Friday, September 26, 2014

Quasi-Fictional Film 20,000 Days on Earth Imagines 24 Hours in the Life of Nick Cave

This is the full text of my Stranger review (find the short version here).

On the basis of his idiosyncratic discography, a conventional documentary
about Nick Cave would come as a surprise—and a disappointment. Fortun-
ately, co-directors Ian Forsyth and Jane Pollard tossed the biographical in-
struction manual in the trash and started fresh. If anything, 20,000 Days on Earth—the figure represents Cave's age on the day depicted in the film—plays like a living scrapbook. Those expecting the filmmakers to check off the usual boxes on the way from birth to adulthood best get their kicks elsewhere, because they won't find much of that sort of thing here.

Cave narrates the entire thing as himself—or the glamorized version he chooses to present on screen (he never appears in jeans and t-
shirts, but rather black suits and extravagant gold jewelry). Since he worked closely with the London filmmakers, he's a collaborator as much
as a subject. In the film, which opens today at The Grand Illusion, he writes, records, and performs songs from 2013's Push the Sky Away with his band, the Bad Seeds, including multi-instrumentalist and magnificent beardo Warren Ellis. "Mostly I write," says Cave, an Australian who calls England home, "tapping and scratching away day and night sometimes."

Cave and Minogue reinvent Lee Hazlewood and Nancy Sinatra for the grunge era.

The directors blend observational material with staged conversations,
most of which take place in the confines of a car. That might not qualify
as fiction, but it isn't exactly non-fiction either—or it isn't the way direct-
cinema pioneers, like Albert and David Maysles or Frederick Wiseman, have defined that term through their work. These quasi-surrealistic se-
quences with psychoanalyst Darian Leader (unbilled), actor Ray Win-
stone, guitarist Blixa Bargeld, and Cave's one-time duet partner Kylie Minogue yield intriguing insights about his past (childhood in Wangaratta), present (life in Brighton), joys (performing) and fears (losing his memory).

The unconventional structure represents a major blessing and a minor curse. At times, Cave's narration becomes obtuse, but he tends to dial it back whenever the atmosphere starts to get too close. His humorous and heartfelt commentary about a collection of archival photographs, for in-
stance, highlights his skills as a raconteur (they include black-and-white snapshots of his pre-Bad Seeds outfits, the Boys Next Door and the Birth-
day Party). Erik Wilson's exquisite cinematography—marked by dramatic lighting and elegantly framed compositions—is the crowning touch.

My favorite part: Cave lounging on a couch with his twins (Earl and Arthur), eating pizza, bathed in the glow of a TV set. The staging suggests that they're watching a wacky comedy or a classic western, but this is a man who's written songs about dead babies ("The Firstborn Is Dead") and electrocutions ("The Mercy Seat"). When Al Pacino's immortal line arrives, the faces of father and sons light up as they speak along in unison, "Say hello to my little friend!" It's a quintessential Nick Cave moment.


20,000 Days opens today at the Grand Illusion. Image: Drafthouse Films.

Friday, September 19, 2014

San Francisco Silent Film Festival 2014: A Silent Sampler with Buster Keaton and More

San Francisco Silent Film Festival presents
Silent Autumn
Saturday, September 2014
The Castro Theatre
San Francisco


Buster Keaton in The General (1927) playing at SFSFF's Silent Autumn

This Saturday, The San Francisco Silent Film Festival presents Silent Autumn, a single day sampler of their epic four-day festival that runs each summer at the Castro Theater. This carefully curated day of programming is the perfect introduction to the silent period for the uninitiated, or those with just a few silent film experiences.  It will also delight seasoned fans of the Festival, a little something to keep them going till next year’s main event. The event distills what makes the Festival’s four-day event so remarkable: inclusive programming, the best accompanists in the world, and a chance to travel in time by presenting these films the way they were meant to be seen on the big screen of a movie palace like the Castro surrounded by an enthusiastic audience.


One of the highlights of the main festival each year is the traditional Sunday morning program of comedic shorts; Saturday’s event kicks off with a collection of Silent Laurel and Hardy shorts. The lads still remain the finest team in comedy and a wonderful introduction to silents for children as well as adults. Pianist Donald Sosin will accompany the lineup of miniatures. Sosin has composed over a thousand scores for both live performances for film festivals across the world like Italy’s annual Pordenone Silent Film Festival and for DVD releases such as his scores for the Criterion Collection’s release of Three Silent Classics by Josef Von Sternberg and Silent Ozu: Three Family Comedies.

Rudolph Valentino overpowers co-star Vilma Bánky in Son of the Sheik (1926) 

The Saturday event continues with a late morning screening of a lush romantic adventure film epitomizing the apex of Hollywood’s golden age of silents, when their technicians and artists brought visual storytelling to an astonishing level of sophistication.  Son of the Sheik, starring the charismatic and unbelievably handsome screen idol Rudolph Valentino, perfectly fits the bill. Valentino plays the title character, having portrayed his father in the wildly popular precursor The Sheik. To convey Valentino’s star power is difficult; fittingly for a Silent film icon there are no words to describe him. The Alloy Orchestra, a trio with a distinctly modern but effective approach to Silent film accompaniment, will play their original score for the film. One of the trio Ken Winokur along with Jane Gillooly restored the film from excellent 35mm negative material.

A Night at the Cinema in 1914 recreates the British movie goer’s experience from the year that The Great War broke out and changed their country forever. The BritishFilm Institute curated this selection comprising travelogues, newsreels, animated, narrative and documentary shorts, and an episode of the legendary serial The Perils of Pauline. A comedic short by Charlie Chaplin, the biggest star of the time, tops it all off. This program serves both as diverting entertainment as well as giving an insight into the times from a historical and social context. Donald Sosin will provide the accompaniment.

Buster Keaton’s The General similarly combines the historic with absorbing entertainment. Keaton tells the true tale of a railroad conductor who ventured into enemy territory during the Civil War to recover his beloved train The General. The story is told with, of course, brilliant comedic embellishments. Interestingly, Keaton changed the engineer’s allegiance from the Union to the Confederacy, claiming “You can always make villains out of the Northerners, but you cannot make a villain out of the South.”  The resulting film provides the laughs and breathtaking stunts expected from Keaton as well an accurate and detailed recreation of the period, including the use of The General’s actual engine. Keaton’s underplayed wry style and stunning action direction make his films some of the most accessible silent films for novice viewers including children.


Expresionism as well as evil abounds in The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari (1920)

The dreamlike German horror classic The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari caps off the day’s programming. This screening combines two beloved features of the SFSFF, a dedication to showing foreign films and a late night psychotronic screening. In this eerie masterpiece a carnival hypnotist puts a young man under his control and sends him out each night to commit a series of murders in his sleep.  Both the film’s pioneering use of Expressionism and the flashback structure became staples of Hollywood’s film noirs in the late 40s and 50s. This will be the U.S premier of the 4K restoration from the original camera negative. Accompaniment by the unfailing Donald Sosin.

There truly is something for everyone at Silent Autumn regardless of their degree of familiarity with silents, preference in genres or age. For show times, ticket information and more on the festival visit the SFSFF’s official website wwww.SilentFilm.org

Monday, June 9, 2014

Stranger Flashback: SIFF Concludes with Quincy Jones, Chris Messina, and Some Cool Shoes

Film/TV Jun 9, 2014 at 11:58 am

That's a Wrap: SIFF Concludes with Quincy Jones, Chris Messina, and Some Cool Shoes

  • K.C. Fennessy
  • Quincy Jones with SIFF artistic director Carl Spence
Every time SIFF rolls around, I end up missing the most famous guests. Granted, I attend the festival more because I'm interested in movies than celebrities, but it's a nice fringe benefit. That said, it takes money and/or pull to get into the tribute events, so I usually give them a pass and attend a film instead.

So this year, I missed the tributes to Laura Dern, Chiwetel Ejiofor, and Quincy Jones. I also missed the opening night screening of Jimi: All Is By My Side with director John Ridley and actress Hayley Atwell, the centerpiece screening of Boyhood with director Richard Linklater,* and the closing night screening of The One I Love with director Charlie McDowell and actors Elisabeth Moss and Mark Duplass, though I did end up catching the films at other screenings (I also interviewed Linklater last week). Incidentally, until my friend Tony mentioned it, I'd forgotten that Charlie is the son of Malcolm McDowell.

I don't think it really counts that I saw actor-director Clark Gregg (Agent Coulson from The Avengers and ABC's Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D.) leaving the Egyptian after the screening of his film, Trust Me, though I did! He patiently posed for photo after photo with all the Joss Whedon fans who had come out to support him.

*Boyhood swept the Golden Space Needles with awards for best picture, best director, and best actress (Patricia Arquette). 

  • It's not so much that Q is short, it's that Carl is tall
Fortunately, SIFF brings in so many guests that you'd have to work pretty hard, i.e. see very few movies, to miss them all. I previously wrote about one set of visiting attendees in this post. More recently, I attended Alex of Venice with actor-director Chris Messina and The Pawnbroker with composer Quincy Jones.

Though I've seen Sidney Lumet's The Pawnbroker (1964) before, I wasn't about to miss the chance to hear what Jones had to say about it. If he didn't stick around for a Q&A, his introduction was worth the trip since he discussed his Seattle childhood, his entry into the world of film composing (a world that was very white until he got involved with it), and his relationship with Lumet, which developed through their mutual friendship with Lena Horne. Since Jones stuck to the subject at hand, there was no mention of his Sanford and Son theme, his production of Michael Jackson's Off the Wall, or any of his other notable endeavors, but it was a pleasure to see the music legend in person.

  • K.C. Fennessy
  • Chris Messina and Lynn Shelton
After the screening of Chris Messina's Alex of Venice, a friend declared that he disliked everything about it, but I took the film for exactly what it was—the directorial debut of an actor currently starring on a network sitcom—and by that measure, it exceeded my expectations.

At the Q&A with actor-writer Katie Nehra and Stranger Genius Award winner Lynn Shelton, who seemed to be everywhere at this year's SIFF, Messina credited a strong cast and crew for making him look good, and I didn't sense any false humility on his part; too many first-time filmmakers settle for what they can find instead of holding out for their ideal collaborators (not counting those with unrealistic expectations in the first place). 

  • K.C. Fennessy
  • Yes, I took a picture of Carl's shoes—they're the best

By way of example, Messina says he used temp tracks from David Wingo the whole way through until he finally wore down the composer's resistance, at which point Wingo contributed original material. If there's a little too much music in the film, his subtle sensibility fits with Messina's slightly dreamy aesthetic, but more than anything else, the film serves as a showcase for Scott Pilgrim's Mary Elizabeth Winstead as a harried lawyer with a young son and Don Johnson as her well meaning, if increasingly forgetful father, and both deliver. Ironically, Messina cited David Gordon Green's All the Real Girls with Zooey Deschanel as an influence. The sitcom on which Messina stars, The Mindy Project, and Deschanel's The New Girl now air back-to-back on FOX—and Shelton has directed episodes of the latter.

As of yesterday, the 40th edition of SIFF has come to an end. Despite all I missed, I enjoyed the films and events I attended, including The Future of Film Criticism panel in which I participated on Saturday (conclusion: it does have a future despite any signs to the contrary). Altogether I saw 41 films, which is nothing compared to the average full series pass holder, but it seems like a lot to me. If I had to pick three standouts, I'd go for Boyhood, Miss Zombie, and Ida.

I've written about two of those films in previous posts, but to bring things full circle: Pawel Pawlikowski's Ida has a lot in common with The Pawnbroker in the way it approaches the Holocaust—particularly the survivor's guilt that's tearing two of the central characters apart—from a unique angle. And it features some of the most beautiful, black-and-white cinematography in the entire festival (the film also stars Dawid Ogrodnik who won the Golden Space Needle award for Life Feels Good). If you're a believer in the deeply humanist work of Danish director Carl Theodor Dreyer (The Passion of Joan of Arc, Ordet): this is the film for you.

As featured in The Pawnbroker, Austin Powers, and many hip-hop tracks.

All photos taken at the Harvard Exit. Ida opens at SIFF Cinema at the Uptown on Friday, June 13. Release dates for Alex of Venice are yet to be determined.

Saturday, May 17, 2014

San Francisco Silent Film Festival 2014: Noir's Murky Antecedents Surface in Silence

The San Francisco Silent Film Festival 2014
May 29-June 2
The Castro Theatre

Two thirds of Undergroound's  Tube set love triangle


Film noir is a fluid genre, unlike the Western or the science fiction film, not everyone agrees on what a film noir is. Traditionally, noir has been defined as an exclusively American crime genre with certain stylistic and story elements: black and white high contrast cinematography, the femme fatale and the protagonist led to an inevitable doom.  However, many include Technicolor films like Leave Her to Heaven in the noir canon, and there has been a critical awakening to the fact that countries other the U.S. in the 40s and 50s produced film noirs. Similarly, noirs antecedents have been posited and reevaluated. Typically noir’s roots are traced back to the German Expressionism, the Hollywood gangster films of the 30s and the Hardboiled school of pulp fiction. The Film Noir Foundation has been trying to explore the question of what noir is with the international bent of this year’s NOIRCITY film festivals and expanded editorial outlook of its NOIR CITY e-magazine which includes a regular feature entitled “Silent Noir”.


Will the good guy finish last?
The FNF will be co-presenting two silent era proto-noirs at the San Francisco Silent Film Festival, running May 29–June 1 at the historic Castro Theatre. Renowned British director Anthony Asquith's second feature Underground (1928) is a working-class love story and thriller set in and around the London Underground (subway system). The romantic triangle pits nice-guy Brian Aherne against sinister Cyril McLaglen for the affections of beautiful shopgirl Elissa Landi. The film's climax is a chase at a power station that rivals Hitchcock's chase scene at the British Museum in Blackmail. The incomparable Stephen Horne will accompany the film on piano. Horne is the house accompanist for the British Film Institute and has previously accompanied Asquith's A Cottage on Dartmoor for the SFSFF, as well as recording his own score for the BFI's DVD and Blu-ray release of the silent thriller. Underground will screen on Saturday, May 31 at 4:30PM.

Director Ozu proves a  deft hand with the gangster genre
The name Yasujiro Ozu brings to mind the graceful, self-contained family drama or comedy depicting everyday life in Japan. However, Ozu worked in a variety of genres early in his career as a studio director. In his 1933 gangster film Dragnet Girl (Hijosen no onna), a tough gangster (Joji Oka) finds himself embroiled in an unexpected love triangle with an innocent shop girl (Sumiko Mizukubo) and his own tough as nails moll (Kinuyo Tanaka) that causes him to reevaluate his criminal lifestyle. FNF president Eddie Muller will introduce this program, playing at noon on Sunday, June 1. The versatile Guenter Buchwald will accompany the film on piano. Buchwald is the director of the Silent Movie Music Company and conducts the Freiburg Filmharmonic Orchestra, which he founded in 1992.

Urban despair in 1929 Berlin
Also for the lovers of ‘the dark side of the screen’, the Goethe-Institut/Berlin & Beyond will co-present Leo Mittler's Harbor Drift (1929), an eloquent German film that prefigures film noir in its depiction of fated souls, with exquisite camerawork by Friedl Behn-Grund of the shadowy harbor, bridges, canals and alleyways of Hamburg. The German title Jenseits der Strasse’s subtitle: Eine Tragödie des Alltags—a tragedy of everyday life—is an apt description of Germany’s unemployment and destitution as personified in the film by an old beggar (Paul Rehkopf), a jobless young man (Fritz Genschow), and a prostitute (Lissy Arna). The film plays Sunday, June 1 at 7:00PM. Stephen Horne will accompany the film on piano with Frank Bockius joining him on percussion. Bockius’ musical background includes founding both a percussionist band and a jazz quintet. He also performs with the Silent Movie Music Company.

To buy tickets or find out more about the festival, visit SilentFilm.org

Friday, May 16, 2014

I Wake Up Dreaming 2014: Dreaming of a Noir World with Pre-Code Classics

I Wake Up Dreaming 2014

May 16- 25, 2014
Roxie Theatre, San Francisco

The Warner Archive has joined forces with programmer Elliot Lavine to present this year's I Wake Up Dreaming film noir festival. The ten day festival runs the gamut from Pre-Code crime classics like Barbara Stanwyck's outing in the women in prison genre, Ladies They Talk About (1933) to late era noirs such as Brainstorm (1965) featuring Jeffery Hunter as a murderer who fakes insanity in an attempt to beat the justice system with disastrous results. There will be plenty of classic era noirs for the purists too, including the one often considered the first true film noir, The Stranger on the Third Floor (1940) featuring a frightening but humane performance by film noir icon Peter Lorre. 

Ann Sheridan and Lew Ayres on the set of 'The Unfaithful'  
 
Other highlights include a double bill of 1947 noirs featuring outstanding performances by Ann Sheridan, Nora Prentiss and The Unfaithful and a pair of Fritz Lang helmed films starring Dana Andrews from 1956, the all-star newspaper noir While the City Sleeps and the suspenseful courtroom noir Beyond a Shadow of a Doubt. Both sets of double features prove the depth of their respective stars, as well as the willingness of Hollywood to take on controversial topics in a sensitive manner: adultery in Nora and Unfaithful, journalistic ethics in City, and the death penalty in Beyond.

George Sanders and Ida Lupino,  two of the all star cast from 'While the City Sleeps'
 
All 30 selections in this year's festival hail from the Warner Archive, but will also include films produced by RKO and MGM now owned by Warners. In a significant change for the festival, all the films will be presented digitally.  In previous years, rarer films were often presented in 16mm prints in varying condition supplied from private collectors. The Roxie's digital projection and the digital source materials will provide a consistent picture and sound quality to this year's screenings.

For the complete schedule of films and ticket information, visit the Roxie's official website.