Saturday, April 30, 2011

Oscar: Best its Mix of creation

by Todd Brown, February 27, 2011 10: 08 pm
inception.jpgNo surprise to see the establishment pick up the tech does price, Nolan of the shown a talent for construction, the best people from large enough possible tech party on the first day and it uses their abilities to full effect. You can't really miss the mixture in this film...
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Oscar: STRANGERS no more does best short documentary

by Todd Brown, February 27, 2011 10: 34 pm
Strangers_No_More2.jpgBest short documentary: the category in which no one has seen none of the candidates. Does not mean that they are not good, means that I don't know if this qualifies for.
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Friday, April 29, 2011

Oscar: Christian Bale beard won the best actor of support for hunting

by Todd Brown, February 27, 2011 9: 52 pm
FighterPoster.jpgGood for Christian Bale taking a blow to his own notorious rant. Indeed, Christian, you just marked many points in my book.
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Oscar: God of love takes best Live Action short

by Todd Brown, February 27, 2011 10: 38 pm
GodOfLove.jpgThis would be the other category in which virtually nobody has seen none of the films nominated. But good for you, God of love and Luke Matheny.
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Thursday, April 28, 2011

Oscar: The lost thing takes the best short animation film

by Todd Brown, February 27, 2011 9: 24 pm
lost-thing3.jpgWhen was the last time, Pixar nominated a for a price and a not win? Because he had just arrived. The Thing lost takes best short Aniamted.
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Meet the villain of LOOPER of Rian Johnson

News of the film by Todd Brown, February 27, 2011 1: 01 pm
SeganLooper.jpg
There is a certain amount of speculation in the title above, certainly, but account in light of what we know of Rian Johnson boucleur that appears me quite confident that I am right. We'll do fall. First of all, the synopsis:
boucleur follows a killer who works for the crowd of the future. He, with others called loopers, has people sent from the future. When it recognizes a victim as his future self, he hesitates, leaving the escape of the man.
Then what we know with certainty. Joseph Gordon Levitt is the main character of the piece. The hero. Bruce Willis is his older self. The other major players which leaves Paul Dano - confirmed as another Looper - and Noah Segan as plausible possibilities as the villain of the piece. And let's be honest: Paul Dano and Noah Segan, which seems more likely to strike fear in the hearts of the viewers?

And so I give you Noah Segan, the wicked of Looper, captured in this photo on the shelf. Photos of production have been popping up with great regularity of boucleur tumblr official account - and I am reasonably confident that it also includes Segan - and more I see I like the look and feel from which they are shooting. While they were care do not abandon what in the film itself environments are fantastically grainy and I'm dying to see what Johnson and its interpreters do perfectly at all.

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Wednesday, April 27, 2011

Oscar: Best make-up to Rick Baker for the right job in a bad Film

by Todd Brown, February 27, 2011 10: 17 pm
wolfman.jpgRick Baker a legend special effects for a reason and it is pleasant to see voters recognising that even when his skills are applied in a not particularly good film. Baker takes the best make-up for The Wolfman.
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Oscar: The SOCIAL network takes the best adapted screenplay

by Todd Brown, February 27, 2011 9: 35 pm
socialnetworkposter.jpgIn the first of what I assume will be a few for Social Network Aaron Sorkin takes best adapted screenplay. That is more appropriate in view of the Sorkin is one of the greatest screenwriters working in the world today.
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Oscar: Speech by the King takes the best Original Screenplay

by Todd Brown, February 27, 2011 9: 38 pm
KingsSpeech_poster.jpgThe big question, of course, is if Harvey Weinstein will now be excise f - word script to appease the MPAA in an attempt to market the film in ten years.
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Tuesday, April 26, 2011

Oscar: Creation is two sound categories, follows Mix with mounting

by Todd Brown, February 27, 2011 10: 11 PM
inception.jpgTo keep score, creation is now winning the Oscars.
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Oscar: INSIDE JOB takes best documentary

by Todd Brown, February 27, 2011 10: 43 pm
InsideJobPoster.jpgSorry, Banksy, no love for you as inside Job takes best documentary film.
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Monday, April 25, 2011

Oscar: ALICE IN WONDERLAND takes Best Art Direction

News of the film by Todd Brown, February 27, 2011 9: 06 PM
The first Oscar of the night was awarded, and I suppose that if a film by Tim Burton today is to win one of these things appropriate is for the artistic Direction. Which is what he has just won.
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Oscar: TOY STORY 3 takes best animated feature

by Todd Brown, February 27, 2011 9: 27 pm
Totoro_ToyStory3.jpgTotoro wins! Totoro wins!

Not as a surprise, but Totoro wins!

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Sunday, April 24, 2011

Oscar: Creation takes better photography

News of the film by Todd Brown, February 27, 2011 9: 08 pm
inception.jpgThe scifi / fantasy films are 2 for 2 at the Oscars for the moment, with Wally Pfister, taking the price of the best photography on creation. I can't argue with this.
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The FOUL King review


[Once again, thanks to Joshua Chaplinsky to following a review.]

The Foul King

screens Tuesday, March 1, in the retrospective of Kim Jee-woon - BAM Rose cinema severely damaged: Kim Ji-woon film.

This ain't no catch Wallace Beery picture, it is certain.

1998 saw the release of debut darkly comic Kim Jee-woon, The quiet Family. Two years later, it came flying high with the coarse Kingtensioner, a nice crowd allowed to trundle along in a luchador mask and a singlet. According to Grady Hendrix, extraordinary co-founder of the New York Asian Film Festival, is the film that broke the Director outside his native Korea. Hendrix knows a thing or twelve on Asian cinema, so I tend to trust when it comes to such things. I personally did not take knowledge of Ji-woon until I saw his crossover of torsion of brain horror tale of two sisters, which resurfaced later as a horrible remake called the uninvited. Although not as flashy as his later work, The King Foul is interesting in that it represents a Director about to hit its creative stride.

the foul king is the story of Dae-Ho, a perpetual counterfeiter cum employee of bank suffers daily indignities in the hands of his boss alpha male. To to harden, Dae-Ho fits with a coach local wrestling, which he turns the terrible coarse King. This alter ego athletic provides Dae-ho with the confidence that it lack in everyday life, him to confront accompanied by street youth and ask pretty out ladies with impunity. Finally he even allows him to confront his boss, abusive, in a hilarious climate post-climax anti-climax.

DAE-Ho is played with kindness without any effort by the future (then) star, Song Kang-ho, in his first leading role. He would go to star in these Korean blockbusters that Joint security area and the host, and a number of future films of Jee-woon. If The King Foul is the film that broke Kim Jee-woon at the international level, it is also the film that broke Song Kang-ho, and the two men have with each other to thank for their mutual success.

For all the honours he received, and taking into account the considerable talents of the people involved, I found The King Foul a bit lacking in the Department of script. I am well aware of the fact that countries outside the United States meet as strictly in a rigid narrative structure, but in a film like that - with high concept, many conflicts and even a true antagonist - I feel that the script could have been stricter. However does not prevent the viewer's enjoyment of Kang-ho, agile comic performance. It is a physically demanding role, and I could swear it was Kang-ho taking most of the assaults in the ring.

The production side, ...King has some very nice choreography, especially in the climate team game. It is less WWE RAW and ballerinas more old school wrestling. There is here a nostalgia which translated well to a Western audience and could explain a large part of the international popularity of the film. As it has already proven with the quiet family, Ji-woon is capable of appealing to moviegoers around the world.

Those only later the familiar with the Director work should not be surprised by Jee-woon comedy roots. Humorous flourishes continue to permeate his recent films, even with their dark subject. More it away from the most simple comedy, becomes more clear with her talent. JI-woon is like a chameleon when it comes to genre, weaving seemingly disparate elements in a fluid everything. Although not the full genus exercise A Tale of two sisters or The Good, The Bad and The Weird , and despite a loose script, The King Foul is able to operate on several levels of stylistic and dramatic.


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Saturday, April 23, 2011

Oscar: Colin Firth took best actor for King's speech

by Todd Brown, February 27, 2011 11: 46 am
KingsSpeech_poster.jpgI expressed his disagreement with the best director award for this problem one, but not at all with Colin Firth, taking best actor. The man was fantastic forever and this is the kind of film for the Oscars. No surprise, but it is not a bad choice.
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Oscar: ALICE took the second prize for the best costumes

by Todd Brown, February 27, 2011 10: 19 pm
Alice in Wonderland: multiple Oscar winner. It's a little weird, but it is hard to argue against a film Burton winner for art direction and costume design...
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Friday, April 22, 2011

Oscar: Randy Newman won best original song of TOY STORY 3

by Todd Brown, February 27, 2011 11: 07 pm
Totoro_ToyStory3.jpgTotoro wins again!

It is almost a given when Randy Newman is appointed these days, isn't it?

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Oscar: Creation takes best visual effects

by Todd Brown, February 27, 2011 10: 53 pm
inception.jpg Creation is now four for four and two times the price of movies in the number two slot. And yet, were considered not good enough for a best director nomination. Go figure. Images, Sound Mix, sound editing and best visual effects...
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Thursday, April 21, 2011

Oscar: Melissa Leo Take best actress for support for hunting

News of the film by Todd Brown, February 27, 2011 9: 17 pm
FighterPoster.jpgThe first of the night acting award, and it is passed to Melissa Leo, best actress in support for hunting. Leo celebrates by dropping an F-bomb on stage.
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Nero, Waltz, Carradine and Williams to the Quentin Tarantino Spaghetti Western star

Quentin Tarantino continues its tour across genres of cult film of the 1970s with a trip in the world of spaghetti westerns.

For a change, it is not Tarantino that spilled on it, the notoriously talkative Director did not say a word on it. Instead, the word came from iconic Italian actor Franco Nero, which spilled in an Italian interview he threw with treat Williams and Keith Carradine. Also have in plaster is Christoph Waltz. The title given by Nero would have translated roughly Angel, the Brute and the Wiseman, although it is a matter of some dispute. Speculation is that this could be filming in the fall.


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Wednesday, April 20, 2011

Trailer for Rough and ready Vietnamese Action Film eliminating order

Something which is more clear that the Vietnamese film industry continues to expand and develop, is that the producers are following the example of the success stories of action profile as the rebel and Clash, in the hope of building at the Viet Nam in the next great global exporter of martial arts and action films. We are already seeing the industry he divided into levels not unlike films produced through the end of the 1980s and early 1990s in Hong Kong with the brilliant business, big budget on the high plateau and a whole layer more thought, reduce budgetary efforts that obtained on the enthusiasm and recklessness on the part of their stunt men.

Quang Minh Vietnamese effort to make future order eliminating (lenh xoa SW) clearly belong in this second category.

Budget limits are obvious, the history is something we have seen several times before, and stunt men themselves are too often for any timing what will come next but there is a raw GB for it and see what passes attitude on display that it carries a long way. Clearly not a perfect film far away but I want yet quite see.

Discover the trailer below.


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Absolutely beautiful Animation Test for world of children

World of children are defined in a country where there is no grown ups. Girls and boys in this world live separated: the boys in the city and the girls in the forest. The boys tell stories about girls and fear, without ever having seen their.

One day our main character Albert (8) meets a somewhat different boy, Jonas (8). The two of them quickly become good friends and Albert presents Jonas to his group of friends in the city. But it is revealed that Jonas carries a secret - Jonas is in fact a girl.

Friends of Albert Hunt Jonas out of the city, but secretly Albert follows Jonas to the forest and a new world opens to him. However, discovery of Albert a great consequences for the world of childhood: the boys attack the girls and a final battle in the forest takes place, where Albert and Jonas after a big fight successfully manage to make peace between the two enemies.


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Tuesday, April 19, 2011

SXFantastic 2011: When the Gangs of the FP Say Dance, you ' d Best DANCE mother F *! & er!

You did step mess with men of The PS. They are hard. They are difficult. They are mohawked and tattooed and pierced. They are cold stone badasses, last of them, and if you cross the that you would be better prepared... dancing?

For years a ground war raging for dominance on the small town of Frazier Park, between two clans: The 248 North and 245 of the South. The outcome of this war is determined steps with led or petty fights, but the video game dance Beat-Beat revelation. Nose with an imminent skirmish between two clan leaders, BTRO, Beat-Beat legendary player the 248 and the fault of place and come, short, shit threat talkine, Dubba T, who heads the 245. Our hero, caught in the middle of this war is the younger brother of BTRO, JTRO. He was born to be a young man struggling to find its strength and become the Savior.

The first feature film by the brothers Trost - one which is mainly known as the Director of photography of Crank - fp the will have its world premiere March 13 in the range SXFantastic at SXSW. The series of films programmed by Fantastic Fest, the largest genus in the United States, SXFantastic film festival last year hosted the first world Gareth Edward midnight monsters and much - sounded A Serbian Film.

We ran the first stills of it a new and we are now happy except for six more, appearing exclusively here at twitch. Check the gallery below.

And, Yes, I consider it a major missed opportunity if the Violent women cited in the title song does not appear in the film.


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Amazing French SciFi of animation FARD short in development as feature film dome

It was at this time last year that we first discovered Luis Briceno and FARD, a short science fiction of absolutely fantastic animation which won David Alapont raves on the international festival circuit. We had the privilege of hosting the full film here on Twitch for a time but eventually had to kill, when the film made the short list for best short animation at the Oscars this year. Voters are concerned about such things, apparently.

But those of you who remember film will understand why this bit of news is so exciting: Briceno and Alapont are developing a version of the feature film entitled dome. Although still listed in the development of the process is far as well as the project has been accepted to the annual market Cartoon Movie production in France, where he will seek to drum for financial partners.

Check the trailer for FARD below an overview of what makes this one special.


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Monday, April 18, 2011

SFIAAFF 2011: LINE-UP PREVIEW

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logo dog.png [Our thanks to Michael Hawley for his preview of the SFIAAFF 2011 line-up.]

Rather than wait until its 30th birthday, the San Francisco International Asian American Film Festival (SFIAAFF) has chosen 29 as the ripe age for a makeover. At a recent press conference announcing 2011's line-up, the fest introduced a new logo, website, tagline ("Stories to light") and most importantly, a new Festival and Exhibitions Director. Masashi Niwano, a 29-year-old Bay Area native, worked his way up the SFIAAFF ranks as volunteer, intern, theater operations manager and even filmmaker. He's come home after a four-year stint running the Austin Asian American Film Festival and now replaces esteemed Chi-hui Yang in helming the largest Asian fest in North America.

SFIAAFF has also replaced its traditional magazine-format program guide with a classy, but somewhat unwieldy and eye-straining 6" x 9" catalog. Flipping through it at the press conference, I noticed an absence of recognizable international auteurs--indeed, only two of the roughly dozen films I'd hoped for were in the program. Among the M.I.A. are new works by Lee Chang-dong, Tsui Hark, Takashi Miike, Koji Wakamatsu, Anh Hung Tran, Amir Muhammad, Kim Longinotto and most strangely, SFIAAFF habitue Hong Sang-soo, who released two new films last year. Of course, SFIAAF is more than just a greatest hits collection from the previous year's fest circuit. A closer examination would reveal many programs worthy of anticipation.

My two wish-list fulfillments are Jia Zheng-ke's I Wish I Knew and Zeina Durra's The Imperialists Are Still Alive! Considered China's most important filmmaker by some, this new work from Jia (Still Life and last year's SFIAAFF entry, 24 City) is a portrait of Shanghai, shot by his extraordinary, longtime cinematographer Yu Likwai. Imperialists is director Durra's narrative feature debut and is set amongst NYC's post-9/11 "emigre intelligentsia." The main character is a bourgeois but politically provocative artist who falls for a Mexican PhD student on the same night she learns that a friend has possibly been abducted under the C.I.A.'s "extraordinary rendition" program. The part is played by one of my favorite French actresses, Elodie Bouchez (Andre Techine's Wild Reeds and Roman Coppola's CQ.) It remains to be seen how the film fits the context of an Asian American film festival, given that the director--as well as Bouchez's character--is of Bosnian-Jordanian-Palestinian descent. Also worth noting is that Imperialists was shot in 16mm and will be screened at the festival in that format. (Speaking of screening formats, you'll need to purchase the catalog to learn what's what--the free mini-guide and website make no mention of them).

This year's SFIAAFF runs from March 10 to 20 and I've got a big, red circle drawn around Sunday, March 13. I plan on parking myself at the Castro Theater from noon till midnight that day for what promises to be one helluva quadruple-bill. The marathon kicks off with what was originally a distributor-imposed "surprise" screening. Said distributor has changed its mind, however, and now I'm free to tell you that the surprise is Lee Jeong-beom's violent revenge thriller The Man From Nowhere, one of South Korea's biggest 2010 box office hits. Actor Bin Won stars as a taciturn pawnshop owner who's forced to revive his skills as a former government assassin in order to rescue the daughter of his junkie upstairs neighbor from child organ harvesters. Whew! Reviews say the film's occasional hoary genre cliches are outweighed by kick-ass set pieces and a riveting performance by Won, in a role that's polar opposite to the developmentally disabled son he portrayed in Bong Joon-ho's Mother. The Castro mood shifts radically at 3:00 with Chito S. Rono's Emir, a campy, 22-song Filipino musical about an OFW (overseas Filipina worker) who becomes nanny to a young Middle Eastern prince. In his review for Variety, Jay Weissberg calls Emir "jaw-dropping in both good ways and bad," which is recommendation enough for me. The Castro's evening programming begins at 6:30 with SFIAAFF's 2011 Centerpiece Film, Le Thanh Son's Clash. This martial arts epic was last year's top box-office smash in Viet Nam and stars that country's very own "Brangelina," couple Johnny Tri Nguyen and Ngo Thanh Van. The trailer is a blast and friends who attended the press screening say it's sexy as all get out. Plus, Nguyen and Van are expected to appear live on-stage at the Castro. How do you top that? Perhaps with Raavanan, the latest spectacle from celebrated Indian director Mani Ratnam (Dil Se, A Peck on the Cheek), which screens at 9:30. This contempo retelling of a tale from the Ramayana stars mono-monikered hunk Vikram as a criminal who conducts a revenge kidnapping of a police chief's wife (Aishwarya Rai). By the way, all four films at SFIAAFF's day-at-the-Castro will be screened in 35mm. Each year the festival presents a "ripe for rediscovery" movie from Out of the Vaults--traditionally at the Castro Theater. Unfortunately, this year's selection unspools at Berkeley's Pacific Film Archive at the exact same time as the Castro's Centerpiece Film. I'm probably not the only person who's distressed over having to choose. This year's revival will be 1936's Charlie Chan at the Olympics, said to be "one of the best and most interesting of the 16 films in which Warner Oland played the title character." The event will include a conversation between Stephen Gong, executive director of the Center for Asian American Media (CAAM) and author Yunte Huang, who's just written the book, Charlie Chan: The Untold Story of the Honorable Detective and His Rendezvous with American History.

Several of the films mentioned thus far hail from the festival's new Cinema Asia sidebar, which is basically their old International Showcase with some foreign documentaries mixed in. Of the 15 selections on offer, I'm especially looking forward to Dooman River, the latest narrative feature about North Koreans in China from director Zhang Lu. His masterful Grain in Ear and its follow-up, Desert Dream, were shown at the festival in 2006 and 2008 respectively. I've also read good things about Jeon Kyu-Hwan's Dance Town, which follows an exiled North Korean table tennis champ as she adapts to life in South Korea. Those who follow the Golden Horse Awards--arguably Asia's most prestigious film accolade--will have the opportunity to catch two big winners from last year. Chang Tso-Chi's When Love Comes won Best Feature Film, Audience Choice Award, Best Cinematography and Best Art Direction, while Chung Mong-Hong's The Fourth Portrait took home prizes for Best Director and Outstanding Taiwanese Film. SFIAAFF's Asian scope extends all the way to Iran, and I've heard nothing but raves for Homayoun Asadian's Gold and Copper from friends who've seen it at other festivals. Praised for how it "illuminates the pressures and pitfalls of traditional roles in Iranian society," the film tells the story of a young mullah-in-training who must assume household and parental duties when his breadwinner wife falls ill to multiple sclerosis. A few other Cinema Asia possibilities include Bi, Don't Be Afraid!, which was Viet Nam's OscarR submission, and Passion, a documentary about the legacy of filmmaking in Mongolia.

Eight documentary and eight narrative features will compete in this year's Competition Awards. I've never been clear about the criteria for these awards, but it seems that the filmmaker must be North America-based, while the subject matter or setting can be anywhere in the world. In addition to the previously mentioned The Imperialists are Still Alive!, I'm most looking forward to Eyad Zahra's The Taqwacores, based on the provocative 2003 novel about an imaginary Muslim-American punk scene. Two directors familiar to SFIAAFF audiences return with new projects in competition. From Ian Gamazon (Cavite) comes Living in Seduced Circumstances, a tale of vengeance and torture that "traverses an imaginary border toward the darkened realm of fairy tale." And director Stephane Gauger (Owl and the Sparrow) returns to the streets of Saigon for a look at underground Vietnamese hip-hop youth culture (Saigon Electric). The only narrative feature of significant LGBT interest in the festival is Hossein Keshavarz's Dog Sweat, a clandestinely filmed, multi-character weaving about young people in Iran that includes a gay couple facing the threat of an arranged marriage. Bertha Bay-sa Pan's romantic comedy Almost Perfect is notable for the appearance of Edison Chen--his first film, I believe, since 2008's XXX-photo scandal made him an industry pariah. Rounding out this year's narrative competition are Jy-ah Min's M/F Remix, which "repurposes" Godard's Masculine/Feminine for a new generation, and Chuck Mitsui's One Kine Day, a skater dude's day-in-the-life saga that's steeped in Oahu working class youth culture. Shifting over to the Documentary Competition, I've got an eye on Lynn True and Nelson Walker's critically acclaimed Summer Pasture, a strictly observational doc about a married yak-herding couple being confronted with modernity. News junkies might remember a 2004 item about a Hmong immigrant who killed six white hunters in a Wisconsin forest. Mark Tang and Lu Lippold's Open Season investigates that tragic story. The resurging interest in the life and career of actress Anna May Wong gets furthered with Yunah Hong's Anna May Wong: In Her Own Words. The only LGBT doc in the festival, Kathy Huang's Tales of the Waria, looks into the world of four Indonesian transgenders. Other competition documentaries explore such topics as India's booming trade in "procreative tourism," i.e., Indian women being paid to act as birth surrogates for Western couples (Made in India), a traditional Hawaiian song competition for students (One Voice) and the deportation of U.S. Cambodian refugees with criminal records to a motherland they no longer know (Resident Aliens).

After Masashi Niwano was named Exec Director of the fest, one of his first missions was to curate a horror series for this year. The result is a fun-sounding trio of terror tales called "After Death: Horror Cinema from Southeast Asia." His picks include Thai blockbuster Nang Nak, which was first shown at the festival in 2000; Histeria, from Malaysian indie director James Lee (The Beautiful Washing Machine) which features that country's first on-screen lesbian kiss, and Affliction from the Philippines.

What else? The SFIAAFF 2011 opening night film is Andy de Emmony's West is West, a sequel to the popular 1999 British comedy East is East. This new adventure follows the multi-ethnic Khan family from Manchester to rural Pakistan, with returning cast members Om Puri, Linda Bassett and Jimi Mistry. (The film was also the sold-out opening nighter at our recent Mostly British Film Festival). After the screening at the Castro, SFIAAFF opening night continues with a party at the SF Asian Art Museum. Closing night's feature is Surrogate Valentine by Dave Boyle (White on Rice), a rock-mockumentary starring local indie singer/songwriter Goh Nakamura.

This year also shines a spotlight on director Gurinder Chadha, who will sort of be on hand to introduce her new macabre comedy It's a Wonderful Afterlife--via Skype. Chadha's spotlight also includes revival screenings of her 2002 mega-hit, Bend It Like Beckham. And finally, this year's festival delivers a whopping nine programs of shorts. In his opening remarks at the press conference, CAAM's Stephen Gong declared 2011's SFIAAFF "the most ambitious festival in our 29-year history." Nowhere is that more evident than in the New Directions section, which includes seven panel discussions (Directions in Dialogue), a night of cutting edge contemporary music at the 111 Minna Street club (Directions in Sound) and the festival's largest event, the all day/all night Festival Forum on Saturday, March 12. This year's forum features live music, spoken word, dance troupes and a Bollywood Under the Stars outdoor screening. Also, as part of Directions in Digital Media, be sure to check out Pixels, Politics and Play, CAAM's first ever independent games exhibition which will happen March 11 to 13 at SUPERFROG Gallery (located in the New People building on Post Street). As someone who couldn't care less about electronic games, whether it's Grand Theft Auto or iPhone Scrabble, I look forward to playing The Cat and the Coup. In this game designed by Peter Brinson and Kurosh ValaNejad, the player becomes the cat of Dr. Mohammed Mossadegh, Iran's first democratically elected Prime Minister who was deposed in a C.I.A.-engineered 1953 coup.

Cross-published on film-415 and The Evening Class.


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Review: Truth in numbers?

My son recently had a class project French to foreign countries (was Mexico) where the purpose was to gather a large number of facts and points of interest in a simple table format. The idea was to go online and research. While I have assumed we could have gone down in the basement and blew the dust of Funk & Wagnalls all who has not seen the light of day since the end of the 1980s, obviously comes from Wikipedia. All the information were there. Of course, my son is in the first year and it was more or less, "Just the facts Madame," for this mission. More difficult is a project of grade 12 on the life and the policy of VP-candidate John Edwards or say that the issue of abortion, but that will come later. For mathematics, sciences and the basic facts, Wikipedia is a wonderful resource for one-click shopping and links if you want to go deeper. The complex social problems human and fuzzy "big issue" science (climate change, smoking) or virtually all of history, wells "capital H" then the equation is not so simple.

I think that truth in numbers?, a brief but dense look at the culture of Wikipedia and the effect of Wikipedia on culture, eventually be a grand narrative uplifting the monoculture of social networks. This knowledge, it is individual voice, when a single "authority" becomes ubiquitous and practice. There is therefore not surprising to see Jeron Lanier, a prominent Silicon Valley critical culture Web 2.0 (and author of "You are not a Gadget") talk (or warning) to this effect. What was more curious about the film, which aims to look fair and balanced user online, mass generated, encyclopedia, but finally descends the side negative more than a few degrees, is that it is painted as a micro-digital-version of the cultural revolution China. I doubt there will be the level of physical suffering and the massive famine that may be having the time of China experts ready to string me up by the neck to put even the two together as analogy (Ever notice how if raise you Hitler), the conversation has its nadir? (I hope that this is not the case for Chairman Mao!) It seems that for the history and politics, the "average Joes" (read: young students and amateurs) who spend a lot of time to edit a host of entries in wikipedia, and thus pass through the level of power implicit in the culture of Wikipedianshave a significantly more powerful than the experts and elites voice. Thus, the elites are thrown under the bus in terms of contributing. The charge by Jimmy Wales and wikipedia culture, because they have to teach classes, books to write and tend to get rather exhausted fighting an "edit war" in this particular entry on the site. There were many articles written on the same subject, but I think that the average user and wikipedia-user is perfectly anti-expert bias current of the encyclopedia or that there is a tab version history or discussion to look at the truth of the entry. Web or no web, if it is on the page, very likely the average person to research something just takes the information at their nominal value. Of course, the pseudo-anonymity to leaves Wikipedians (known by the alias user generated) speaking head a comment on not attaching your name to something is usually the territory of the ransom Notes and Graffiti. Hyperbolic, perhaps, but as many internet things, those with free extra time can monopolize (and poisoned) discussion if they hammer away sufficiently long in the comments section. Just ask politician John Seigenthaler from politician and assistant Robert f. Kennedy JFK assassin and beyond, in handling heated and concentrated by the administrators of the page in question. The approach of laissez-faire, explicitly referenced here with the lively source of Ayn Rand that Wikipedia has been growing forward at a pace unprecedented against democracy curated to say that the slower to build Oxford English Dictionary is a fascinating comparison. Andrew Keen another expert of Web 2.0 and critical appears as the more negative, and it plays to the screen in a debate with Jimmy Wales who painted the founder of the site (or at least co-founder depending on who you talk) in which crosses the country of Wales as a ' this is what it is,' indifference to these concerns, in particular on the question of the non-expert/expert bias and the ensuing edit goods which leave many entries giving simply part of the truth, certainly not all the truth and nothing but. Wikipedia itself naturally gives the authority the general impression, even if it is not.

Certainly there is food for thought on display here and history (Wikipedia was funded by money raised from Boomis, a website page-ring whose claim to fame was the 'Babe-Aggregater' (emblemized by a photo of Sylvia Saint in full Boomis swagvous can consult to Ms. Saint on Wikipedia))(, if you do not know who she is) and the film succeeds in milk for all talking head format it is. Less interesting is a failure intro of Wales itself turned on and take photographs in India during a tour of self-promotion, or sentencing veiled suggestion that Wikipedia and its commitments (or the priorities set by Wales) led to the dissolution of his marriage. These things fall film focus of headier issues of the information age at an angle of clueless and eccentric leader. I am not opposed to the quirk of led character, the best docs are often this and God knows web-culture is a goldmine quirk (the Social Network or Startup.com for example), but it seems poorly shoe horns in 85 minutes package or simply a function of collected images. There are by my very rough estimate, an hour of good content. Apparently, the project took several years to zero in on original Director Nic Hill was to focus on, and Behind the Mask Director Scott Glosserman was introduced to help with just this thing very: Focus. I would not say that it is a complete success in the Department of Jimmy Wales, the man or how it is a metaphor for Wikipedia. Perhaps, which was perhaps not the intention. You will probably find that in the films of Wikipedia entry. Finally, it should (but rarely ever) be taken for granted that you trust your source of information independently of the web or book or Word of mouth and the history and knowledge is as much perspective that it is done. Monocultures are probably not a good thing for the race to go ahead in his own lights. But hey, give me liberty convenience or give me death - it is a snap to finish this school project.


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Sunday, April 17, 2011

Ngoc Nguyen from Minh and Cuong Ngo discover Oriental pearls

News of the film by Todd Brown, February 28, 2011 3: 01 pm
OrientalPearls.jpgMinh Nguyen Ngoc award-winning author and Director Cuong Ngo join forces on Pearl Oriental, an anthology project six part which will be certainly be drawing attention to the Asian Art circuit and test. Skip to periods and generations, the film focuses on six different women and their stories. Each frame of the trailer seems to be perfectly composed, the kind of thing that you used to wait for a Wong Kar Wai / collaboration with Christopher Doyle. Take a look of eye below.
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The writer of OSS 117 loops italic letter adorned with the adventures of PHILIBERT

UH oh, Jean Francois Halin is at it again.

The last time Halin decided of laugh a classic genre he approached the 70 series, a revival of two films of French James Bond knock off script spy OSS 117. The first of the films of OSS of Halin flat out brilliant a, one of my very favorite year films. Second considerably less so. And, perhaps in acknowledging this, Halin decided to leave the spy film lie for some time and go to another kind. The Cape.

Directed by Sylvain embers with Jeremie Renier in mind, it rips in the mystical Errol Flynn with an enthusiasm not seen since Robin Hood: Men In Tights. Renier - internationally known to play the far more serious characters - in such films as Atonement , and the Silence of Lorna is clearly having a blast and why not do it? He gets to play with swords on colorful sets surrounded by women who seem to abandon their robes when there is around.

Check out the trailer below!


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Saturday, April 16, 2011

Latvia va horror with demons LOUIS XVI

LouisXVI.jpgYou know what happens when you go to the big house, empty, right? The Latvia is about to learn from the ghosts of Louis XVI - a forthcoming slasher to mark one of the first films of horror of the Aik Karapetyan Baltic region.

The production company is now summary details, saying only that he is a young man who tries to win a weekend in a beautiful manor house, only to discover that it is already inhabited, but the first trailer is solid. Check it out below.


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SXSW 2011: Nick Frost is a hairy man, Bespectacled of Joe Cornish attack the block


Ladies and gentlemen, your first glimpse of Spaced , Shaun of the Deadand Hot Fuzz star Nick Frost of the Joe Cornish block the attack.

The creation at the upcoming SXSW Festival, attack the block is the beginnings of the Cornish language, a frequent collaborator with director Edgar Wright, with whom he collaborated on the script for the upcoming film of Tintin Steven Spielberg and Peter JacksonWhile working with Wright on the script for ant-Man.

Here is the official ground:

Attack the block ' is a movie adventure action fast, funny, frightening between gang teen against an invasion of wild alien monsters. It is a subdivision of London in a playground Sci - Fi. A block of Tower in a besieged fortress. And the teenage hero street children. It is the inner city from space.

More than we get!


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Friday, April 15, 2011

Viet Nam Gets a historical epic of his own with KHAT VONG THANG LONG

Trailer alerts by Todd Brown, February 28, 2011 2: 52 pm
KhatVong.jpgYou simply have to love an epic of action that features two young children chasing each other on the backs of Buffalo. You simply have to. And Vietnamese effort of Khat vong thang Long has exactly with some beautiful places, the battles on a large scale and thrown impressive production design.

Unfortunately I could not find any information in English on it - any help on this front would be appreciated - but it is clearly attempting to the Viet Nam to move in the epic world of martial arts on a large scale, and although there are moments where the inexperience shows a bit - there is a too obvious CGI shot in particular. the results are remarkably well research. Discover the official teaser below.

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DVD Review: I Clowns (the clown)

Early on, I will be confess that this is my first full viewing of a Fellini film.? I saw pieces of at least half a dozen, and I saw the spirits of the deadFellini segment, but not full functionality.? I think that can put me in a bit of a disadvantage with The Clowns, but I think that I have enough reading to overcame this deficit.? It is a strange film in his work, and thus a fresh eye can be a benefit to judge its effectiveness.? Then, perhaps I just tell me to be comforted.? In any event, onward and upward with I Clowns (the Clowns) Fellini.

The Clowns is part drama, part fantasy, part pseudo-documentary and all about the spirit of Federico Fellini.? Even only having received bits along the way, I am aware of Fellini of clowns, circuses, fondness of it and the absurd.? The Clowns is its way to explore this a corner of his mind and why clowns and circus had a such great grip on the people in the 20th century.? It is a phenomenon which has seen its greatest heights in the 20th century, after all, the art of the clown is less admired that it was once.

As The Clowns is a film about clowns, it is Fellini.? His obsession of clowns dates back to his childhood, and we see this reflected in the first scene of the film, in which a young boy wakes in the middle of the night to find a tent of circus rige to his front door.? When the boy is first of all between the tent, it is confronted with confusing frenzied acts of clowns, their faces painted in white and Brown, and is not gladdened, but he is frightened, their appearance.? In film, he switches back and forth between the story told in clown acts, Cirque du Soleil and the story of a documentary directed by Fellini on clowns, which is all staged.

The documentary in history shows Fellini and crew skeleton visiting various major circuses of Europe and various retired clowns and friends to find out what makes them who they were.? This part of the film is rather propulsive, and its character clearly scripted, several parts of it feel very natural.? The impromptu performance of an old clown on his guitar is very charming and leaves the two participants in the film, and gave attracted such we, as viewers, gestures to this man who apparently has not lost his touch.? Can say that this is a project of passion for Fellini, his heart is in it and it feels very personal.

Learn the portions of the film, are strangely, some of the harsher parts to pass through.? There is very little narrative push through the film, however, we do some minor emotional bonds with the clowns.? Without dialogue, the film does not flow as beautifully as it should.? Fellini seems to be tempting to recreate the feeling of being in the tent of circus with the action, but it translates very well, and several of these sequences is feeling a little indulgent.? Shot-to-shot editing is very fast at the pace, but the scenes continue for a long time (necessarily) to watch the build actions and the climax.? The only one with which I truly love is the final act, which was longer than all the others, but full of kinetic energy and madness in a manner which were not other acts.? The last twenty minutes of the film are really engaging and exciting.

Overall, the film is difficult to analyze.? Documentary segments are very interesting, but inviting the more if it has a rudimentary understanding of clowns and learn history; While segments of fantasy suffer from their own indulgence.? The combination of the two is a very interesting film, but not necessarily in a terribly entertaining the first time around.? Actually, I went back and watched most of it a second time after searching the excellent extras and it is much more engaging.? If you want to see Clowns, Raro video disc is the way to go.

The disk:

Presentation of the video the Clowns Raro is really to see.? The video is relatively strong and bright.? The image is stable throughout.? This mistaken for one of these super expensive restorations anytime soon, but I cannot imagine after this good on video before.? The Clowns was produced and filmed for television, suggesting Fellini a disadvantage regarding the time, he managed to put in the film, but I think that he feels more spontaneous and reflect the documentary segments.? The audio is presented in its original mono and fairly decent sounds.? The Clowns was not shot with audio synchronization and it's obvious, but yet again, it seems fairly accurate to the Director.

This package is really excels in the Department of extras.? First up is Adriano Apra Fellini Circus fantastic visual essay.? Look at this test is all the difference when I went back and watched the film a second time.? APRA explains some very basic concepts that Fellini assumes that the reader understands and these explanations have greatly contributed to my gratitude for what has been done with the film.? It also explains the genesis of the Clowns, Fellini inspirations and goes through many of the thoughts of Fellini on clowns, clowns, circus, and other issues related to this film.? I know a lot of people think extras as just that, extra, but it's a case where the bonus material is every bit as good as the functionality.

Along these lines, Raro included a packaged beautiful fifty-page booklet from the gills of the information.? Included are pieces of original script of Fellini, some of his own drawings for the film, excerpts from his book, The Clowns, released as a companion to the film and other really fun blocked.? Packaging is nothing to sneeze at, either, with a single disk digipak in a box set with booklet, it looks and feels like has taken care to prepare this version.? The outer case like so very distinctive.? Good work all around.? Rounding of the debut United States Raro is a short Fellini called UN Agenzia matrimonial, shot in black and white in 1953.? An interesting short, but nothing spectacular.

I'm not sure that The Clowns is the first film of Fellini that I should have looked at, but with the presentation of the film Raro and additional essential package, I feel better for it.? Definitely recommended for those who bother spending a bit of energy and matter grey in pursuit of entertainment.


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KOIKYOKUSEI Review (days with you)

In recent years, there was a noticeable decline in Japanese drama of quality features. Administration seems to prefer a more secure and more mellow approach compared with dramas stiff-necked and silent of yonder. Koikyokusei appears to float somewhere between the two worlds, but manages to stay on the right side of the line of setae. Film of Mori is a welcome return to the world of glassy eyes and silent conversations.

Koikyokusei could be the first feature film of Mori, it is hardly a newcomer. Photographer hailed turned Director (think Mika Ninagawa (Sakuran)), it has been around since nearly 20 years. His career is perhaps not as visible in the first feature film of Ninagawa, but if you look close enough you can still recognize the eye of a photographer here.

Mori film is set in the idyllic landscape of Hokkaido in winter time, quickly reminding me of Millennium Mambo and Shinkai 5 centimeters per second of Hou (although actually in Hokkaido, the setting is quite similar). The film follows Natsuki who lives all by itself, stuck in boring work and all of his free time taking care of his mentally unstable brother. His life is out of whack when a friend of former child, Sota, returns to catch up with lost time between them.

Somewhat reluctant at first, she cannot help but surrender to his will charm. And when it finally considers there is light at the end of the tunnel, Sota decides to return to Tokyo, leaving their relationship hung once more. Puzzled, Natsuki sets out to find why he ran it for a second time, only to discover the truth behind the actions of Sota. Cue dramatic last hour.

Visually, Koikyokusei is a typical Japanese drama. Somewhat stilted, controlled camera work, a few distributed superb shots in all and always attractive. The beautiful definition almost made the rest. Quite a few shots from the top, but I guess that is where the experience of former employment of the Mori is picking up. It leads to some very nice images, so you do hear me complain.

As for the soundtrack of the film, it is obviously point low of the film. Every time a dramatic climax approaches film reaches to fill the background with a few pop songs Japanese shaded, most of them of quality worthy of confidence. More subtle, sweetened musical choice, proven how that might be, would have worked here much better, more emphasis on the actors and the images. We hope that something Mori will consider when she began work on his next film.

Acting is solid, while Toda and Kato have no difficulty to carry dramatic weight on their shoulders. Perhaps Kato looks like bears a little too much resemblance with those of an idol of fiery popstar of Tokyo, but it is just a minor quirk and I guess that has to do with the commercial appeal than actual acting skills. Support casting is too nice, but that the film is strongly concentrated on its two main characters, he is not far too much room for them to really shine.

The third act of the film is certainly the best. While the first hour is decent and efficient, the soundtrack of the film retains more than any real emotion. When film approaches its peak that is reduces the impact of music and drama prevails Finally, delivering very touching scenes and some poignant moments.

The final is elegant and respectful. Not what you call a happy ending but in true Japanese fashion the main characters find solace in their plight and find the strength to continue. It is somewhat unrecognized cliche (some people only appear to think that happy endings are snapshot), but when it is executed it is very powerful.

Koikyokusei is a beautiful little drama, only hampered by some poor choice of music. The acting is strong, the film is visually powerful (make the most of its lovely framework) and the drama is humble and touching. Almost everything I wish for in a good Japanese drama. It is certainly still room for improvement, we hope Mori gets another chance to improve his skills.


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Thursday, April 14, 2011

Hey Toronto! Win custom Gorgeous displays of phantom Creative for the dark Crystal City!


Okay, here a very special treat for you - especially those of you planning attend back to The 80 series this screening twitch, the TIFF Bell Lightbox continues this Saturday, March 5th with dark crystal.

Local artist Justin Erickson is to create a series of posters for the screening series, one for each film in the series to promote. Readers of the Magazine of Rue Morgue, where he was an artist key and designer for some time now, are already well familiar with the work of Justin and his Phantom creative city it even push some new territories as well. What you see above is original artwork by Justin for dark crystal.

Now, here's the thing about these posters. They are not available on the market. They are not on sale now and they will never be. While the images will be used online, the number of physical copies will be ultra limited. Beyond the ultra limited, really. There will be ten. In the world. Never. And, yet again, they will not be sold. Five copies are kept for those involved in the assemble series. And the other five? Those who are being given to persons participating in the screening.

Copies five giveaway three will be provided in theatre in the first three people able to respond to all of the trivia questions, I'm cooking. The other two are to win now. We are two of these away, with a pair of tickets each to a pair of lucky Twitch readers. I will not make you answer a question, I will not make you jump through hoops, all I require, it is that you be there in person, to pick up your poster and tickets to the show. I will not ship it. I not hold them for you. Will I not give them to someone else who you send in your place. You have to come to the theatre yourself to take advantage. Good with you? Then send me an email here saying that you want to be on the drawing of lots for the poster of the Dark Crystal and tickets. The winners will be drawn at random Friday morning.

New posters - and will be unveiled new gifts - every Monday morning from now until the series is complete.

AN important note for those PLANNING TO attend: screening this week of the princess Bride sold 100% of online orders advanced. There is no tickets available for the attached sales. We are looking for by moving the other films in the series in a greater projection to allow more room, but if you want to avoid buying your tickets early disappointment. Tickets for all remaining sessions in the series - dark crystal, Gremlins, back To the Future, the last starfighter and Krull - are now available through TIFF online ticketing.


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Del Toro to produce stop animation "Pinocchio" Henson with Pathe

Film news by Andrew Mack, February 17, 2011 9: 25 pm
Grimmly-Pinnochio.jpgThe problem is well understood when the boss is away gallivanting about Berlin that we must sometimes awhile to get part of the news of the day. We have to sit on it while itching to display day jobs. We are here, nearly 12 hours later, but it is always useful drafting of.?Guillermo Del Torro is getting together with the Jim Henson Company and Pathe and help create a new version of 3D fairy tale Carlo Collodi Pinocchio stop animation. The film will be co-directed by artist grey sadly and Mark Gustafson whose background is in stop animation. Sadly illustrated a book of Pinocchio left in 2002 [coverage] and it is this work won the whole ball of wax lamination. Del Toro wrote history with collaborator Matthew Robbins. Nick Cave has signed on to be a consultant for music music.?
"It must be dark in a fairy tale or narrative child work something, Brothers Grimm, Hans Christian Anderson and Walt Disney understood," said del Toro. "We tend to call something Disney-fied, but many people forget how powerfully disturbing best animated Disney movies, including children being transformed into Pinocchio donkeys." What we are trying to do is make a Pinocchio is more faithful to Collodi wrote. It is more surreal and slightly darker than what we saw before. "
How necessary is a new Pinocchio? All things considered and the parties involved, that I would be happy a judgment animated version with the vision of Del Toro and sadly. Artwork suggests that it Del Toro would be perfect bedfellows and fast reading of sadly of the web site. I say that it. Let's see what you can do.? var part. var href = $('img[id=main-asset]') .attr ('src'); part = href. $('.asset-corps_img[src='+part+']') .css ('display', 'none'); $('.asset-more_img[src='+part+']') .css ('display', 'none'). part = part.replace('twitchfilm.com','twitchfilm.net'); $('.asset-corps_img[src='+part+']') .css ('display', 'none'); $('.asset-more_img[src='+part+']') .css ('display', 'none'). part = /(\/[^\/]+)\.(\w+)$/.exec(href); If (part) {part = part [1] + "-inch-"; $('.asset-corps_img[src*='+part+']') .css ('display', 'none'); $('.asset-more_img[src*='+part+']') .css ('display', 'none');} part = part.replace('twitchfilm.com','twitchfilm.net'); If (part) {part = part [1] + "-inch-"; $('.asset-corps_img[src*='+part+']') .css ('display', 'none'); $('.asset-more_img[src*='+part+']') .css ('display', 'none');}

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Wednesday, April 13, 2011

Review: Small-town murder songs

by Kurt Halfyard, February 15, 2011 11: 54 pm
Rural Ontario Gets an epic soundtrack in Ed Gass-Donnelly hybrid character inky study and police procedure. Capture of the Bruce Peninsula region area of heavy Mennonite North Waterloo with gospel musical collective apocalyptic noodling named properly, Bruce Peninsula town murder songs essays local police and the OPP response first Greyforks, Ontario murder. A dancer at the local bar peeler lies with its underwear his ankles in a picturesque-by-be-non-scenic ditch on a road. The local police captain is played by prolific Swedish actor Peter Stormare sporting a spectacular Cop-moustache, is boldly jet black. Capt. Walter shows tableux slowed in coup de opening film research guilty of something as spectators watch with perplexity and judgment, and the film cut quickly baptism of adults in the next time a theme clair violence/redemption will penetrate a large part of the story. Throw some fire and sulphur quotations from the bible in chapter title cards style, and the Canadian Gothic backdrop and you can guess that you're in for a look in the space of fragile head of a Constable with the past. Stormore is completely meeting the challenge of dropping the secondary role of character (his film credits strange hundreds) to one very credible and interesting first man slash anti-hero.The film a lot on his plate. Could make the argument that these whispers exist partly in flesh by the runtime of the movie. Central crime is actually not a large or particularly revealing mystery (keeping with realism adopted by one of the characters in the film) and is resolved with efficiency capped Washington, the fate of city homicide investigator and door to door (a few establishments distils with innocent facade) footwork of Walter and his Deputy (Aaron Poole, strong) gets more work simply by identifying who played the anonymous registration 911 call. It leaves a lot of margin for Gass-Donnelly to fill in an aesthetic video clip, and I mean this in a good way. The use of slow motion, widescreen photography and thundering gospel gives small-town murder songs a very distinct style, while being grounded and real insight into the region which offer poetry in the banal and really show how darn level which is part of Ontario. Jill Hennessey agenda and Act and wonderfully on Earth (if not exceptionally brilliant) Martha Plimpton play two women in the life of Walter contrast where it was then and where he is now. Whiskey Tango Ex - factors of the Hennessey heavily in the case of murder, more conservative (watch with missionary sex and prayers with Walt in his downtime) diner waitress Plimpton provides film to have one of three tonal digressions on "what the city think" this cartilaginous murder. A conversation of dinner with an availability of body partron is reminiscent of grotesque innkeep Maury Chaykin of Atom Egoyan, The Sweet Hereafter; a movie that shares some similarities with it, even if it takes place in a small town in Western Canada. Another characteristic digression prolific Canadian actor Jackie Burroughs is a wonderfully warm and authentic performance that did not really need to be in the movie, but it makes you happy, that it is there, especially since it gives closing tables films (oddly reminiscent of Gary Jules musical side-pan at the end of Donnie Darko.)My biggest complaint on small pieces of murder city is that it is not long enough. Screen - time to the establishment of the community, the German farmers (Walter is directly linked if excluded from), the pace of the region (a scene involving the movement of a bungalow by flatbed truck-style house is a real show-stopper) intermingle with Walters own sense of inner conflict and alienation is excellent, but the film is about something that could go much further. Brendan Steacy cinematography allows the Viewer to do a lot of work linking the image and tone Gass-Donnelly outlayed themes, I am not saying that I wanted to be too flagrant or heavy hands, just explore this region a little more.Small-town murder songs opens in Toronto (at The Royal) on February 18, 2011. var part. var href = $('img[id=main-asset]') .attr ('src'); part = href. $('.asset-corps_img[src='+part+']') .css ('display', 'none'); $('.asset-more_img[src='+part+']') .css ('display', 'none'). part = part.replace('twitchfilm.com','twitchfilm.net'); $('.asset-corps_img[src='+part+']') .css ('display', 'none'); $('.asset-more_img[src='+part+']') .css ('display', 'none'). part = /(\/[^\/]+)\.(\w+)$/.exec(href); If (part) {part = part [1] + "-inch-"; $('.asset-corps_img[src*='+part+']') .css ('display', 'none'); $('.asset-more_img[src*='+part+']') .css ('display', 'none');} part = part.replace('twitchfilm.com','twitchfilm.net'); If (part) {part = part [1] + "-inch-"; $('.asset-corps_img[src*='+part+']') .css ('display', 'none'); $('.asset-more_img[src*='+part+']') .css ('display', 'none');} Video

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DVD Review: MASSACRE MAFIA style: the family Edition

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Most people who know of Massacre Mafia Style, the epic underground low-budget gangster film from all-around entertainer Duke Mitchell, from its frenetically paced trailer, shown below.? Those of us who make it a practice to seek out these exploitation styled gems know that the film rarely lives up to the trailer.? Is Massacre Mafia Style another such manipulation?? How can a film possibly live up to a trailer this outstanding?? Read on...

While not necessary, it is helpful to have an understanding of Duke Mitchell as a person and an entertainer to fully appreciate Massacre Mafia Style.? Duke was a lounge singer, and a damned good one.? He was friends with Sinatra, he was Mr. Palm Springs, and in the 50's he was part of a Martin & Dean styled comedy team that starred in Bela Lugosi Meets a Brooklyn Gorilla.? He was also a proud Italian-American, and it came through in his work.? Massacre Mafia Style was actually Mitchell's second attempt at writing, producing, directing, and starring in his own films.? Gone With the Pope was the first, but it remained unfinished until 2009, when Oscar winning editor and founder of Grindhouse Releasing, Bob Murawski got a hold of it and released it in a touring print through his company.? Massacre Mafia Style was his second and final feature, and, I believe, by far the better of the two.

The film is the story of Dominic "Mimi" Miceli (Duke Mitchell's birth name), the son of an exiled mafia kingpin, who travels from Italy where he is in exile with his father, to Los Angeles to start up the family business again.? Mimi is a take no prisoners kinda guy, he finds a childhood friend who was also a member of his father's family, and they get to work doing the town.? The film is absolutely full of what seems like stereotypical Italian "goomba" behavior, but the whole thing has a very true ring to it.? In his first attempt to get the attention of the local crime bosses from church on Sunday, he kidnaps the local capo, an old underling of his father's, and holds him for ransom.? He announces his demands via a pinky in a box, in a scene that will bring to mind either the toe in The Big Lebowski or the turd in a box from Pink Flamingos, take your pick.? It works, Mimi gets his ransom and big crime boss is released in time to attend his son's wedding.? Who shows up to the wedding but Mimi and his best pal Jolly, apparently they rolled in on their balls of steel, and set up shop at the family table to talk business.

This is how Mimi operates, he sees what he wants, and he takes it, or at the very least, he makes sure no one else can have it.? Eventually he treads a little bit too heavily on the toes of the other bosses in town and they attempt to call in a hit, at which point Mimi and Jolly go apeshit.? They find out that a hit is in, and they don't bother finding out who placed it, they just go around killing anyone they think might be involved.? Again, that is how Mimi rolls, shoot first, ask questions later.

The film was not so much influenced by The Godfather, as it was a challenge to that film.? Duke Mitchell was an auteur, and even though he only made two films, he really made them count.? Mitchell packs Massacre Mafia Style with characters, all sporting mafia nicknames, but none of them really amount to anything.? Massacre Mafia Style is a one-man show, and we are lucky that the one man is Duke Mitchell.? He gives himself all the best lines, he gives himself the prettiest girl, he gives himself a couple of really nicely profound monologues, and he directs it in such a way that he is in almost every single frame of the movie.? For some films that wouldn't work, but with this one, it wouldn't work any other way.? Massacre Mafia Style is Duke Mitchell

Duke Mitchell had no idea that he was making an exploitation film.? You can tell that this film, while violent and ugly, was made with his blood, sweat, and tears.? Mitchell wanted this film to be epic, and while it may fall slightly short of that, it never, not for a second, fails to be entertaining and it overcomes its handicaps in spades.? You can tell that many of the people in the film are not actors, it is perfectly obvious.? I won't tell you that it lends any kind of realism to the film.? Their performances are stilted and most line readings feel like first takes.? However, like I mentioned above, it isn't a film about them.? Duke Mitchell could have been acting opposite cardboard cutouts and this film would have worked.? There is love here, it is in every frame.? Duke made damned sure that HIS film was done HIS way, from the script, to the direction, to the soundtrack, which is filled with his songs.

At the outset of this review I asked if this film would suffer the fate of so many exploitation films and fall short of the expectations built from the trailer.? The answer is a resounding no.? Massacre Mafia Style is the rare film that is better than its trailer, and at a lean 79 minutes, it never lets up.? There is no filler, in this film, it is all killer.

The Disc:

I'm not going to lie, Massacre Mafia Style is ugly on this DVD.? It has the look of an upconverted VHS tape.? This is probably exactly how it looked when it was first released back in the early eighties under the title, "The Executioner".? It is presented in a full frame, 1.33:1 aspect ratio, though I understand that it was projected at 1.85:1 originally, and zooming in on the image with my Blu-ray player leads me to believe that was true.? It crops to 1.85 beautifully.? The audio is similarly unremarkable.? It is presented in mono, which I'm sure was its initial theatrical appearance, and has an unstable sound, but the dialogue is clear, and the over the top sound effects are present as well, so no harm no foul.? All in all, for an exploitation film, it isn't the worst I've ever seen.? There is still some charm in a dirty, scratchy print, and warped sound, and I understand that, but seeing what can be done these days with digital restoration, it is a bit shocking when we do come across something that hasn't been cleaned up.? I don't expect Massacre Mafia Style is really a candidate for that process, and so I'll take this, it is better than nothing.

Where the Massacre Mafia Style: Family Edition DVD really shines, apart from the awesome film, is in the extra features.? For a film as obscure as this, I've never seen such a packed release.? The main feature contains no less than three full-length commentary tracks.? One from Duke's son Jeffrey Mitchell, a second from Duke's longtime friend Frankie Ray, and a third from Duke's friend and longtime valet of Frank Sinatra George Jacobs.? They aren't exactly scholarly, but they each have their moments, and are perhaps worth listening to once.? Also present on the first disc is that legendary trailer, presented in higher quality, presumably from a film reel rather than VHS.? The trailer is great, you can check it out below.

The wealth of extras continues on disc two.? The most impressive is an hour long documentary following the lives of Duke and his son Jeffrey.? For the many of us who are young, or weren't aware of Duke Mitchell's fame and/or notoriety, this is a great way to find out.? Jeffrey narrates much of the doc, adding in interviews from the above commentators and tons of great anecdotes from both his life and his father's.? Duke was not a gentle man, and he didn't take shit from anyone, so you get the feeling that Massacre Mafia Style was a sort of fictionalized autobiography, which make it even more entertaining, if that is possible.? Also included on the second disc are extended interviews with Frankie Ray and George Jacobs.? These interviews are hilarious, with Frankie and George going into numerous anecdotes about Duke, Sinatra, Lenny Bruce, and others that are really great stories.? I definitely recommend checking them out.? Rounding out the features are first a massive photo and audio gallery with photos from Duke's personal collection from Massacre Mafia Style and beyond and featuring a few of Jeffrey Mitchell's songs from the 70's when he was a working musician in the UK, also there is an audio recording from one of Duke's final live performances.? Good stuff, but nowhere near as good as the film itself or the documentary included on the disc.

Massacre Mafia Style is a great forgotten gem.? As of right now, it is only available legally through the official website.? The Family Edition is well-worth the $30 it costs, and normally I wouldn't pay that kind of price for a film, but this one is outstanding and a real winner.

Disc 1:
* Three commentary tracks featuring Jeffrey Mitchell and family friends Frankie Ray (comedy writer for Lenny Bruce) and George Jacobs (Frank Sinatra's assistant and valet). * Original Theatrical Trailer. * Rare Radio Spots, narrated by Duke Mitchell himself! * A preview for the upcoming release of An Impressionistic Tribute to Jimmy Durante, a Duke Mitchell concert film unseen for over 30 years!

Disc 2:

* Like Father, Like Son, a brand-new documentary on the life and work of Duke Mitchell featuring new interviews with Jeffrey Mitchell and family friends Frankie Ray and George Jacobs along with rare home movies and archival footage. * Extended interviews with Frankie Ray and George Jacobs. * An extensive still gallery featuring hundreds of exclusive photographs from Duke Mitchell's own private collection spanning his early career all the way to Massacre, full of candid behind-the-scenes photos and all set to the music of Duke Mitchell and featuring three seventies-era tracks from Jeffrey Mitchell: Jacknife, Whisky and In A Dream. * Rare audio recordings from one of Duke Mitchell's final live performances.

DVD-ROM Extras :

* The film's early treatments, rough draft and final shooting script available as PDFs.

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Tuesday, April 12, 2011

Festival Preview: Film comment selects 2011

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Hey, is it me... or did things just get really dark in here? Oh, and intense, too? Nothing wrong with that, mind you, just interesting how the folks over at Film Comment could put together such an idiosyncratic program for this year's quasi-fest and have it accidentally take on a theme. Indeed, even a film as filled with wonder and good-natured humor as Werner Herzog's Cave of Forgotten Dreams is still literally, overpoweringly, dark. In fact, at times it's so stygian that a bulb blew out in the screening I attended so that no picture at all was projected--and it didn't seem like anyone in the audience even noticed for nearly a minute.

So what are some of these dark delights? Glad you asked...

I Only Want You to Love Me (Screening Feb. 18th, 19th, 22nd and March 3rd)

What's a Fassbinder feature from 1976 doing here? Then again, who cares, really? -it's Fassbinder, and here he's doing what he does best: giving us an unforgettable portrait of an individual at odds with society and filming it with a deceptively simple approach. Moreover, this tale of economic and emotional anxiety--and how the two are invariably linked--is just as relevant to our living-on-credit 21st century as it must have been to Germany during its expansive '70s period. In both eras there's been a prevailing notion that the "good life" is just within grasp, so why not push a little harder and close one's grip on it? The problem is that our protagonist's foolish consumerist choices are compounded by an underlying insecurity that's pretty much spelled out by the title. As he tries to prove his worth to both his wife and his parents by taking pricey cab rides and buying fancy schmansy furniture, the narrative starts to take on the familiar contours of social realist drama--"the tragedy of the common man who tries to live beyond his means." And certainly the deep sense of shame that attaches to our sad sack anti-hero recalls similar themes in films such as Tokyo Sonata.

But while the overall trajectory of the central storyline might be easy to plot in advance, Fassbinder still manages to keep things riveting. He does this partly by means of a frame story that makes us suspect some monstrous crime has been committed, and partly by mixing in a strain of psychodrama throughout, especially at the climax, which is both surprising and tragic. In short, I Only Want You to Love Me is smart and harsh, absurd and heartbreaking--the kind of combinations that probably would have appealed to Kafka.? ?

Cave of Forgotten Dreams (Screening Feb. 20th)

It's a cliche to remark of 3D movies, or really of any kind of eye-candy-oozing?spectacle, that "Oh, you just have to see this on the big screen"... but in the case?of Herzog's latest doc, this really is true. Trust me. First, the 3D experience is notable in that it doesn't try to sell you on a?greater-than-reality experience; instead, reality itself is shown to be more than enough. Second, the legendary director uses the format to suggest compelling backgrounds and distances,?emphasizing depths that make you want to explore them rather than pointy objects thrust in your direction that make you want to recoil.

As his tiny, multitasking four-person crew reverently illuminates the oldest paintings in the world, you can't help but?feel that you're not just watching a record of its visits to the stygian caves, but that you're actually visiting with them. Gradually, as Herzog's typically soulful narration expands to discussing the role of art and spirit in the human condition, the feeling arises that the entire doc is an all-encompassing meta-metaphor: you're in the cave of the theater and?Herzog is the Cro-Magnon painter, running his flickering images against one of the walls. Full of some astoundingly transportive moments as well as some?silly but endearing flights of fancy, Cave of Forgotten Dreams offers more rewards than?most could reasonably expect from it. Chances are, you'll even overlook its slightly padded feeling and its too-stately pacing toward the end.

Domaine (Screening Feb. 18th, 21st, 23rd, and 25th)

Confession: I'm a Beatrice Dalle fan from way back, so Domaine already holds huge appeal for me due to the star's ability, once again, to be both commanding and good. Director Patric Chiha opens with a beguiling seaside scene that isn't like the rest of the movie in that there are lots of characters and yet no real angst to speak of. Quickly, though, the script zooms in to focus on two of these characters, mathematician Dalle and her teenage nephew Pierre. They take long walks in the park together and engage in much wine-sipping, and over time some of the same ideas and themes get revisited as if in a rondo. If that sounds boring, think again. Every time we go 'round the spiral of their interaction, we corkscrew deeper into these characters' psyches. So what seems to be a conventional, if somewhat highbrow, coming-of-age flick turns out to be anything but.

Domaine is really a character study, and one of the richest I've seen in a long time.? More accurately, it's one of those anti-character studies: as you spend more time with?the characters, the less you feel you understand them with any certainty. Similarly, the plot elements that seem to hint where things are going--certain sexual tensions, Pierre's' conflict with his mother over his dissipate aunt--well, none of this really leads where one might think. The climax, though elliptical in some ways, will stay with you so that in the end you may feel moved by Domaine and not be sure why. That's partly a function of the way that Chiha builds the relationship with the audience, vacillating between intimacy and keeping it at arm's?length--just like the two main characters do with each other.

I Saw the Devil (Screening Feb. 20th)

If you're a genre fan and Twitch reader, there's a good chance you've already seen Kim Ji-woon's cause celebre. If you haven't, though, please let me encourage you to modulate your expectations. Undeniably thrilling or unnerving during certain sequences, I Saw the Devil's epic scale has to be applauded for its ambition, if nothing else. Exploring the same kind of dark interconnections between hunter and hunted, and between the self-righteous and the psychotic, as David Fincher's Seven, the film is undeniably worth seeing--a near-miss that's still more fun in its failures than other films in their successes.

The problem is that at key moments it succumbs to borderline cliches and even outright silliness. The result, then, is that its big ideas don't all come together, and so I was left with the unfortunate, and probably inaccurate, feeling the Kim was simply trying to out-revenge Park Chan-wook. In one scene the Bond-like Lee Byung-hun scoops baddie Choi Min-sik off the street in a moving car, and everything about it seems off: the idea feels unoriginal (Wanted), physically impossible (how could you drive while dragging a strong madman on board?), and out of place both tonally and generically--like part of a not-quite-serious HK action film got spliced into the proceedings.

Lee, as in Kim's The Good, the Bad, and the Weird, exudes a strong presence--but that's about it. Choi, though he gives a solid performance, is sometimes undercut by the direction (too many close-ups) and the inconsistent script (I can't figure out why he rapes some victims but not others.) All in all, I think I would've enjoyed two separate movies about these characters more than I enjoyed ...Devil when all was said an done. To be sure, the premise of exacting and prolonging revenge by continually, and unexpectedly, disrupting someone's life is a terrific one, and here it powers the film's wonderful and impressive second act. But the first act has too many predictable or overblown moments (i.e., a severed head getting dropped by oafish CSU guys made me guffaw), and the third act is too assured of its own profundity to be as impactful as it thinks it is.

Cold Fish (Screening Feb. 24th and March 1st)

I'm probably the biggest Sion Sono fan that I know, so you should be aware that any film he makes is apt to be interesting to me and worth recommending to others who admire his previous work. That said, while it contains many proverbial flashes of brilliance, overall Cold Fish doesn't just feel like something Sono would produce at this stage of his creative career. Instead, it feels more like a step backward. It's not so much that Sono delivers both a story and a mode of storytelling that are less lyrical, less experimental, and less nuanced--let's face it, less everything--than most of his other work. After all, Be Sure to Share was straightforward and I admired that--a change of pace that worked on its own terms and in the context of Sono's body of work. But with Cold Fish we get the kind of mildly subversive, mildly transgressive fare that any number of directors could have created. The originality that distinguished Strange Circus, not to mention Love Exposure, is sorely absent. It feels, in fact, that here Sono is hanging everything on the supposedly shocking narrative--which summarizes down to a hail-fellow-well-met businessman who turns out to be an opportunistic serial killer. But once you get past that surprise, it's strictly Straw Dogs plus body parts.

Yes, the director elicits strong performances from male leads Mitsuru Fukikoshi and Denden, but the female characters are pretty underdeveloped, which again is a shame if you're familiar with Sono's previous work. I don't expect full-bodied characters in every genre piece, and find that Sono's use of "types" can be quite effective, but here we get female characters whom we figure out in the first few minutes and then never really do anything that challenges or engages us. Yes, some tension does build up re a thug who shows up because his brother goes missing, and a dash of narrative spice is added via cops who are on the killer's trail. But nothing is really done with either of these subplots, which is odd given that so much energy goes into establishing them. Instead, we get lots of lectures on how to be a man, lots of lugging bodies around, and so on. Sure, some of this is fine, but Sono's instincts in terms of pacing seem to be way off. Cold Fish could certainly be lean and mean at 90 minutes yet at more than two hours it feels more than a tad self-indulgent.

Klaus Kinski: Jesus Christ the Savior (Screening Feb. 20th, 21st, and 24th)

No doubt about it: it would be ridiculously easy to trade on the perennial appeal of Kinski's inspired madman persona by foisting on the public a half-baked from-the-vaults documentary based on some obscure one-man-show... but that's not what Peter Geyer has done in excavating the '70s-era footage on display in Klaus Kinski: Jesus Christ the Savior. What he's done, simply, is fashion the most purely electrifying performance-doc I've seen in ages. It's not just a recording of a memorable performance, but a hugely memorable piece about that performance. This extra layer of content is achieved not with the standard backstage segments and talking head interviews, but simply by showing the performance in all its heckler-interrupted glory. In fact, it's these hecklers--usually questioning Kinski's wealth/status or his strong-arm tactics in suppressing other hecklers--who offer the "commentary" one expects from a doc like this. Kinski, delivering an impassioned monologue that seeks to make Jesus relevant to the counter culture, was obviously not prepared for such objections, which are both ideological and theological. But it's in this way that the doc brilliantly comes to encapsulate the history of Christianity itself--its schisms and debates, its internal struggle over issues of authority and the ends justifying the means, and of the power and pitfalls of evangelism. Highly recommended.

Sobibor, October 14, 1943, 4 pm (Screening Feb. 23rd, 26th and March 1st)

So here's another documentary that's straightforward in its construction yet more moving and dramatic than your typical narrative feature...

Because you're a Twitch reader and probably a lot savvier than I am, you're likely to be quite familiar with the "director's statement"--a brief rationale/intro that I usually ignore when handed to me in a press pack. In this case, though, director Claude Lanzmann provides a scrolling title card at the outset that's so perfect in nearly every way that you wish every documentarian was this forthright and thoughtful: it lays out the relevant how-and-why details regarding this doc and bursts with exceedingly well-expressed insights. Lanzmann notes that his film, being an account of the only successful uprising at a Nazi concentration camp, represents an important refutation of historical perception in two senses. First, it offers an example of Jews not being deceived all the way to the gas chamber--Yehuda Lerner, the subject of Sobibor, knew what would happen if he didn't defy his captors because he'd already seen countless others meet their fate. Second, the story of the revolt at Sobibor enables Jews to reappropriate the idea of violence in the service of self-defense, another strand that seems to be missing from the typical Holocaust narrative. And when considering the fact that museums now occupy the place where Sobibor and other camps once stood, Lanzmann points out that such places "institute oblivion" as much as they encourage remembrance. The idea of a doc, by contrast, is to capture "living words."

And boy do they live. Lerner speaks, but there's no attempt to buttress this spoken text with persuasive visuals. The first part of Sobibor follows one of the strategies of Lanzmann's Shoah: there's no archival footage along the lines of Night and Fog. Instead,?we see present-day fields, mundane cityscapes, unspectacular rail lines. And, as in Shoah, such images are far more haunting than one might expect, with the juxtaposition of today upon yesterday showing how easy it is for history to covers its tracks. The second part of Sobibor is mostly concerned with Lerner being directly interviewed on camera. There's a slight delay while his words are translated and repeated to the viewer that may make some audiences impatient. I chose to use such moments to let the words really sink in, which is what I think Lanzmann intended:? this is the kind of tale in which you don't want to gloss over anything.?

Oh, and if that weren't enough, Film Comment Selects will also screen Lanzmann's The Karski Report (2010) and A Visitor from the Living (1997)--plus feature the director in person on Saturday, February 26.?? ?

Sodankyla Forever (Screening Feb. 19th)

A celebration of--or, more precisely, a greatest hits compilation drawn from--the famous Finnish film fest that's known not so much for its alliteration but for the world-famous directors it consistently draws. However, this dense-with-ideas doc isn't about the history of that fest but rather it aspires, as its subtitle would imply, to something far grander: a full century of cinema itself. To that end, it uses outtakes of panel and Q&A appearances by an all-star team of filmmakers to trace the connection between film and the 20th century's landmark events. No, please don't look for the inclusion of Asian or Latin filmmakers, but if you're into Europeans and Americans above all else, then you're in for a treat.

Milos Forman acts as an anchor for the film, and he begins it with an enchanting anecdote about watching a silent adaptation of a popular Czech opera. Also on hand are Ivan Passer, Bob Rafelson, Michael Powell, Abbas Kiarostami, Samuel Fuller, John Sayles, Jerzy Skolimowski,? and countless others. Rather than presenting ideas thematically, the doc follows a fairly unimaginative chronological organization, which does get the job done with maximum efficiency. We start out with the rise of fascism, head into World War 2 and its horrors, follow up with Neo-Realism and film noir, then finish up with censorship, the Prague Spring, and the Vietnam War before the film peters out in the '70s. If you're guessing that Eastern Europe is heavily represented here, you'd be right, but we also get plenty of ideas that apply generally, such as cinema being the anti-nationalist art form par excellence. Because of such insights and its unique primary footage of world cinema giants, I expect Sodankyla Forever to be a big hit on DVD one day. Its one major weakness, if one chooses to look it at that way, is that it does not ever really analyze the medium as providing an aesthetic experience. Rather, every film becomes no more than a political document, from Battleship Potemkin right through Apocalypse Now. This notion becomes concrete when an earnest Jonathan Demme discusses Caged Heat by stating that it was intended to be a lefty rabble-rouser.

Well, that's it for now. Please know that the full lineup features Burke and Hare, Hobo with a Shotgun, James Wan's Insidious, and even Legend of the Fist: The Return of Chen Zhen, courtesy of a partnership with NYAFF. So while FC Selects is not a high-profile showcase, nor your typical indie or genre fest, it does combine elements of all of these to winning effect. More importantly, the common element that all these films share is that they deserve to be seen by more people, especially in New York. In fact, 16 of these titles lack distribution altogether, which make them perfect for the obscurity-loving Twitch reader--these are films that are rare, illuminating, or strikingly unusual. In short, they're worthy of your attention in any way possible.


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