sutrters on March 14th, 2010

Network

“I'm mad as hell and I'm not going to take this anymore!” is just one of many gems in this film about the behind-the-scenes world of at a major television network. Though the film is over thirty years old, its message remains resonant and relevant to life in America in at least as much as our culture continues to rely on television for everything from entertainment to news to education.

Network is both a warning call about the business of TV and an entertaining ride through the physics and metaphysics of the television industry.

Director: Sidney Lumet
Writer: Paddy Chayefsky

Themes: media, media corruption, corporations & big business, illumination, spirituality, vocation, commercialization.

Donnie Darko

Donnie Darko takes some very strange conceptual bedfellows and gracefully interweaves them, creating a supremely unique and dream-like film. While it is easy to get caught up in the time-travel oddity here, the deeper focus of the writing is interested in psychiatry and the difficult questions that parents face in deciding how to best help their children through mental illness.

This topic is timely in today's culture and will be so as long as children and teenagers are prescribed psychiatric medications. However, the presentation is far from polemic. The film manages to keep you following two steps behind, swept up in the experience of watching and listening even as the ideas sink in.

Director: Richard Kelly
Writer: Richard Kelly

Themes: family drama, teenage angst, teenage relationships, psychiatry, psychosis, & psychiatric drugs, time-travel, bullying.

Contempt (in French)

Jean-Luc Godard made a great many films in the 60's and achieved international fame. Today, his films are still watched, and the freshness of his style with its preference for conversation over narrative coherence remains intact. (We could classify many of his movies as being film-as-conversation experiments. Pursuing ideas first, motif second and narrative flow in a distant third Jean-Luc Godard's films are interesting and special when compared to the films of other auteurs, but are not particularly “tight” or narrative.)

A stand-out in his oeuvre is his film about film-making and fame, Contempt. Though the emphasis remains conversational, the story does take on a compelling coherence and we can follow the characters from scene to scene in a straight forward way. Bridget Bardot and Fritz Lang are featured in Contempt and the dialogue hits its points nicely.

Director: Jean-Luc Godard
Writer: Alberto Moravia

Themes: film-making, fame, celebrity, power, relationships, dissolving marriage, art.

Glengary, Glenross

Glengary, Glenross is quintessential David Mamet. Angry, pathetic men evade and eventually confront their anger and their pathos while cursing with articulate fluidity and exceptional vigor.

Al Pacino and Jack Lemon curse with a creativity that is at once natural and inspired as they share space in a real estate office in Chicago, berated and acclaimed by their office manager, Kevin Spacey, and watching Ed Harris edge closer and closer to a complete emotional blow-up or break-down.

Glengary, Glenross is a film that achieves a perfect marriage between written dialogue and acted delivery of that dialogue.

Director: Sidney Lumet
Writer: David Mamet

Themes: sales, pride, despair, deception, loyalty, competition, culture shift.

Hiroshima, Mon Amour

Hiroshima, Mon Amour tackles some difficult and abstract subjects with a great artistry, poetry and depth. Set in post-war Hiroshima, the films explores concepts of sanity, identity and the human response to trauma, considering also the lingering impact of deep emotional trauma and the inescapability of personal history.

A man and a woman engage in an affair, meant to last for only one night. He falls for her and refuses to let her simply walk away from him, back into her life as an actress. She had envisioned a role for herself in this affair and played it. When she thinks the part is finished, she gets pulled back in, eventually drawn to tell her highly personal story and revisit a traumatic period of her life – all too real – that she had spent years trying to escape.

Director: Alain Resnais
Writer: Marguerite Duras

Themes: memory, personal history, identity, trauma, war, psychosis & recovery

Sources:

IMDB.com

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sutrters on March 14th, 2010

The Film Society of Lincoln Center's current series, “Another Spanish Cinema: Films in Catalunya 1906-2006,” screening at the Walter Reade Theater from January 27 through February 14, sheds light on a little known facet of Spanish cinema: films from the Catalan region of Spain, and its celebrated city of Barcelona. This section of Spain has contributed such great artists as Salvador Dali, Pablo Picasso, and Antonio Gaudi. However, its considerable contributions to world cinema as been little noted. This film series sets out to correct this situation. 

Barcelona was the center of Spanish filmmaking during the silent era. However, this ended after the Spanish Civil War of the late 1930s, when the Franco regime suppressed all traces of Catalan language and culture to prevent it from breaking away from Spain. Some filmmakers, though, continued to make films that sought to resist Franco's repressive rule through radical, transgressive art. One filmmaking collective that did so was known as the “Barcelona School,” a loose constellation of writers and directors that set themselves in opposition to the more commercial films being made in Madrid. One film that came out of this movement, which screens in this series, is Jacinto Esteva Grewe and Joaquin Jorda's Dante Is Not Simply Harsh (1967). This film has definite affinities to the various “New Wave” movements occurring in Europe at the time, as well as surrealist elements reminiscent of Bunuel and Dali's Un chien andalou, and its iconic image of a bisected eye. The surrealist impulse of the film is evident in its exquisite-corpse structure, casting its central couple (Serena Vergano and Enrique Irazaqui) in different environments and backgrounds, using loose associative connections to transition from scene to scene rather than a conventional plot. The film also calls attention to itself as a film, by opening with the film crew shooting the actors. While the film often strains patience by its infatuation with its own subversive cleverness, it remains an interesting time-capsule curio. Burning streets, fashion shows, absurdist dialogue, and jarring montages abound in this film. These images circle around rather gruesome shots of eye surgery, which recall that Bunuel and Dali's earlier surrealist masterpiece. 

After Franco's death in 1975, Catalan cinema began to emerge from its previous suppression, and many fascinating films resulted. Ventura Pons is perhaps Catalan cinema's most recognized and celebrated filmmaker, and two of his films screen in the series. Ocana, Intermittent Portrait (1979) is a fascinating and lively documentary portrait of the titular subject, who fled the repressive environment of Madrid to the more liberal Barcelona in order to pursue his passions for painting, acting, and cross-dressing. Ocana is interviewed in his colorful bedroom, in front of a large mirror next to his bed; the camera often pans from Ocana to his mirror image, reflecting the fact that his life revolves around his appearance, both to himself and to others. He talks about the ostracism he has experienced and his connection to other outcasts; his life is itself a form of protest against conformity and repression. “I love provoking people,” he says at one point. He also fiercely resists labels. Despite his penchant for cross-dressing, he insists he is not a transvestite; rather, he considers himself a “pure actor.” We see him parading down the street, flashing his genitals to the crowd during his impromptu street performances. He also sings and acts melodramatically in performance clips interspersed throughout the film. Ocana embodied the struggle to be respected on his own terms and to be free to live his life as he chose. 

A more recent work by Pons, Anita Takes a Chance (2001), is a charming comedy about a middle-aged woman (Rosa Maria Sarda, in an energetic and funny performance) set adrift when she is unceremoniously dumped from her job as a ticket taker in an old movie house, which is being torn down to be replaced by a multiplex. Anita is considered to be too old to fit the image of this new venture. She reminisces about her dead husband and is anxious about her loneliness and her seeming lack of prospects for the future. She obsessively returns to the construction site for the multiplex, where she becomes drawn to a young bulldozer driver (Jose Coronado). She begins an affair with him, despite his being married. Through this affair, Anita is able to break out of her constricted and routine experience, finding new excitement in her life, even as she risks pain and disappointment. Humor and pathos are deftly intertwined in this film, and Anita's movie-influenced fantasies effectively convey her fascinating character. 

Another celebrated Catalan filmmaker is Cesc Gay, represented in the series by In the City (2003), which follows a group of characters in Barcelona, who are connected in ways that are ultimately only grasped by the viewer. Their romantic entanglements and the hidden parts of their lives intersect with the setting of Barcelona, which also becomes a character in the story. 

These and many other films in the series show the richness and variety of a previously overlooked facet of Spanish cinema, one of the world's strongest and most vibrant film industries.

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