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Showing posts with label Art House. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Art House. Show all posts

Friday, February 28, 2014

For Your Consid eration: Act of Killing


In the opening sequence of "Act of Killing," torturer Anwar Congo seeks redemption by acting out a scene from his imagination. In his fantasy, the people he killed return from the dead and forgive him. Swaying and smiling, kissed by the spray of the beautiful waterfall behind him, surrounded by dancing girls, Anwar basks in the glow of his imagined forgiveness. "Peace! Joy! This isn't fake!" An anonymous director shouts from behind the camera. But once the director shouts "cut," a small army of production assistants appears to throw coats over the dancing girls, who are shivering in the cold. It is fake. It's all fake.  And if you are looking for some kind of redemptive ending from ACT OF KILLING - and some critics, apparently, are - this is as close as you are going to get.

I revisited ACT OF KILLING on Netflix this week, having seen it at the beginning of its theatrical run at a screening of the Austin Film Society and the Alamo Drafthouse. This Sunday, it will be under consideration for an Academy Award, an award for which Nic Fraser of the Guardian believes it is entirely unsuited. Calling the movie "tasteless" and pretentious, he submits the opinion that people shouldn't overreach the "journeyman's art" of documentary filmmaking:
The film does not in any recognisable sense enhance our knowledge of the 1960s Indonesian killings... Instead of an investigation, or indeed a genuine recreation, we've ended somewhere else – in a high-minded snuff movie.
I could not possibly disagree more with the sentiments expressed in this article. Yes, there are lots of forgotten, heavily-whitewashed atrocities in the world, which the filmmaker could have chosen to focus on. For instance here, in America - as one of the former torturers in ACT OF KILLING actually points out - white settlers committed wholesale genocide on Native Americans. "Has anyone been punished for that?" the torturer sneers. Or have the perpetrators of that particular genocide been, in fact, glorified - as cowboys, as gangsters, as "Free men?"



 "I'm a gangster. A free man. A movie theater gangster. Not much education. A human drop out. There are people like me everywhere in the world." These are the words Anwar uses to justify himself, during a break in the shooting. He is restless, uncomfortable. He lights a cigarette, moves toward a window, complains he is too hot. As a youth, Anwar scalped tickets outside of theaters playing American movies, then walked across the street and cut people's heads off, sometimes still whistling the theme from the movie. The pressure of his conscience visits him in dreams. But in the daylight, he romanticizes his actions. Anwar and his companions knowingly use movies - American movies - to whitewash their actions and their roles as tough guy enforcers. They play dress up as much in life as they do in their re-enactments.

We watch them decide which stories to tell. One of Anwar's neighbors, a man with a Chinese stepfather, says he has a story to relate. Anwar and his friends are encouraging, until they realize that the neighbor's story is about how his Chinese stepfather was killed in an anti-communist raid. "We don't really have time to tell every story," they say dismissively. "But maybe it can inform the actor's performances." The look on the man's face says it all.  He nods, goes within himself. When it's  time for him to play the part of the victim, he weeps until huge strings of snot hang out of his nose.

What would make this re-enactment more "genuine?" Some sad music? A Ken Burns style pan and scan over some pictures of mass graves? Would that make it more of a "recognizable" documentary? What if there are no mass graves? What if the victims are silenced? What if all that is left is the story told by those who won the war?

"War crimes" are defined by the winners. I'm a winner. So I make my own definitions." When asked whether he is worried about the Geneva convention rules against torture, one man gives an answer worthy of George Bush. "I don't necessarily agree with those international laws. When George Bush was in power, Guatanamo was ok. Saddam Hussein had weapons of mass destruction. That was right according to Bush, but now it's wrong." You can't really fault his logic. Why should these guys pay attention to international laws about torture, if the United States doesn't?



Why do we forgive that, and not this? It's not because Abu Ghraib happened in a faraway country. It's because we've decided that torturers, murderers, and oppressors are somewhere else. They are in some other country. They can't be our grandfathers. They can't be our neighbors. They must be someone else, somewhere else, because the idea that we, ourselves, are not the guys in the white hats, is something we are not prepared to accept. The very idea of "white hats" is so bound up in our national mythology that we forget that the people wearing them were, in fact, the ones who were doing the shooting. We want a happy ending, we want the bad guys to be punished. If that doesn't happen, how can we push the badness away from ourselves? How can we know that we are the good guys?

Toward the end, Anwar is sitting on a dock in a thunderstorm. There is darkness and black water all around him. He speaks of his terror in confronting this darkness. And the viewer knows, instinctively, that he is about to confront the darkness in himself. When he finally does, his reaction is the only possible one: he retches. In an excellent AMA on Redditt, Oppenheimer describes the scene eloquently:
It’s as though his body physically rejects all the words he has been speaking. If you transcribe his words on the roof, they are much the same as we have heard throughout the film - “I had to do it, because my conscience told me they had to be killed.” (...) His body is finally rejecting his words.

For my part, I had this desire to put my arm around him and say “It’s going to be okay” (a manifestation of desperate optimism that we Americans are famous for). In that moment, however, I had this sickening realisation that no: it will not be okay. And this is what it looks like when it is not okay. And I realised then I could do nothing other than bear witness to what was unfolding.

Oppenheimer does not glamorize these men. By simply bearing witness, he uses the camera to critique not only the situation in Indonesia, but Western civilization itself.

Go watch it on Netflix. Believe it or not, I haven't even told you all the good parts already.








Friday, February 14, 2014

Do You Want Cupid's Cove, or Do You Want the Future Room?




Fair warning: if you are planning to watch "Blue Valentine" with your sweetheart tonight, you may end up crying in your chocolate mousse - and not for the right reasons. The movie is 120 minutes of pure heartbreak. The story cuts back and forth between the faltering marriage of Dean and Cindy, and the heady early days of their whirlwind romance. "Do you want Cupid's Cove, or do you want the Future Room?" Dean asks Cindy, as he tries to talk her into a weekend getaway at a sex motel.  As they dance and get drunk in the soulless, metallic "Future Room" that they've chosen for themselves, we realize why this story is especially poignant: it's precisely because the heartbreak is self-chosen.

Derek Cianfrance may be one of the most interesting American directors working today. The Place Beyond the Pines, while a cinematic tour de force (that motorcycle chase!!), ultimately fizzled out for me when Ryan Gosling left the screen. I didn't care about the second story involving the sons; I felt like it kind of meandered off into a place beyond the plot.  Personally, I like Blue Valentine better, and I think it holds up better narratively. Cianfrance shot the romance in lush, highly saturated Super16, and let two amazing actors (Gosling and Michelle Williams) pretty much improvise an entire relationship over the course of the production. The result feels intimate, fresh, and sincere.

 
Bittersweet and atmospheric, Blue Valentine may not be your first choice for Valentine's Day, but it is on Netflix now. (And who are we kidding, you were going to binge-watch House of Cards Season 2, anyway!)

Monday, December 9, 2013

Shadows

It's still John Cassavettes' birthday for about  20 minutes or so, so why not spend them watching "Shadows?"



From the Slate article: "How John Cassavettes' startling directorial debut changed American movies forever:"

"If American independent cinema could be said to have a birthday, Nov. 11 is as good a date to celebrate as any. On that night 50 years ago, John Cassavetes, an actor then best known for his TV roles, unveiled for a downtown New York audience his directing debut, SHADOWS. Cassavetes had financed the production with his paychecks from Hollywood and made the film with a cast and crew of novice actors from his drama workshop. The finished product betrayed their inexperience: mismatched cuts, shots out of focus, audio out of sync. But it was also unlike anything audiences had seen before..."

Friday, December 6, 2013

Computer Chess

I've spent the last four weeks trying to figure out what to say about Computer Chess. Much has been made of its retro production values ("don't point the camera into the sun!") and its wry portrait of a nascent nerd culture that nobody realized was about to take over the world.  But what I haven't seen anybody talk about is the clear affection with which Andrew Bujalski approaches his subject: a bunch of barely-out-of-high school "C" programmers who are trying to push the boundaries of artificial intelligence - which, in the 80s, was kind of adorably clunky and mechanical.



It's clear that Bujalski loves these guys. He KNOWS these guys. He's probably sat around in hotel rooms getting stoned with them, back in the days when that's what we did, because internet chatrooms didn't exist.  As someone who literally grew up in that culture, I was excitedly jumping up and down in my seat as I recognized people onscreen who I hadn't thought about in years (I'm still convinced one of the characters is based on Somtow Sucharitkul, but of course I can't prove it.) And it opened up my heart in ways I hadn't expected. And maybe that's why I find it so hard to talk about. I feel something personal in my relationship to this film. It's like a memento I keep in a box in the back of the closet, that I only pull out to look at in private. It's nerd nostalgia at its finest.

The phrase "coming of age" has become really devalued in the film world, since it is generally associated with a bunch of hormonal high schoolers on prom night finally getting laid/assaulting a teacher/discovering their bromantic feelings for one another on the verge of adulthood. This film, thankfully, is none of those things. But it is the portrait of a bunch of smart kids earnestly trying to make a machine think like a human, as they navigate academic politics, the human potential movement, and the halls of the Marriott to try to score points for futurism. If you were avoiding it because you don't like "Mumblecore," do yourself a favor and check it out. This is something special. And it's on Netflix right now.

Wednesday, December 4, 2013

John Waters Top 10 of 2013

It's that time of year, folks: the time when John Waters lets us all know what filth we need to pick up on video in the new year!


JOHN WATERS' TOP 10 MOVIES OF 2013





"1. Spring Breakers: The best sexploitation film of the year has Disney tween starlets hilariously undulating, snorting cocaine, and going to jail in bikinis. What more could a serious filmgoer possibly want?


2. Camile Claudel 1915: Not since Freaks has there been such a harrowing pairing of a star (the sensational Juliette Binoche) with a cast of genuinely handicapped actors. Once again, the great Dumont proves he is the ultimate master of cinematic misery.


3. Abuse Of Weakness: Isabelle Huppert, my favorite actress in the world, plays a crazy director (based on Breillat) who recovers from a massive brain injury by falling for the convict swindler she casts in her film. Their nonsexual, obsessive relationship is sheer perfection to watch, especially when Huppert keeps falling down in those weirdly glamorous orthopedic shoes.


4. Hors Satan: Nature never seemed more brutal than in this love story between a mentally challenged holy man who performs miracles and a teenage bad girl from the farm who foams at the mouth.


5. After Tiller: The brave documentary that asks the question, Which of the four doctors who still perform late-term abortions in America do you like best? Me? I’d pick the more matronly one from Albuquerque."


More, so much more, in the link!


Thursday, November 21, 2013

Nuns With Guns

I've never been a big fan of the rape-revenge genre. Inevitably, when people hear that you are a woman who enjoys exploitation films, the conversation immediately turns to "oh! Well have you seen "I Spit on Your Grave," because, you know, the protagonist has a vagina and as a vagina-owner, you probably will love it." Like watching one of the few protagonists I can relate to getting brutally gang-raped in the opening scene is going to be an empowering experience for me. Cause that's the basic rape-revenge plot: girl gets raped, gets angry, and goes on a killing spree to get back at her rapists. At best, it shows a lack of imagination when it comes to writing origin stories for "strong women characters." At worst, it's a cartoon idea of what rape is:  a one-dimensional shorthand for female character motivation.

And that's why it took me so long to get around to Ms. 45.


I came to Abel Ferrara through Bad Lieutenant. Ferrara's sleazy, gritty portrait of a New York cop didn't shy away from portraying all sides of a self-destructive soul, so I suspected Ms. 45 would show the same unflinching commitment. And oh boy, did it ever.  This was not a one-dimensional fantasy of a "strong woman." Zoe Lund's performance is amazing, as she mutates from a mute, washed-out seamstress to a stalking killer, a Travis Bickle of sexual politics whose very existence deconstructs the motivations of everyone around her. She's not strong. She's like Batman having a psychotic break. And of course, it's all wrapped in Ferrara's lapsed Catholic imagery.  So by the time she shows up in a nun's habit and red lipstick and starts firing wildly at a party full of people, we know she's about to self-immolate for our sins.  And it's awesome to watch.

Drafhouse is releasing a new, digitally remastered and uncut print of this 70's classic in December, to theaters, DVD, Blu Ray and VOD. Right now they are giving away two tracks from the soundtrack for free, so hustle on over, baby!

http://drafthousefilms.com/film/ms.-45

(By the way, if you want to see "Bad Lieutenant," it's on Hulu for free. You're welcome.)