospital. The man entertains the girl by telling her a fantastical story, in which people familiar to her are incorporated. Looking like a cross between The Adventures of Baron Munchausen, Titus and The Princess Bride, and now also Cinema Paradiso, it has the potential of being one of my favorite movies of the year, even if its not really one of the best films of the year.


    Originally posted on:SpoutBlog

  • FilmCouch #65 Indiewood mashup

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    Under discussion:

    The Visitor  (2007)

    teh visitor carson mell

    If you’re visiting a theater and tired of the same old movie clichés, conventional wisdom would point you to the independent movie selection. However, a string on indiewood flicks–most recently The Visitor (opening tonight)–are caving in on their own “indie” clichés. Like rogue environmentalists tracking an invasive species in an Appalachian creek bed, we digest their ways and spew out some indiewood movie pitches of our own.

    As a palette cleanser, we talk to Carson Mell. We formed a crush on him last week watching Wholphin DVD No. 5. His sharp wit and creativity are on display in his short animation, Chonto.

    filmcouch-65

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


    Originally posted on:SpoutBlog

  • Trade Roughage 04/11/08

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    Under discussion:

    Prom Night  (2008)

    • Prom NightQuentin Tarantino will give the Cinema Master Class lecture at this year’s Cannes Film Festival.
    • A new New York State budget makes room for a tripling of film production tax incentives, designed to stop the flow of productions running away to nearby states like Connecticut.
    • The remake of Prom Night is expected to narrowly beat out Street Kings at the box office this weekend, and Sony distribution president Rory Bruer knows why. “Prom night is a common sort of experience,” he told The Hollywood Reporter. And really, this is what people look for when they go to the movies: a reflection of an experience they’ve had, plus murder.

    Originally posted on:SpoutBlog

 


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