
For years now, I have greatly admired the work of Quebecois director Denis Côté without ever exactly falling in love with it. Granted, I am not well acquainted with his earliest features. I first became aware of Côté's career with his 2009 film Carcasses, which examined the life and environment of a scrap-collecting loner, a film that had certan affinities with the documentary vignettes ...
2019-03-25 04:56:36 +0000 UTC
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Is cinephilia healthy? It's a question I suspect a lot of us ask ourselves from time to time, and although we may have our doubts, we keep coming back to the cinema, that artificial world, for pleasures and reassurances that our "real" lives cannot provide. As I have mentioned on various occasions, I became a hardcore cinephile after my first wife left me and I was living alone in relative isolation....
2019-03-21 04:43:01 +0000 UTC
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This midlength film, about Audrey (Campbell), a young literary executor researching the correspondence between her great-grandmother, Polish-Canadian poet Zofia Bohdanowiczowa, and Polish-American writer / Nobel Prize nominee Jozef Wittlin, is starkly, startlingly material-oriented. Much of its running time is devoted to Audrey poring over the physical letters and artifacts from the Harvard Archives ...
2019-03-17 03:33:53 +0000 UTC
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Although Soderbergh's latest opened in a few theaters (NY and LA, I think), this is a Netflix production. So in one respect, it's a film without film, a piece of cinema that exists in a still-evolving netherworld that is being negotiated and legislated, by audiences and critics and even the Academy. Making sure that form follows function, Soderbergh has not only made the film on an iPhone, insuring t...
2019-03-17 03:07:16 +0000 UTC
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They can use it for free.
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From the very beginning, Donald Trump has done very little to hide the fact that he was using the Presidency to make himself richer. He has laughed off the accusation, but never denied, that he was making policies for his own personal gain. In fact, many of his diehard supporters seem to enjoy this about Trump, like it’s a sign of gangster machismo – a literal “Don” getting away with in it plain sight.
But w...
2019-03-14 19:59:52 +0000 UTC
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I should be writing about Steven Soderbergh's (quite lovely) High Flying Bird in this space, but that can wait for a little while. While I used to enjoy the practice of writing a short something-something about every film I saw -- formerly at Letterboxd, and now mostly here -- the experience has been a bit stressful of late. This is partly due to problems with my health. I have had a migrain...
2019-03-14 01:33:20 +0000 UTC
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Med Hondo, one of the key figures in the history of African cinema, passed away on March 2 at the age of 82. Although his work is not nearly as well known anywhere as it ought to be, it has made more significant inroads in Europe (France in particular) than in the U.S., where he is virtually unknown. I had not heard of him until very recently, and while that in itself proves nothing -- there are lots...
2019-03-12 05:13:55 +0000 UTC
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A filmic portrait of a young man on the margins of society, Sauvage is precisely the kind of misguided liberal exercise that betrays a condescending attitude toward its subject under the guise of care. From its lackluster realist approach, which is clearly meant to signal raw, poetic immediacy but feels clumsy and second-hand, to its peripatetic, ambling plotline, Sauvage is a puppe...
2019-03-12 04:39:14 +0000 UTC
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Deborah Stratman's lovely new film is a collaboration with Barbara Hammer, comprised mostly of footage that Hammer shot in Guatemala in 1975 but never fashioned into a completed work. This material is both observational and incredibly well-composed, exhibiting the lyrical quality of a film like Bruce Baillie's Valentin de las Sierras, showing a particular way of looking at an environment wit...
2019-03-09 22:13:51 +0000 UTC
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The Magic Life of V is an interesting specimen, in that it actually becomes less compelling of a film the more we learn about its protagonist. In the beginning, we don't know a great deal about Veera, or "V" as she calls herself. We simply see her entering various LARPing scenarios -- one based on the Harry Potter universe, another that is vaguely futuristic and paramilitary, involv...
2019-03-06 19:12:14 +0000 UTC
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In what strikes me as a rather direct nod to Chris Marker and Edgar Morin's classic Le Joli Mai, Brett Story's new film has her traveling around New York City asking semi-random individuals whether they are optimistic about the future, and what they think it holds. Although the question provokes some interesting answers, and finds that people are perhaps not so much distributed along a polit...
2019-03-04 17:13:23 +0000 UTC
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Just a brief note on this one, since I turned it off at the 45 minute mark (with an hour left). This film is a highly objective, deeply unprejudiced look at "coaching" culture, from business retreats to personal-objective achievement seminars to YouTube ASMR channels. Portions of these scenes and environments are presented in seemingly modular fashion, with no obvious build or argument. Formally, the...
2019-03-02 04:28:19 +0000 UTC
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Although The Chambermaid is a strong film on its own merits, I found myself mentally comparing it with Roma as I watched it. Both films focus on relatively young women in service professions, showing them hard at work cleaning up after people who are higher on the socioeconomic ladder than they are. But Roma was too often maddeningly opaque, offering us a largely external v...
2019-03-01 03:42:41 +0000 UTC
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In different circumstances -- referring to highly abstract works of the avant-garde -- I have argued that the biggest risk that a work of art can take is being willing to be mistaken for nothing. In its own subtle way, The Plagiarists, directed by Peter Parlow and co-written by Robin Schavoir and filmmaker James N. Kientiz Wilkins, is just such an artwork, a film that is so negligible on its...
2019-03-01 00:29:15 +0000 UTC
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Leto (Kirill Serebrennikov, 2018)
On the face of it, Leto ["Summer"] is the sort of film that is probably better suited to the Un Certain Regard sidebar than the rare air of Competition. But then again, it's difficult for me, and I suspect others, to fully judge its aesthetic and intellectual impact. This is a film made by Russians for Russians, raising to the level of...
2019-02-25 18:27:10 +0000 UTC
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Quite by chance, I read two articles today that worked in tandem to make me reflect, not only on what I'm doing here, but what I am accomplishing or not accomplishing in my (minor) career as a writer and public citizen. It isn't as though the issues addressed were completely new to me, but they were expressed in a way that prompted me to think deeply about what they had to say.
The first was
2019-02-24 21:28:56 +0000 UTC
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Everybody Knows (Asghar Farhadi, 2018)
Or, as I'm sure Mike D'Angelo would say, "Everybody Whiffs." After going from strength to strength for four films straight (possibly even more -- I still have not seen Fireworks Wednesday), Farhadi turns in an actual bad film. While I'm sure it will seem like blasphemy, or at least an unmerited slap in the face, to make the compar...
2019-02-24 19:15:00 +0000 UTC
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Sorry for the lack of posts, guys. I just had a writing deadline, followed by a spike of activity in my copy editing job, and now followed up with a stack of papers to grade. But I will be back very shortly with some T/F selections, stuff from Berlin, and some New Directors / New Films entries, all in good time. Thanks for your patience and, as always, your patronage.
2019-02-22 17:56:09 +0000 UTC
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It seems like only a few weeks ago (and in fact it was) that I was commenting on Wang Xiaoshuai's Shanghai Dreams in this very spot. And my overall assessment of the filmmaker was not very positive. I found him to be a lackluster social realist whose work, while certainly competent, was almost deliberately averse to surprise.
Well, it's always nice to have to eat those kind of wo...
2019-02-19 01:38:45 +0000 UTC
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French cinema's favorite pervy uncle is back, and he's using a MacBook Pro to create a strange approximation of the sublime. Brisseau's latest exhibits the nubile flesh to which his audience has become accustomed, although to be fair, one of his three actresses is probably approaching middle-age and is a less glaring example of someone who shouldn't be caught within 100 feet of the old lech. But it's...
2019-02-15 19:42:35 +0000 UTC
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The English title of Les Proies, "The Game," is a bit misleading. I suppose de Contes did not want to call it "The Quarry" because of the multiple meanings of that word, and "The Prey" sounds far more dramatic than the film actually is. But "game" implies its own double-meaning which is not entirely applicable here. There is no game-playing in this film. It depicts a group of men who are dea...
2019-02-15 01:37:18 +0000 UTC
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This compilation film, which won the Tiger competition at Rotterdam, is subtle in its construction, so you might not immediately notice that it actually proposes a radical new relationship between spectator and performer, something that takes us beyond mere film. Present.Perfect. is composed of segments of live streams from various individual's web channels across China, "anchors" who host t...
2019-02-13 06:09:31 +0000 UTC
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(Over the next few weeks, I'll be writing about films that are screening at the True/False Festival, that screened at Rotterdam, or are coming up at Berlin. If you are curious as to which festival(s) a given film played in, check the tags at the bottom of the post.)
The last thing that experimental cinema needed was another train film. The connection between trains and the avant-garde has been ...
2019-02-11 01:11:16 +0000 UTC
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Wow, this one's a doozie. I had forgotten just how much anarchic activity and social commentary Imamura could layer into a film, and at times both the plot and the frame are full to bursting with wild images and ideas. It's certainly a pleasure to see a film so replete and yet so formally controlled. And at the same time, Pigs and Battleships is a somewhat exhausting experience, a bit like a...
2019-02-09 03:07:17 +0000 UTC
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The choice is yours:
You can get with this:

Or you can get with that:

2019-02-06 05:34:52 +0000 UTC
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What should I watch next? One of these exciting new selections from IFFR, or a classic I haven't seen, or a new release?
2019-02-04 06:51:15 +0000 UTC
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A Wild Stream (Nuria Ibáñez Castañeda, 2018)
Ashore (aka Terra Franca) (Leonor Teles, 2018)
There's something about fishing that just seems to appeal to contemporary documentary filmmakers. Maybe it's the fact that, aside from a few minor technological improvements, it hasn't changed very much for hundreds of years, and so watching (mostly) men a...
2019-02-04 04:34:02 +0000 UTC
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This film was my first extended exposure to Iranian independent Mani Haghighi. I say "extended," because several years ago I started watching, but did not finish, his debut film Men At Work, about a group of guys on a road trip up in the mountains who encounter a semi-precarious looking rock monolith and become irrationally obsessed with knocking it down. It struck me at the time as a bit to...
2019-02-01 20:55:47 +0000 UTC
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How to we distinguish between between art and real life? The Russian Formalist Victor Shklovsky argued that art was a process of estrangement, putting us at a distance from the familiar so that, in a dialectical reversal, it would come closer to us again, less habituated in our perception and instead renewed, so that it may shine forth. (His often cited dictum is that art "makes the stone stony.") By...
2019-01-31 20:54:25 +0000 UTC
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The real question here is, do we really need another film about the Vincent Van Gogh story? While there's no denying his stellar achievements or his influence on the modern art that followed in his wake, Van Gogh has become so ingrained in the global consciousness as a story that it becomes harder and harder to see the paintings themselves. What's more, the particular circumstances of his au...
2019-01-30 15:54:18 +0000 UTC
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