Sunday, November 6, 2011
Lars Von Trier's new film "Melancholia" at Landmark Theatres: Nov 11 - Jan 20
Finally, finally being distributed stateside! It needs to be said though, with delays between the premier of films of this caliber in international festivals (Cannes in May, Venice in Sept) and the three, four, six months between then and hitting the screen, it does nothing but fuel the already distribution-compromising online bootlegging/torrent culture. To cite an example that contrasts this trend, Terrance Malick's "Tree of Life" was premiered at Cannes, and prints already made and in a complete edit, prepared before it's premier, were being distributed and the film was on-screen within a month. That said, very excited for the new Von Trier. For all his ill-conceived misbehaving at Cannes this year (that sadly overshadowed the press on his film), the reviews of "Melancholia" have made it out to look his best in a very, very long time.
Check J. Hoberman's review from Cannes for the Village Voice with the headline of 'Wow' along with Nicolas Rapold's review from the NYFF in the most recent Film Comment which depicts it to be the mapping of one persons life-destroying personal depression projected on a global scale as world-destroying inevitable cataclysm - successfully! A grand Von Trier style melodrama that hits all the right notes and delivers again on the blending of dark miserablism, immense scale and the absurd that Lars has been missing from much of his recent work. Lastly, but not least-lauded, Amy Taubin rated it the best drama seen at all of Cannes for Film Comment, for her, even surpassing the aforementioned Palme d'Or winning "Tree of Life". So where the Malick was a grandiose existential inquiry into the Cosmos' cyclical designs of Light, Time, Beauty, Rebirth and Destruction - the Von Trier is more a gorgeous, fatalist, Cosmic melodrama about wish-fulfillment, Moon-bathing, Lunacy (literally) and Doom. Curious to see some of the most notable names in film criticism finding their passions more stoked by the latter. Can't wait!
Link to official Magnolia Pictures "Melancholia" site
Link to Landmark Theatres "Melancholia" site
Sunday, October 16, 2011
New Films by Pedro Almodovar, Goran Hugo Olsson, Sean Durkin
& Jeff Nichols at Landmark Theatres: Oct 14 - Nov 24
After a particularly dry summer, the Fall/Winter sees a season of exceptional cinema coming to the Landmark Theatres again! The newest Pedro Almodovar is apparently his foray of sorts into genre film, in having (yeah!) Antionio Banderas play the 'mad scientist'/antagonist role in a variation on something between "Eyes Without A Face" and his own "Frankenstein" story. No surprise that "The Skin I Live In" involves feminine beauty and (extreme) pathology between the sexes, this is Almodovar after all. And that gender ambiguity he loves? Expect that to be taken to it's most profound, literal, conclusion. Speaking of pathology, two of the highlights from Film Comment's coverage of the Venice Film Fest and Sundance included these two explorations of extreme trauma's effect on domestic life, both pieces of homegrown independent cinema. The reviews cited them as being largely influenced by the Malick/Kubrick schools of American cinema, so I'm intrigued. From the director of "Shotgun Stories" we follow the life of abstract threat and unease at the hand of a looming disaster that shadows the protagonist in "Take Shelter" and the life of recovering from the traumas of Cult-induction and identity obfuscation in "Martha Marcy May Marlene" which has been described in reviews as a unnerving and subjective narrative, fraught with a tensely disconcerting dreamlike tone.
In less pathological of-the-mind and instead real-world concerns... "Black Power Mixtape 1967-1975" is nearly a perfect documentary in every sense, seriously, see it while it's still playing. You owe it at least to your own sense of the disparate contrast between what it meant to explore civil liberties in public during those decades vs. our current nationwide movement. By 'nearly perfect' I mean just that, this film isn't the absolutely flawless document in tone and content it could have been, yet the core material it presents is as relevant and important now as it was in it's time. This 'core' being the original documentary footage and editorial objectives of the Swedish news crew, material which in the decades since, has since been left largely untouched in a Swedish TV station’s vault. Spanning the years 1967-1975 and largely consisting of just everyday scenes of urban life, in the streets, in small business, in neighborhoods, in people homes, throughout black Americans are pictures socializing, going about their business, often in mixed-race company, primarily in urban settings all across the US. Vibrant color scenes of 70's Harlem, black & white footage of 60's Chicago to the neighborhoods and community centers the Bay Area and the 'Panthers community-building in Oakland. Had it just been this footage, edited together by director Goran Hugo Olsson from what he calls "20 hours of really good material", these original interviews, street scenes, and observations, with no need to ad contemporary commentary and 'contextualizing' by the current pop and cultural players contributing voice-over, it would have been a totally flawless work of documentary filmmaking. Two personal highlights; Young, articulate, deeply troubled black youth expressing their concern about the evident purging of the progressive elements of American that were the same-year assassinations of John Fitzgerald Kennedy, Martin Luther King and Robert Kennedy, who at the time, was lying in state at St. Patrick's Cathedral a block away. The interviewees attending the viewing and ensuing public wake. Second highlight; The brilliant, true, treasure trove that was both the person and establishment of Lewis Michaux and his African Memorial National Bookshop. Powerful, intimate, moving, revealing interviews and personable moments with founders of the movement Stokely Carmichael, Angela Davis, Martin Luther and Corretta Scott King and Eldrich Cleaver, among others. Together with the footage of the everyday, it rounds out the image of the time and the nationwide movement in this docu's depiction of both the above-ground manifestation and the core of the movement from behind-the-scenes, all set within the larger cultural questioning and public 'awakening' of those decades.
Also at Landmark in the coming months! The two most notable films of the Cannes and Venice film fests we've not yet had the privilege to see (due to the achingly slow theatrical distribution of) David Cronenberg's "A Dangerous Method" with Fassbender and Mortensen as Sigmund Freud vs. Carl Jung in the birth of modern Psychotherapy and what looks to be a directorial highlight, among his many, in the form of Lars Von Trier's gorgeous, fatalist, Cosmic melodrama "Melancholia".
Saturday, October 8, 2011
Boris US Tour: Oct 8 - Nov 12
Japan's heavy rockers Boris return to US! Essential attendance for the promise of their blasting of-the-sun rock brilliance and cynicism-crushing intensity. Every time I've seen them live they've delivered the next variation on their own particular ever-mutating mix of Doom Metal, Heavy Psych, warped J-Pop, dysfunctional College-Rock and more recently, their own thrilling new form of Shoegaze. Yes, the latter we first briefly glimpsed on their Japanese Heavy Rock Hits 7" series and more recently refined on the near-perfect "Attention Please" which I had a abundance of words to say on the subject specifically the tri-album recording/release blur that was the barrage of this past summer. Anticipation is stoked for what will no doubt be some serious HEAVY ROCKING next week!
Sunday, September 18, 2011
Decibel Festival of Electronic Music: Sept 28 - Oct 2
It's that time of the year again! From September 28 to October 2 our little urban center of Seattle will host the second-largest electronic music festival in the United States; the Decibel Festival of Electronic Music and Visual Media taking place in venues all over the city. Decibel's whole raison d'etre is about being the global showcase for all things electronic, in the most progressive, all-inclusive sense, regardless of genre or style, whether on the dance floor or in the seated auditorium. And with being just two weeks away (!) it seemed it was time to put one of these together! In exploring the finalized lineup, it must be said though, there's distinctly less going on this year for me on the 'essential' end of the spectrum. Decibel's need to host larger showcases that have sold-out nights, therefore paying the bills and keeping them from being too far in the red this year, has meant bigger names, and less of the sprawling 'fringe' that has made the festival as expansive as they have been in past years. That said, there's still an abundance of quality to be found over the (now 5 days) of the fest. WEDNESDAY Decibel Opening Party featuring the post-Dubstep ambiance and rhythmic complexities of the UK's Zomby who's most recent on 4AD (of all labels) needs to be heard for a sense of where this genre is going, future/pastism for sure. Atom TM put in a smart set of hardware ultra-funk with Ascii visuals in New York for Unsound earlier this year, expecting more of that, Seattle Jon McMillion has been ultra chameleonic this past year, fusing warped house with some gloomy psychedelia.
THURSDAY For all the corporate sponsor name, the Red Bull Music Academy Presents is going to warp/destroy minds. What Amon Tobin plans to unleash on the audience in the form of his audio-visual installation of "Isam" is going to be as memorable as if you were at 'Devil's Peak' when a certain gathering of UFOs happened. Trily. Opening act Baths play a fuzzed-out garage rock informed blend of psychedelia, lo-fi hip hop and downtempo beats and electronic textures that are organic and fluid. FRIDAY Optical 1 hosted again this year at Benaroya Hall, home to Seattle Symphony, is the ideal setting for the post-Shoegaze ambiance, melodicism and audio-visual work that is Ulrich Schnauss along with legendary Shoegaze band Slowdive's drummer and composer Simon Scott. Also on the bill, the face of new Ambient Americana; Mountains who are currently making the most languid, pastoral, perfect fusions of longform Indian Raga, acoustic guitar plucking and electronic soundscapes. Warm Oscillations showcase at the Crocodile featuring the mutant-hybrid sounds of Ghostly Intl. artist Mux Mool's hiphop and fractured downtempo beats along with Italo-Disco influenced, lo-fi, retro hardware sounds of oOoOO and the Blurring the Lines showcase later that night featuring the Dubstep, Ambient Techno and Deep House sounds of genre innovator Martyn.
SATURDAY Optical 2 right off, gotta say, this was going to be the most anticipated highlight of the whole festival for me, that is, until the one-of-a-kind audio-visual innovations of Ryoichi Kurokawa was dropped from the lineup. Nonethless, there's still what will likely be unmissable new sensorial work of Markus Popp as Oval and the electric guitar and electronics pointilist/expressionist work that is the gorgeous sounds of Christopher Willits. Later at the Crocodile, Community Bass Session will basically be acting as a Planet MU label showcase, featuring the hiphop informed hyperprogramming of Machinedrum and the smooth gliding synth and Dubstep-influenced beats of Ital Tek. SUNDAY Bit Pop showcase on the exceptional in-house soundsystem of the Triple Door , notable for the debut of the new collaborative work between Kranky recording artist, Benoit Pioulard and and the ambient post-Shoegaze of Rafael Anton Irisarri together as Orcas. Sunday also features one of the finer longstanding traditions in Decibel, the Decibel in Dub showcase this year hosting the return of studio/hardware wizard Mad Professor and longtime On-U Sound mixing board maestro Twilight Dub Circus. Between these, and the bounty of showcases I'm putting in an appearance, to check out, (let's not forget Decibel in the Park if the weather's nice, just cuz), see what's going down, hopefully find some surprises along the way, Decibel will be a long, diverse 5 days. As with every year though, I'm sure it will seem premature by the time it's conclusion comes, there I will be, yearning for more. Ushering in the end of Summer as it does every year since 2004.
Labels:
Atom TM,
Christopher Willits,
Decibel Festival,
Mountains,
Orcas,
Oval,
Ryoichi Kurokawa,
Simon Scott
Sunday, September 4, 2011
The Ouroboros Ring Around the World: Arcanum vs. Incorporated
(or) Science vs. Magic in Grant Morrison's Batman
The Ouroboros is an ancient symbol depicting a serpent or dragon eating its own tail. It comes from the Greek words oura (Greek οὐρά) meaning "tail" and boros (Greek βόρος) meaning "eating", thus "he who eats the tail". The Ouroboros often represents self-reflexivity or cyclicality, especially in the sense of something constantly re-creating itself, the eternal return, and other things perceived as cycles that begin anew as soon as they end (the mythical phoenix has a similar symbolism). It can also represent the idea of primordial unity related to something existing in or persisting before any beginning with such force or qualities it cannot be extinguished. The ouroboros has been important in religious and mythological symbolism, but has also been frequently used in Alchemical illustrations, where it symbolizes the circular nature of the Alchemist's opus. As well, it is also often associated with Gnosticism, and Hermeticism. In alchemical texts dating as far back as the 2nd Century such as The Chrysopoeia of Cleopatra, Alexandria encloses the words 'hen to pan', ie; "one is the all" in it's black and white halves that represent the Gnostic duality of existence. As such, the Ouroboros could be interpreted as the Western equivalent of the Taoist Yin-Yang symbol. The Chrysopoeia Ouroboros of Cleopatra is one of the oldest images of the Ouroboros to be linked with the legendary opus of the Alchemists, the Philosopher’s Stone. Swiss psychologist Carl Jung saw the Ouroboros as an archetype and the basic mandala of alchemy. Jung also defined the relationship of the Ouroboros to alchemy: "The alchemists, who in their own way knew more about the nature of the individuation process than we moderns do, expressed this paradox through the symbol of the Ouroboros, the snake that eats its own tail. The Ouroboros has been said to have a meaning of infinity or wholeness. In the age-old image of the Ouroboros lies the thought of devouring oneself and turning oneself into a circulatory process, for it was clear to the more astute alchemists that the prima materia (or Philosopher's Stone) of the art was man himself. The Ouroboros is a dramatic symbol for the integration and assimilation of the opposite, i.e. of the shadow. This feedback process is at the same time a symbol of immortality, since it is said of the Ouroboros that he slays himself and brings himself to life, fertilizes himself and gives birth to himself. He symbolizes the One, who proceeds from the clash of opposites, and he therefore constitutes the secret of the prima materia which unquestionably stems from man's unconscious."
But enough with the ontological history lesson. And here, discussing a comic book, you ask? Certainly! If that comic is written by Grant Morrison. So, it should be iterated at this point, this is a post for the readers. If you've not done the reading on Morrison's run on Batman Incorporated, do not proceed with this post. - SPOILERS - SPOILERS - SPOILERS - SPOILERS - That said, and warning given, year 5 in his ongoing Bat-tale has met with a lot of hiccups along the way, largely editorial and publishing in nature. Subsequently he's had to do rewrites and issues have been narrative-crushingly late, but the big picture is starting to form on this, Morrison's final 'season' (as he's been calling it), of his 6-year tale. Where the first book was about, in-part, a meta-premise: "The entire written history of the character as the extraordinary and surreal life of one man. What kind of toll would such a life take on his mind, and what if there was an ultimate villain who knew and exploited that history?" the second was based on the larger mythological theme: "Man's primordial battle with evil; the tyrannical monarch, the wolf, the dragon - and the creation of his own myth in the face of such evil. A myth where Ultimate Evil turns it's gaze on humanity and humanity gazes right back and says... gotcha." The overarching concept of the third and final book is finally beginning to coalesce as the meeting of two factions; one a crimefighting Global Corporation of finance, know-how and technology as it prepares itself for the other; a dark Cabala of Druidic Magick, Arcane Superscience Cults under the employ of post-WWII western governments. The first obviously being Bruce Wayne's global crimefighting organization; Batman Incorporated. The latter, born of the fallout of espionage organizations like Department Zero and Spyral, akin to a expressly sinister version of Operation Paperclip which sheltered the mad scientists and technological wizards of DC Comics Cold War history; the international shadow-cult Leviathan.
Of Leviathan's prominent antagonists, the Ouroboros has particular significance to one Doctor Dedalus. Shown early on in issue #5 as being initially under the guiding hand of the Reich, discovering and employing various arcane Magicks and artifacts to the Axis cause, later on, preempting the War's conclusion and under the guise of researching and excavation of pre-Celtic Arcanum in a tomb in Scotland, (where we see that he gains his 'powers' and 'Cloak of Smoke' as it were), then surrendering himself to the British. In his surrender to the Brits he reveals his research into a "fifth form of matter," "lost to prehistory and the fall of primordial, unknown empires." To reference primordial, unknown, pre-Celtic empires in Grant Morrison's version of the DC Universe, you need look no further than the origin of Arthurian culture as was depicted in his Seven Soldiers. A book which intertwined Welsh and Jack Kirby mythology with a time-spanning epic fight against the Sheeda/Sidhe, fairies who turned out to be not from a 'other' dimension but rather, the far future (the Celts called it "Annwyn"; Morrison terms it "Unwhen"). Dedalus then in their employ, forming the UK espionage and supersceince organization Department Zero, which later became Spyral and was deemed 'too dangerous' for the modern world and disbanded (with force) by the UN para-military with aid from their existing roster of metahumans. Of significance, the metahuman's job as depicted in issue #3 is to lock Dedalus in a tower, echoing the actual myth of Daedalus in which he was locked away in a tower to protect his knowledge of the Minotaur's Labyrinth. The Minotaur and the Labyrinth being themes we will be seeing again shortly. Dedalus for decades after (still dressed in his 'Cloak of Smoke') imprisoned on the Falkland isles, by a metaphysical weapon of his own devising. Yet even here, in oration to/with himself, it's shown that he's far from powerless; (it's no coincidence that Morrison chose to have Dedalus' semblance resemble that of the Magician card in the Tarot) in the midst of his rambling about the ultimate superweapon of his conception, "the ring around the world": Oroboro - we're then witness to his uncanny weather-changing abilities, out of a blue sky, right on cue.
Which brings us to dualism and back again, to the Ouroboros. As themes of aspect and counter-aspect arise in the book, the serpent and "it's black and white halves that represent the Gnostic duality of existence" become the repeated image over a narrative that spans decades, where Kathy Kane the Silver Age Batwoman and her legacy tie into Department Zero and connections with modern-day events in Argentina. It's revealed that the intelligence organization the then 'Agent-33' (who is the modern day hero of Argentina, Gaucho), has worked for is none other than Otto Netz aka Doctor Dedalus' twin-shadow organization; Spyral. Gaucho, having done no small amount of investigation into the post-Spyral underworld has discovered a (again) decades long conspiracy and secret organization operating out of Argentina. An organization who's doctrine and fictional 'history' are lifted almost directly from the works of Jorge Luis Borges - himself a real-world author who's darkly florid fiction, explored the fluid 'between' states of mind, perception, and experience, most well known for his plumbing of the subconscious though the metaphor of the Labyrinth and as one of the progenitors of the literary genre which came to be known as Magic Realism. So there's the Labyrinth again, and there he is; Jorge Borges. First with the Daedalus and the Minotaur reference and now quite literally quoted structurally in issue #3, from Borges story "Death and the Compass" ...not to mention, you knew it was coming; "El Oroboro" - the name of a fictional book written by the Florida Group (of which Jorge Luis Borges was a collaborator and contributor) under the collective pseudonym Espartaco Extrano (ie; Strange Spartacus). Much like Extrano's life, the Florida Group was itself an artifice, the product of a literary feud between itself and their ficto-literary adversaries, the Boedo Group. Again with the duality. Again with the mirrored-self, the mirrored-fiction, the mirrored-organization. The fictions reflecting reality, reflecting fictions. The reflected-selves together comprising the whole. The Yin-Yang. The Ouroboros.
This theme also informs Morrison's obvious dualistic, mirror, positive/negative critique of Capitalism; Batman Incorporated represents a example of a ‘good’ business form, where profit can be equated with helping others and the company’s gross worth with the net result of its ability to save - or in real-world terms ‘better’ - society. Leviathan is the ‘bad’ model, the old post-Colonial/ Military Industrial Complex model, where Capitalism is a blind machine that finds its moral base only within the whim of the market and exists not for the betterment of society or the human condition - but singularly for the reproduction of itself. Both simultaneously mirroring one another in the establishment of factions/representatives from each organization, geographically creating a ring around the world and in doing so, strategically targeting Argentina, Japan, Hong Kong, Australia, England, France and the Great Plains of the United States. There's also a curious, secondary interpretation to these two approaches; where Incorporated is about building that legacy and continuing the work beyond Bruce's own investment/participation/lifespan as the enduring 'concept' of Batman - the idea of immortality as living on through others, where knowledge, skills, values are passed from one generation to another - the benefits of which belong to all of society. Leviathan by contrast is the old bromidic Capitalist 'material' solution, the single-minded attachment to the physical world, the hiding behind the accumulation of things; life as objects, power, money, influence. Like Leviathan's brainwashed consumers, as vehicles for their drug/virus, far from ensuring immortality, this attachment serves only to substantiate those very fears and anxieties about the world. And in-particular about mortality and death. It's revealing then, that Leviathan's logo development described by Grant in the commentary pages of Batman: The Return is that it should resemble the sigil of Kali's Yantra. Kali, the Hindu goddess who's name is derived from Kala, literally translates in various interpretations as "black, time, death". The correspondence between the logo, and the Tantric sigil is striking, and no happenstance in their shared symbolism. As a further reduction of the Capitalism metaphor; in the end with Incorporated vs. Leviathan, it’s down to competing products and their marketing being the divide between exploitation or appealing to a beneficial need. And don't overlook the fact that it's predominantly children who are getting hooked on Leviathan (note the significance), children, and teenagers in 3rd World cultural and economic crisis; the drug cartels of Argentina, the gangs of Native American reservations in North America, the armed 'tribal purging' of South Africa. These are all of the places that Leviathan is offering their product... at the cost of life-enrollment in the World Serpent.
Link to DC Comics: "Batman Incorporated" - Grant Morrison's Batman Vol.9
So at the conclusion of the first season as Grant Morrison is calling it, we've seen these two forces embodied by the Incorporated and the Arcanum - each with their own agenda to create a 'ring around the world' in the establishing of their influence, reach, and even as it could be called, branding. Where Bruce Wayne's motivation was gained in a (yet undisclosed, but often referred to) future-vision from his time traveling Fourth World jaunt that was last year's The Return of Bruce Wayne. Leviathan, other than what's been discussed here, has yet to play or even fully reveal their hand. Or their identity. Some of the villainous cast we know; we have the Operation Paperclip ex-Nazi superscientist and spy Doctor Dedalus, we've seen the product of one of Leviathan's Middle East meta-human enhancement facilities in the form of The Fatherless/Heretic in Batman: The Return, yet, who is the death-masked, white-cloaked, mastermind that is directing the magic spell that will change the world with the creation of the Oroboro? Who (or what) is Leviathan him/itself? Much speculation has been made online by my betters. Two significant clues have been laid down by Morrison; the first being in The Heretic's confrontation with Damian Wayne in the issue noted above, he states "I know you...but... that day has yet to come. When it does...You will know me. But not... yet." implying a specific tense that alludes to Leviathan's knowledge of future events.
The Heretic bearing a striking resemblance to Michael Lane, the 'Satanic' Batman of issue #666 who, if you'll recall, not only is depicted in that future-flash-forward as having developed metahuman abilities, but referenced closely in the possible death/sacrifice of Bruce Wayne and Damian's ultimate decision in making a deal with the 'Devil'. (or; is The Heretic instead Talia Al-Ghul's genetically engineered 'perfect' version of her son, last seen in "Batman & Robin" issue #12 in an embryonic state; given metahuman abilities and born from the carcass of a dead whale, (again in "Batman: The Return"), who was after all referred to as "he who is called Fatherless"?). Corresponding with this, Leviathan has spoken in confidence with Doctor Dadelus of Bruce's time traveling and his ordeal at the hands of Darkseid and the Omega Sanction. In referencing these events, (largely only known to those close to Bruce Wayne) Leviathan dispels the rumor that in returning from such a cross-cosmos quest, that Bruce Wayne has returned a 'god'. The Second major clue, also lies in matters of time. This one in the hands of Incorporated; we see in issue #1 that in his first mission under the Incorporated banner, Bruce seeks out a object "more precious than diamond" which he then infiltrates and steals from the laboratory of one superscience mastermind Doctor Sivana. This object? The Suspendium Gem which last time we saw in the DC Universe, was in the hands of Sivana to the purpose of performing experiments on another DC science-villain; the larval Mister Mind in the DC event book "52". Experiments that, you guessed it, imbued Mister Mind with a time-altering, quantum consciousness that warped the nature of the 4th Dimension itself. Of note, the original appearance of Suspendium - which was designed by Doctor Sivana in the 1950's Golden Age comic of the Marvel Family - was to create a Stasis Bubble in which events were frozen, unaltered, untouched, trapped in time.
In riddling out all of that, with yet another whole year until the tale's conclusion, where do we stand? Right in the fray of a sprawling time-warping puzzle of 'tenses', labyrinths, historic political intrigue, superscience, global Magick spells, international conglomerates vying for markets, metahuman manufacturing, building of armies and a baffling, new, inscrutable 'unknowable villain'. A villain who's massive Machiavellian aspirations are being cast on the world as though he were the very architect of the story itself... or someone who has certain knowledge of it's outcome. And where might that knowledge come, if not... from the future? (Or is Leviathan simply an old nemesis in the form of Ras Al-Ghul's Sensei, the believed-deceased leader of the League of Assassins?) I can't decide which, but the latter seems just far too literal considering this story's tone. And with that half-educated stab in the dark, I'm going to part with words from the one individual who knows with certainty the future of this tale; the author himself. It's all you from here on out Grant: "[Batman Incorporated] is the return of Bruce Wayne to the Batman persona, and so I thought; 'what would Bruce bring to that'? It took off again, and I got really into the notion of doing [Incorporated] as a team-up book... in doing ten issues of these super-intricate stories, in the midst of which I noticed all the threads I'd left untouched. As I decided to tie up and pay off every thread from my Batman run, I realized there was still one big, final story to tell and it goes right back to the beginning of my time on the book. I wanted to bring them all together and do this absolute grand finale, a 12-issue rollercoaster ride through Hell, the biggest Batman story I could think of to wrap up my six years on the book. That's what the second 'season' if you will, became -- these twelve issues that will finish everything, dotting all the I's and crossing all the T's, and leaving no stone unturned. I'd found the epic finale for my whole run and I can't wait to write it..."
Link to DC Comics solicitation for "Batman Incorporated: Leviathan Strikes!"
Link to DC Comics solicitation for "Batman Incorporated: Leviathan"
Link to Comics Alliance 'Grant Morrison Talks About Action Comics, His Batman Mega-Story and Mothers'
Link to Rolling Stone 'Grant Morrison: Psychedelic Superhero'
Labels:
Carl Jung,
DC Comics,
Grant Morrison,
Jack Kirby,
Jorge Luis Borges
Sunday, August 28, 2011
Sounds on Rotation - Aug / Sept - Books in Circulation
Been a while again since I've done one of these! So here's whats been playing at my place on the hi-fi/on my pod these past couple months or so. Have been particularly enthused again with the current summer batch of new albums I've acquired. These being (as per usual) mostly dissonant, minimal, abstract, avant and atmospheric type sounds. Consisting of random modern composer titles, the notable soundtrack to Terrance Malick's newest, few choice electronic releases, a couple new avant-jazz/improv recordings, noise, post-rock, garage, psych stuffs and a couple of metal records on the more doom/space end of the spectrum. Indeed! New sounds make such an excellent compliment to the encroaching end of the Summer. Looking forward to the changes, both seasonal and otherwise that Fall will bring!
Alva Noto & Sakamoto, Ryuichi "Summvs" (Raster-Noton)
V/A "The Tree of Life - Soundtrack" (Lakeshore)
Deepchord "Hash-Bar Loops" (Soma)
Okland, Nils & Apeland, Sigbjorn "Lysoen - Hommage a Ole Bull" (ECM)
Eternal Tapestry & Sun Araw "Night Gallery" (Thrill Jockey)
Baker, Aidan "Still Life" (Primary Numbers)
Fennesz "Seven Stars" (Touch)
V/A "Invasion Of The Mysteron Killer Sounds" (SoulJazz)
Jasper TX "The Black Sun Transmissions" (Fang Bomb)
Biosphere "N-Plants" (Touch)
Hertta Lussu Ässä "Hertta Lussu Ässä" (Destijl)
HTRK "Work (Work, Work) (Ghostly Intl.)
Cindytalk "Hold Everything Dear" (Mego)
Sun Araw "Ancient Romans" (Drag City)
Jóhannsson, Jóhann "The Miners' Hymns" (Fat Cat)
Bardo Pond "Bardo Pond" (Fire)
Kangding Ray "OR" (Raster-Noton)
Barn Owl "Ancestral Star" (Thrill Jockey)
Lippok, Robert "RedSuperStructure" (Raster-Noton)
Boris "Attention Please (US & Japanese Editions)" (Sargent House/Daymare)
Boris "Heavy Rocks" (Sargent House)
Mathieu, Stephan "To Describe George Washington Bridge" (Dekorder)
Cantu-Ledesma, Jefre "Conversations with Myself" (Shining Skull)
The Men "Leave Home" (Sacred Bones)
Hell, Rene "Terminal Symphony" (Type)
Jesu "Ascension" (Caldo Verde)
Liturgy "Aesthethica" (Thrill Jockey)
Moon Duo "Mazes" (Sacred Bones)
Pale Sketcher "Seventh Heaven" (Ghostly Intl.)
Carousell "Black Swallow & Other Songs" (Digitalis)
NHK "YX aka 1CH aka SOLO" (Raster-Noton)
Chaton, Anne-James "Evenements 09" (Raster-Noton)
Grails "Deep Politics" (Temporary Residence)
Hecker, Tim "Ravedeath 1972" (Kranky)
The Thing & Yoshihide, Otomo "Shinjuku Crawl" (Smalltown Supersound)
The Thing & O'Rourke, Jim "Shinjuku Growl" (Smalltown Supersound)
Vainio, Mika "Life (... It Eats You Up)" (Touch)
Sanso-Xtro "Fountain Fountain Joyous Mountain" (Digitalis)
Six Organs of Admittance "Asleep On The Floodplain" (Drag City)
Tiago Sousa "Walden Pond's Monk" (Immune)
Vladislav Delay Quartet "Vladislav Delay Quartet" (Honest Jon's)
Books in question being split between a couple authors, the David Foster Wallace was a second-read recently completed with the aid of a group of friends convening for our Pale King Book Club semi-weekly. As a unfinished work by Wallace, and his final novel, it stands as a powerful, sad, commentary on our 'society of diversions' and the seemingly incessant state of being entertained that western society has been seeking out since the time of the book's setting in the early 1980's. Bolano I feel like I am finally ready for again, almost a year after the massive, intimidating, overwhelming experience that was "2666". Harbach's "Art of Fielding" has been recommended by many friends and authors in the know, as a amazing first-time novel, the additional stamp of approval from the fact that David Foster Wallace's editor, Michael Pietsch did the editing on this one. The Ballard is a ongoing on/off again dipping in/out of in the midst of other books as it's his short fiction collection, and has a vast abundance of ideas, best taken one at a time. How I do wish Murakami's "IQ84" was released stateside by now! I've been ready for this one for nearly a year, at this point it's near at least; we're looking at a early October date for the English translation. The others being pop/pulp adventures to satisfy that appetite, comics supplying a important counterpoint to the headier lit:
David Foster Wallace "The Pale King" (Little, Brown)
Chad Harbach "The Art of Fielding" (Little, Brown)
Roberto Bolano "Savage Detectives" (Farrar, Straus & Giroux)
J.G. Ballard "The Complete Stories of J.G. Ballard" (W.W.Norton)
Warren Ellis "Transmetropolitan" (DC comics/Vertigo)
Grant Morrison "Supergods..." (Spiegel & Grau)
Grant Morrison "Action Comics" (DC Comics)
Jonathan Hickman "FF" (Marvel Comics)
...And the new July/Aug issue of Film Comment, Sept issues of The Wire, Sight & Sound, Artforum, N+1, Frieze and McSweeney's 36 have all made for good reads.
Sunday, August 14, 2011
Yes, We Know You Hate the City: Cryogenic Culture Shock, Gonzo Journalism
& A Election of Greater Evils in Warren Ellis' Transmetropolitan
This is going to be a unusual post for me, as I'm making it before having finished the reading. After having spent since 2004? 2006? searching for a complete set of the issues that make up this story, and neither wanting them trashed as many of the beret wearing post-post Mod's tend to leave them second-hand, or even the damn difficulty of finding all the issues in one place, much less not wanting/being able to afford 60+ issues at three dollar cover price... my patience, perseverance and pissed-off-ed-ness paid off! Warren Ellis' "Transmetropolitan" in it's entirety for about 1/4 of cover price an issue. And the previous owner even took care of the books! Alright, enough on me and my find, here's the 101, or in this book's case, the 100001: Created by Warren Ellis back in 1997 and inspired by the 1969 science fiction novel by Norman Spinrad titled "Bug Jack Barron", the series covers the work of Gonzo Journalist, Vulgar Misanthrope, and all-around Total Bastard of the Hunter S. Thompson mold, Spider Jerusalem in a sprawling futuristic/Dystopic vision of New York, so chaotically, over- reachingingly advanced that outsider subcultures splice genes with alien refugees, previous era's cryogenic deep-freezers are hit hard by culture shock, matter re-compilers are as common as microwaves (and get hooked on mechanical 'dope') and new media-religions are invented every few hours. Spider's story begins with him returning The City after a lengthy self-imposed state of exile from the madness, as a Nixonian thug nicknamed The Beast prepares for his re-election to the presidency (the reason Jerusalem went into exile in the first place), and a primary battle is heating up between a virulent racist and a charismatic senator whose rictus grin masks some seriously warped realities. And of course, claiming to 'Hate The City' all the while, Jerusalem delves into the machinations of the race, and in doing so, breaks into a web of conspiracies that threaten the future of the country. Ha. And that's just within about the first 13? 17? issues of what I have read.
Link to Vertigo Comics Warren Ellis "Transmetropolitan" - Vol.1
Link to Vertigo Comics Warren Ellis "Transmetropolitan" - Vol.2
Link to Vertigo Comics Warren Ellis "Transmetropolitan" - Vol.3
Link to Vertigo Comics Warren Ellis "Transmetropolitan" - Vol.4
Link to Vertigo Comics Warren Ellis "Transmetropolitan" - Vol.5
Link to Vertigo Comics Warren Ellis "Transmetropolitan" - Vol.6
Link to Vertigo Comics Warren Ellis "Transmetropolitan" - Vol.7
Link to Vertigo Comics Warren Ellis "Transmetropolitan" - Vol.8
Link to Vertigo Comics Warren Ellis "Transmetropolitan" - Vol.9
Link to Vertigo Comics Warren Ellis "Transmetropolitan" - Vol.10
It's curious, as Ellis' work, especially outside the mainstream superhero realms, from around this period, ie; late 90's to mid 00's has been all of his strongest writing. At the time of it being initially published, for a confluence of reasons, "Transmetropolitan" struck me as a pretender to the throne in a cool-Postmod, Anarcho Journalism, Political Satirical, hyperactively Dystopian, sprawling Meta-City, kind of way. The 'Hunter S. Thompson-ness' of it just too much. But having begun some years ago to delve into the meat of the book, I've found it significantly more rich, original and compelling than my initial assumption that Ellis was just flaunting those concepts while doing a bit of Grant Morrison coattail riding, in themes and style. I since recognize that I was totally amiss on that assumption. So here it is. A decade later I finally get to read/own the thing. What those-in-the-know have described as Ellis' greatest or second-greatest work only to "Planetary".
Link to DC Comics Warren Ellis "Planetary" - Vol.1
Link to DC Comics Warren Ellis "Planetary" - Vol.2
Link to DC Comics Warren Ellis "Planetary" - Vol.3
Link to DC Comics Warren Ellis "Planetary" - Vol.4
Which is, to me, easily one of the pinnacles of comic book storytelling this decade. "Planetary" being tales of the historic legacy of the 'Archeologists of the Impossible' through the centuries, but more precisely what it is, is the greatest of meta-literary explorations of the history of 'Pulp' ever written. In comic book form. Tarzan, Lone Ranger, Doc Savage, Sherlock Holmes, Dracula, Godzilla, James Bond, Land that Time Forgot, Journey to the Moon, 2001: A Space Odyssey, Hong Kong action films... you name it... as the 'shadow history' of the human race. If Transmet even begins to deliver qualitatively on par with Ellis' other higher-ranking works, finally finishing the reading of this book is going to be a wild, great ride.
Sunday, August 7, 2011
Raúl Ruiz's new film "Mysteries of Lisbon" at IFC: Aug 5 - 11
Opening at Landmark Theatres: Aug 18 & SIFF Cinema Sept 30 - Oct 13
Highlight of the Seattle International Film Fest, to the extent that I expect it will be a serious contender for the best new film seen this year! Spanning three generations, dozens of characters, seven narrative voices, a whole century of intrigue, mountains of sacrifice, scandal, war, loss, mystery, misery, revelation, piracy, conquest, the high seas, early colonialism, the age of science, 19th century decadence, class struggle, and lasting nearly 5 Hours this is one that defiantly disproves that literature can't be translated to film... it just involves the massive undertaking of all of the above qualities, a director who's deeply immersed in the tale, has decades of directorial skills established and has assembled a almost-impossible perfect cast of actors capable of portraying an ensemble-cast of characters, many of them over the course of decades of change, metamorphosis, epiphany, revelation into the persons they become through the trials and tribulations of life... and what a almost 'mystical' life it is! Adapted from the novel of the same name by Camilo Castelo Branco, who's work is often compared to a hybrid of Dickens, Victor Hugo, and Tolstoy, and I'd say in this cinematic adaptation, expansive enough to also include such far-flung literary styles and content as Conrad, Melville and the decadent surrealism of characters like those that populate Thomas De Quincey's "Confessions of an English Opium-Eater". This is exactly a piece of literature that would be deemed 'unfilmable' by most. What Ruiz delivers is instead labyrinthine, complex to a you're-screwed-if-you're-not-paying-attention degree, mesmerizing in it's multifaceted structure, this is a true life-like puzzle as multiple identities are stripped away to uncover startling revelations in the best traditions of both literary and cinema melodrama and mystery.
That it's a period piece exploring the mad world of the 19th Century takes away not at all from richness of the material, and certainly the more 'stuffy' social conventions of the time(s) are explored at length to reveal their mirror-opposite and other face, usually over time in the lives of the very same character. The characters of this century in all their mysticism meets colonialism, meets revolt, meets the age of science, meets the age of high adventure, meets the end of the era of piracy - meets all-together in the mind of a young boy caught within the convolutions of the adult world. It's intrigues, it's family and class struggles, the monstrosity of the aristocratic system, the bourgeoisie, and his own life having been denied a family due to being born a 'bastard' son, as this delirious, dream-like fugue of a film/tale. Ending with, what is one of the greatest sleight of hand I've probably ever seen in cinema (and inverting what is probably the worst of narrative gimmicks that exists), which on the surface appears to be a cliche', but in exploring it's dualism/multiplicity there's a epiphany that comes as almost a revelation... especially after the 4 1/2 hours that proceed it. A Massive achievement. Almost faultlessly executed and paced, to the extent that at almost twice the duration of your average film, it's propulsive layers-upon-layers of story-within-story, elapse in what seems like half it's time. For lovers of great tales, and especially those who know their history (both established, eccentric, literary and factual) this is probably the current definition of 'Cinema Magic' right here, in that way where you come away feeling that fiction has just 're-written' history itself.
From Tony Pipolo's review in Film Comment: "To recount the plot of the film is to engage with its reflexivity, as each story stumbles into another and points of view shift in a continual spiral that is less a matter of digressions than the irresistible lure of storytelling. Were the film to continue for 50 or 100 hours, one imagines it might subsume all possible stories from the period of its setting—late 18th- to mid-19th-century Portugal and France—into a tapestry threatening to extend geographically with Borgesian design, a human comedy to surpass Balzac’s."
Link to official "Mysteries of Lisbon" site
Link to IFC distribution "Mysteries of Lisbon" site
Link to Landmark Theatres "Mysteries of Lisbon" site
Link to SIFF Cinema "Mysteries of Lisbon" site
Link to Tony Pipolo's "Mysteries of Lisbon" article in Film Comment
Saturday, July 9, 2011
Substrata 1.1: Sound & Visual Art Festival: Jul 15 - 17
Exceptional three day mini-festival (two nights of performances, third day field recording workshop ) of precisely curated sounds by Rafael Anton Irisarri from the 'heavy' end of the ambient, neoclassical, immersive-avant spectrum, in an intimate setting of the Chapel Performance Space with a explicit audience in attendance (no loud rock bar, and hangers-on here) and a dedicated sound engineer. Exactly as a festival of these sounds, with the corresponding audience and venue should be curated, hosted and assembled. The festival also bringing together associated aesthetics and theory in a booklet published featuring essays by Irisarri, Jon Wozencroft, Lawrence English, and others. Along with complimentary photography by Wozencroft, Phil Petrocelli, and Thomas Meluch. Check that lineup: Biosphere - Oren Ambarchi - Nils Frahm - Rafael Anton Irisarri Trio - Benoit Pioulard - Marcus Fischer - Eluvium - & Crys Cole - Here's hoping this is the first of many!
From the Substrata site: "Substrata seeks to explore varying perspectives of scale though the use of sound, composition and visuals - an international showcase featuring accomplished artists working in the cutting edge where structural abstraction meets physical dynamics. By creating compositional spaces dealing with a sense of mass, along with openness of structure, the perspective of scale and the listener's place in relation is shifted to allow for greater a sense of 'place' beyond the environ of the performance in the interplay of the moment and physics of the larger world. Wherein the most minute of gestures are made significant, or massive planes of perspective become revealed, as dynamic interplay builds these spaces that are as much acoustically sensed, as perceived in the mind's eye. Each showcase features distinctly different takes of the potency of this kind of minimalism, varying between weighty combinations of bass and tonalities used to sculpt out atmospheric ambiance, or powerful dynamic structures made up of the subtlest filigree of sonic building materials."
Photo design/credit: Petrocelli Designs LLC
Sunday, July 3, 2011
Cannes Film Festival + Cinema Miscellanea
Link to official Cannes Film Festival site
Link to Cannes 2011 Festival Prize Winners
Cannes Film Festival being one of the major preview/heralds of film to come in the next year, judging from what I'm seeing here, 2011/ 2012 looks to be shaping up in pretty awesome fashion.That is, assuming we get these films distributed stateside. Cannes 2010 saw very little in the way of the major films from the fest ever appearing in theatres in the US, let's hope this coming year we see otherwise. New ones by some of the worlds greatest cinematic orchestrators of shock, beauty, subtle entrancement, rapture and genre-transcendence. Links below to some of the notable Directors works and prize winners from this years festival. Unfortunate that very little of them made it into the West Coast SIFF/SFIFF Fests this year (the exception being Terrance Malick's "Tree of Life" which is already here stateside at the time of it's premiere). After doing reading on the festival in both Sight & Sound and Film Comment, the abundance of curious and atypical works by established directors suggests there are some major surprises to be had in the coming year. This just being a small selection of some of the dramatic works by known directors, see the 'Out of Competition' for a number of what look like exceptional/curious documentaries:
Link to Terrance Malick - "Tree of Life" at Cannes site
Terrance Malick's Palme d'Or win this year is both a bit of a surprise and very much deserved for this longstanding American director! Flying in the face of the age of postmodern detachment, cynicism and irony -- we get this deeply personal, emotional, existential, spiritual, audacious, COSMIC tale from Malick. His most abstract to-date. No one in all of American cinema is making films like this, a visual spectacle with a 'soul' belonging more to traditions of quasi-religious questing ala Bergman & Tarkovsky. Profound almost transcendental cinematography from Emmanuel Lubezki (DP on "The New World"). Yet, not quite the masterpiece it could have been, I suspect the Palme d'Or is more for the sum total of his filmography than just this work alone. There is also rumor of a 5 hour cut, to be released on Blu-Ray before the end of the year, which I suspect will lend some insight into the seeming imbalances of the theatrical cut. Still, the film is deserving of the highest accolades. Congratulations 'Terry'!: Synopsis: "The Tree of Life is the impressionistic story of a Midwestern family in the 1950's. The film follows the life journey of the eldest son, Jack, through the innocence of childhood to his disillusioned adult years as he tries to reconcile a complicated relationship with his father. Jack finds himself a lost soul in the modern world, seeking answers to the origins and meaning of life while questioning the existence of faith."
Link to Lars Von Trier - "Melancholia" at Cannes site
After the absurdity and time-wasting spectacle that was Von Trier's idiotic missteps in interviews at Cannes, the more significant and better spectacle is going to be his newest, when we finally get to see it. From what I've read it looks to exceed "Antichrist" in it's surrealism and storytelling potency. Gotta love how terse and brief this synopsis is too. Synopsis: "Justine and Michael are celebrating their marriage at a sumptuous party in the home of her sister and brother-in-law. Meanwhile, the planet, Melancholia, is heading towards Earth..."
Link to Nuri Bilge Ceylan - "Once Upon a Time in Anatonia" at Cannes site
I've been following this Turkish director for about half a decade now, and increasingly he's become a cinematic voice to recon with, "Climates" and his previous, "Three Monkeys" were particularly notable and some of the better films seen each of those years. Significant for the weight of their atmosphere, the subtlety of the acting on display and the competency of storytelling. Synopsis: "Life in a small town is akin to journeying in the middle of the steppes: the sense that "something new and different" will spring up behind every hill, but always unerringly similar, tapering, vanishing or lingering monotonous roads..."
Link to Paolo Sorrentino - "This Must Be The Place" at Cannes site
Sorrentino, who's "Il Divo" was one of the best things I saw in SIFF that year, is back with a bio-drama about... ahem... Sean Penn as Robert Smith?? Synopsis: "Cheyenne is a former rock star. At 50 he still dresses "Goth" and lives in Dublin off his royalties. The death of his father, with whom he wasn't on speaking terms, brings him back to New York. He discovers his father had an obsession: to seek revenge for a humiliation he had suffered. Cheyenne decides to pick up where his father left off, and starts a journey, at his own pace, across America."
Link to Takashi Miike - "Ichimei aka Hara-Kiri: Death of a Samurai" at Cannes site
After the near tone-perfect nature of Miike's serious investment in period drama that was "13 Assassins" he's back with another adaptation of a classic piece of Samuria cinema based on the previous film by Hasaki Kobayashi and Yasuhiko Takiguchi's novel. Synopsis: "Seeking a noble end, poverty-stricken samurai Hanshiro requests to commit ritual suicide at the House of Ii, run by headstrong Kageyu. Trying to dismiss Hanshiro's demand, Kageyu recounts the tragic story of a similar recent plea from young ronin Motome. Hanshiro is shocked by the horrifying details of Motome's fate, but remains true to his decision to die with honor. At the moment of the hara-kiri, Hanshiro makes a last request to be assisted by Kageyu’s samurai, who are coincidentally absent. Suspicious and outraged, Kageyu demands an explanation. Hanshiro confesses his bond to Motome, and tells the bittersweet tale of their lives... Kageyu will soon realize that Hanshiro has set in motion a tense showdown of vengeance against his house."
Link to Naomi Kawase - "Hazenu" at Cannes site
Kawase's last two films "Mourning Forest" and "Nanayo" were amazing exercises in subtlety and ambiguity in tone. Her depiction of the uncertainty of relationships being about paramount. Some of the more gorgeous cinematography and natural splendor caught on screen I've seen this decade too. Synopsis: "The Asuka region is the birthplace of Japan. Here, in ancient times, there were those who fulfilled their lives in the midst of waiting. Modern people, apparently having lost this sense of waiting, seem unable to feel grateful for the present, and cling to the illusion that all things will move constantly forward according to one’s own plan. In ancient times, there were three small mountains that people believed were inhabited by gods. They were Mt. Unebi, Mt. Miminashi, and Mt. Kagu, and they still stand. In that time, a powerful official used the mountains as a metaphor for a struggle inside his own heart. The mountains were an expression of human karma. Time has passed into the present. Takumi and Kayoko, inheriting the unfulfilled hopes of their grandparents, live out their lives. Their tale continues a story of the ages, representing the uncountable souls that have accumulated in this land. "
Link to Jeff Nichol - "Take Shelter" at Cannes site
New young director who's film was highly lauded in most press I've read, and that's about as much as I know on this one. Synopsis: "Curtis LaForche lives in a small Ohio town with his wife Samantha and six-year-old daughter Hannah, who is deaf. Curtis makes a modest living as a crew chief for a sand-mining company. Samantha is a stay-at-home mother and part-time seamstress who supplements their income by selling handmade wares at the flea market each weekend. Money is tight, and navigating Hannah’s healthcare and special needs education is a constant struggle. Despite that, Curtis and Samantha are very much in love and their family is a happy one. Then Curtis begins having terrifying dreams about an encroaching, apocalyptic storm. He chooses to keep the disturbance to himself, channeling his anxiety into the obsessive building of a storm shelter in their backyard. His seemingly inexplicable behavior concerns and confounds Samantha, and provokes intolerance among co-workers, friends and neighbors. But the resulting strain on his marriage and tension within the community doesn’t compare to Curtis’ private fear of what his dreams may truly signify."
Link to Sean Durkin - "Martha Marcy May Marlene" at Cannes site
The exceptionally positive reviews have been placing this between the better aspects of "Eyes Wide Shut" and the sense of existential American landscapes that make up the work of Terrance Malick. I'm ready! Synopsis: "Martha Marcy May Marlene is a powerful psychological thriller starring Elizabeth Olsen as Martha, a young woman rapidly unraveling amidst her attempt to reclaim a normal life after fleeing from a cult and its charismatic leader (John Hawkes). Seeking help from her estranged older sister Lucy (Sarah Paulson) and brother-in-law (Hugh Dancy), Martha is unable and unwilling to reveal the truth about her disappearance. When her memories trigger a chilling paranoia that her former cult could still be pursuing her, the line between Martha's reality and delusion begins to blur. "
Link to Nicolas Winding Refn - "Drive" at Cannes site
The "Pusher" trilogy and "Valhala Rising" Refn is back. Gotta say though, this subject matter looks significantly less compelling to me. Synopsis: "Drive is the story of a Hollywood stunt driver by day, a loner by nature who moonlights as a top-notch getaway driver-for-hire in the criminal underworld. He finds himself a target for some of LA's most dangerous men after agreeing to aid the husband of his beautiful neighbor, Irene. When the job goes dangerously awry, the only way he can keep Irene and her son alive is to do what he does best-Drive."
Link to Jafar Panahi & Mojtaba Mirtahmaseb - "This is Not a Film" at Cannes site
What happens when you have been banned from making films for 20 years in Iran and you're under state issued house-arrest for 6? Apparently when you're Panahi, THIS. Synopsis: "A day of the life of an Iranian filmmaker Jafar Panahi, before the celebration of the new Iranian year (NORUZ)."
Link to Dardenne Brothers - "The Kid with a Bike" at Cannes site
The masters at making the everyday dynamic, unexpected, passionate and intensely visceral are back. The disparity between reading their synopsis and what one envisions as the prototypical result from formulaic Hollywood, vs. what we will be getting with this film, is an exercise in visual storytelling potency itself. Synopsis: "Cyril, almost 12, has only one plan: to find the father who left him temporarily in a children's home. By chance he meets Samantha, who runs a hairdressing salon and agrees to let him stay with her at weekends. Cyril doesn't recognize the love Samantha feels for him, a love he desperately needs to calm his rage."
Link to Mohammad Rasoulof - "Goodbye" at Cannes site
Bit of a total mystery for me, as this is Rasoulof's last film before his being banned by Iran from making films for 20 years along with his compatriot Panahi. Previous to this, his "White Meadows" in SIFF 2011, was one of the better films seen this year. So the ambiguity is compelling. Especially with no synopsis offered by Cannes.
Link to Hagar Ben Asher - "The Slut" at Cannes site
New young director who's film was presented only in the 'Critics Week' section, but universally praised in the articles read. Synopsis: "Tamar, 35, a beautiful young woman, lives alone with her two daughters. She can’t restrain her sexual appetite and gives herself to several men of the village. Shai, a young man, just moved back in the region to handle his dead mother's assets, but as he meets Tamar, he decides to stay. They soon fall in love, but will Tamar be satisfied with only one partner?"
Link to Michel Hazanavicius - "The Artist" at Cannes site
Expecting very, very good things of this. Won 'best actor' for Jean Dujardin as Valentin. Synopsis: "Hollywood 1927. George Valentin is a silent movie superstar. The advent of the talkies will sound the death knell for his career and see him fall into oblivion. For young extra Peppy Miller, it seems the sky's the limit - major movie stardom awaits. "
Link to Pedro Amlodovar - "The Skin I Live In" at Cannes site
Almodovar takes on the Frankenstein myth in his own spin. Of all the 'premise for his recent series of films, this I'm most excited for. Especially the blending of genres and tone I expect he'll carry off masterfully. Even the title is great in it's implications. Synopsis: "Ever since his wife was burned in a car crash, Dr. Robert Ledgard, an eminent plastic surgeon, has been interested in creating a new skin with which he could have saved her. After twelve years, he manages to cultivate a skin that is a real shield against every assault. In addition to years of study and experimentation, Robert needed a further three things: no scruples, an accomplice and a human guinea pig. Scruples were never a problem. Marilia, the woman who looked after him from the day he was born, is his most faithful accomplice. And as for the human guinea pig..."
Link to Andrey Zvyagintsev - "Elena" at Cannes site
In contemporary post-Tarkovsky cinema, this young director has been a rising star to watch. His "The Return" and more recently "Sacrifice" were two of the better films from the post-Soviet Union I've encountered this decade. Deeply existential, quasi-religious and visually poetic, it's no surprise he studied under Andrei. Synopsis: "Elena and Vladimir are an older couple, they come from different backgrounds. Vladimir is a wealthy and cold man, Elena comes from a modest milieu and is a docile wife. They have met late in life and each one has children from previous marriages. Elena’s son is unemployed, unable to support his own family and he is constantly asking Elena for money. Vladimir’s daughter is a careless young woman who has a distant relationship with her father. A heart attack puts Vladimir in hospital, where he realizes that his remaining time is limited. A brief but somehow tender reunion with his daughter leads him to make an important decision: she will be the only heiress of his wealth. Back home he announces it to Elena. Her hopes to financially help her son suddenly vanish. The shy and submissive housewife then comes up with a plan to give her son and grandchildren a real chance in life."
Link to Hong Sang-Soo - "The Day He Arrives" at Cannes site
Another new Hong Sang-Soo! Is this a film a year now from him? He's seriously forming up to be the postmodern Bergman of South Korea. No doubt, more bummer times and the people who make that their lives, will ensue. Synopsis: "Sungjoon heads to Seoul to meet a close friend who lives in the Bukchon area. When the friend doesn’t answer his calls, Sungjoon wanders around Bukchon and runs into an actress he used to know. The two talk for a while, but soon part. He makes his way down to Insadong and drinks makgeolli (rice wine) by himself. Some film students at another table ask him to join them--Sungjoon used to be a film director. He soon gets drunk and heads for his ex-girlfriend’s house."
Link to Gus Van Sant - "Restless" at Cannes site
Van Sant's "Paranoid Park" was about ten times the film I expected it to be, after kind of having given up on the guy after "Gerry" and "Elephant", I came away shocked at his collaboration with Christopher Doyle for both it's artistry and realism. Synopsis: "Annabel Cotton is a beautiful and charming terminal cancer patient with a deep felt love of life and the natural world. Enoch Brae is a young man who has dropped out of the business of living, after an accident claimed the life of his parents. When these two outsiders chance to meet at a funeral, they find an unexpected common ground in their unique experiences of the world. For Enoch, it includes his best friend Hiroshi (RYO KASE) who happens to be the ghost of a Kamikaze fighter pilot. For Annabel, it involves an admiration of Charles Darwin and an interest in how other creatures live. Upon learning of Annabel's imminent early passing, Enoch offers to help her face her last days with an irreverent abandon, tempting fate, tradition and even death itself."
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