05-Mar-2011
Posted by : Bobby
Hitler in Hollywood
A fictional documentary by Frederic Sojcher in the tradition of the great mockumentaries. Starring Maria de Medeiros (of Pulp Fiction fame) as herself, hot on the trail of a missing filmmaker of the classical era who was wrapped up in a CIA-sponsored plot to use Hollywood to destroy the financial prospects of European cinema in the postwar period. So the film betrays maybe just a bit of an irrational fear of Hollywood hegemony which nevertheless is based on a meritorious complaint about a general lack of diversity in movie theaters all over the world.
The film is shot in a first-person manner from the point-of-view of either de Medeiros or her cameraman (and would-be lover). Visually the film looks excellent and is given a majestic air because of the use of large-gauge film stock rather than the expected digital video for an aesthetic of this kind.
04-Mar-2011
Posted by : Bobby
Mothers
Milco Mancevski’s fourth film continues with his favored structural device: interlocking disparate stories in large episodic blocks. The first section details two young girls as they journey through Skopje on their way to a police station to report a flasher. The second narrates the tale of a television crew shooting a reportage on an old village and the old people that live in it. The third is a classical documentary account of a Macedonian crime journalist who reported on the very murders he committed (proving the theorem that reality is stranger than fiction).
This third narrative thread becomes experimental because of its placement within the film. The shift to classical documentary discourse from traditional storytelling is so sudden that the viewer is forced to assimilate it and given no chance to reject. The break is somehow radical and seamless at the same time, yet it is not certain if Mancevski is pushing the boundaries of narrative or simply cobbling things together dispassionately.
03-Mar-2011
Posted by : Bobby
18 Meals
This new Spanish film directed by Jorge Coira is grouped into three segments sectioned off by intertitles corresponding to the three meals of the day. It is an ensemble film full of melodrama structured as a “day-in-the-life” narrative in the Galicia region of Spain. Described in this way the film seems very unoriginal and even a bit hokey, which unfortunately is the case.
For the most part the acting is adequate as the film features a wide variety of talented players. Coira used a lot of improvisatory techniques in creating the scenes for his actors to incarnate. What could have been disastrous and meandering turns out to be the strength of the film, though it only seems strong in relation to other weaknesses that prevent the film from being of even moderate interest.
02-Mar-2011
Posted by : Bobby
Black Swan
Here is a film that is enjoyable but probably won’t have much of a shelf life. That’s because the content is a bit cliched: an artist who must sacrifice everything for their art; a young woman coming of age; a possessive and demanding mother; the dark half of a personality. These are stock themes with the requisite stock characters to go with it. All of the internal elements of the film are paper thin but structurally, formally, the film is commendable.
The use of grainy 16mm makes for an interesting contrast with the polished world of professional ballet. Aronofsky seems to have a solid control of the telling of the tale if not the tale itself. Still, one gets caught up in it. The film is a visceral ride but like most roller coasters they diminish in interest the more you revisit them.
Though cliched one still feels for the story of a hard worker who must sacrifice everything in search of success. If you know what it feels like to have a dream and to be consumed by it you can’t help but be marked by a tinge of recognition for Portman’s Nina. She walks through the film in a one-note performance as a blank slate that others project their own recognitions on. By the conclusion you root for her to complete her final brush stroke, not just to see a job well done but because it is also the only way she can free herself. It is perhaps heavy-handed irony that her search for perfection means that she must ultimately destroy herself. This is fine for “popcorn” art cinema but one must expect more from Aronofsky the next time out.
01-Mar-2011
Posted by : Bobby
From the Waist On
This curiously-titled film by Gianfrancesco Lazotti derives from what is probably an untranslatable phrase in Italian which serves as the original title: “Dalla vita in poi.” The story is about a disabled girl who begins writing love letters to her best friend’s boyfriend in jail and the two eventually strike up a short-lived affair. Broadly described the plot doesn’t sound much better than your typical telenovela (or whatever the Italian equivalent is).
Lazotti worked as an assistant director for both Ettore Scola and Dino Risi but has not been able to siphon any of the cinematic aptitude from those old Italian masters. Up to this point he has spent a majority of his career making television series and it is plainly apparent in both the look and feel of his film. Not that television series are of an inherently lesser quality than cinema — just that they are often of lesser creativity. Everything seems flat on television, which can be understood when one considers that broadcasting is reaching for as broad an audience as possible. Lazotti has made a medium-neutral work that would more deserve to be on Rai TV rather than the Rai Cinema that produced it.
26-Feb-2011
Posted by : Bobby

Ralph Fiennes at FEST press conference
The 2011 Belgrade International Film Festival (FEST) opened on February 25th with Ralph Fiennes’ directorial debut Coriolanus. This was a homecoming for the film as it was shot on location in Belgrade using a large Serbian cast and crew. A huge audience filled the Sava Center main theater — maybe as many as 1,000 — and the screening the following morning played to a packed house as well.
FEST is the largest film festival in Serbia in terms of selections and financing. Compared to the Auteur Film Festival in Belgrade hosted every December it is much more mainstream and much more broad in scope. In the early years (founded in 1971) it was described as a “festival of festivals” with regards to the fact that the selection was mainly composed to be a survey of standout films at other international festivals (which is how the Auteur Film Festival also operates, though with a much more challenging artistic slant). Today it is known as a place where you can catch the most talked about Hollywood and European achievements of the past year that would normally not play at movie theaters in Serbia’s still-developing cinema network.
There are a number of programs at FEST including the competition section “Europe out of Europe, “Panorama of World Film,” “Selected Documentaries,” and a homage to festival films from the initial year of 1971. The festival also offers master classes including one by Emir Kusturica and another by veteran film critic Michel Ciment.
25-Feb-2011
Posted by : Bobby
“I hear Brenda’s got a baby, but Brenda’s barely got a brain.”
These are the opening words of Tupac’s “Brenda’s Got a Baby” and they are among the more potent and evocative opening salvos in the history of hip-hop music. The tragedy is that Brenda barely has a brain. Or as Pac later mentions, “She’s only 12 years old.” So her lack of a brain is a symbol of her innocence. It is also a critique of a society that has not done its best to educate Brenda or to put her in a position where she can succeed. Brenda has not been nurtured and taught the rules for survival: her father is a junkie, he mother is disinterested, her cousin is molesting her. There is no authority figure that can steer her right and in fact they do everything they can to hurt her. This is also the tragedy.
“A damn shame, the girl can hardly spell her name.”
Normally the birth of a new life is the herald of a new beginning and also a continuation. The irony is that Brenda has a baby and it is a damn shame. Is this what the world has come to? When normally a case for joy and excitement the baby becomes just another part of the trap. It becomes a curse and a burden. This is why it is so easy for Brenda to toss out the problem in a dumpster like so much garbage. But not for long and Brenda is drawn back by an external (and also surely some sort of internal) call. She notices the baby’s eyes so she recognizes her own soul and that of another. Brenda may not have a brain but she has a heart — the two rarely go hand in hand in the luckiest individuals, as they do with with Tupac Shakur.
16-Feb-2011
Posted by : Bobby
*I am offering this post in honor of the “For the Love of Film (Noir)” blogathon. All you noir lovers, please donate to the film preservation fund at the following link and enjoy this essay on the semi-documentary crime film (noir)…
https://www.paypal.com/cgi-bin/webscr?cmd=_s-xclick&hosted_button_id=LAWFPAB4XLHAW
For blogathon navigation:
http://www.ferdyonfilms.com/?p=8403 (Ferdy on Films)
http://selfstyledsiren.blogspot.com/2011/02/for-love-of-film-noir-let-links-begin.html (Self-Styled Siren)
PART ONE
Noirs always take place at night, much in the same way that a western takes place on the frontier. But they’re still not a genre. What they are is a style. This is why we can speak of them in terms of mood, tone, and atmosphere. But this is also the reason we can analyze a unique sub-class of this form that appeared primarily after the war and lasted only until the beginning of the next decade: the police procedural. Or, for the purposes of this analysis, the semi-documentary crime film.
It is a style of crime film that generally attempts to show the inner-workings of a justice organization in intricate detail. Unlike classical noirs, the bad guy is usually punished (through death generally, but sometimes through apprehension) by the pursuing agency at the conclusion of these films and hope is confirmed that the world is good[1], or the status quo is maintained. The reason that these films are associated with the documentary, the traditional discourse of sobriety, has more to do with stylistic elements than most anything else. Certain formal attributes are appropriated by the semi-documentary crime film for the purposes of advancing a story. A realistic story.
11-Feb-2011
Posted by : Bobby
The blog by Girish Shambu has become a wonderful clearinghouse for online film criticism and other cinema-related media. It is also well-known for the extensive discussions that take place in the comments sections of his postings. The traffic to this site is excellent and those taking part in the discussions often read like a who’s who of the critical world. Though it is rare that one will find passionate and detailed dialogue about specific films and filmmakers because of the genteel tone that most of the visitors adhere to (as well as the general nature of the posts). There is more backslapping and glad-handling than anything, no doubt due to the notoriety of many of the posters and perhaps a general unwillingness to get down and dirty with each other about issues one believes in.
One can find this blog to be more of a guide that opens the door to good content, even if it does not rigorously debate that content. Oftentimes there are links to rare pieces that have been lingering somewhere in digital space waiting to be examined. In this sense Girish’s blog functions similar to Film Studies For Free, though a bit less rigidly academic and more “popular” instead.