Coverage of the Seattle International
Film Festival and year-round art house
programming in the Pacific Northwest.
Kathy Fennessy is President of the Seattle Film Critics Society, a Northwest Film Forum board member, and a Tomatometer-approved critic. She writes or has written for Amazon, Minneapolis's City Pages, Resonance, Rock and Roll Globe, Seattle Sound, and The Stranger.
Member: IBEW and SAG-AFTRA.
Saturday, May 30, 2009
A Brief Survey of Men with Eyeliner on the Silver Screen from the 1920s to the 2000s
Saturday, May 23, 2009
Barry Jenkins: He’s Gotta Have It, Part Four


Thursday, May 21, 2009
Barry Jenkins: He’s Gotta Have It, Part Three
Monday, May 18, 2009
Barry Jenkins: He’s Gotta Have It, Part Two
Sunday, May 17, 2009
He's Gotta Have It: a Chat with Barry Jenkins

-- Charles Mudede, The Stranger
***** ***** ***** ***** ***** ***** *****
From the moment I first heard about Medicine for Melancholy, which was initially described as a sort of African-American spin on mumblecore, I knew I'd like it, and I did. (Even if the dreaded m-word has lost traction in recent years, I still consider myself a fan.)
In fact, the debut feature from Barry Jenkins is one of the finest films of 2009. The voters behind Film Independent's Spirit Awards came to the same conclusion and nominated him for their prestigious One to Watch Award, along with Nina Paley and Seattle’s Lynn Shelton.
I interviewed Jenkins while he was in town earlier this year to introduce Medicine
for Melancholy at the Northwest Film Forum, and here’s what he had to say...
Click here for my review of the film.
I haven’t seen your bio, but I know some basic facts, and I'm definitely going to be asking you questions you’ve answered before, but they’re kind of important. Since it comes up in the movie—Micah says "born and raised"—I have to ask: were you born and raised in the Bay Area?
No, not at all.
You weren’t? I’m not assuming you're Micah, but I figured you grew up there.
Well, he is, but…I’ve only been living in San Francisco for about three and a half years.
That’s a surprise to me.
I was a regular visitor for six years, because when I first moved to LA, my best friend from film school, James Laxton, the cinematographer, was born and raised there, and I used to visit him all the time, because I did not enjoy LA, so it feels like I’ve been living there for six years.
That’s interesting. I don’t have cable, and had never heard of Wyatt Cenac
before, so I didn’t know he was on The Daily Show. Is he a San Franciscan?
No, he’s not. The only person involved with the film who’s a born and raised
San Franciscan is James, and right now the only person who lives there is me.
The film credits indicate that you spent time in LA.
Yeah, there are a lot of LA names in the special thanks.
Is that how you ended up working on Their Eyes Were Watching God?
Yes, I graduated from film school and moved directly to Los Angeles. I graduated on Decem-
ber 15th and I was in LA by December 21st. I was there before Christmas, which was nuts.
Wow.
I’d gotten this grant called the Pathfinder Award, which was like a $5,000 grant.
Which is enough to do a move.
It was enough to move, but in retrospect, I should’ve taken that money and gone to Europe
or hobo'ed around the country. Instead, I moved to LA, paid way too much for an apartment, and took a very, very underpaid job as a director’s assistant on Their Eyes Were Watching God.
But it’s nice to be involved with something big like that.
Yeah, and it was the right move. I mean, I was the only person in town, so I was like one
of only three people interviewed for the job—that’s why I got it, despite having no experience, and man, it was like a crash course in how different making movies would be in LA as oppos-
ed to coming from film school where you have to make a movie [during] a certain semes-
ter, and you’re guaranteed a crew and you’re guaranteed film. Nothing’s guaranteed in LA.
Even within that protective Oprah bubble?
Exactly, but when you get to LA, nothing’s guaranteed. Everybody’s fighting for the same few jobs. So, I was the director’s assistant, and I saw that movie from the earliest pre-production
all through post-production, so it was about nine months, and I was fresh out of school.
That seems long for TV—that's longer than a lot of features—but it does look good.
Yeah, I mean, this was the biggest-budgeted TV movie at that point. And then it was the highest-rated television movie in network history, too. So, it was like being on a really big Hollywood set. I mean, you had Halle Berry, and she was on top of the world at that point.
I liked it, but I haven’t read the book [by Zora Neale Hurston], and I know that peop-
le who have are going to be more discriminating. My Mom has recommended it to me.
You see, I had read the book and I was just coming from college. I have a dual degree; a bachelor’s in creative writing and in film, so I read Their Eyes Were Watching God in a serious literary discourse, and then we made the Harpo version, which is just not the same as the book. I was going to say it doesn’t stand up, but I’ll be polite, and say it’s just not the same. [laughs]
And it probably couldn’t have been, even in a feature film. You know, if it’s within a certain budget, it seems like it would have to have…
With that much money and that many people, you can't have made the book, there’s no way.
You thank Darnell Martin. Are you still in touch?
We're still in touch, we're still friends. Darnell is very proud of Medicine. She was super supportive of me. Darnell gave me that job because she knew I didn't have any footing in LA, and she liked my short films. She's always looking for filmmakers as her assistants.
That's very cool.
It was really cool, and it was a really intense job, because Darnell was going through a transition in her personal life. She's a single mother with a three-year-old child in New York. So, she doesn't drive and she's trying to get her kid into school on the East Coast, and she's at the helm of this huge movie and it had been awhile since her last feature, so it was really important for her.
My unusual connection with her [work] is that I’ve seen Prison Song, but more people have probably seen I Like It Like That, her first feature, which I haven't, although I've heard good things about it. I've also seen Cadillac Records, so I'm somewhat caught up.
I Like It Like That was great. She has a really interesting style, and she's amazing with actors.
BeyoncĂ© was a better Etta James [in Cadillac Records] than I expected. I was thinking: you can’t take a tall thin woman and…but Darnell did a good job, I thought, with the whole cast.
Darnell is intense, and she will pull a performance out of you, and it was really cool to see that, because the one thing—the thing you learn the least about in film school is directing actors.
Click here for part two
Their Eyes Were Watching God
Endnote: Distributed by IFC, Medicine for Melancholy isn't yet a-
vailable on DVD. Image from my personal collection (Jenkins at the NWFF).
Thursday, May 14, 2009
Celebs Invade Seattle: Part Two

Award-winning author/screenwriter Sherman Alexie (The Toughest Indian in the World, Smoke Signals) cuts loose with one of his infectious laughs at the Northwest Film Forum screening of Kent Mackenzie's lost Native American classic The Exiles in 2008.

Click here for my review of The Exiles.


Click here for my review of Medicine for Melancholy.
***** ***** *****
Endnote: Cross-posted at Facebook. Interview with Jenkins to come.
Saturday, May 9, 2009
Celebs Invade Seattle: Part One

-- Harry Callahan, Magnum Force (1973)
While in town last July to shoot World's Greatest Dad, actor/director Bobcat Goldthwait introduced The Landlord at the Northwest Film Forum.
***** ***** ***** ***** ***** ***** ***** ***** ***** *****
I love photography, but I'm not much of a photographer. I can always get better, but I'll never be great. I just want to remember specific people and places that are better served by pictures than by words.

use the cheap-
est possible e-
quipment. I've
got a 35mm
camera and
a digital model,
but they've proven to be less than re-
liable. For a Luddite like myself, a Pola-
roid, Diana, or Lomo device would seem like the best way to go, but they cost money, too, and aren't always that easy to track down, so years ago, I threw my lot in with the Kodak disposable, and I've enjoyed the results.
I usually opt for black and white film, which eliminates most grey tones,
resulting in a high-contrast, Weegie-like look. Sometimes I opt for color.
On the downside, faces can look shiny--especially mine--but hues can
appear brilliant. I particularly like the way my snapshot of the Experi-
ence Music Project turned out. If you stick to the rainbow-saturated, copper-plated side of the building, you can get some lovely images.
![]() |
Former NWFF Exec Director Michael Seiwerath introduces Bobcat |
![]() |
Bobcat and Michael |
World's Greatest Dad plays the Egyptian on 6/6 at 6:30pm and on 6/7 at 4pm. If The Wire's Omar Little were sitting beside me at the moment, he'd surely say, "I'm feelin' the chapeau and the specs, you feel me?"
Robin Williams also co-stars with Matthew Broderick in Wonderful World, which plays the Kirkland Performance Center on 6/5 at 7pm and the Egyptian on 6/11 at 7pm and 6/12 at 4:15pm.
Note: As ever, dates, times, and venues are subject to change; I suggest
double-checking the SIFF site before making plans or purchasing tickets.

Graphic novelist and screenwriter Daniel Clowes (Ghost World, Art School Confidential) and editor, publisher, and co-founder Gary Groth at the Fantagraphics Store on 9/08. I asked Clowes if he was still working with Michel Gondry on an adaptation of Rudy Rucker's Master of Space and Time. He said they had decided that it was impossible. Instead, he, Gondry, and Gondry's son, Paul, are working on an original project.
(Click here for my chat with Michel, conducted at SIFF '06.)
Next up: Sherman Alexie and Barry Jenkins. Alas, my snaps of Ramin Bahrani didn't turn out (and yes, Alexie's local, but he's still a celeb!).
Endnote: Cross-posted at AndMoreAgain ("Reelin' in the Years: Part Four") and at Facebook. Three years ago, Robyn Hitchcock turned the Callahan quote at the top of this post into the swell song "A Man's Got to Know His Limitations, Briggs." It appears on the album Ole! Tarantula.
Wednesday, May 6, 2009
Tia Lessin: I Turn My Camera On, Part Four
A Chat with Tia Lessin (click here for part three)
Actually, he’s having us out to the Traverse City Film Festival next month. He [Michael Moore] created the film festival a few years back. He renovated a theater in Traverse City that he owns, so he’s inviting us to show the film.
That’s great, because that really, in a way, puts his stamp on it, as well. Here’s another person saying: This is something I think you should see.
Like most everybody with any kind of conscience in this country, he had strong feelings about Katrina, so he was really happy to see this political, emotional film.
I read about how you ended up in New Orleans, and why you made the film, but how did Kim and Scott, these specific people, come to your attention?
In the National Guard Armory, which you see in the film with the soldiers return- ing; across the parking lot was the Red Cross shelter where Kimberly and Scott had arrived that night with 25 people in a truck, so their community—their friends and neighbors—were staying there, and they were down the road in a trailer, so they had this footage, they knew they had a story to tell, and they spotted us from the street. How funny. [Lessin and Deal originally intended to make a film about the redeployment of the National Guard from Iraq to New Orleans.]
[image]
The view from Kimberley's attic
The story that Kim and Scott tell is that they saw us, we looked important, and they honed right in. So that’s really how the film begins, with Kimberly essentially interrupting the interview Carl was doing with the head of the Red Cross shelter. Some people call it serendipity, some people call it fate—it happened to be Carl’s 40th birthday. Look, there are a lot of people with incredible stories to tell, and they’re not really extraordinary storytellers like Kimberly. I think that was really— the footage she had was important ultimately, but also her voice, her ability, and her invitation for us to get on the road with them to see how their story turns out.
That’s amazing that she found you.
And we were looking for a story to tell, there’s no question about it, and we also realized that it was the personal story that was lacking, that we weren’t seeing in the news media, and we objected to how the residents of New Orleans were being characterized. They were either victims or they were looters, and Kimberly and Scott presented this opportunity to tell a story of survivors, of powerful resourceful people who were nobody’s victims, so they were looking for someone to help them get the story out, we were looking for someone…our objectives were aligned, let’s say that.
And you end up getting their community’s story out, too—not that Scott and Kim- berly wouldn’t be interesting enough, but other people come on board, as well. I wanted to ask you, and I know you don’t have much time to go in to detail, but I’m sure not everyone realizes she had a baby at Sundance. I’m wondering how else their lives have changed since the film, because they go through so many changes during the course of it, through moving to Memphis, and other things that happen.
The thing I’m starting to think about Kim and Scott is that they have used ev- ery crisis in their lives as an opportunity. I mean, they’ve been through a lot of storms—whether related to Katrina or not—and they have emerged from the other end stronger, and so they decided to have a baby, and not just to have a baby, but they decided they were in a good place where they could have a baby, and where they had created a good environment in which that would be possible. Kimberly has also recorded a new album, and they created a record company called Born Hustler Re- cords. You can look at the website at bornhustlerrecords.com. She's selling it in con- junction with the film’s release, so some of the songs you hear on our soundtrack are on this album, and many more. And they’re raising this beautiful little girl. And I guess the one other thing, she’s been traveling around with this film. And unfor- tunately, she wasn’t able to come to Seattle, but they’ve been to New York, they’ve been to Utah. They’ve been able to see audiences respond, really emotionally, to the film and their story, and I think that has been life-changing for them.
After Hoop Dreams came out, there was some talk about the fact—and the film- makers were open about this—there’s a point in which the electricity gets turned off for one of the subjects, and the filmmakers pay the bill. And in the film, the lights go off, then they're back, and the film moves on. I’m wondering how you and Carl feel about this, when you’re watching people going through a crisis. Is it wrong to do something like that, or is it something you don’t even have to talk about?
First of all, Kimberly and Scott aren't just subjects in this film. They contributed to it.
I think that’s how the Hoop Dreams directors felt, too: We’re in these people’s faces with cameras at all times, so...
Right. She also had footage, which we licensed. We paid commercial rates, so: yes.
I don’t have a problem with it. And since then, I think the issue isn’t as contro- versial as it was at that time, but then what do you do, leave these people with- out electricity? That’s your only other choice, at least in the case of Hoop Dreams.
Everybody has a different situation, and I think documentary filmmakers need to interrogate themselves about their relationships with—Carl’s and Tia’s situation in this world is quite different from Kimberly’s and Scott’s. We have a lot of power and privilege that we try to keep in check, and we interrogate ourselves all the time.
That’s good, and I like your clarification. It’s important to remember, as viewers, that they might be subjects to us, but not to you. That’s a good point to make.
We licensed their footage, but we pretty much kept out of their lives as much as we could, because they had a lot to do. [laughs]
And she seemed pretty comfortable. I love that line in the film where someone asks, ‘Do you always travel around with a film crew?’ I thought that was great. That was literally after only about a week with us. She was a natural.
[image]
Tia and Carl
Trouble the Water is now available on DVD. For more information, please click here. Images from The Mercury News, indieWIRE, and Zeitgeist Films.