The magazine's editors have assembled an eclectic, cutting- edge assortment of discoveries and rediscoveries. At the core are four new films by some of French cinema's most uncompromising and radical talents - Olivier Assayas, Raúl Ruíz, Philippe Grandrieux, and Catherine Breillat - alongside work by young turks and old masters from world cinema hotbeds like China, India, and Kazakhstan. (Three films, DEMONLOVER, LA NOUVELLE VIE and HAPPY HERE AND NOW, form a loose "Underworld Trilogy": each follows a character's descent into a shadow realm on a quest that's never quite completed.) In addition, there are a number of special programs: a tribute to the late John Frankenheimer, twinning the theatrical premiere of his final film with one of his early classics and a pair of films from the vanguard of the Thai New Wave. Both are extensions of articles that have been featured in recent issues of Film Comment - or soon will be: hence two programs of new and rediscovered Chris Marker films and videos, an appetizer for our May-June issue, which will be largely devoted to an in-depth tour through the 50-year career of this pivotal yet incompletely understood filmmaker, best known as the maker of La Jetée and Sans soleil.
11'09"01
France, 2002; 135m
The unspeakable horror of 9/11 will haunt everyone forever. This film,
critically scrutinized elsewhere on the planet, makes its U.S. debut. Not all of
the sentiments expressed are going to sit well with the individual viewer and
there has already been some controversy about alleged anti-American sentiments -
but considering it's an omnibus effort in which eleven filmmakers from eleven
different countries were each commissioned to make an 11-minute and nine-second
film, that's no surprise. Co-directing credits go to: Samira Makmalbaf (Iran),
Claude Lelouch (France), Youssef Chahine (Egypt), Danis Tanovic
(Bosnia-Herzegovina), Idriisa Ouedraogo (Burkina Faso), Ken Loach (England),
Alejandro Gonzalez Iñarritú (Mexico), Amos Gitai (Israel), Mira Nair (India),
Sean Penn (U.S.), and Shohei Imamura (Japan).
Fri Jan 31: 1 & 3:45; Sat Feb 1: 1 & 8:30 Sun Feb 2: 3:30
HAPPY HERE AND NOW
Michael Almereyda, U.S., 2002; 89m
Set "a few seconds into the future," this new film by the director of Hamlet and
Nadja is "a narcoleptic whodunit, part detective thriller, part low-tech sci-fi,
that vibes off the same thrift-store R & B version of New Orleans Jarmusch
worked in Down by Law." (Mark Olsen, FC Nov/Dec 02). A young woman (Liane
Baliban) investigates the disappearance of her sister, whose trail ends on the
hard drive of a laptop containing traces of an Internet relationship with
somebody called Eddie.... Pitting the beguiling ambiance of New Orleans and the
rich individuality of its inhabitants against the melancholy poetics and
seductive disembodiment of virtual reality, this unclassifiable
trip-through-the-looking-glass, featuring a typically eclectic cast (Ally
Sheedy, Clarence Williams III, David Arquette), is a haunting yet playful
chronicle of isolated souls searching for connection in a contemporary
wilderness. And yes, there's even a little Pixelvision somewhere in the mix.
Fri Jan 31: 6:30; Sat Feb 1: 3:45; Fri Feb 7: 2:30
DEMONLOVER
Olivier Assayas, France, 2002; 128m
Olivier Assayas' "thriller" is a sleek, angry cinematic weapon, aimed right at
the venal heart of corporate culture. It looks, sounds, and feels like
absolutely no other movie. "Ostensibly, DEMONLOVER is a thriller about a
corporate mole (Connie Nielsen), who, in the course of trying to scuttle a deal
between the multinational conglomerate she works for and the titular U.S.
Internet company, uncovers links between the latter and 'The Hellfire Club,' a
pornographic interactive torture website.... The reality DEMONLOVER posits is a
kind of video game, in which...each escalation of the action or narrative
'twist' moves things to a new 'level.' [The film] represents a genuinely radical
vision" (Gavin Smith, FC Jul/Aug 02). With Charles Berling, Gina Gershon and, in
a performance as eye-popping as Denis Lenoir's digitally altered cinematography,
Chloe Sevigny. Music by Sonic Youth.
Fri Jan 31: 9; Sat Feb 1: 5:45; Sun Feb 2: 1 Sun Feb 9: 3:45
THE ROAD
Darezhan Omirbaev, Kazhakstan, 2001; 85m
Darezhan Omirbaev was rightfully judged one of the world's best filmmakers by
none other than Jean-Luc Godard a few years ago. Oddly, he is all but unknown
here in America. His five features are all poetic/reflective wonders, and he has
an extraordinarily good eye as well as a unique sensibility, pitched between
serenity and restlessness. THE ROAD is his 8 1/2, transposed to a more
reflective key. The narrative is a series of episodes in the life of a director
(played by fellow director Jamshed Usmanov) who is editing his new film (based
on Omirbaev's previous film, Killer). He is annoyed by his wife, flirts with his
editorial assistant, fantasizes about a woman he meets in a roadside bar, and
returns to the village of his childhood to bury his mother. Every episode of
this soulful, finally moving film is punctuated by shots from the POV of a car
going down roads, streets and highways - at once literal and metaphorical. With
another fellow filmmaker, Serik Aprymov, as the brother.
Sun Feb 2: 6:15; Tue Feb 4: 1; Wed Feb 5: 6:30
COMBAT D'AMOUR EN SONGE / LOVE TORN IN DREAM
Raúl Ruíz, Chile/Portugal/France, 2000; 126m
This story about stories begins with a fake "making of" sequence, as the cast
and crew of the latest Ruíz oeuvre report for duty on set, to find out exactly
what sort of film they'll be making (the reason for the director's own absence
is the subject of a priceless gag). The new film, we learn, will consist of
fragments of several stories told in permutations determined by the procedures
laid down by a medieval mystic. If this isn't enough of a shaggy-dog story, the
tales themselves, acted by a cast of role-swapping thespians in assorted hats,
beards and accents, involve a delirious panoply of Arabian Nights mysteries.
This maze of story is as playful as Italo Calvino, as structurally adventurous
as vintage Resnais, and as visually fabulous as Ruiz's early-80s
Welles-inflected films, such as The Three Crowns of the Sailor (Jonathan
Romney).
Sun Feb 2: 8:15; Mon Feb 3: 6:30; Tue Feb 4: 3 Wed Feb 5: 8:30
SEAFOOD
Wen Zhu, China, 2001; 86m
Novelist Wen Zhu's debut is a deceptively simple story about a prostitute who
goes to a lonely seaside resort in winter to do away with herself, only to be
stopped in her tracks by a monstrous local cop. "SEAFOOD is the bullet in the
head that new Chinese cinema's been waiting for, an elusive and poetic pleasure
when seen once, a deeply satisfying landslide of genre connections and narrative
interconnections when seen twice, and the best self-contained double bill of the
year" (Chuck Stephens).
Mon Feb 3: 9; Wed Feb 5: 1:15
PATH TO WAR
John Frankenheimer, U.S., 2002; 165m
For what turned out to be his final film, John Frankenheimer went back to his TV
roots with this brilliantly cast and staged drama about the inner workings of
the Johnson administration, and the ego-driven self-deceptions that led to the
Vietnam nightmare. No other filmmaker was ever able to wring more suspense out
of behind-the-scenes wheeling and dealing, and at the same time maintain his
political focus. With Michael Gambon in a towering performance as Johnson,
Donald Sutherland as Democratic stalwart Clark Clifford, Felicity Huffman as the
supernaturally patient Lady Bird Johnson, an appropriately gruff Philip Baker
Hall as Everett Dirksen, Whit Stillman regular Chris Eigeman as one-time Johnson
advisor Bill Moyers, and, in a strange piece of casting that pays off in the
end, Alec Baldwin as Robert McNamara.
Wed Feb 5: 3:15; Thurs Feb 6: 1; Tue Feb 11: 6
SEVEN DAYS IN MAY
John Frankenheimer, U.S., 1964; 120m
Frankenheimer threw down the political/melodramatic gauntlet with The Manchurian
Candidate, and then followed through in 1964 with this white-hot thriller about
a possible military takeover by a rogue general (Burt Lancaster) after a
dove-ish President (Fredric March) gets his nuclear disarmament treaty through
the Senate. The plot is discovered by Colonel Jiggs Casey (Kirk Douglas), who
races against time to head off the coup. Based on Rod Serling's tight adaptation
of the novel by Fletcher Knebel and Charles W. Bailey II, SEVEN DAYS IN MAY
sports an incredible supporting cast operating, like the stars, at maximum
intensity: Edmund O'Brien, Ava Gardner, Martin Balsam, Andrew Duggan and the
great George MacReady.
Thurs Feb 6: 4:15; Tue Feb 11: 9:10
CHRIS MARKER & SLON
Two films made by Marker and SLON (Société pour le lancement des Oeuvres
Nouvelles), the film co-operative he founded in the aftermath of May '68:
THE BATTLE OF THE TEN MILLION
France/Cuba, 1970; 58m
An absorbing and clear-eyed account of the state of the Cuban revolution in
1970, focused on Fidel Castro's failed attempt to achieve a mammoth
10-million-ton sugar harvest. Culminating with Castro's astonishing admission of
defeat in front of a mass rally, the film refuses easy leftist romanticism, yet
still affirms solidarity with the Cuban social revolution. "A precise and
unclichéd view of the implications of revolution in South America" (Time Out).
Preceded by
2084
France, 1984; 10m
The centenary of the French trade union movement imagined by Marker from a point
100 years into the future. A small gem that anticipates the technological
visions of Level Five.
Fri Feb 7: 1, 4:30 & 9
THE SECRET LIVES OF DENTISTS
Alan Rudolph, U.S., 2002; 105m
The prolific and grievously underrated Alan Rudolph returns with another
idiosyncratic look at the pitfalls, stumbling blocks, and blind spots in
relationships between men and women. The scenario is generic: husband Campbell
Scott thinks he's happily married to wife Hope Davis, until he starts suspecting
she's cheating on him; paranoia gradually opens a Pandora's box of infectious
germs and obnoxious imps (Denis Leary starts turning up as Scott's crude macho
id, in a spoof of Fight Club). But in this Rudolph film more than any other,
suffering is the name of the game and hard reality is the bottom line: like his
couple, who make their living as dentists, he touches unexpectedly raw nerves,
exposing a deep reservoir of regret, denial, and authentic emotional pain. And
his film confirms Scott and Davis as two of the most-underappreciated talents
working in American movies today.
Alan Rudolph, will attend for intro and Q & A for the Feb 10 screening only.
Actors Campbell Scott and Hope Davis will be doing a Q & A on Friday, Feb 7
only.
Fri Feb 7: 6:30;
Mon Feb 10: 7
LA NOUVELLE VIE / THE NEW LIFE
Philippe Grandrieux, France, 2002; 102m
Like a Francis Bacon painting come to life, LA NOUVELLE VIE is not for the
fainthearted. Taking Sombre's stark, liminal visuals and claustrophobic
atmosphere of sexual violence to new extremes, Grandrieux's follow-up is
relentlessly brutal and punishingly voyeuristic, yet pushes its minimalist
narrative to the brink of visual abstraction. Set in an unspecified but
seemingly lawless Eastern European country in the aftermath of a civil war, the
film depicts the sexual enslavement of a young woman, and the efforts of a young
American to rescue her. Inspired by the myth of Orpheus and Eurydice, the film
is the cinematic equivalent of a plunge into the abyss. Its radical aesthetic
might best be described as "post-traumatic realism": its pulverizing soundtrack,
alternately numb and histrionic performances, and shuddering, defocalized
visuals befit its depiction of unshowable (or unwatchable) atrocity and
abjection and its nihilistic vision of man's animalism. It's showing on St.
Valentine's Day, but we don't recommend it as a date movie.
Note: this film will be shown in French with no subtitles. However, it has very
little dialogue and a translation will be provided.
Sun Feb 9: 1:30; Mon Feb 10: 3:30; Fri Feb 14: 9
REMEMBRANCE OF THINGS TO COME
Chris Marker & Yannick Bellon, France, 2002, video; 48m
Chris Marker's essayistic films and videos call to mind montages from 30s movies
of operators busily plugging in wires and making connections. In Marker's great
work, associations between images and events, between public and personal
history, between feelings and ideas, fly fast and furious, and weave themselves
into a poignantly thrilling historical tapestry. In REMEMBRANCE OF THINGS TO
COME (has there ever been a better title for a Marker project?), the filmmaker
traces the exact trajectory of feeling that led up to World War II in France. He
sees that period principally through the eyes of photographer Denise Bellon, and
frames the most cataclysmic event of the 20th century between portraits she took
of the surrealists. If we all had history teachers as excitingly unorthodox as
Marker, for whom no event - from a production of Milhaud's opera "Medea" on the
eve of war to a failed attempt by Spanish Republicans to topple Franco in 1944 -
deserves to be forgotten, the world would be a far better place.
Preceded by
EMBASSY / L'AMBASSADE
France, 1974, 20m; video
One of Marker's personal favorites, this imaginative and insightful response to
Pinochet's 1973 coup in Chile is cast as a Super-8 diary found in an embassy,
where political activists had taken refuge following a military takeover. But
the events - and their setting - are not what they first appear to be.
Sun Feb 9: 6:30
KEN PARK
Larry Clark & Ed Lachman, U.S., 2002; 96m
Larry Clark films can occasionally rub people the wrong way. He knows how to
push certain buttons. His latest, by comparison, is more like a hot fork in the
eye. It begins with a teen suicide, proceeds through a tangled web of violent
familial relations and painful-to-watch sexual activity, and then concludes with
a mutant catharsis. Unlike Kids or Bully, the new film (a directorial
collaboration with Far From Heaven cinematographer Ed Lachman) places greater
emphasis - and blame - on the parents. If you were in any way offended by the
previous films, stay away from this one. But if you want a confrontation with
the maddening morality of Clark, and see a film that has repulsed even the most
hardcore distributor, this is your ticket. (Don't even think about bringing the
kids.)
Note: Director Larry Clark will be in attendance.
Sun Feb 9: 8:30
BLISSFULLY YOURS
Apichatpong Weerasethakul, Thailand, 2001; 125m
Thai filmmaker Apichatpong Weerasethakul's follow-up to his Mysterious Object at
Noon is even more daring, a lyrical documenting of one afternoon in the lives of
a Burmese illegal immigrant, his girlfriend, and the woman who puts him up, as
they escape to a pastoral idyll on a mountaintop forest clearing. "Apichatpong
is at the forefront of two of contemporary cinema's most important movements:
the collapsing barriers between documentary and fiction, and between art and
porn.... BLISSFULLY YOURS flowers into a contemplative experience of terrific
breadth and mystery" (Kent Jones, FC Jul/Aug 02).
Tue Feb 11: 3:30; Wed Feb 12: 3:30 & 8:30
MONRAK TRANSISTOR
Pen-ek Ratanaruang, Thailand, 2001; 115m
This affectionately cynical musical comedy is so bright with homespun emotion,
barnyard profanity, spontaneous eruptions into song, and poisonous twists of
fate that it might have you wondering if Billy Wilder has somehow been reborn in
Bangkok. As a wedding present, Pan - a young man from a rural village who
aspires to become a popular singer - gives his new wife, Sadaw, a transistor
radio. Shortly thereafter he is drafted into military service, and in his
absence the pregnant Sadaw listens to the radio at night, dreaming of her
dulcet-voiced partner. Meanwhile Pan has gone AWOL to pursue a singing career.
His big break arrives, but fate intervenes, preventing the reunion of husband
and wife. A scythe to flay the body politic of modern Thailand, from its simple
rural roots to its rotten urban core, Pen-ek's film is anchored by a pair of
sparkling performances by Suppakorn Kitsuwan and Siriyakorn "Oom" Pukkavesa as
Pan and Sadow (Chuck Stephens, FC Nov/Dec 02).
Wed Feb 12: 1 & 6:15; Fri Feb 14: 4:30
BRIEF CROSSING / BREVE TRAVERSÉE
Catherine Breillat, France, 2001; 84m
Catherine Breillat revisits the familiar territory of sex as power in this story
of a teenage French boy and a middle-aged English woman who meet on an overnight
ferry crossing from France to England. Gilles Guillain's performance as
16-year-old Thomas, caught between showy precociousness and open-hearted
innocence, carries a film that is as awkwardly tender as it is brutal. After
premiering at Venice in 2001, BRIEF CROSSING mysteriously disappeared off the
radar - a must-see for all Breillat fans.
Thurs Feb 13: 2:45 & 9:15; Fri Feb 14: 2:30
SHADOW KILL
Adoor Gopalakrishnan, India, 2002; 90m
Life can be rough when you hate your job. And the main character in Adoor
Gopalakrishnan's latest film can tell you all about it. He's the town
executioner in a small Indian village in the 1940s, and he doesn't have the
stomach for his work. As he prepares his rope for its next victim his mind
unravels in psychic turmoil. The director, influenced by the great Satyajit Ray,
explores this tale of psychic pain and guilt with a multivalent array of
narrative layers and sumptuous naturalist photography.
Thurs Feb 13: 4:30; Fri Feb 14: 7