Archive for the ‘Theater & Film’ Category

Cliff Evans – EMPEREAN; Boston Bazaar Bizarre 2007

Sunday, December 9th, 2007

Cliff Evans

EMPYREAN
(Nov 9, 2007 – Jan 13, 08)
at the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum
Cliff Evans: Emperean

I’ve been trying to find more video screenings, with out attending mini film festivals. I think I have some good leads, this came up and I saw it. This temporary video-art by Cliff Evans, might be the ONLY contemporary piece of art in the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum– which is more known for its fantastic internal courtyard (now decked out in red poinsettias), leather bound books, doilies, old correspondence, and cool old furniture. The video piece was constructed of five screen projectors mounted the ceiling and projecting upon five widescreens (mounted lengthwise), three screens in the middle and two as the outer wings.

It started off with soothing electronic music playing and Brad Pitt and Angelina Jolie riding a camel into the desert and drawing the attention of locals, and paparazzi. As they brought their “celebrity” to the wasteland, many commercial trucks followed them, FedEx, etc, then the military drove in and many men parachuted into the desert. The place was then over-run by tourists, hospitality services, security contractors, military and commercial operations. Spas, tanks, religious preachers, pious people and thrill seekers. And then there was a weird/cool image of a multi-headed flying Cheetah with bird wings and human breasts, roaring and swooping down from the sky. Basically humanity is presented as lost among its animal pursuits. Does this human-system have a stopping point? How long can it sustain its own raging celebrity-party and self-satisfaction? The projection canvas is large but the video is short enough you can watch a few times to see all of the items.

All of the images that Cliff Evans used are found-photos cropped. segmented and animated in a MTV/documentary style. They soothing pan and zoom to tell the story of empire drunk on itself.

The rest of the Gardner Museum is much as it has been for the last several hundred-thousand-millenniums…. “Boston-beautiful” and quirky.

You can get an idea of Cliff Evans’s spacey detached multi-panel videos on YouTube:
15 Reasons to Go to War (part 1)

15 Reasons to Go to War (part 2)


Boston Bazaar Bizarre 2007!

Boston Bazaar Bizarre
I like going to this every year. It only lasts 6 hours, and I blew more money on funny craft-bling than I was expecting. But I do have to shop for the relatives in Alaska. I also bought a perfect bold graphic tote-bag and a handmade black and white comic for today’s secret Santa. The little ‘zine reminded me of my homer junior high school days, when my posse and I drew hilariously dumb black-and-white comic books….
Boston Bazaar Bizarre 2007
Boston Bazaar Bizarre 2007 - Inside the cyclorama
Boston Bazaar Bizarre 2007
Boston Police Department motorcycles

Friday fun, “Little Dieter needs to Fly”

Friday, November 30th, 2007

No Pictures

Bjørn Melhus, The Castle – The Meadow – The City (video) — Roebling Hall
Postcards from the Edge — James Cohan Gallery
Streams (video work) — Whitebox


Little Dieter Needs to Fly

“Little Dieter needs to Fly”

Wow this documentary by Werner Herzog was so much better than “Rescue Dawn”. It doesn’t just cover the 6 months that Dengler was captive, tortured, escaped and wandering through the forest in an hallucinatory hungry daze. This documentary covers Dengler’s life arc, which is far more interesting that “Rescue Dawn”.

Additionally, Dengler’s life story is far more inspirational tale of man struggling against his conditions, than the Christopher McCandless life story (as poorly told by Jon Krakauer).

Jet Li’s “Fearless” a.k.a. “Huo Yuanjia”

Sunday, November 25th, 2007

In “Fearless”, Jet Li, a Tibetan Buddhist and Kung Fu champion, brings his deeply personal vision of wushu to screen.. Wushu is not just a form of physical fighting but also a mental form of conflict and ultimately a path towards peace.

Earlier this month, I saw this film playing on a small blurry screen above the bar at Snacky’s in williamsburg. I was mesmerized by the story – even though they had turned off the sound and flipped the captions to Chinese characters. I was pulled in right about the time the hero lost his family in an act of revenge to one of his acts of revenge. It led to, of course, yet another act of revenge, but the hero paused and realized it had all be for naught. He then abandons his ginormous Chinese estate, and heads out to the mountains where distraught, he falls limp into a large river. He is rescued by a small village and taken in as one of their own. The water scenes, small flash-backs and the mountain scenery were gorgeous and immediately hooked me. I was actually sorry to leave Snacky’s.

So I bought the DVD, and enjoyed it later.

Though primarily an intimate movie about fearlessly conquering the “demon within,” it is also story of national pride and history. If you are interested in action films, peaceful philosophies, and Chinese history you should check it out. The film not only plunges head first into kinetic storytelling, it also fleshes out wushu tenets. And I also experienced it as a strong shout of independence. In this period of rising Chinese influence, this movie snaps into focus why I, if Chinese, would be proud to be living in a time of great national success, particularly in light of how the film portrayed the west’s domination of China. Fearless indeed.


Jet Li's
I’ll definitely be watching this again. But, I understand that a better 140 minute “Director’s cut” (aka. original version) includes more beautiful footage, better english subtitles and more about the hero’s spiritual growth. However, it is sadly not sold for the north american market, which only makes me want to find it more.

“Brendan” by Ronan Boone

Friday, November 16th, 2007

Brendan
by Ronan Noone
Directed by Justin Waldman

the Huntington

“Into the Wild” the movie, book and spectacle overwhelm the real story

Sunday, November 11th, 2007

In the mid 1990’s when I originally heard about Chris McCandless and his starvation while camping in Alaska, I, like many others thought it was sad story of another person ill equipped and disrespectful of nature. Though I was no longer living in Alaska, I know that many other Alaskans were saddened by what only appeared to be a normal news story. Peoples’ hearts went out to the McCandless family, but it’s a bit of a fact that people die in the Northern elements all the time, some are equipped for it and others are not.

However, I soon turned disgusted of the writer of the near novelization of Chris’s troubling journey and ultimate death. This author really made a mint of off Chris’s problems. I then stopped thinking off it, until that is, this summer when Hollywood-land mounted an hype-assault upon my quiet reason. The new movie, as it turns out, is mostly based upon the mythical story told in the book “Into the Wild”, and only loosely upon Chris’s real life and death

This book alone is spectacle by itself.. it is a throughly egotistical romance with the idea of ego-destruction through nature-escapism. Krakauer has been very open about the fact that he never billed himself as a journalist or that the pseudo biographical (and pseudo auto-biographical) book was even objective. Even so, it resonated with many suburbanites in the lower 48, and with cool dudes like Sean Penn. People ate up the themes of journeying across the country, the wild Alaskan settings, and the spectacle of a young man attempting dangerous ego-destruction without proper equipment and without any adult supervision.

But that was only part of it…

I think the ultimately enduring consensus of Chris’s life, is well explained below (link at bottom) and it feels more correct than Krakauer’s romantic vision. As recent news has shown, the kid wasn’t poisoned at all, he simply starved as he really could not take care of himself. As we are coming to learn, Krakauer constructed a near-literary work of hero-worship, when he really could have been writing about the tragic onset of mental illness.

Kachemak Bay. Homer Ak 2007


The publicity for this movie was equally disturbing. If the book was one influenced by the author’s own wanderings, the movie takes the ego-spectacle up a notch. The ironic thing is that if the kid was really on a vision quest the last thing he would have wanted was the circus his story created.Having grown up in Alaska, I’ve seen wide-eyed people both visit and relocate there. There are plenty of good people that have made the great state of Alaska home. They are living humble lives in humble homes and who are quite happy and in a respectful communion with their natural surrounds. People who choose to live a humble life far away from the buzzing dirty transformers and unrelenting commercialism found in most of American cities. Some of them maintain good relationships, have families, raise gardens and animals, live in the woods situated far from the main roads, and a few may even live entirely off-the-grid. These choices for healthier living are likely goals Chris could have enjoyed… But these humble travelers are not suffering from the same illness as was Chris. What is very tragic is that Chris would never quite achieve that level of peace with himself, his friends and the world.
At any rate, much of the movie’s pre-release coverage (like September’s issue of Outside magazine) was actually coverage of how Sean Penn wanted to *make* this glamorous movie, and the way he won the rights from the McCandless family to do so. And so after ten years of waiting, and the looming threat of another movie house actually making a similar movie, the family finally green lighted Sean Penn’s vision. This magazine, and other articles, plunged into the breathless details of life on the set, just how perfect the main actor was, funny stories of filming the shooting “the rapids”, and how Sean Penn got into a boat to show the main actor how to be fearless, etc. So the media coverage goes…blah, blah, blah, and I really do not care.The sadness of the true story is overwhelmed by the venal story telling and the crassness of the story tellers.

Because of this krackpot exploitative book from the 1990s, we have all had to endue months of hype regarding “How Sean Penn© hung in there ten years, to get to make an Important Movie™” with an “all star cast and crew”… I just can’t stand it, this movie’s self-important hype alone has negated much of the “importance™” of this boy’s needless death©. Ugh, please, I could go on..


The story of a young man and his suffering, packaged as a journey towards enlightenment, towards freedom from material ways and towards nature — is a great dramatic story. But in Chris’s case, the illness and the suffering was so powerful that his wandering and his railing could not diminish it. In Chris’s time of need, he turned his back on others who were feeling compassion towards him. Or was it Alex Supertramp who forced Chris to forgo human connections and send him on his long march north? (Read the links below for that interesting theory.)
Purple Bus in Alaska, with no Alex Supertramp in it...

Who really killed Christopher McCandless?

The links below are some of the better articles and posts I’ve read about the events from last decade, the shameless movie as well as the some mounting and overdue criticism of Jon Krakauer for creating the “Cult of Chris McCandless”

Read Doug O’Harra’s fascinating posts below as he crafts a fine theory about how Chris met his final end… just who killed Chris McCandless?


OUT OF THE WILD — By Doug O’Harra
Into The Wild: The False Being Within
— By Doug O’Harra

Also interesting:
McCandless’ fatal trek: Schizophrenia or pligrimage? — Respected author overlooks obvious.

Theories differ on the cause of McCandless’ death
— EXPERTS DISAGREE: The movie’s botanical villain is different from the book’s. And Krakauer changes the text in his book’s latest edition to protect his position, not to reflect the findings.
LOST MEN — David Denby’s sober review of the movie in the The New Yorker.

MFA: Jewish Film Festival “Starting out in the Evening”

Thursday, November 8th, 2007

Tonight was the last screening before the film’s brave commercial release next month. We saw it at the MFA during its participation in the Boston Jewish Film Festival. A nice and literary film about an aging writer who has clamped down his own life story in pursuing his ambitions. His life and his boring ten year novel project are “rebooted” after agreeing to help a graduated student write her thesis.
What I liked about this tender story of delusion: is the four main characters struggling with life’s marching forward and yet don’t fully see the struggle in front of them. Andrew Wagner’s direction was thoughtful as he brought the internal literary world of these characters’ minds (the screen play was based upon a novel) into the world of filmic action.

And of course there is Frank Langella -a guy who is consistently interesting, and whom I don’t see myself getting tired of his acting finesse.

The director answered questions after the movie. Though both are fairly mystical religions, he sounded more like a Buddhist than a Jew when talking about his outlook on life and the film’s emblematic message: “life is a struggle” and “the process is the reward”. I recommend the movie– however you should know that it is tender quiet moving story of people on the cusp of change, it has pretty fine acting but it has theatrically laden dialog at times.

Starting Out in the Evening

Director: Andrew Wagner
Country: USA, released 2007
Duration: 111 min., 35mm
In person: Director Andrew Wagner
Frank Langella, Lauren Ambrose, Lili Taylor

Frank Langella is Leonard Schiller, a 70-year-old Jewish writer whose novels are out of print. An ambitious and seductive graduate student, played by Lauren Ambrose (Six Feet Under), upends his carefully ordered life. Lili Taylor, as Schiller’s 39-year-old daughter, adds another superbly realized character to the mix.



A movie review here:
“Starting Out in the Evening” — This intimate and poignant film celebrates the old white male writer, a dying breed.

Every reader knows that the delicate emotional textures of a good book are the hardest things to re-create on film. Some filmmakers seem to know it, too: In adapting Brian Morton’s sturdily exquisite 1998 novel, “Starting Out in the Evening,” Andrew Wagner (who directed the 2004 feature “The Talent Given Us”) may not get every nuance of the book exactly right. But it’s rare to see a movie adaptation in which a filmmaker has taken so much care in translating the odd little qualities that make a particular novel special, to preserve the complex and fragile threads of feeling between characters that are often much easier to grasp on the page. “Starting Out in the Evening” is a small picture — it was shot on location in New York City, in high-definition video, in 18 days — but it’s from a filmmaker who’s used his brains to make up for any monetary resources he might have lacked. The picture feels both intimate and immediate, a model for what smart young filmmakers can do with good material.


Boston Jewish Film Festival
MFA Jewish Film Festival listings at the MFA

Frost Nixon another play in which Frank Langella shines..

“Control”, & watching the Red Sox during a Halloween party

Friday, October 26th, 2007

Check out the movie “Control”.
Step back in time and relive the dark days of musical success, but also misery, of Joy Division’s short time with us. A good music movie with freshly performed songs and atmospheric black and white cinematography. It sadly chronicles Ian Curtis’ punk life, worsening epilepsy and ultimately his sad suicide.

“The War” – Ken Burns in conversation with Christopher Lydon

Tuesday, October 23rd, 2007

One of the great things about living in Boston – all the excellent book events…

The War – A Film By Ken Burns and Lynn Novick

Directed by KEN BURNS

The War: An Intimate History, 1941-1945

Written by Geoffrey C. Ward and Ken Burns

Harvard Book Store hosted a discussion with Ken Burns and Christopher Lydon, regarding the documentary’s companion book on world war 2. The new PBS series “The War” recasts the war as a personal canvas for people from four towns. Filmmaker Ken Burns was questioned and probed by the ever ready and masterful conversation provocateur Christopher Lydon. This was actually a special event, and Ken Burn’s historical perspectives were often passionate and humane. So many people have been grateful for this series, coming up to him to thank him for shedding light on the personal and generational side to this war, and war in general.

Paraphrasing Ken Burns:

World War 2 had a sense of communal sacrifice. If I had been asked to do 50 things as a citizen, after 9-11, I and everyone within the sound of my voice would have done those 50 things. But in today’s world of individualized consumerism, we are never asked to give up anything. Immediately after 9-11 — I was essentially asked to go out and shop.

Q: What did you find different or common with the two series “Civil War” and “The War”?
A: Men talked about the same things. They were afraid, they were bored, they were hot, they were cold, they did good things, they did bad things, and they saw their friends die. (Ed. and perhaps, they also blocked out much of it and refused to talk much about the experience.)

“…in a time of Irony, the war cry is ‘huh?’ …”

He has been interviewed all over the TV and Radio spectrum, but this will likely remain the most revealing and essay-like interview that I’ve seen. (I also enjoyed the very short interview on The Daily Show with John Stewart, link below) After all the interviews he has done in the past month, Burns thanked Lydon for requiring him to actually use his brain.
Ken Burns and Christopher Lyon in conversation in Cambridge MA Oct 23, 2007


The Daily Show Interview of Ken Burns — dated 9-28-2007
Harvard Book Store — Ken Burns in conversation with Christopher Lydon.
A great hour-plus of sharp conversation. I look forward to seeing the 15 hour documentary on DVD.

Charles Mee interview on 360

Sunday, September 30th, 2007

Charles Mee talks about his latest play IPHIGENIA 2.0
Studio 360 interview of Charles Mee


Signature Theatre — now playing: IPHIGENIA 2.0 by Charles Mee

“Lady Chatterley” at the Brattle Theater

Wednesday, September 26th, 2007

LADY CHATTERLEY tells the story of a passion that is both innocent and subversive – one that transcends, without ever ignoring, class and social conventions. As Constance and Parkin nourish their mutual love, both enter into a radical realm where nature, sex and romance merge into one powerful experience. Winner of 5 Cesar Awards (the French ‘Oscar’), including Best Picture and Best Director.

Lady Chatterley (2006)
The first hour was tedious and creaky, but the styling picked up as the spring arrived. Nice little touches (like noticing grass moving in the wind, motorized wheelchair scene and the way the characters treat each other) don’t much change what amounts to just another remake.

Ate some bi bim bop and saw some fun live music afterwards.