Friday, July 13, 2012

DAYS OF HEAVEN: CHECKIN' OUT THE GROUND UNDERNEATH



As I mentioned some time ago, Terrence Malick's 1978 film Days of Heaven is pretty close to my favorite film of all-time.  For me, it's one of those films that never gets old, each subsequent viewing yielding new discoveries.  

The film begins a one-week engagement at the Laurelhurst Theater today.  It's really something that needs to be seen on the big screen at least once.  I've decided to share an essay that I wrote about Days of Heaven some seven years ago for a film class.  Looking it over again, it's very much, for better or worse, a snapshot of where I was as a writer back then.  

If you haven't seen the film, you probably shouldn't read the essay, since it's more analysis driven than review-based, so, yeah, there are SPOILERS.  Here we go:




Terrence Malick’s Days of Heaven is a testament to an acuity of vision rarely seen in modern cinema. The film is a period piece that transcends its time and setting to paint with broad strokes whose trajectories can be read and applied universally to any era.

After opening with a collage of vintage pictures intended to apply setting for the action, we meet Abby and Bill who are both working difficult jobs in what appear to be less than safe environs.  Bill, who is shoveling coal, has an argument with his foreman that ends in violence.  He flees the scene, his job undoubtedly terminated.  Linda, a girl first seen in a still image at the opening of the film, is revealed as our narrator and Bill’s younger sister.  Also made clear is the relationship between Abby and Bill.  They are lovers, though Linda tells us “they told everybody they were brother and sister”.




One of the themes with which Malick deals here is the plight of the unskilled worker in America.  The disparity of wealth between the farmhands and the farmer is so pronounced that the issue of abusive power gained through economic gluttony becomes obvious very early.  The film understands that applied capitalism requires an underclass to exist, one that does not reap rewards or benefit from the system.  The farmhands are mostly seen laboring in the fields.  Linda tells us, “come the time the sun went up ‘til it went down, they was workin’ all the time. You didn’t work, they’d ship you right outta there.  They don’t need ya.  They can always get somebody else”.

When Abby is docked pay and Bill is threatened with the loss of employment for questioning the decision, we see just how trapped the workers are by the class-based system their world presents.  The farmhands don’t just work in the fields; they live there too.  We see them cooking in the fields, huddling together for warmth.  The lone structure on the horizon is the farmer’s house.  A modern edifice equipped with electricity, it contains more rooms that the single farmer could possibly require for himself.  And yet, when it begins to snow, Abby and Bill have to cover themselves in straw to compensate for the lack of a roof over their head.  To further distance the farmer’s economic standing from that of his laborers, we’re given access to him lounging outdoors on a couch, vacantly admiring his hat, as the farm foreman crunches numbers revealing the harvest to be the most profitable ever.  All the while the sounds of work carry over from the fields.




The film’s structure is a unique synthesis resulting from the simultaneous adherence to and rejection of traditional narrative-based cinema.  The emphasis on the visual element of the film heightens our awareness that the story is being drawn from memory.  That our narrator is a young girl allows us to accept the abstractions and playfulness of youthful misunderstanding that naturally occur as she relays her story.  Whereas a grown narrator might have insight concerning the complexities of adult relationships, Linda’s worldview boils everything down to the sparest of details.  In her mind, life is hard but there’s always the possibility of overcoming it all, becoming a mud doctor and “checkin’ out the ground underneath".  The film does create a decipherable world with characters that make choices, have conflict and, as a result, are handed consequences for those actions.  It even draws from classic literature for its major story arc, but more on that later.

Abby and Bill, thrust into lean times and situations, are characters ripe for the exploration of moral imbalance.  While it’s easy to identify the types they embody, it’s the lines that are crossed that eventually define them.   Early on, Linda explains the reason for the brother/sister story.  She says, “My brother didn’t want anybody to know.  You know how people are…you tell them somethin’ they start talkin’”.  The lie, and the need to protect it, weighs heavily on both of them.  When another worker asks Bill if his sister keeps him warm at night, Bill reacts violently.  On several occasions, Abby tells Bill to conceal his affections because people are watching.




The couple’s moral fortitude is most notably challenged when the farmer develops an interest in Abby.  The harvest season near its end, the farmer asks her to stay on with him.  Bill, in the act of stealing medical supplies for a wound Abby sustained in the fields, overhears his employer being given a year to live by the physician.  Knowing this, Bill views the farmer’s advances as opportunity rather than competition.  In a plot development borrowed from Henry James’ “Wings of the Dove”, he encourages Abby to tell him she’ll stay.  Since Malick reversed the gender roles of James’ tale, Bill can be viewed as more than merely opportunistic—he’s become a sort of pimp.  In the same manner in which he justified lying about their relationship, Bill tries to rationalize his proposition.  Perhaps unable to fully embrace every aspect of the plan for himself, he implies that part of his motivation derives from the other farmhands looking at her ass like she’s a whore.  Despite his excuses, he’s aware that no justification will diminish the essential wrong of what he’s suggesting.





In the end, the film judges them all.  The farmer, his growing suspicion and jealousy represented by the feverishly churning weather vane atop his house, finally observes Abby and Bill in one too many affectionate moments.  Everything comes to a head when, in a sequence that smacks of divine retribution; locusts descend on the wheat fields.  While the workers try to smoke the insects out of the fields, the farmer attacks Bill.  He inadvertently lights a wagon on fire that sets the fields ablaze.  When the farmhands try to put it out, he screams, “let it burn!”  Consumed in fire, the field becomes hell on earth, confirming Linda’s earlier suspicion that “the devil was on the farm”.  It all catches up with them. Bill, in self-defense, fatally stabs the farmer.  The farm foreman and local law enforcement chase Bill down and kill him.  Abby has to endure the loss of both the men in her life.  And Linda? She’s forced to witness the judgment falling upon them.





With a look and emotional space all its own, Days of Heaven dances around the average testifying to the unique vision of its director.  Achieving clarity and identification within impressionistic borders, Malick has given us a gift not easily digested or forgotten.





Days of Heaven runs for one-week-only at the Laurelhurst Theater beginning Friday, July 13th.  More info available here.

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NE CHANGE RIEN (CHANGE NOTHING): A STUDY IN INTIMACY AND DISTANCE




Ne Change Rien (Change Nothing) unfurls in slow motion glory like the opening of a flower to meet the morning sun.  And thanks to the attentive, fly-on-the-wall presence of filmmaker Pedro Costa, we're front and center for the blooming of actress/musician Jeanne Balibar's second album as she and the musicians working with her conceive and record the songs that populate it.






As a music documentary, Ne Change Rien operates far outside the standard, exposition-filled format that most viewers have come to expect from the genre.  With the exception of a few exchanges between the musicians and a spare aside or two to the camera, Balibar and her band are entirely focused on the task at hand, all while Costa's cameras silently capture the act of creation as it occurs.  Those unfamiliar with Balibar's vocal delivery will find it resides pleasantly somewhere in the neighborhood of Brigitte Fontaine, Marianne Faithfull, and, at its most dramatic moments, Nico.  The surprising derivation from that mode of vocalization: when we're privy to Balibar's opera rehearsals and lessons with her private voice instructor.





Costa shoots the action in exceptionally high-contrast images that, for the majority of the film, are swimming in darkness.  The presence of black within the majority of each frame is so pervasive that it comes as a complete shock when the polarity shifts here and there, moving to compositions bathed in brilliant white.  So dramatic is the shift, the band seems nearly naked in these moments, unprotected as they are by the shadows.





This is a breathtakingly beautiful film, one where the tone of the music and the look of the images are matched perfectly.  It's an effortless study in intimacy and distance, among the best documentaries I've seen in recent times on the topic of the creative process.  Highly recommended.





Ne Change Rien (Change Nothing) screens at the NW Film Center's Whitsell Auditorium (in the Portland Art Museum) on Friday, July 13th at 7pm and Sunday, July 15th at 5pm.  More info available here.


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Thursday, July 12, 2012

CINEFAMILY INVADES PORTLAND THIS WEEKEND



Los Angeles-based theater the Cinefamily is taking over a screen at the Hollywood Theatre for a series of special events this weekend.  Unaware of what Cinefamily is all about?  Here's a quick blurb from their website to catch you up to speed:

The Cinefamily’s mission is to foster a spirit of community and a sense of discovery, while reinvigorating the movie-going experience. Like campfires, sporting events and church services, we believe that movies work best as social experiences. They are more meaningful, funnier and scarier when shared with others. 

The Cinefamily was founded in 2007 by brothers Dan and Sammy Harkham and Hadrian Belove, founder of Cinefile Video. We currently average 14 shows per week, many of which are enhanced with special guests, live music, dance parties, potlucks and other kinds of social fun. Last year, 53,352 patrons visited the Cinefamily in person, and 1.5 million were reached by the Cinefamily livestream.

Those wanting a more visual representation of the work being done by the organization could easily spend hours wading through the Cinefamily vimeo page.

Co-founder Hadrian Belove will serve as an ambassador of the theater's mission for the Portland events, bringing with him three unique presentations for PDX audiences to enjoy.  First up on Friday night is a program called 100 Most Outrageous F-CKS.  According to the press release:

A psyche-shattering presentation featuring the most outrageous clips of copulation across the history of film! Since its inception, the motion picture has titillated our collective senses in more ways than you can shake a…well, let’s just say in a lot of ways. From the shiny mainstream to the slimy underground, from the restrained to the risqué, from the prudish to the piggish, sexual images have soaked cinema with their uncanny ability to turn peoples’ heads, curl their toes and make them feel all funny inside — and since the Cinefamily truly believes in the Catherine Breillat-approved adage that “sex is comedy”, it’s time to get real funny. Tonight we celebrate the absolute finest in demented on-screen porkage, alongside every conceivable combination of limbs, lips, etc. Bring a date (or at least someone you need to broach certain topics with…)!






Also on Friday, Hadrian will present Lost in the Desert.  It's "a South African kids’ movie sadistic to the point of absurdity, submitting its lone boy protagonist Dirkie, poor eight-year old Dirkie, to a cavalcade of traumas and tribulations punishing in their accumulation, and positively Christ-like in their extremity. This movie is either the bleakest of godless nightmares, or the blackest, most hilarious comedy ever concocted–and made for children, no less. Mel Gibson would flinch at what happens to this kid. And, unbelievably, the film was directed by the wee actor’s da. Stranded in the Kalahari without water, Dirkie biblically wanders the desert with his pet terrier where he is harassed by hyenas, repeatedly injured, sleep-deprived, psychologically tortured, and finally left passed out and half-buried in the sand looking like an image from an Arrabal film. Disturbing and relentless right up to its oblique, ambiguous and haunting last shot…and, oh, those dead puppies in the sand…dead puppies in the sand…"






Saturday evening brings an even more playful side of Cinefamily to town when Mr. Belove will lead Portland in a round of the 5 Minutes Game.  Need a lil' more info?  Here it is:
We’re firm believers in “Every movie is interesting for at least its first five minutes”, those fascinating moments when you’re still entering the new world a film presents you, and trying to figure out what the hell’s going on. What we’re gonna do is choose fifteen movies you’ve likely never seen before (with most, if not all the films unavailable on DVD), line ‘em up, and only show you the first five minutes of each, not counting their opening credits. After all that, you, the audience, gets to vote on which film out of the fifteen we all then watch in its entirety.








NSFW!! 100 Most Outrageous Fucks (trailer) from Cinefamily on Vimeo.






The Cinefamily presents:
100 Most Outrageous F-CKS at the Hollywood Theatre on Friday, July 13th at 7:30pm.  More info available here.
Lost in the Desert at the Hollywood Theatre on Friday, July 13th at 9:30pm.  More info available here.

5 Minutes Game at the Hollywood Theatre on Saturday, July 14th at 7:30pm.  More info available here.


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JACKPOT RECORDS presents FRIDAY THE 13TH PART III IN 3D



Tired of only celebrating patriotic holidays in July?  Well, Jackpot Records has got your back when in comes to commemorating the spookiest day outside of Halloween (and/or secretaries day).  Tomorrow night, they're hosting a rare theatrical screening of Friday the 13th part III as it was originally released back in 1982...in 3D!!! 

This third chapter in the co-ed slaying adventures of Jason Voorhees was directed by Steve Miner, who also helmed the second film in the series, as well as the far scarier, mid-80s C. Thomas Howell vehicle Soul Man.

Here's a little more info, plucked straight from Jackpot's press release for the event:

Friday the 13th Part III is the third film in the Friday the 13th series. Released in 1982, it was the first film in the series to feature Jason Voorhees wearing the hockey mask that has become his prominent trademark. Friday the 13th Part III was released theatrically in 3-D, and is notable as the first Paramount Pictures film produced in 3-D since 1954.


This 1982 film, upon it's initial release mainly played the drive-in circuit and was rarely shown in 3D. Now, we are giving you another chance to catch all manner of sharp objects being thrust your direction...and if you're lucky an eyeball might pop onto your lap!







Friday the 13th part III in 3D plays one-night-only at the Bagdad Theater on Friday, July 13th at 8pm.  More info available here.

 

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Sunday, July 8, 2012

NW FILM CENTER'S TOP DOWN ROOFTOP CINEMA NEEDS A HELPING HAND



Call it a mixed blessing, if you will, but the phenomenal success of the NW Film Center's annual Top Down rooftop cinema series has presented its organizers with a unique problem to solve.  Bottom line, the audience has outgrown the outdoor screen upon which the summertime screenings are projected.  It's reached the point where those unlucky enough to be at the back of the crowd have to squint in order to even be able to tell that there's a movie being projected at all.

As no doubt many of you are aware, the Film Center is a regional, non-profit media arts center, not exactly the kind of organization that tends to have much petty cash hidden away for emergencies of this variety.  Fortunately, we live in the age of crowd-funding where websites like Kickstarter or IndieGoGo allow individuals to throw down a few bones in support of the artists, organizations and causes they love. 




Can you tell where we're going with this?  Yes, Top Down needs your help to make this year's outdoor film series an enjoyable experience for all in attendance.  They've got a Kickstarter campaign in progress as well as a winning season of Thursday night screenings lined-up for Portland audiences.  A donation of any size will help ensure that the NW Film Center is able to reach their goal and purchase a screen large enough for all to experience a little cinema under the stars.

And what to expect of this year's films?  Well, as usual, it's an eclectic mix of crowd pleasers ranging from an old favorite from the great Preston Sturges to a campy children's entertainment starring Don Knotts.  Also on the schedule, one of local film hero Gus Van Sant's best films and a rock and roll musical for the new millennium.  All in all, a series of events worthy of your patronage.

Here, again, is the link for the fundraising campaign, complete with details of the different rewards available for each level of support.  This link will allow you to peruse the specifics of this year's schedule.  And, because who doesn't love trailers, here are the coming attractions:





















The NW Film Center's Top Down rooftop cinema series kicks off on Thursday, July 26th at the Hotel deLuxe's parking garage (located at SW 15th & Yamhill).  The opening night film is Preston Sturges' 1942 screwball comedy The Palm Beach Story.

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Thursday, July 5, 2012

RAIDERS OF THE LOST ARK: WEARING THE HAT, GRABBING THE WHIP





Film snob or not, there aren't too many fans of the cinematic arts out there who can deny having at least some love for Raiders of the Lost ArkSteven Spielberg's 1981 homage to the serialized action material that powered his imagination as a child delivers on so many levels that very few of the action/adventure films that followed it, including Spielberg's sequels in the Indiana Jones series, feel as fresh or full of possibility as Raiders does.





Beginning tomorrow, PDX gets another chance to gather together in a theatrical setting to watch Harrison Ford wearing the hat, grabbing the whip, and transforming into the character he was born to play (yeah, I hear ya Star Wars fans--we'll just have to agree to disagree on this one).  The Hollywood Theatre's booked a 4-day run of the brand new 35mm print of the film.  One hopes that it won't be the last time that it's shown in town on actual film but, given the rush by the studios to erase analog exhibition, I wouldn't necessarily count on future opportunities to experience this king among blockbusters in this traditional and superior format.





Raiders of the Lost Ark begins a four-day run at the Hollywood Theatre on Friday, July 6th.  More info available here.

 

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THE BALLAD OF GENESIS & LADY JAYE and GRAND ILLUSION



One gets the feeling while watching The Ballad of Genesis and Lady Jaye that musician and artist Genesis P-Orridge's entire life is a performance.  Anyone with any familiarity with his work in the groundbreaking industrial and experimental electro acts Throbbing Gristle and Psychic TV might have already had an inkling that this is the case; at any rate, Marie Losier's documentary portrait of Genesis and his wife and collaborator Lady Jaye does little to dispel such assumptions.





While the film does delve into the highlights of Genesis' past, it's chiefly an examination of his and Lady Jaye's pandrogyne project, a living, breathing performance piece wherein both members of the couple underwent various surgeries in order to resemble the other.  It's a fascinating topic that might have been better served by a more direct and confrontational mode of documentation.  As it stands, The Ballad of Genesis and Lady Jaye is a fluttering, dreamlike journey through a willfully individualistic consciousness (all narration comes from Genesis, as Lady Jaye passed away in 2007), often interesting but sometimes frustratingly short on narrative signposts.






The Ballad of Genesis & Lady Jaye begins its run at Cinema 21 on Friday, July 6th.  More info available here.






What can you say about a film that's already been qualified by so many others as the greatest anti-war feature ever made?  Jean Renoir's Le Grande Illusion (Grand Illusion) retains all its power some 75 years after its release.  Perhaps it's because nothing has changed; we still fight wars, the indomitable spirit of nationalism drives those efforts, and it almost never yields anything of value for the individual.  Built into those observations, Renoir fashioned an insightful analysis of class manners, emphasizing in particular their inability to withstand the brutality of war.





To commemorate the film's anniversary, Rialto Pictures has released a newly-restored 35mm print that trumps all previous restorations.  Both sound and image now have a crispness that was obscured in previous theatrical prints and home video versions.  As for the story, it still casts a hypnotic hold on this viewer.  First time viewers might notice the strong resemblance to John Sturges' popular 60s film, The Great Escape.  For those who haven't had the pleasure of seeing the film,  here's a rare chance to view it as it was meant to be seen, projected in 35mm onto a large theater screen. 






Grand Illusion begins its week-long run at Cinema 21 on Friday, July 6th.  More info available here.


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