Archive for March, 2008

A short report from rainy Austin

Posted on Monday, March 10th, 2008 by Guest

Though it took team Indiepix, collectively, about three days to get here, all of the networking, idea-exchanging, film and panel going, and promotion of the Cinema Eye Honors for Nonfiction Film has been worth it. While True/False proved to be a Quaker summer camp like commune of nonfiction film celebration, South by Southwest is more like a meeting of the minds of the future. Since my good friend/blogger Joel Heller has an interactive pass, I have been privy to events like the “Facebook on Film” discussion, the Google and Frog Media receptions, and other tech-heavy content. Which is not to say I have been ignoring film. Though I have yet to get into a screening at the revamped Alamo Drafthouse (drats!), I have managed to see a few winners, including the documentary CRAWFORD an amusing but in no way timid look at the small Texas town in which George Bush chose to make his home. And ooops, just got interrupted by the wonderful Slava Rubin, from IndieGoGo. They are an independent film networking site doing some really innovative and important things with companies like B-Side and self-distribution gurus Lance Weiler and the Four-Eyed Monsters. But now, off to a screener of MATADOR, which my friend Donal edited and Steven Beer is repping. I am very exciting for this film!

More soon.

And now, even more photos from True/False

Posted on Friday, March 7th, 2008 by Guest

“To you the bold and foolish lambs. To you who are intoxicated with riddles, let’s go. Who take pleasure in twilight. Whose souls are lured by noise to every treacherous abyss. For you do not feel for a rope like cowards, and where you can guess you hate to calculate. And where others would poison, you dismember.”

danielle in coat
on the bed
my eye

“He wrote me: I will have spent my life trying to understand the function of remembering, which is not the opposite of forgetting, but rather its lining. We do not remember, we rewrite memory much as history is rewritten. How can one remember thirst?” – Chris Marker

We Cause Scenes.

Posted on Thursday, March 6th, 2008 by Jason

Check these guys out. Grand Central comes to a complete halt. It’s always when you’re rushing about that that things get…strange.

Next time I’m there.

Improv Everywhere

Mischievous Gnomes Everywhere – True/False ‘08

Posted on Thursday, March 6th, 2008 by Jason

My first visit to Columbia, Missouri and the True/False Film Festival. Wow…

I saw nine movies in four days and still missed two dozen more. Where else could you say that but at a film festival? I had every intention of blogging during the fest itself. But with the films, the parties, the people, the town, the barbecue

True/False swept me up in the greatest sort of rollercoaster, and there was time for no writing any more extravagant than a scribbled note. But here’s some thoughts on what was a fantastic success. Great programming, funky theaters, even They Might Be Giants on a Sunday night in Columbia. C’mon now! My only complaint is that it was too short.

sidewalk chalk

First and foremost, as they should be, the films:

Shake The Devil Off – Director Peter Entell introduces us to Father Jerome LeDoux, and the shocked, passionate, and musical parishoners of St. Augustine Church in New Orleans. A beautiful but troubling film about a neighborhood forgotten by it’s country and by the Catholic Church. I won’t give away the ending, except to say that it stuck with me the rest of the weekend, setting the standard and the trend all the way through. Except for the closing night film. But I’ll get to that later.

bandleader

Stranded – The story of the Uruguayan rugby team that crashed into the mythos of humanity when it crashed into the Andes mountains in 1972. Forty-five people went down in a Fairchild FH-227 twin turboprop airplane and endured an unfathomable stretch of time in the most gruesome elements. The sixteen survivors in the film go back to the mountain to tell their story. It’s as difficult to watch as you could imagine, but also sparkling and pure, like the unending expanse, surrounding them in whiteout.

Secret Screening Red – I can’t tell you a damn thing about this film, and probably don’t have to explain why. But I will say that this was one of my personal favorites of the festival. It screened in the Forest Theater, in the tallest building in town (proclaimed The Tiger by the locals), and it greeted me with a morning sun fresh with the warmth of spring. Waaaay too early in the morning, that sun, and seen without the benefit of coffee.

The screening room itself was painted to resemble the deep dark of some Tolkien forest, waiting to drag you away. And singing in front of the blank screen was a pixie with a uke and a voice teetering on the upper edge of a person’s capacity to hear it. She covered Zeppelin, Guns N’ Roses and Dylan, and I don’t know what else, but I was transported. I might have hallucinated the whole thing.

As for the movie, gaze on this picture and seek it out. It won’t be that hard to find. Perhaps on IndiePix next time…

bulletproof

True Life Fund:Very Young Girls – I am not a crier. A very few movies have made me cry, and most of them are war movies. We’re talkin’ Glory, Schindler’s List, Bravehart (I know, I know, Mel Gibson. But hey, on any given sunday…) But I was barely keeping it together during this film. A character-driven piece about teenage prostitutes, horribly abused and brainwashed at an age far too young to be capable of finding any way out. The stories of the handful of girls brave enough to share them, painted a full and far worse picture of the life than anything I’ve ever seen.

But these girls found an ally in GEMS, a New York-based organization run on a shoestring that looks to rescue them from their circumstances with generosity and hope. The most heartbreaking moments of bravery occur. But this ain’t Hollywood, and many of the endings aren’t happy. Yet I did witness something amazing, a faith beyond my understanding and capacity. The founder of GEMS, herself a former sex worker, always left the final choice to the girls. She refused to force them to see it her way, even when she knew how terrible the end result.

The best part of the screening was it’s connection to the festival’s True Life Fund, with which the theater-goers could contribute directly to GEMS. This great idea banished the annoying delay between inspiration and action, and you can bet I gave at the door. I have it on record that the Fund raised over $8,000 in only two screenings, and I think that’s pretty swell. I’m tellin’ ya, give it up for the people of Columbia, Missouri. It wasn’t all us drunken out-of towners at this thing. The locals got behind the festival in a big way, filling room after room. The line for the overflow queue, marked by an enormous rainbow Q perched on the tip of a stick like goliath’s lollipop, was always long and gleeful.

blurry brick

Gonzo – This was the film I was most looking forward to, and I was not disappointed. Director Alex Gibney’s work focused on Hunter S. Thompson’s salad days, from the mid-’60’s to the mid-’70’s, when most of his books were written and his bold but doomed campaign for Sheriff of Aspen, Colorado was run. The visuals were stunning and the pacing breakneck, much like the author’s life, which came to an end on the wrong side of a hand gun at the family’s Woody Creek ranch in Colorado.

Not much for new information in play here, especially for a devout follower of gonzo journalism, but a ton of insight and fantastic stories from people who knew him best. Yet my favorite moments were the pieces of Hunter. Always Hunter. Alex unearthed some fantastic footage and video recordings of the man-beast himself, from the depraved insanity of the Fear and Loathing trip, to the later days under a sort of self-imposed house arrest filled with strange faces and stories but bereft of his early manic drive. Gonzo only further cemented Hunter S. Thompson’s status as a mad, monstrous genius, barbaric and intolerable yet missed with a tear-streaked longing, the recollection of glee, as if our own trickster spirits hit the floor with him. Still missed, always missed.

gnome

Song Sung Blue – This was a tricky one. First film of the day on Sunday, though I was in significantly better shape than at the Forest Theater. Fresh off two big wins at Slamdance, Song Sung Blue followed Mike Sardina, the Neil Diamond impersonator known inside his tiny circle of fame as Lightning, and his songbird wife Clair, who joins him on the Midwest Bar Circuit as Thunder. Together, Lightning and Thunder fought for fame (and struggled against people’s habit of calling them Thunder and Lightning) through bad health and marital struggles, always with dreamers’ hearts. Their story is a tragic and joyful one, though I couldn’t help but wonder at the access I was given to the ugliness of their day-to-day lives. Some moments (like a repetitive close-up of Clair, with no makeup and stark lighting, as she tokes furiously on cigarette after cigarette) seemed designed for laughter but left me cringing. I recognized the feeling from any one of dozens of reality tv shows I’ve caught, all designed to exploit the stars while sizzling away my necessary brain cells with mind-numbing speed. Now I know that this was not director Greg Kohs’ intention. During the Q&A we met a straight-shooter with nothing but love and compassion for his subjects. But sometimes you’ve got to call them as they lie, and though the film was impressively done and evoked strong emotion, I left the theater feeling abused and dirty.

I admit a partial fault for that. I had gone to bed only a couple hours earlier. But there were more movies to see, and one must keep that flag in the air.

wine nap

The Order of Myths – Bravo. When do you ever leave a movie feeling like you just experienced an audio/visual thesis paper, and yet can’t get it out of your mind? Director Margaret Brown gives us an insider’s look at Mardi Gras in Mobile, Alabama, where celebrations have been held since years before New Orleans was even founded, and the white folk and the black folk spend hundreds of thousands of dollars on segregated parades and parties. They elect their own king, queen, and royal court, have their own mixers, and toss strings of beads, candy, and boxes of moonpies to their own people in the parade crowds.

The film makes it’s point subtly, allowing the moments to reveal themselves without a running commentary. No one needed a narrator to point out the class distinctions still very much alive in Mobile, probably because we’re all familiar with them in some form in the many places we’ve traveled. But watching the black clothing designer keep her composure in the company of her old money, granddaughter-of-a-slave-owner client when the topic of our history comes up…watching the little kids passed over for beads and treats by the masked white parade organizations…eesh. In the end there’s some traditions, beautiful and cherished, that embody everything great about the spirit of the south, the family and community atmosphere and the embrace of formality and leisure, and then other traditions that remain just ’cause that’s how it’s always been done, prodding a bony finger at hurts that still flare up. After all, the last recorded lynching in this country was right there in Mobile, only twenty-five years ago. To me, The Order of Myths was a great example of balanced documentary filmmaking.

The Mosquito Problem – This was another problematic screening for me. I had yet to remedy that feeling dirty problem from earlier with a proper shower, and the screening was smack in the middle of the afternoon, that synaptical dead zone when mind and body coordinate their efforts to force a nap. This issue was compounded by the fact that this slow-paced, Altman-esque peek at the people of Belene, a tiny rough-luck town on the wrong side of the Danube, was entirely subtitled and kept intentionally free of razzle-dazzle. It played it straight, a tourism video of a place akin to hell for a New-Yorker, where boredom, poverty, joblessness, a looming nuclear threat, the ghost of communism and a crumbling prison live together amongst an unending deluge of mosquitos. As you can imagine, dealing with said lil’ beasties is the biggest topic of conversation.

Director Andrey Paounov takes us there so we never have to go ourselves, and for that I am eternally grateful. But I want to stress, this is a fantastic movie. There are shots that haunt my dreams, like one of a dank cloud of mosquito poison clogging the streets. This film unravels over time, drawing you in without an active point, giving these people a proper stage. In some ways this felt like the polar opposite of Song Sung Blue, and a nice counter to some of the more active commentaries I’d seen. A palate cleanser after a strong, garlic-addled first course. In some ways the perfect film to lead me in to the closing night.

Yes, we’re there. The closing night film.

smiley

Man on Wire – Director James Marsh described his film as a “Caper Picture”, an endearingly Old Hollywood description, yet utterly on point. The story of Philippe Petit’s incredible tightrope walk between the twin towers in 1974 and the planning that went into getting away with it was pure joy on celluloid. With extra marks for danger and lawlessness, the film was embodied by the energy of the protagonist, who spoke with such passion and drive that Marsh actually had to fade him to black in mid-sentence at one point just to keep the story rolling along.

But as incredible as the event was, as astounding the footage and stills, the most moving aspect was Petit’s approach to life — filled with a willingness to look impossibility in the face, to die if necessary, in order to always follow your dreams. He’s the greatest and the worst friend and ally, pushing all those beyond themselves and what they thought capable. It’s the way I strive to live my life, and fall short on often enough to be completely inspired and taken in by a man who refuses to, thereby achieving grace and immortality.

This amazing film raged against the darkness of most of the other docs I saw at True/False, summing up the fest and blazing a trail for the future. I was shaken to my core, yet left more whole and complete than I’ve felt in a good long time. Cheers to Man on Wire.

I could go on and on about the rest of the festival, but I’ll leave it to your imagination (I’m sure you’ve got one), and to the tons of photos you’ll find through myself, Danielle, the dope-ass Brian Liu of ToolboxDC (He took that pic of me, BTW), and everyone else too blown away by the festival to keep quiet. I’ll simply let it be said that SXSW coming up this weekend has quite a lot to live up to.

T/F rocked the docs!

party me

Ma Verite, True/False in Photos

Posted on Thursday, March 6th, 2008 by Guest

Thanks to my dear friends AJ Schnack, Joel Heller, and Brian Liu for these. . .
Brian Liu has his own blog entry about the fest that is worth reading.

Danielle and Ionic Furjanic in Ryan's room
Danielle with her darling, Ryan Harrington

Jason and Danielle of Indiepix
Ryan, Danielle, and Daniel Robin

Cynthia Lester passes her sign
The Indiepix Crew

Jordan blogs with tartlets

Ionic Furjanic

Cine, Ma Verite — Cinema, My Truth (A True/False Recap)

Posted on Thursday, March 6th, 2008 by Guest

For the past week, I have been wearing my black True/False hoodie as if it is a badge; the symbol of a movement. Yet I’ve avoided blogging my festival recap. Why? Well, here’s an anecdote. A very recent anecdote. This evening, I taught my NYU class, “Contemporary Documentary.” Just to shake things up again, I showed my class, who are relatively new to documentaries, Chris Marker’s brilliant “SANS SOLEIL.” When I turned on the lights, they looked as if they just performed triple bypass surgery. I have never seen anything like it! SANS SOLEIL, which I have seen multiple times, is a singular cinematic essay that explores time, memory, represention, colonialism, commodification, politics, mediation, Hitchcock, seasons, cats, classical music, revolutionary spirit, the failures of the Sixties, and much much more, essentially creating a new cinematic language. It is a film with which I have long been obsessed, writing an epic paper structured like the film itself – the Vertigo-ian spiral of time. (As Madeline, our Proustian-named heroine says, pointing to the rings on a sequoia tree, “Here I was born, and here I died.”) But, I digress. (As usual).

The point being that, quite frankly, I was shell-shocked by True/False. Unable to, like the students in my class, immediately process the amazing things I had just seen, and relationships I had made. In a book about Chris Marker, Catherine Upton writes that he believes in cinema’s power to “unveil deeper realities that expand and enrich the significance of the everyday world, but remain firmly grounded in its objects and appearances.” In short, cinema’s power of revelation. The revelations of True/False were multiple, and every moment was like that perfect image of happiness that Marker uses in both La Jetee and Sans Soleil, the one we are not aware is happiness distilled until we are in the future, pondering the past. I’m waxing philosophical, I know. Teaching at a college level – read: pretentious – does that to me.

True/False really was about this new recognition of the power of nonfiction, as well as the recognition that there is no such thing AS nonfiction. These artists whose films I saw this weekend — Margaret Brown (THE ORDER OF MYTHS is her wonderful exploration of racial segregation and ritual in the American South); Nanette Burnstein (AMERICAN TEEN is an intensely crafted film that captures the truth of teenage life in midwest America); Cynthia Lester (MY MOTHER’S GARDEN explores the filmmaker’s mother’s hoarding disorder and mental illness with a sense of the beauty of difference and unconditional love); Daniel Robin (MY OLYMPIC SUMMER delves into the filmmaker’s collapsed marriage through the lens of his mother’s existential angst); Anna Browlnowski (FORBIDDEN LIES is an absolutely phenomenal film about a bestselling author/pathological liar that works on so many levels and shifts direction unexpectedly so many times I was utterly captivated); and James Marsh (MAN ON WIRE, about the World Trade Center tightrope walk of Philippe Petit, is about such a huge amount more that the audience was collectively moved to tears) — all capture a larger truth through their own lenses, their Cinema Eyes. I have not felt this moved since I attended the Flaherty Film Seminar four years ago. There was a feeling of collective energy and frenzy, of the spirit of everyone there supporting the same ideas. Sitting every day at the new Ragtag Cinema (festival HQ, which True/False co-founders David Wilson and Paul Sturtz also, ummm, co-founded), editing the Cinema Eye Yearbook with Pamela Cohn and AJ Schnack, I watched as friends like Shooting People’s Ingrid Kopp, journalist Ray Pride, filmmakers Ashley Sabin and David Redmon (KAMP KATRINA and the upcoming INTIMIDAD), darling blogger Joel Heller (DOCS THAT INSPIRE), and numerous others hunched over laptops, working our collective asses off to usher in this new movement. This, as well as the shared inspiration of all the friends, new and old (watch out — here come the shout-outs) who I communed with in the quaintness of Columbia, Missouri (new best friend/star of my Big Sky recap Brian Liu, I THINK WE’RE ALONE NOW director Sean Donnelly, Jordan duh!, Docurama’s Liz Ogilvie, Indiewire’s Eugene Hernandez, the kick-ass Brent Hoff of Wholphin, SALIM BABA producer-cinematographer Francisco Bello, AOL True Stories’ Andrew Mer, fellow Indiepixer Jason Tyrrell , Greg from Balcony Releasing, my favorite documentary composer Ionic Furjanic of MANDA BALA and JESUS CAMP, and numerous others that I am forgetting of course, felt as if we were all riding one collective wave. Or so I’d like to think. And to have my soulmate — my twin sister Alana — there to experience with me, made the whole weekend as perfect as perfection can be. Which is, perfection squared and distilled. I have more to post about True/False. But for now, like my students, I need to process (and sleep.) Chris Marker’s narrator says, “the significance of the image only became apparent to the man years later.” To me, the significance of True/False took just a couple of days to become apparent. David Wilson and Paul Sturtz, you bold and foolish lambs, I salute you for that.

Doppelgangers

Blogs We Like

Film Companies/Labels

Film Festivals/Series

Film Journals

Archives

Get Adobe Flash playerPlugin by wpburn.com wordpress themes