Showing posts with label Rainer Werner Fassbinder. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Rainer Werner Fassbinder. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 21, 2012

PDX hung out w/ Wim Wenders @ Cinema 21 last Thursday!!!


It didn't matter how tired I was after so many PIFF screenings.  There was no way I was gonna miss out on Wim Wenders' appearance at Cinema 21 last week.  The man is a personal hero of mine, his fluidity of process continually inspiring my own approach to creative work.

There's a unique flavor of narrative freedom saturated with resigned nostalgia present in the best of Wenders' work (Alice in the Cities, Lightning Over Water, Paris, Texas, and The American Friend, to name just a few).  Even if you've only seen a couple of his movies, his style is unmistakable, though his path to getting there varies from project to project.


One of the New German Cinema pack (a name given by film journalists to a group of post-reconstruction era German auteurs of the time that also included Werner Herzog, Rainer Werner Fassbinder, Hans-Jürgen Syberberg, etc.) that sprung into the limelight during the 1970s, Wenders, like Herzog, is one of the few who grew into an international artist, working outside of Germany regularly, spreading his European sensibilities beyond the borders of his homeland.

Presently, he's promoting his most recent film, Pina, the Oscar-nominated, 3D documentary that presents the work of the late choreographer/dance company director Pina Bausch.  It's why he showed up in our small burg, introducing the film, as well as sticking around to answer a few questions from the audience after the 7pm screening. 

Before the film, Wenders asked if anyone had ever been to a small village named Wuppertal, where the film is set.  A couple of hoots from the audience either suggested that, yes, a few people had visited, or that the many beers being sold in the lobby were inspiring an agreeable conviviality bordering on benign deception; either way, it was clear that the audience was already in the palm of Wim's hand.


The film itself is a wonderful use of stereoscopic technology.  Even more than Herzog's Cave of Forgotten Dreams,  I can't imagine how reduced the experience would be by seeing the film in a two-dimensional presentation.  It requires the illusion of defined 3D space to properly convey the dances that Pina and her company conceived together.  Beyond that, it's a beautiful introduction to Pina's work, even to a dance neophyte such as myself.

Post-screening, Wim admitted that if Pina had not passed shortly before shooting on the project began the film would have been an entirely different picture.  He said his original vision was to make a film about Pina's eyes, the way she saw, and how it influenced her work.  After Bausch's death, the dancers convinced Wenders that there was still a film that could be made about Pina; one that still included the four numbers that Pina had wanted in the project.

On their own, those dance pieces were not enough to constitute a film and Wenders found himself in need of an appropriate solution for supplementing the material.  He relied on the dance company's intimate knowledge of Pina's process to inform his own ability to add to the planned material, devising a film that included additional dances prompted by a complex series of (Pina's) questions answered by danced responses.  Those additions, all filmed outside the studio, add a harmonizing playfulness that breathes much life into the film.  Yet again, another example of Wenders' ability to work outside the box to great results.


If you'd like to hear Wenders speak more about the project, why not listen to the most recent edition of the NW Film Center's Adjust Your Tracking podcast, featuring Film Center staffer/journalist Erik McClanahan's phone conversation with him.  Hit the link to tune in.


All photos are courtesy of Viva Las Vegas, who was lucky enough to be in the front row for Wenders' Q&A.  Thanks again, Viva!

Also many thanks to both Cinema 21 and PIFF/NW Film Center for partnering to bring Wenders to PDX!  A great night, folks. 


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Tuesday, October 4, 2011

Welcome Back...it's raining again in PDX

Hey, it's been a while.  This lil' experiment in blogging got put on the back burner for a number of reasons.  My wife and I are having a baby in less than a month.  I've been working on a really exciting non-fiction film project.  And there's the day job, of course.  I'm sure that anyone reading this can identify with how quickly time disappears if you let it.


My love of movies certainly hasn't diminished; just the amount of time I have to go out to see them.  To that end, when I do find the time to blog, the content that is discussed here is likely to include home video and television, as well as the occasional first-run theatrical stuff that had previously been the exclusive subject of this site.  I figured I'd open it up a bit and maybe that would make it easier to post more often.

So, um...welcome back:




This whole notion of "opening up" the style of the blog will likely include shorter, topical postings, as well as a few longer ones here and there.  If I encounter an online article about the decline of 3D cinema, for instance, I might post it, jot down a few thoughts of my own and invite others to comment on the topic.  As soon as this entry goes live, I'll go ahead and enable comments for all posts on the blog (a feature I'd previously kept disabled), so feel free to comment on this or any future (or past) posts.

As for the first regular review in many months, I'll be uploading a look at Amer, which is making its dvd and blu-ray debut this week.  It should be up within the hour, so keep an eye out for it.

And, finally, it'd feel weird to not at least mention a couple of pop culture crumbs that I've run into and enjoyed lately, so--briefly--here we go:

The NW Film Center recently hosted a four-night run of Rainer Werner Fassbinder's "lost" 1973 sci-fi epic, World on a Wire.  I happily rejected the opportunity to see (the seemingly ubiquitous) Drive in favor of the catching the limited run feature...and, MAN, was it worth it!  I'll probably post in more depth about World on a Wire in the future, either soon or when it hits blu-ray and dvd next year.




I also caught a mid-August showing of Andrei Tarkovsky's 1979 Stalker (also at the NWFC).  It's long been my favorite film by the Russian master but I'd never had the chance to see it theatrically.  All those beautiful textures blown up larger than life...you can be sure that I was in heaven.




Last night, I streamed the first episode of Ken Burns and Lynn Novick's latest documentary project for public television, Prohibition.  While I completely get that many people aren't down with the very much defined style that Burns has employed in his decades long career, I was drawn in by Burns usual attention to detail and his ability to unearth lost kernels of our shared national history.  The take away from episode one?  That, as is still the case in modern American life, much of what the temperance movement of the 20s and 30s was about can be linked to entrenched ideologies about how others should conduct themselves in society.  If this doesn't sound familiar, you're probably not keeping up with the news of the day.




I've also been diggin' the hell outta the new Wilco album and this compilation of tunes by Malian singer Sorry Bamba.






A quick reminder:  we're still on Facebook and, every once in a while, an exclusive post will end up on that page, so hit us up there and be sure to "like" the page while you're at it.

And that's pretty much it for now.  Like I said, keep an eye out for that review of Amer.  It should be up within the hour.  And, since those of us living in the Pacific Northwest are currently welcoming the return of old friend "the rain," I'll leave you with this:





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