31 August 2013

'The Look of Love'


Michael Winterbottom has rarely let me down.

His films range from the joyful noises he makes with Steve Coogan ("24-Hour Party People," "Tristram Shandy," "The Trip") to his amazing Terrorism Trilogy -- "Road to Guantanamo," "In This World" and "A Mighty Heart." But the three most recent of his movies that I've seen -- 2010's "The Killer Inside Me," 2011's "Trishna" and his current effort "THE LOOK OF LOVE" -- have ended his run of guaranteed raves.

"The Look of Love" reunites him with Coogan in a biopic of Paul Raymond, the British "men's club" impresario who reigned in Soho in the 1960s, '70s and '80s. While it's a satisfying portrayal of a man and an era, the proceedings come off as surprisingly subdued. There's no giddiness of, say, "Boogie Nights," and that's not necessarily a criticism; just an observation. Winterbottom frames the proceedings from the wistful perspective of Raymond near the end of his life, looking back at his successes (making money) and his failures (he was a lousy husband and father). No matter how much wealth and acclaim he attracted, nothing seemed to give him more true pleasure, in the end, than taking his daughter or granddaughter to the bakery and letting the little girl pick out her favorite dessert.

The other drawback here is the supporting cast, which (again, in stark contrast to "Boogie Nights") is rather drab and uninspiring. It's as if Coogan goes looking for energy to play off of and comes up empty, no matter whom he turns to. The stunning Tamsin Egerton, as Raymond's trophy wife and business partner, adds the most zip in a role inordinately devoted to coked-up threesomes. Raymond's other business partners are mostly ciphers with pornstaches. Amanda Poots' rendition of the title song is both lovely and touching. However, her efforts in the key role of Raymond's troubled daughter, Debbie -- doing lines with her irresponsible dad and struggling to launch a career with modest talents -- are rather scattershot.

Finally, there's no ignoring the wall-to-wall nudity throughout the film. Just about every actress but Poots disrobes at some point. I was reminded of Steve Martin's bit about watching a Las Vegas revue: "Wow, look at the tits. There must be ... 57 tits up there." Here, on the one hand, it's a bit of a distraction; on the other hand, Winterbottom is not shying away from the sexism and misogyny that drove Raymond's business juggernaut. The director is making a point.

When we're asked to see that the emptiness of Raymond's empire becomes crushingly obvious to him, Coogan is a gifted enough actor to pull that off. I was moved by the film's final scenes. Coogan (expertly aged throughout the film) displays an impressive range. He shuns flash in favor of a more somber trudge through a privileged life built on exploitation.

In that sense, he and Winterbottom have made a powerful, if flawed, film.

GRADE: B

BONUS TRACKS

   Winterbottom films earning an A or A-minus:
  • Wonderland
  • Welcome to Sarajevo
  • 24-Hour Party People
  • In This World
  • Road to Guantanamo
  • 9 Songs
  • Tristram Shandy: A Cock and Bull Story
  • The Trip
  • A Mighty Heart

   In the B range:
  • Trishna
  • The Killer Inside Me
  • The Look of Love

29 August 2013

Attack of the B-Pluses

Three solid titles for the price of one today:

AUGUSTINE (B+) - This is a slow burn of a French psychodrama that gradually reveals itself to be an old-fashioned if uncertain love story. Set in the 19th century, this elegant film spins the tale of teenage Augustine (played by Soko), a household servant who suffers from horrific, orgasmic seizures that at times paralyze parts of her body.

She is taken to a sanitarium and her condition is diagnosed by a neurologist, Professor Charcot (sad-eyed Vincent Linden, "Mademoiselle Chambon"). Augustine becomes a bit of a show horse for the professor, who parades her to various conferences, where he hypnotizes her to induce the seizures. Charcot wins acclaim.

Charcot's wife, Constance (finally a substantial role for Chiarra Mastroianni), seems distant and displays signs of jealousy of the bond that develops between Charcot and Augustine, even though, by all appearances, the pair have a simple medical relationship. However, that relationship takes a fascinating twist toward the film's rewarding resolution. In typical French fashion, this one is a slow burn, deceptively clever, with a deep resonance. 

THE WORLD'S END (B+) - The gang from "Shaun of the Dead" is back -- writer/director Edgar Wright, writer/star Simon Pegg and co-star Nick Frost -- with a reprise of the standard drunken-slacker-meets-alien-invader story. While they can't recapture the magic of that first film, they do an admirable job of doing it proud, delivering head-spinningly clever dialogue that dares you to keep up with it.

Pegg is Gary King, a loser who wears the same clothes and drives the same car he did back in the early '90s and who hasn't gotten his life together. His four old school chums have gotten their lives together but try as they might they can't resist Gary's silly plan for a reunion back in their hometown in order to complete a feat that eluded them back in the day: the Golden Mile, a run of 12 pubs (with a beer at each) in one night. Never mind that Andy (Frost) is a teetotaling recovering alcoholic.

The first half of the film is a classic British tale of raunchy old  mates getting cheeky with each other (I learned the phrase "having a wide-on") and failing miserably to recapture their youth. Wright flips a switch about halfway through, though, to reveal that their hometown is now overrun by robotic types that ooze blue goo when you, you know, knock off their heads or rip off a limb (ideal for beating them with).

Suddenly, the special effects kick into high gear and the broad gags from "Shaun of the Dead" rise from the grave. The proceedings, however, can be exhausting. With about 20 minutes (and three pubs) to go, the air went out of the theater and the audience seemed to disengage. Part of that might have been the rather strident political tone that Wright and company take, forcing us to actually think about whether or not we're better off submitting to an intellectually superior life form or purging artificial intelligence from our lives.

The final showdown with the leader of the robots (voiced by Bill Nighy) brings everything together -- a clever polemic mixed with filthy putdowns -- and the coda tidies things up nicely, but as the credits rolled there was a slight sense of relief mixed with the joy of having survived such an engaging film. 

BLACKFISH (B+) - This is a powerful call to arms that goes behind the scenes at Sea World to reveal the treatment of performing orcas who have turned violent over the years. CNN Films jumps into the documentary deep end with a story that unfolds a bit like a mystery. It will hook you, but in the end, the whole exercise comes off as a little too slick for its own good.

Director Gabriela Cowperthwaite, producer Manny Oteyza and co-writer Eli Despres do their homework here. They gather a good number of former Sea World trainers to tell the story that centers around Tilikum, the whale that killed its trainer in 1991 and more recently attacked Dawn Brancheau, in February 2011, drowning her in front of a stadium full of shocked spectators.

Sea World declined to participate in the film (you can read a bit of post-production back and forth between Sea World and the filmmakers here), so this often feels one-sided. But the former trainers come off as earnest, fair and believable. They're not shy about expressing their guilt for participating in the spectacle. (It's also fun to see footage of them as fresh young adults compared to their weathered and world-weary faces now.)

The filmmakers really score with their explanation of the habits of orcas and a debunking of the myths reportedly perpetuated by Sea World. The whales are highly social, often with a tight-knit family structure (families commonly are split up and scattered to different venues). They also are highly developed emotionally, a fact that the filmmakers exploit to great effect in ratcheting up the drama.

In the end, you might feel a bit manipulated by this well-produced polemic. That's no criticism of the filmmakers, who used all the tricks at their disposal to get a point across. 

BONUS TRACK
The soundtrack from "The World's End" is loaded with Manchester-scene classics from a generation ago, notably "Loaded" (and its defiant opening dialogue) by Primal Scream. Another one of my favorites, from the Inspiral Carpets, also gets a spin. Enjoy.



28 August 2013

Today's random video: Little Buddy

One of my favorite comedy bits ever. Albert Brooks with his speak-n-spell ventriloquist dummy, Buddy.


Follow Brooks here.

26 August 2013

Feelings

Failing to make an emotional connection with two intense films: 

FRUITVALE STATION (B) - A solid by-the-book rendering of the last hours in the life of a young black man shot to death by a transit cop for the Oakland subway system. Director Ryan Coogler does a fine job bringing this true story to the big screen.

Michael B. Jordan is compelling as Oscar Grant, who struggles to do right by girlfriend Sophina (Melonie Diaz), daughter Tatiana (Ariana Neal) and his mother (Octavia Spencer). Oscar has been to prison before, has lost his job, and must battle the urge to sell drugs to pay the rent. So he's no choirboy, although Coogler's depiction is of a lovable big bear who comforts a dying dog (huge metaphor there) and seems to have finally decided to turn his life around.

As much as Coogler and Jordan venture toward Oscar's dark side -- Jordan can darken his eyes and flash a numbing glare on cue -- this production can't help tipping the balance toward Oscar's essential good nature, especially his expressions of love for Tatiana. That thrusts the supporting cast into thankless roles of long-suffering women more commonly found in a TV Movie of the Week.

Coogler shows great command here, and he manages to build tension even though the audience knows what's coming. While he often captures the menace and confusion of the confrontation itself, the overall drama feels deflated by the end, and Spencer becomes just another mother praying for her son only to end up mourning over his body with what feels like empty words.

CLEAN, SHAVEN (1993) (C) - What the ... ? The debut from Lodge Kerrigan -- who scored in 2004 with a somewhat similar story, the jittery psychodrama "Keane" -- is a disturbing glimpse into the mind of a violent schizophrenic searching for his daughter. Kerrigan skews experimental, and here it's sometimes tough to follow along amid the voices and buzzing noises in the head of Peter Winter (Peter Greene, who was Zed in "Pulp Fiction"). (An old-fashioned push-button car radio that emits mostly static and cross-talk is an overused and clunky metaphor.)

I had to fast-forward through some explicit scenes of bloodied young bodies and self-mutilation. It was as tough to watch as "Henry: Portrait of a Serial Killer" was. I also struggled to find a reason to care about this story. It borrows heavily from early David Lynch (it's as if Eraserhead took off in a '70s road movie) but lacks sophisticated characterizations.

Kerrigan doesn't dawdle; this clocks in at 79 minutes (quicker, of course, if you zip through some scenes). Lately he's been directing episodes of "Homeland" (Damian Lewis starred in "Keane") and "The Killing." Maybe Kerrigan has finally found a happy medium 20 years on.

25 August 2013

The Female Gaze


The great filmmaker Nicole Holofcener cites "Girls" as a cultural turning point that is creating a shift toward female-centered projects. “When I was 25 years old, that was the TV show I wanted to make," she tells the New York Times.

The piece revolves around Jill Soloway ("United States of Tara") and her debut feature, "Afternoon Delight," in which a suburban mom brings home a 19-year-old stripper (Juno Temple) to be the family nanny. It's an example of "a wave of films that address sex frankly and unapologetically and from a female perspective."

Here's the trailer:



24 August 2013

New to the Queue

More celluloid to look forward to:

A summer capper from the "Shaun of the Dead" team, "The World's End."

More maturing for Mumblecore. Time to check in on Joe Swanberg to see whether he's stuck in a rut, with "Drinking Buddies."

The searing French drama of a family of winemakers, "You Will Be My Son."

Marin Ireland alert: The quirky, claustrophobic drama "Sparrows Dance."

The latest from Chile's Sebastian Silva ("The Maid," "Crystal Fairy"), the family drama "Old Cats."

The harrowing story of young Cubans rowing to Florida, "Una Noche."
 
Twinned documentaries about groundbreaking musicians, "Guitar Innovators: John Fahey and Nels Cline."

The self-explanatory "The Trial of Muhammad Ali."

The definitive documentary about the ultimate outsider event, "Spark: A Burning Man Story."

The history of the 20th century through the eyes of its chief cartoonist, "Herblock: The Black & the White."

A romantic drama featuring bed-hopping and swapping urbanites, "The Happy Sad."

21 August 2013

Asea

Shall we start a new category, called the Patsies* -- inscrutable films that make you say to yourself, "That means nothing to me"?

 LEVIATHAN (C+) - This is a near-wordless documentary providing a harrowing bird's-eye view (at times literally) of a fishing boat in the North Atlantic. It is a slog and a chore to get through, because often the viewer gets tossed into the maelstrom and bombarded with repetitive images. There is no narration and only scattered, passing, meaningless snatches of dialogue.

We see the drudgery of hoisting nets, emptying nets, chopping up fish. We get a few unique POV shots -- from way atop the mast, from underwater, from the back of the boat viewing seagulls.  The silence and intensity, though, make it difficult to get a handle on the point being made by filmmakers Lucien Castaing-Taylor and Verena Paravel. The movie sports a kinship with "Into Great Silence," the mute though much more ponderous and drawn-out study of monks in the Swiss Alps.

At times the dimly lit scenes boast an avant-garde beauty, but too often, the images are dizzying and disorienting, to no great effect. It's as if someone strapped Frederick Wiseman to the hull of the boat and shouted at him to "just keep shooting."

I never connected with it. I dozed on and off during the first half hour. I woke up not worried that I might have missed something important.

At times, the camera sits for excruciatingly long stretches, numbly observing the various activities. We watch one fisherman take a shower. Ho-hum. We actually get one continuous shot, of several minutes duration, of one fisherman watching television -- and dozing off. That scene is a perfect distillation of "Leviathan" and my reaction to it.


* - From Patsy in "Absolutely Fabulous," having this exchange after arriving home post-dawn from a night of carousing:
Patsy: What time is it? 
Eddy: 7:30 [a.m.] 
Patsy: What? in the... 7:30, you say? That means nothing to me. 
Eddy: Go back to bed, darling. 

19 August 2013

The Art of the Documentary


In many ways, for me at least, the construction of a documentary is little different than that of a feature film. A filmmaker can't just settle for training a camera on the star or slacking on the storytelling or ignoring the necessities of technical details and sharp editing. A documentary needs a compelling narrative arc, whether it's a hero story or a nagging mystery.

I saw both ends of the quality spectrum within a few days. I was disappointed in "Levon Helm: Not In It or My Health" and exhilarated by a second screening of "The House I Live In" at a special event at the KiMo Theater downtown (with a fabulous sound system). And somewhere in the middle, I enjoyed the charming profile "The Bitter Buddha."

The Levon Helm documentary has its moments, and if you're a fan of the Band drummer you'll fall for his charms, but for the most part this movie just sits lazily on the screen. All of the footage seems to have been shot entirely in 2008, as if Helm cut off access one day and the project was shelved, only to be hastily edited together after his death last year.

The filmmakers skimp on the archival footage. We get a quick rush seeing the boys on the Ed Sullivan show or performing at Woodstock. Helm, having cheated death for the past decade at the point of filming, understandably dwells on the two previously departed members of the Band, Richard Manuel and Rick Danko. However, the filmmakers never adequately explore Helm's relationship with his bandmates, nor do they press him to explain his fixation with those two ghosts. A connection is missing.

We also get a few glancing cheap shots at Robbie Robertson, whose financial edge as principal songwriter (Helm here is obviously bitter about the Canadian Robertson filching Helm's Southern experiences to write Americana classics like "The Night They Drove Old Dixie Down") led to the band's breakup and the bitterness that kept them apart.

Meantime, the filmmakers spin their wheels, showcasing Helm's homespun monologues in front of pals and admirers to the point where you swear you heard that story just a half hour earlier. And after yet another one of those good-ol'-boy moments, the screen goes black. It's an unsatisfying experience in the end, because you just know there was a better film to be made here.

***

If you want to see a good film, look for the name Jarecki in the credits. Eugene Jarecki has had a string of pleasing releases: "The Trials of Henry Kissinger," "Why We Fight," "Freakonomics" and the last year's sharp HBO biography "Reagan." Brother Andrew crafted what is one of the best documentaries of the past decade, "Capturing the Friedmans." Half-brother Nicholas Jarecki has dabbled as a producer in documentaries ("Tyson") but focused on feature films, most notably last year's financial thriller "Arbitrage."

Eugene's "The House I Live In" is the culmination of his work as a documentary filmmaker. Here he takes on the United States drug war and the skewed incarceration rates of people of color. Let's put aside the fact that this is a powerfully crafted polemic; it's simply a great film.

Jarecki scores high in all categories of the Documentary Checklist. He's got intelligent, well-spoken talking heads; an engaging but not overpowering soundtrack; just the right amount of stats and data given on the screen; a sympathetic but flawed hero; a familiar but effective framing device; a locomotive of a narrative; a clever twist at the two-thirds mark; a broad historical perspective; and a tug at your emotions, especially at the end.

Jarecki gambles in the beginning by using what has often been a fairly trite framing device: his own personal story, which he narrates. Not only that, but he's the white savior who will use his black nanny as the hook to get into his story. Jarecki was raised by a black woman named Nannie Jeter, who was well compensated by his well-off parents but whose subsequent commute left her an absentee mom. She lost a son to drugs and AIDS, and he is just one of the victims Jarecki introduces from the war on drugs.

The bond between Jarecki and Nannie is strong enough to overcome any qualms about the valorous white filmmaker using his former nanny to school us all on race relations. The film rises above the simplicity of the racial element to the war on drugs. It makes bigger points about society and our capitalist system.

And then, more than halfway through the film, an interesting thing happens. Jarecki introduces a historian (I lost track of names, but I believe it's Richard L. Miller), an intense steampunk intellectual who provides a broad historical perspective about the government's targeting of drug use and ethnic groups, going back to the mid 19th century. The sweeping theory runs from the ban on Asians' use of opium, through Mexicans' marijuana use, the jazz scene's heroin craze, the crack epidemic of the '80s and the current focus on the lower class and meth. It's an eye-opening observation that various epochs of the drug war follow a similar pattern in which a vulnerable class of people is targeted, ostracized and then attacked through the criminal system. Another articulate talking head -- David Simon, creator of "The Wire -- cautiously compares the modern war on drugs to a slow holocaust.

Jarecki also interviews a judge who is tired of the ridiculous sentencing guidelines. He talks to a medical expert. And he has a keen eye for those who have been run through the criminal justice system. He uses one, Shanequa Benitez, more for visual effect (reaction shots, for example) than for her insights.

Put it all together, and it's a triumph of documentary filmmaking.

***

And then there are those documentaries where you just point the camera at a subject and know you'll get a good story. I'm a sucker for documentaries about comedy and comedians ("Standup" with Jerry Seinfeld, "Joan Rivers: A Piece of Work," "The Aristocrats"), and "The Bitter Buddha," which turns the camera on veteran journeyman comic Eddie Pepitone, ranks up there with its insightful predecessors.

Pepitone is a troubled man. His standup routine might approximate what I imagine Rodney Dangerfield might have been like off-stage when he dropped the goofball act and got serious with his therapist. I identified with Pepitone's middle-aged hand-wringing over the general unfairness of the world around us. He kills with a bit featuring him trying to read a simple line for a laundry detergent commercial only to be foiled by the enunciation of the dark thoughts he can't keep to himself.

Director Steven Feinartz fashions quite the valentine to this sad-sack slob. He assembles an impressive array of funny people to wax comedic about Pepitone. We hear from Patton Oswalt, Dana Gould (entertaining on the DVD extra, too), Sarah Silverman and Zach Galifianakis. Feinartz cribs a lot of material from Pepitone's appearances with Marc Maron on Maron's popular podcast. He uses animation (by Allen Mezquida) to liven up those segments. Animation also is used to punctuate the chapters with an occasional absurdist Tweet from Pepitone. The gimmick works because the Tweets are funny. ("Remember, we are just specks of dust in infinite space who love ice cream.")

The dramatic device Feinartz uses here involves a big show back in his hometown in New York that Pepitone is nervous about, mainly because his old bully of a father might make his first trip in seven years from Staten Island to Manhattan for the show. Pepitone's dad sounds like a typical gruff postwar father, and Pepitone's mother suffered from mental illness before she died. The scenes with Pepitone and his dad are revealing for their complex interactions. It's also interesting to see the unhealthy 50-something look as old as his father; they could be brothers.

The film climaxes with Pepitone's big show in front of his father. And there you have the universal narrative arc and hero story: Will the big goof please his old man?

GRADES
"Levon Helm": B-minus
"The House I Live In": A
"The Bitter Buddha": B+

13 August 2013

Coupling

A couple of quick ones:

ROBOT AND FRANK (B-minus) - This wouldn't be much without Frank Langella, who plays a lonely old man sinking into dementia but is re-energized by the companionship of his robot assistant. But Langella is fantastic, lifting this from the heap of trifles and making it worth a look.

The first 20 minutes are choppy, as if the filmmaker was in a hurry to get to the second act or perhaps the producers insisted on trimming this down under 90 minutes. Langella's Frank is an ex-con jewelry thief who warms to his futuristic companion (a honey-voiced Peter Sarsgaard) and starts to feel the ol' juices flowing when he realizes that Robot is the perfect lock-picker and safe-cracker.

That second act is cracker-jack, and if you buy into the concept, the movie starts to hum.  Langella is weighed down, though, by a weak supporting cast (a flat Susan Sarandon, a zombified Liv Tyler and a puzzled James Marsden). Jeremy Strong overplays a bad-guy role. And surprise twist at the end, feels cheap. Langella and Sarsgaard rescue the proceedings with a touching scene toward the end, and Langella brings the proceedings heart-breakingly full-circle in the final scene. Charming.

NATHALIE (2003) (B) - Another film you root for. This was remade in America as "Chloe," which I didn't see. Here, a wife (Fanny Ardant) tires of her husband (Gerard Depardieu) cheating and hires a stripper (Emmanuelle Beart) to seduce him -- and to report back on their assignations.

This could have been a cheesy Cinemax sizzler. But Ardant's Catherine and Beart's Nathalie (nee Marlene) develop a believable bond over Nathalie's steamy reports. Depardieu, just before he ballooned into middle age, is a plausible, low-key cad.

This one has its own twist at the end, and it's worth the price of admission. It makes me suspect that this is one of those examples of thinking up a killer ending and building a whole story around it. It works. The storytelling is compact and compelling. The actors are at the top of their games. And director Anne Fontaine ("Coco Before Chanel") delivers.

11 August 2013

New to the Queue

They keep making movies, I keep making plans to see 'em:

A documentary about the influence of the blues on rock 'n' roll, "Born in Chicago."

It's been a while since Madeline Zima slugged David Duchovny, and "Breaking the Girls" looks like saucy fun.

I have found my summer blockbuster! "Elysium."

A debut feature by the actress Lake Bell, the story of a young woman trying to break into voice-over work, "In a World ..."
 
I'm a sucker for unbearably gloomy, tragic tales, so bring on the unbearably sad "Our Children."

If only for Aubrey Plaza and a few laughs, "The To-Do List."

I really liked Miles Teller in "Rabbit Hole," didn't care much for the execution of "(500) Days of Summer" (though the screenplay was fine)and I appreciate the makers of "The Descendants," and that comes together in the promising snarky-teen saga "The Spectacular Now."

I'll watch just about any documentary, so why not put "Jamel Shabazz: Street Photographer" in the queue.

And then there's "The Good Son: The Life of Ray 'Boom Boom' Mancini."

And what looks like a fascinating social experiment, the Soviet Georgian documentary "The Machine Which Makes Everything Disappear." 

I'm torn about the both the biopic "Lovelace" and the latest David Gordon Green ramble (with Paul Rudd and Emile Hirsch) "Prince Avalanche."

Someday, when it's raining late at night and I'm not appreciating my limited time on Earth, I may sample the first 20 minutes of Paul Schrader's messed-up trash "The Canyons" and maybe feel icky afterward.

I've seen roughly one Woody Allen film in the past 30 years (the ridiculous "Vicky Christina Barcelona"), and it might be time to check in on his latest with Cate Blanchett. (Translation: I expect to be dragged to "Blue Jasmine" as penance for refusing to go see "Midnight in Paris.")

09 August 2013

A Karen Black moment

... Curled up in the sink to put her makeup on in the mirror in "Five Easy Pieces."

The former Karen Blanche Ziegler of Park Ridge, Illinois, died this week at 74.

The trailer:

07 August 2013

Today's Trailer: Sexy Siri?


Writer/director Spike Jonze is back this fall with an interesting premise: Joaquin Phoenix, portraying a lonely writer who falls in love with a virtual companion, computer-voiced by Scarlett Johansson.  Here's the trailer:


05 August 2013

Citing One More Source


In my previous post about my online sources for film intelligence, I referred to a split of some reviewers from the Onion AV Club. The site many of them landed on is The Dissolve, which features fuller in-depth reviews than does the Onion.

Among the familiar names at the newer site are Nathan Rabin, Noel Murray, Scott Tobias, Keith Phipps and Tasha Robinson. Instead of letter grades, films are ranked on a scale of 1 to 5 stars.

04 August 2013

ABQ Confidential: Fall Preview II


The Guild Cinema is rolling out its early-fall lineup, and we'll get to check off more titles from our wish list at the cozy venue in Nob Hill:

  • "Leviathan," the powerful fishing documentary, Aug. 11-16.
  • "Augustine," the randy French period piece, Aug. 16-22.
  • Michael Winterbottom's latest with Steve Coogan, "The Look of Love," Aug. 31 to Sept. 4.
  • Here's a dynamic double feature: Andrew Bujalski's "Computer Chess" and Terence Nance's "An Oversimplification of Her Beauty," Sept. 7-11.
  • The disturbing doc, "The Act of Killing," Sept. 16-19.
  • "Crystal Fairy and the Magical Cactus," the trippy Chilean romp, Sept. 20-26.
  • The Viennese art drama "Museum Hours," Oct. 1-5.
  • Another blockbuster double-feature: "A Band Called Death" and "Big Star: Nothing Can Hurt Me," Oct. 6-10.

01 August 2013

Fall Preview

The Southwest Film Center at UNM has put together its schedule for the fall semester, and the student-run operation will help us check off a few titles on our wish list. Among the offerings:
  • Stories We Tell (Nov. 14-17) - Sarah Polley's family memoir, which got a criminally short first run in Albuquerque.
  • A Band Called Death (Sept. 5-8) - The documentary about the Detroit black-punk trio.
  • Much Ado About Nothing (Sept. 12-15) - We missed Joss Whedon's B&W take on Shakespeare in its quickie run at the megaplex.
  • Dead Man (Oct. 17-20) - We're due for a re-screening of Jim Jarmusch's Old West masterpiece, one of our favorite films of the '90s, with Johnny Depp as a sort of proto-Tonto.
 Other titles include "The Place Beyond the Pines," "NO," "Mary Poppins," the recent "Kon-Tiki," "The Big Lebowski," "Bless Me, Ultima," "Sightseers" (a dark comedy about a couple on a murderous holiday trip) and the Manhattan Short Film Fest.