Showing posts with label Rafi Pitts. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Rafi Pitts. Show all posts

Sunday, January 1, 2012

:::: FILMS OF 2011 ::::


TOP FILMS OF 2011 IN NO PARTICULAR ORDER
--------------------------------------------------------

Raúl Ruiz "Mysteries of Lisbon" (Portugal)
Terrence Malick "The Tree of Life" (United States)
Pedro Almodóvar "The Skin I Live In" (Spain)
Lars Von Trier "Melancholia" (Sweden)
Takashi Miike "13 Assassins" (Japan)
Hiromasa Yonebayashi "Arrietty: The Borrower" (Japan)
Andrew Ross "Page One: A Year Inside the New York Times" (United States)
Göran Hugo Olsson "The Black Power Mixtape 1967-1975" (Sweden)
Tomas Alfredson "Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy" (Sweden/United Kingdom)
Werner Herzog "Cave of Forgotten Dreams" (Germany/France)
Masahiro Shinoda "Pale Flower" Restored/Re-released (Japan)
David Cronenberg "A Dangerous Method" (Canada)
Patricio Guzmán "Nostalgia for the Light" (Chile)
Michael Madsen "Into Eternity" (Finland)
Martin Scorsese "Hugo" (United States)
Rafi Pitts "The Hunter" (Iran)

The past 12 months again yielded great discoveries outside the expected sources and return artists creating works outside their established form, a year of finding new record labels and film distributors, authors of choice returning with some of their finest writing to-date, making connections between screenplay, director and soundtrack that were previously inconceivable; 2011 was a good one. Some of these combinations generated exciting, unexpected new hybrids of styles, genres, sensorial vocabulary and narrative voice. Malick returned from his usual hiatus of many years with one of his greatest visual and sonic narratives ever constructed, though highly imbalanced in it's chapter-content, "Tree of Life" still stood as a work of moving-pictures storytelling of a nature that just about nobody in american cinema even attempts. Lars Von Trier returned with a stunning, cosmic, spectacle of nihilistic wish fulfillment in the form of "Melancholia" and Raul Ruiz' final film, a labyrinth of timelines, characters, intrigue, history, class struggle and the world imbued with magical possibility as seen by a child in the 19th Century period piece that was the masterwork "Mysteries of Lisbon" ...and Takashi Miike reigned in some of his more absurd indulgences and delivered what is easily one of the most powerful, visually precise, yet traditional of Samurai films of the past couple decades in "13 Assassins". And lastly, who could have predicted that Scorsese would make not only a children's fantasy in the form of the adaptation of the young-adult novel "The Invention of Hugo Cabret" but that it would be a holiday hit ranking in attendance alongside the glut of CG-fart jokes, cynicism and video game tie-ins flooding the market as the standard in offerings for the younger set. So thank him and the consistently artful, richly complex moral/emotional beauty of Studio Ghibli and their "Arrietty" for offering genuine stories about the world in which we live, as the fantastic.

As it has for the past few decades, Scarecrow Video played an invaluable role as a source for moving pictures from around the globe, an especially considerable resource for those of us enabled by all-zone/region Blu-Ray players. This year's Seattle International Film Festival hosted only one or two of the films listed above, as opposed to previous years, where SIFF dominated the field by screening most of the best films of the year during the course of the festival. By contrast, SIFF's offerings were their weakest this year of many a decade, so good thing for the independent cinemas here picking up the slack. With indie cinemas closing around the nation, it was that much more important to support the local theater opportunities such as the (newly expanded to four screens!) SIFF Cinema the Landmark Theatre chain, the Grand Illusion Cinema and what's proven itself to be the paramount indie screen in Seattle, Northwest Film Forum. Many of the best films seen this year, when they did come to the theater, had runs that lasted no more than a week. Others were never to return to the cinema again or as a domestic DVD/Blu-Ray release or even online in any digital context, official, bootleg or otherwise. Again proving the wisdom of getting out there, seeing the city and prioritizing the art/music/film that we're fortunate to have in our urban cultural crossroads.

Lastly, the unseen films by a few directors of note that never made it over here distributed stateside (at least not 'yet') or even made a less-desirable appearance as an online release. I suspect a number of these would have made the list, if I had an opportunity to see them:

Sion Sono "Himizu" (Japan)
Nuri Bilge Ceylan "Once Upon a Time in Anatolia" (Turkey)
Jafar Panahi "This is Not a Film" (Iran)
Pema Tseden "Old Dog" (Tibet)
Béla Tarr "The Turin Horse" (Hungary)
Jean-Pierre & Luc Dardenne "The Kid with a Bike" (France)
Steve McQueen "Shame" (United Kingdom)
Guy Maddin "Keyhole" (Canada)
Masahiro Kobayashi "Haru's Journey" (Japan)
Huang Weikei "Disorder" (China)
Alexander Sokurov "Faust" (Russia)
Asghar Farhadi "A Separation" (Iran)
Gerardo Naranjo "Miss Bala" (Mexico)
Julia Loktev "The Loneliest Planet" (United States)

Tuesday, May 10, 2011

Seattle International Film Festival : May 19 - June 12


First off to address grievance/concern with the curatorial direction SIFF seems to be taking as a trend since 2009; AGAIN this year, rather than the usual post expressing my ebullient enthusiasm in an exclamatory tone, this post is to begin with criticism. As a paragon of International World Cinema in the United States, even on occasion eclipsing San Francisco, Chicago and New York in scale, depth and dictionary-definition diversity, the Seattle International Film Festival has established itself over the course of the past decade+ (I can really speak for previous decades, having only seen them in print and not attended in-person) as a focal-point of visionary cinema curatorialship. Admittedly, years like 2009 were even then, a bit thin, but even then I found some 22 films of gravitas or curiosity worthy of attending, by both directors of note and new developing artists. Overall not a bad year, but not on par with the stellar run we'd seen spanning 2001-2008. Figuring it was a one-off lapse and the recession and funding issues with SIFF having opened their new theatre and home to their film archive and offices, I assumed it was a product of the times and singular qualitative dip on their part. Even then, not a significant one, as I saw much, much great cinema that year in the festival (also see the posts here from SIFF '07 or '08 for reference).

This year, immediately when the schedule was posted on Thursday May 5, there was a visible void of progressive, inventive, notable, names, titles and works in the New Global Cinema category (customarily SIFF's largest and richest) that one would expect (and have become accustomed to) in seeing self-evidently there when doing that quickly browsed shortlist. Off the top of my head, doing a run-down of the films I've known have been out there in international fests awaiting arrival in the states and looking to SIFF to hopefully bring them to our city; New Cristi Puiu? No. New Andrei Ujica? No. New Hong Sang-Soo? No. New Zhao Dayong? No. Masahiro Kobayashi? No. New Kazuyoshi Kumakiri? No. New Takashi Ishii? No. New Catherine Breillat? No. New Jia Zhang-Ke? No. New Sergei Loznitsa? New Li Hongqi? No. New Takashi Miike? No. New Kaneto Shindo? No. New Michelangelo Frammartino? No. Things like the new James Benning docu or the new Huang Weikai docu? No and No. Or for instance, one of the most lauded Japanese films in a decade, that has yet to play anywhere near our city; Kôji Wakamatsu's "Caterpillar"? Definitely a No. And I'm not even going to inquire about the film that won the world's most prestigious cinema award of 2010, that we've still not seen play here; Apichatpong Weerasethakul anyone? So, yeah. You get the idea. My usual 20-30 films annually in SIFF reduced to this in 2011. Grateful as I am to have an ongoing annual International Film Festival in my town, as far as the sum totality of everything I'm going to/am curious to see, this is a pretty sorry sight:

--------------------------------------------------
Friday, May 20
--------------------------------------------------
11:59 PM - André Øvredal "Troll Hunter"
Egyptian Theatre
TROL2011A

http://www.siff.net/festival/film/detail.aspx?id=44304&FID=206

--------------------------------------------------
Saturday, May 21
--------------------------------------------------
6:30 PM - Mike Cahill "Another Earth"
Egyptian Theatre
ANOT2111A

http://www.siff.net/festival/film/detail.aspx?id=44460&FID=206

--------------------------------------------------
Saturday, May 21
--------------------------------------------------
10:00 PM - Paddy Considine "Tyrannosaur"
SIFF Cinema
TYRA2111A

http://www.siff.net/festival/film/detail.aspx?id=44454&FID=206

--------------------------------------------------
Sunday, May 22
--------------------------------------------------
9:00 PM - Takeshi Kitano "Outrage"
Neptune Theatre
OUTR2211A

http://www.siff.net/festival/film/detail.aspx?id=44233&FID=206

--------------------------------------------------
Tuesday, May 24
--------------------------------------------------
7:00 PM - Sophie Fiennes "Over Your Cities Grass Will Grow"
SIFF Cinema
OVER2411A

http://www.siff.net/festival/film/detail.aspx?id=44265&FID=206


--------------------------------------------------
Wednesday, May 25
--------------------------------------------------
7:00 PM - Aleksei Fedorchenko "Silent Souls"
AMC Pacific Place 11
SOUL2511A

http://www.siff.net/festival/film/detail.aspx?id=44306&FID=206

--------------------------------------------------
Saturday, May 28
--------------------------------------------------
1:00 PM - Raul Ruiz "Mysteries of Lisbon"
Egyptian Theatre
MYST2811E

http://www.siff.net/festival/film/detail.aspx?id=44273&FID=206

--------------------------------------------------
Saturday, May 28
--------------------------------------------------
9:30 PM - Various "Animation United" / Damian Nenow "Paths of Hate"
SIFF Cinema
ANIM2811A

http://www.siff.net/festival/film/detail.aspx?id=44516&FID=206
http://www.siff.net/festival/film/detail.aspx?id=44619&FID=206

--------------------------------------------------
Sunday, May 29
--------------------------------------------------
10:00 AM - Mahamat-Saleh Haroun "A Screaming Man"
AMC Pacific Place 11
SCRE2911M

http://www.siff.net/festival/film/detail.aspx?id=44263&FID=206

--------------------------------------------------
Wednesday, June 01
--------------------------------------------------
6:30 PM - Rafi Pitts "The Hunter"
Admiral Theatre
HUNT0111A

http://www.siff.net/festival/film/detail.aspx?id=44238&FID=206


--------------------------------------------------
Thursday, June 02
--------------------------------------------------
7:00 PM - Mohammad Rasoulof "The White Meadows"
Egyptian Theatre
MEAD0211A

http://www.siff.net/festival/film/detail.aspx?id=44226&FID=206

--------------------------------------------------
Sunday, June 05
--------------------------------------------------
9:00 PM - Sergio Caballero "Finisterrae"
Harvard Exit
FINI0511A

http://www.siff.net/festival/film/detail.aspx?id=44372&fid=206


--------------------------------------------------
Monday, June 06
--------------------------------------------------
9:30 PM - Tsui Hark "Detective Dee & the Mystery of The Phantom Flame"
Egyptian Theatre
PHAN0611A

http://www.siff.net/festival/film/detail.aspx?id=44307&FID=206

--------------------------------------------------
Wednesday, June 08
--------------------------------------------------
4:30 PM - Sivaroj Kongsakul "Eternity"
AMC Pacific Place 11
ETER0811M

http://www.siff.net/festival/film/detail.aspx?id=44364&FID=206

--------------------------------------------------
Saturday, June 11
--------------------------------------------------
6:00 PM - Anh Hung Tran "Norwegian Wood"
Egyptian Theatre
NORW1111A

http://www.siff.net/festival/film/detail.aspx?id=44268&FID=206

Wednesday, May 16, 2007

Seattle International Film Festival : May 24 - June 17


Link to Seattle International Film Festival site

Yes! Its that time of the year again. Amazing that this little town of ours has one of the largest film fests in the whole stinkin usa. Schedule was released on May 10 and listings, catalog and tickets went on sale then for the general public. Make sure to get on it in advance if there are specific films you dont want to miss, as this thing can be rather insane and films can sell out on the first day of ticket sales.

:: Some of What I Intend on Cacthing in the Fest ::

--------------------------------------------------
Friday May 25
--------------------------------------------------

9:30 PM - Satoshi Kon "Paprika"
Neptune Theatre
PAPR2507A

http://www.seattlefilm.org/festival/film/detail.aspx?id=22044&FID=32

--------------------------------------------------
Saturday May 26
--------------------------------------------------

1:30 PM - Andrea Arnold "Red Road"
Harvard Exit
ROAD2607A

http://www.seattlefilm.org/festival/film/detail.aspx?id=21599&FID=32

--------------------------------------------------
Saturday May 26
--------------------------------------------------

6:30 PM - 18 Directors "Paris je t'aime - A Collective Feature Film"
Harvard Exit
PARI2607A

http://www.seattlefilm.org/festival/film/detail.aspx?id=21683&FID=32

--------------------------------------------------
Saturday May 26
--------------------------------------------------

9:00 PM - Werner Herzog "Rescue Dawn" ( * )
Neptune Theatre
RESC2607A

http://www.seattlefilm.org/festival/film/detail.aspx?id=22258&FID=32

--------------------------------------------------
Sunday May 27
--------------------------------------------------

6:30 PM - Abderrahmane Sissako "Bamako" ( * )
Pacific Place Cinema
BAMA2707A

http://www.seattlefilm.org/festival/film/detail.aspx?id=21518&FID=32

--------------------------------------------------
Monday May 28
--------------------------------------------------
7:00 PM - John Cage / Henning Lohner "One11 and 103"
Northwest Film Forum
103X2807A

http://www.seattlefilm.org/festival/film/detail.aspx?id=26692&FID=32

--------------------------------------------------
Tuesday May 29
--------------------------------------------------

9:45 PM - Shane Meadows "This Is England" ( * )
Egyptian Theatre
ENGL2907A

http://www.seattlefilm.org/festival/film/detail.aspx?id=22286&FID=32

--------------------------------------------------
Wednesday May 30
--------------------------------------------------

9:30 PM - Tsai Ming-liang "I Don't Want to Sleep Alone" ( * )
Harvard Exit
IDON3007A

http://www.seattlefilm.org/festival/film/detail.aspx?id=21566&FID=32

--------------------------------------------------
Wednesday May 30
--------------------------------------------------
9:45 PM - Volker Schlöndorff "Strike"
SIFF Cinema
STRI3007A

http://www.seattlefilm.org/festival/film/detail.aspx?id=22823&FID=32

--------------------------------------------------
Thursday May 31
--------------------------------------------------

4:30 PM - Nick Broomfield "Ghosts"
Neptune Theatre
GHST3107A

http://www.seattlefilm.org/festival/film/detail.aspx?id=22353&FID=32

--------------------------------------------------
Saturday June 02
--------------------------------------------------

6:30 PM - Gregor Schnitzler "The Cloud"
Pacific Place Cinema
CLOU0207A

http://www.seattlefilm.org/festival/film/detail.aspx?id=23258&FID=32

--------------------------------------------------
Monday June 04
--------------------------------------------------

9:30 PM - Apichatpong Weerasethakul "Syndromes and a Century" ( * )
SIFF Cinema
SYND0407A

http://www.seattlefilm.org/festival/film/detail.aspx?id=22057&FID=32

--------------------------------------------------
Tuesday June 5
--------------------------------------------------

9:30 PM - Daniel Sanchez Arévalo "DarkBlueAlmostBlack"
Egyptian Theatre
DARK0507A

http://www.seattlefilm.org/festival/film/detail.aspx?id=21545&FID=32

--------------------------------------------------
Thursday June 07
--------------------------------------------------

7:00 PM - Steven Okazaki "White Light/Black Rain" ( * )
Harvard Exit
LIGH0707A

http://www.seattlefilm.org/festival/film/detail.aspx?id=25585&FID=32

--------------------------------------------------
Friday June 08
--------------------------------------------------

9:30 PM - Kiyoshi Kurosawa "Retribution" ( * )
Pacific Place Cinema
RETR0807A

http://www.seattlefilm.org/festival/film/detail.aspx?id=22048&FID=32

--------------------------------------------------
Saturday June 09
--------------------------------------------------

11:00 AM - Miwa Nishikawa "Sway"
Harvard Exit
SWAY0907A

http://www.seattlefilm.org/festival/film/detail.aspx?id=21899&FID=32

--------------------------------------------------
Saturday June 09
--------------------------------------------------

7:00 PM - Lars von Trier "The Boss of It All" ( * )
Egyptian Theatre
BOSS0907C

http://www.seattlefilm.org/festival/film/detail.aspx?id=21529&FID=32

--------------------------------------------------
Sunday June 10
--------------------------------------------------

6:45 PM - Katsuhiro Otomo "Mushishi" ( * )
Egyptian Theatre
MUSH1007A

http://www.seattlefilm.org/festival/film/detail.aspx?id=26606&FID=32

--------------------------------------------------
Sunday June 10
--------------------------------------------------

9:30 PM - Hiroaki Ando "TEKKONKINKREET" ( * )
Egyptian Theatre
TEKK1007A

http://www.seattlefilm.org/festival/film/detail.aspx?id=25890&FID=32

--------------------------------------------------
Tuesday June 12
--------------------------------------------------

6:30 PM - Garin Nugroho "Opera Jawa" ( * )
SIFF Cinema
OPER1207A

http://www.seattlefilm.org/festival/film/detail.aspx?id=22047&FID=32

--------------------------------------------------
Tuesday June 12
--------------------------------------------------

9:30 PM - Mahamat Saleh Haroun "Dry Season" ( * )
SIFF Cinema
DRYS1207A

http://www.seattlefilm.org/festival/film/detail.aspx?id=22025&FID=32

--------------------------------------------------
Wednesday June 13
--------------------------------------------------
9:30 PM - Xiaolu Guo "How is Your Fish Today?"
Harvard Exit
TODA1307A

http://www.seattlefilm.org/festival/film/detail.aspx?id=22533&FID=32

--------------------------------------------------
Friday June 15
--------------------------------------------------

7:00 PM - Rafi Pitts "It's Winter" ( * )
Pacific Place Cinema
ITSW1507A

http://www.seattlefilm.org/festival/film/detail.aspx?id=19978&FID=32

--------------------------------------------------
Friday June 15
--------------------------------------------------

10:00 PM - Andrew Lau/Alan Mak "Confessions of Pain"
Neptune Cinema
CONF1507A

http://www.seattlefilm.org/festival/film/detail.aspx?id=26277&fid=32

-------------------------------------------------