7/31/07

The sadness continues... Michelangelo Antonioni dies


So soon after losing one titan of art cinema, another passes. Michelangelo Antonioni dies at 94. I can't find any worthy news articles at the moment that do his tremendous work sufficient credit, so I'll link to THIS.

Antonioni, along with Bergman and Tarkovsky were my earliest experiences with serious cinema. His films convey a deep sense of sadness and loneliness that often shook me to the core. Characters tend to drift insubstantially from one liaison to the next, drawfed by an increasingly dehumanizing environment. Real, empathetic communication seems stunted if not impossible within these interpersonal voids. Those that are hyper-sensitive to this existential reality, such as Monica Vitti's character in "Red Desert" are discounted as mad in an essentially anhedonic world of masks.

I just had to grab a Nietzsche book and look up one of his many poignant quotes on this subject as it seems fitting in this context:
"We, too, associate with "people"; we, too, modestly don the dress in which (as which) others know us, respect us, look for us--and then we appear in company, meaning among people who are disguised without wanting to admit it. We, too, do what all prudent masks do, and in response to every curiosity that does not concern our "dress" we politely place a chair against the door."

Most articles on his death are focusing on Blow-Up as his most influential film, and with good reason as it's probably the most commercially successful and well-known. Although it's been several years since I've seen it, I have to admit it didn't impact me in the way his meandering character-driven films do.

My very favorite Antonioni films are the 4 he made consecutively between 1960-1964:
The Red Desert - 1964
L' Eclisse - 1962
La Notte - 1961
l' Avventura - 1960

I also really enjoyed the Passenger, but for very different reasons, and have been trying to track down Zabriskie Point for several years.

7/30/07

Ingmar Bergman died today :(

A sad day for serious film lovers everywhere. Ingmar Bergman dead at 89.

Bergman was in many ways a launching point for my love affair with art cinema, his film "The Seventh Seal" opening a vast world for a bored suburban teen almost 10 years ago. I'm sure the story rings true for many, many people.

One scene in particular always stands out in my mind. The knight meets the traveling caravan of performers and sits down in a meadow with them to share their berries and cream. A distinct hush of peace fills the scene- smiles, a laughing baby, and a faint breeze rustling the grass. A moment of pure worldly bliss that momentarily lifts the knight's existential angst (and my own).

Of the many I've seen and enjoyed, my personal very favorites:
Autumn Sonata - 1978
The Serpent's Egg - 1977 (can I really be the only Bergman fan that genuinely likes this one?)
Scenes from a Marriage -1973
Cries and Whispers - 1972 (favorite of favorites)
Hour of the Wolf - 1968
Persona - 1966
The Seventh Seal - 1957

...so many greats in his oeuvre, the above are my personal picks. Some films I feel bad about excluding, like "Wild Strawberries" for instance, but they didn't resonate as much as the above on first viewing. To be perfectly honest, I think Bergman is at his best when he addresses deep existential, spiritual, and psychological issues-- so I have to admit I've neglected his early comedies.

7/29/07

Film: Inland Empire - David Lynch - 2006

Finally! I've been wanting to see this one since it was announced, and I didn't hesitate when the opportunity arose this weekend.

Where to begin? A fitting question for a film as convoluted and maze-like as this one.

Long ago I had read it was shot entirely in DV, but this didn't prepare me for the initial almost distracting hyper-reality of this type of recording. I suddenly realized that my visual expectations were pretty rigid and that I've been jaded by the high-gloss artificiality of the standard Hollywood pictureframe. The home-video quality at the outset quickly dissolved as the masterful web of story began to take hold. In fact, later I had to marvel at the quality of the DV as it excels in the grungy reality much of the film portrays and is used masterfully for special effects.

The sound design is nothing short of brilliant and plays a key role as it does in so many Lynch films. Dark industrial rumblings, precisely-pinpointed noises, and endless reverbs that fade from scene to scene. Credits have Lynch listed as the sole sound designer, I'm impressed! The music is excellent, and often surreally unfitting to great effect. No Badalamenti involvement with this one as far as I know.

The story? Oh brother. Multiple layers of reality, filmic self-reference, rugs being pulled away from under me as soon as I formulate a theory about what the hell is going on. I love it. I think the best way to enjoy a film like this the first time is to suspend critical analysis and let it take you where it may... let it absorb into the subconscious and enjoy its mesmerizing whimsy.

I can pretty safely say this film is about Hollywood (the inland empire?), and more precisely about acting and the effect an actor has on the viewer. Laura Dern's character (btw probably the best acting I've EVER seen) is the driving force behind the plot, I feel like most of the film is a depiction of what is going on in her mind as she plays and lives through this role in "no more blue tomorrows" - but on another level the viewer (a lady often shown watching the action on a TV) is identifying with the action (perhaps sometime in the future) and superimposing her life onto the movie. The rabbit show seems to be a depiction of meaningless sitcoms with laugh-tracks tied to things that simply aren't funny. I have no idea where the Polish past comes into play... so much more to think about!

I will have to say at around 3 hours, Lynch fans will really get the most out of it. This one doesn't strike me as entry-level Lynch and is probably his most challenging yet.

IMDB

7/26/07

Film: The Shout - 1978


Hypnotically paced mind bender that reminds me quite a bit of some of Peter Weir's work, specifically The Last Wave which appeared a year before this one.

The Shout leaves a lot to interpretation and will probably reward repeat viewings.

"I've always found it hard to believe that the soul is imprisoned in the body until death liberates it. Don't you think that in periods of spiritual starvation that the soul may take refuge in a tree, a stone?"

On another note, John Hurt's character is an electronic musician, some of the coolest scenes are the creation of his soundscapes. His studio is full of EMS equipment like Putneys, Vocoders and I think I spotted a Roland Space Echo. Great stuff.

IMDB

7/24/07

Film: Venus in Furs - Jess Franco - 1969


The film's title is actually the only thing is shares with the great novel by Leopold von Sacher-Masoch. This is by no stretch of the imagination an adaptation of the book.

A little over an hours worth of beautiful women and cinematography, a hallucinatory ghost story and great down-tempo lounge and jazz music. Quite enjoyable.. as fleeting as it was...

IMDB

7/23/07

Tech Purchase: Ultimate Ears Super fi 3 headphones.


My Shure E2c ear-canal headphones finally gave out after about 5 years. The right ear kept cutting out with movement. I narrowed the problem to the area of the 1/8" connector and tried unsuccessfully to solder a new one on... well I was successful, but lost all bass response for some reason.

So the search started for sub-$100 headphones. After checking numerous reviews I settled on the Ultimate Ears Super fi 3, a company I honestly never heard of until I did a little digging. Apparently they're more well known in the music business than to consumers. A steal on Amazon currently for $60 (retails $90ish).. I'm a little worried about bass output from some reviews.. but I'll initially chalk that up to bad earplug fit and see how it goes when they arrive.

I've been lazy...

Haven't been keeping up with this, but I'm determined to at least document the films I've seen if I don't have the energy to write a little blurb about them. Eventually I'd like to write something substantial per blog entry, and not only focus on films.. I'll have to slowly work into writing mode again.

So the films, to the best of my recollection, that were omitted in the past 10 or so days of non-blogging are:

The Man in White - Takashi Miike - 2003
Color me unimpressed. Standard Yakuza revenge flick without the absurd craziness I hoped for out of Miike.

Turkey Shoot - 1982
A trailer from another film blog turned me on to this one. Unfortunately the trailer turned out to be way better than the actual film. B-style most dangerous game, probably not inebriated enough to fully enjoy its lack of subtlety. Olivia Hussey is always worth watching though. Trailer here.

I'm A Cyborg, But That's OK - 2006
How could a film set in a Korean Mental institution and in which the main character believes she is actually a Cyborg possibly turn out dull? Well it was, for the most part, pretty dull and forgettable. I did enjoy some of the senseless irrationality, and seeing Koreans yodeling in Switzerland was kind of cool.

Britannia Hospital - Lindsay Anderson - 1982
I enjoyed If... and Oh Lucky Man, but this one I just couldn't finish.

Iluzija aka Mirage - 2004
Quite possibly the first Macedonian film I've seen. Fairly banal unfortunately, charting the hopes and eventual downfall of young Marko. A fairly intelligent kid that has the following going for him: bullied at school, has an alcoholic + bingo-addicted father, near catatonic mother, an older sister with a seemingly two-word vocabulary: nerd or fag, and his only friend in the world is a chess-playing, gun-totting thief named Paris. With advantages like these, who wouldn't succeed? It's all pretty standard and the ending seemed like an over dramatic afterthought that really made little sense. The film was worth watching for exactly 2 reasons: a small slice-of-life from unknown Macedonia, and a score that featured some music by Erik Satie.

Purfume: The Story of a Murderer - Tom Tykwer - 2006

Sublime. Absolutely breath-taking, exhilarating... the finest film I've seen in quite some time. This one deserves an entire post of its own, complete with photos, analysis... the works. It's exceptional how well an essentially visual medium can portray the sense of smell. Did I say brilliant yet?!? An instant favorite!!

Goya's Ghosts - Milos Forman - 2006
A disappointment. Doesn't live up to the expectations set by Amadeus. Goya's inspirations are flightily covered from his anti-Papal cartooning, to his depictions of the French invasion of Spain, and the eventual "liberation" by British forces. A subplot drives the drama forward, in which a wealthy merchant's daughter (Natalie Portman) is summoned by the inquisition on a ridiculous charge and suffers tremendously. Portman succeeds in being alternately beautiful and hideous as the story progresses. Javier Bardem's role was masterfully played. Unfortunately the whole thing seemed rather flat, intellectually dull and altogether uninspired... well, except for the part where Brother Lorenzo is forced to admit to his Darwinian roots.

7/12/07

Film: Seconds - 1966 - Frankenheimer


The similarities with the film below are striking. Both deal with escaping the routine "cloud" of everyday life, as Edmond put it, but by different means. Instead of lashing out against the superego, here we have a sci-fi scenario of faking death and assuming a new physical appearance. An entirely fresh start as an escape from a meaningless, stale existence. Hemingway once said something along the lines of.. no matter where you are, you can never escape yourself... this film got the point.

IMDB

7/10/07

Film: Edmond - 2005



I'm going to have to think about this one a bit and then write something down. There were moments I had to turn the volume down because what was happening on screen became so intense and uncomfortable. It's rare that a film elicits that kind of reaction.

Screenplay + original play by David Mamet

IMDB

New Cronenberg film!



Saw this trailer on a film blog. Im excited! Big fan of his past work.. It's called "Eastern Promises"

7/8/07

Tech Purchase: Apple Ipod Shuffle


I needed to find a replacement for holding the sweaty brick which is my Zen Sleek Photo while running. This seems perfect. It's extremely small (a little larger than a quarter) and clips onto a sleeve, pocket, whatever. It only has 1GB of storage, but this should be enough for my greatest "motivational high energy music" - currently new-school Electro and old Italo disco stuff. The controls are extremely limited.. shuffle or straight-play and the transport buttons. But again, perfectly acceptable for jogging purposes. I can't complain, bought it from Amazon for $50 (had a $25 off coupon).

Drone-based music Production Techniques

Ambient music has fascinated me since I picked up Aphex Twin's Selected Ambient Works Vol 2 back in '98 and began trying to get my hands on anything that the famous Sleepbot Envirmental Broadcast streamed out. I'm still in the grips of this musical genre after all these years, and have been noodling about first with trackers, then VSTis and finally hardware synths + guitar ever since.

An interesting thread at KVR on "dark ambient production" techniques provides some excellent insights into what goes into crafting these soundscapes. The thread is HERE.

One of the posts that is especially amusing and not entirely inaccurate deserves to be reprinted here.
Dark Ambient for dummies:

1 - Take any sound source, speech, banging on an instrument, Beatles records, shouting, whatever.

2 - Slow and stretch many times.

3 - Layer a few times, adding great heaps of delay and reverb.

4 - Add even more great heaps of reverb.

5 - Select an appropriately mysterious Old-World name like 'Geschwartzengeruhften' or 'Traumgespritzenereinheit'.

6. Add more reverb, just to be sure.

8 - Take a foggy picture of either 1 - a crypt or cave or 2 - some astrophysical phenomen, then collage with medieval sigils and/or Cuneiform carvings for the cover of your CD, which should be called something like 'X-Cthonian Antiworld Transmissions'.

9 - See yourself magically appear in this week's Cold Spring mailorder update.

Film: Contes immoraux - 1974 - Walerian Borowczyk


This was actually viewed on 7/7 - I've got to start being more timely with my posts.

What can I say about this film? Visually beautiful, sublimely perverse, quite sexy. The cinematography is amazing- words truly fail me on how artfully this was composed and shot. Art in the guise of exploitation. An instant favorite.

The film is split into 4 separate tales, the shot on the left taken from tale 3. Note- the woman on the right is Paloma Picasso. Yes, the Picasso's daughter.

IMDB

7/6/07

Film: A Taste of Honey - 1961


This was actually viewed on 7/5 - but after another mind-numbing day I was too depressed to post.

A British realist drama of the "kitchen sink" school. Supposedly one of the classics of this style, it failed to impress for the most part. A few scenes, such as the one captured on the left were beautiful in their portrayal of inner turmoil matching the exterior decay of industrial Manchester. Noteworthy for it's wonderfully grim and despondent setting- likely influenced the gritty urban portrayals in the 70s.
IMDB

7/4/07

Film: Around the World in 80 Days - 1956


One of the films I grew up with, such a joy to see it again after all these years. Just as clever and entertaining as I remember it.

Thanks Dad for making this the first VHS film you ever bought, roughly 20 years ago...

7/3/07

Film: 300 - Second Viewing


Movie mood this evening was for pure, visceral entertainment and 300 fit the bill nicely. This was my second viewing, the first being one of the rare times I go to the movie theatre.

Any interesting film gains something from a second viewing. Overlooked details are discovered, the distractions of the visual spectacle and milked emotions are done away with. A repeated viewing allows more free analysis and interpretation.

Capturing a screenshot for this one was almost a chore. Every image is like a beautiful HDR photograph- I would have liked to post dozens. The voice over narration is very well written, as if it was actually drawn from a heroic epic. Truly superb was the sound, something that typically eludes notice-- every sword clang and arrow whir made it's presence known. I especially loved when sound was used to illustrate heightened senses in a particular scene in Sparta's marketplace. Time slowed as individual sounds came to the forefront, bathed in cavernous reverb the viewer briefly transcends the visual beauty and is immersed in sound. Unfortunately, my one gripe about this film was the music. It seemed that every other scene tried too hard to pull the heart-strings with gladiator-styled wailed themes. The similarity doesn't bother me, just that it was used to excess.

Still, with such artfulness in visuals, sound-design, and writing, I don't feel like the film ever gains the status of a true piece of art. This is a case where the pieces feel to be more than the whole, but a solid enjoyable piece of entertainment it certainly is.

IMDB

7/2/07

Film: Black Cat, White Cat - 1998 - Emir Kusturica


Frantic and fun in the tradition of the greats Underground and Time of the Gypsies, Kusturica is undisputed master of lust-for-life Gypsy cinema.

IMDB

Fallout 3 Preview



IGN published a very interesting preview article to this highly anticipated sequel. The article is found here.

Fallout 2 was one of the most immersive games I've ever played and the first RPG I actually spent a good deal of time on. It set you loose in a huge world, where you follow your own moral compass and make decisions that actively change the game world. For example, if you screwed over an entire town for your own personal gain, you can bet the citizens will never forget you.

A few noteworthy things about the new one are the primary first-person view and the fact that moral neutrality in decision-making can also lead to interesting outcomes. The combat system is a bit ambiguous at this point- it's supposed to be real-time, but with action points. Not sure how that's going to work out.

There are a few games that elevate themselves from time-sink for the bored to the level of a real experience that would be a shame to miss. Based on the previous game, I'm thinking this may be one of them..

New Position



Started my new position today. Slightly braindead, energy sapped. No real desire to post, but the captain's log will accept no holes.

Pic on the side comes from the relatively unknown sci-fi philosophical mind screw entitled "Brain Dead"

...Not to be confused with the excellent Peter Jackson zombie splatter fest also known as "Dead Alive"

7/1/07

Currently reading...


Infinite Jest by David Foster Wallace

I'm about 1200 pages into my ebook edition so far, roughly 50%. A massive tome- I've been at it a little over a month, reading relatively slowly during lunch breaks and boring evenings.

The book jumps around quite a bit, different strands of linearity with several central characters. So far, one of the finest pieces of modern lit I've read... Funny, profound, insightful, sad, even occasionally dull and frustrating. It's the moments, the gems of insightful thought and extraordinarily good writing that keeps me with it.

A book unlike any other- often it's like zooming in on life with a microscope and describing all the glorious details. The beauty of the mundane captured.

Film: The Servant - 1963


Jazz and decadence in early 60s London. Conventions and formality slowly decay, a pampered life is manipulated into destruction. Who is really the servant?

IMDB

Lilly's tape-loop



I somehow stumbled on to this a few days ago and it's been rattling around in my head ever since- Dr. John Lilly, professional psychonaut best known for Programming the Human BioComputer slooooooowly talks on his tape-loop model of human thoughts, emotions, and actions. Very good points about the relative safety of the loop as a hindrance to "transcendence". Such a simple, elegant way of describing routine and repetition. A reminder that I haven't given enough attention to my own thought routes lately..

First Post- What the hell am I doing?


I'm particularly bored this afternoon. I've decided to start a blog. No idea what direction it'll take, but I'll start with a running log of things noteworthy and interesting. Self-centered nostalgia rather than public consumption is its goal.

So to start things off, an interesting anime gem I found the other night. Usually I stay away from anime, unless it's ridiculously surreal or absurd. Animation is at its strongest in the realms of the fantastic. Theorizing best saved for another post, on to the film..

Shôjo tsubaki (aka Midori) - 1992 - Hiroshi Harada
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0930902/

This headtrip is set in the late 19th Century follows the fate of a pretty young girl, Midori. Leaving behind the rewards of sidewalk flower peddling and the rat-eaten corpse of her mother, she falls in with a traveling freak show. Amid the abuse and insanity she eventually finds true twisted love.

There really isn't much more to say about the plot, it's all pretty simple and trite. What makes the film noteworthy is the lovely jarring split of innocence and perversion. The animation style is early, often the story is told with static images and very sparse movement. This old-school stylization lends a certain beauty and melancholy glaze to the film, like you're watching an anime you vaguely remember from childhood. Disturbing images abound and the deviant eroticism of "naughty" anime shows up on occasion.

One more interesting thing is the cinematic history of this film. The director didn't allow passive consumption of his film, instead he staged events around its showing. The film traveled around Japan, along with a real freak show, and was apparently a totally interactive experience. In one account I read that the audience was led into a candle-lit cellar where the film was played in complete darkness, freaks hiding in the shadow throwing various scene-relevant objects at the audience (flower pedals, sand, etc). Apparently these performance-centered exhibitions were the only way Harada allowed the film to be seen, and DVD rights were withheld for a very long time.