25.6.09

Locarno Film Festival: Leopard of Honour 2009 to William Friedkin


The Swisscom Leopard of Honour for the 62nd edition of the Locarno International Film Festival will be awarded to American director William Friedkin, and To Live and Die in L.A. (1985) starring William L. Petersen and Willem Dafoe will screen on the Piazza Grande to mark the occasion. A masterclass will also take place at the Spazio Cinema (Forum) and is open to the public.

Born in 1935 in Chicago, William Friedkin made his directorial début with Good Times (1967), a musical starring Sonny & Cher. Four years later he had his first major hit with The French Connection (1971), which won five Oscars, including Best Director and Best Film. Friedkin followed this with The Exorcist (1973), which broke box office records and is still considered by many today to be one of the most terrifying films ever made. It won ten Oscar nominations and a Golden Globe for Best Director.


The 18 feature films William Friedkin has made to date include Sorcerer (1977) with Roy Scheider, Cruising (1981) with Al Pacino, The Hunted (2003) with Tommy Lee Jones and Benicio del Toro, plus the more recent Bug (2006) with Ashley Judd, screened at the Directors Fortnight at Cannes.

Since 1998 he has also staged a dozen operas all over the world and he is currently working on Puccini’s La Fanciulla del West for the Paris Opera.

Frédéric Maire, the Festival’s Artistic Director, comments «From action to horror, from thriller to fantasy, maverick William Friedkin has revolutionised genre cinema from within the very heart of the Hollywood system. Still going strong after 40 years in the business, this virtuoso and perfectionist director still holds his audience in thrall through a cinematic style that is both spectacular and firmly rooted in reality, and the dark world he conjures, reflecting the evils of our society ».

Every year, the Locarno Festival’s Leopard of Honour pays tribute to a major filmmaker still at work. Previous recipients include Manoel de Oliveira, Jean-Luc Godard, Joe Dante, Ken Loach, Ermanno Olmi, Abbas Kiarostami, Wim Wenders, Alexander Sokurov, Hou Hsiao-Hsien and, in 2008, Amos Gitai.

From this year on, the Leopard of Honour will be supported by Swisscom, one of the four main sponsors of the Locarno Festival.


A los 62 años, murió Farrah Fawcett


Estaba enamoradísimo de ella de chico...

Farrah Fawcett, the star of "Charlie's Angels" who has been fighting a nearly three-year battle with cancer, died Thursday at the age of 62.

She died at 9:28 a.m. PT in a Santa Monica hospital.

In 2006, the Hollywood golden girl was diagnosed with anal cancer, and has waged a public battle with the disease ever since.

Fawcett became a television star when she burst onto the scene in 1976, playing one-third of the female crime-fighting trio in "Charlie's Angeles."

She left the show after one season and starred in a film, "Somebody Killed Her Husband," which was a flop. She played more serious roles in the 1980s and 1990s, and won critical praise playing an abused wife in "The Burning Bed."

Barbara Walters, who had been in constant contact with Fawcett's family, said Thursday morning that Fawcett would likely not make it through to the end of the day.

"She's had her last rites," Walters told ABC's Good Morning America.


'Transformers' has $60.6 million day (Variety)


Es lo que hay...

Grossing $60.6 million, Paramount's sequel "Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen" easily scored the best opening day ever for a Wednesday release at the domestic box office.

Previous record-holder was "Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix," which grossed $44.2 million in its first day.

Par will release an official Wednesday number Thursday morning.

"Transformers 2," playing in more than 4,200 theaters in the U.S., has a strong shot at eclipsing the $152.4 million earned by "Spider-Man 2" in its first five days. That film opened on the same Wednesday in 2004.

The opening day haul in the U.S. included $16 million in midnight runs, the best run ever for a film released on a Wednesday. And it's the third-best of all time after "The Dark Knight" ($18.5 million) and "Star Wars: Episode III -- Revenge of the Sith" ($16.9 million).

The sequel also is cleaning up overseas, where it's now playing in virtually every major territory, save for Italy and India.

On Wednesday, film saw boffo opening numbers in both Australia and Korea, two key markets for the franchise. Grossees in each territory exceeded the performance of the original "Transformers."

"Revenge of the Fallen" got off to a sizzling start in the U.K. and Japan, where it opened early over the weekend. Pic grossed $19.6 million from 833 runs to top the international B.O. chart for the weekend.

In Blighty, pic grossed north of $14 million from 517 locations to come within 3% of the opening of "The Dark Knight" last summer. Sequel outperformed the original "Transformers" by 71% and "Spider-Man 2" by 18%.

Action remains a gigantic draw overseas, evidenced by the turnout for the first "Transformers." That film earned $51 million in South Korea alone, followed by $47.5 million in the U.K.

Like the domestic box office, the international B.O. is primed for a big-budget action tentpole.

Overseas, the highest-grossing summer actioner to date is "Terminator Salvation" ($196.5 million).

Last summer a number of Hollywood event pics logged boffo biz. This summer has been sluggish in comparison. Four films last year jumped the $300 million mark, led by "Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull" ($401.3 million), "Dark Knight" ($375.1 million) and "Hancock" ($326.2 million).

Domestically, estimates have "Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen" grossing $150 million-$170 million over its five-day debut.


The Wooden Birds - Magnolia (2009)



The American Analog Set toed the line between sleepy and dreamy so closely that it was easy to take the group for granted. When the band worked at its peak, it operated in a sort of twilight haze, and the ease with which one got lost in its beauty played a large part in determining what one got out of it. Factor in their more or less lasting hiatus (recent SXSW reunion aside), and the American Analog Set legacy hangs in a sort of hazy purgatory. Did the band exist, or did we merely imagine it?

The ghostly memory of the AmAnSet lingers near leader Andrew Kenny's new project the Wooden Birds as well, but it hardly hovers over it. If anything, Kenny, never a howler, is even more hushed here, with the Wooden Birds' debut Magnolia sounding as if it were recorded under extenuating circumstances-- a sleeping baby upstairs, say, or a sensitive neighbor-- only for Kenny to discover he liked how those muffled results turned out. Kenny and his new cohorts David Wingo, Lymbyc System drummer Michael Bell, and American Analog-vet Leslie Sisson seem to relish working within these spare constraints, where every note counts and nothing slips in to clutter to the songs. That precision and the process seem to have pushed Kenny in an interesting musical direction, too, seeing as so much of Magnolia recalls Lindsey Buckingham at his least manic, specifically the strange little ditties that fill Fleetwood Mac's Tusk and Mirage, nestled between the bigger hits. The resemblance is almost uncanny on songs such as "False Alarm", "Hailey", and the brief "Hometown Fantasy", which contains a heart-grabbing minor turn that's a perfect counter to its initial country feel.

That loose country vibe pervades tracks like "The Other One", "Quit You Once", and "Never Know" as well, each relatively interchangeable but so tasteful and uncomplicated their redundancy doesn't hurt, especially when Sisson starts chiming in with some breathy harmonies that fit the limited musical field like the last piece of a (simple) puzzle. After that it's back to songs like "Anna Paula" and "Seven Seventeen", the latter a deceptively sweet meet-cute number, and each with Sisson again playing a subdued Stevie Nicks to Kenny's mellow-mode Buckingham. Like much of Magnolia before it, the songs lope along quiet, lazy rhythms in no particular hurry to get where they're going. But while the Wooden Birds never quite arrive anywhere special, that's not to say Kenny isn't pointed that general direction. If Magnolia is a disc tinged with innocence and nostalgia, it's tinted by a hint of shadowy dread drawn from someplace more mysterious than Kenny is willing to reveal just yet.

Joshua Klein, May 21, 2009 (Pitchfork: 7,1)


Diario de California (Parte 3) o el romance del gobernador y una tal María


Acaso por segunda vez en una década --desde que el haber tenido cinco presidentes en un par de días a fines de 2001 se convirtió en una popular broma en los Estados Unidos--, la Argentina vuelve a estar en la tapa de todos los diarios en este país gracias al affaire del gobernador de Carolina del Sur, Mark Sanford, con una "María" que viviría en la calle República de la India y de la que se sabe poco --o se dice poco-- aunque se publican sus cruzados y románticos e-mails.

Asi que, finalmente, gracias a nuestras mujeres, la Argentina volvió a ser tema de conversación generalizado --noticieros, talk shows-- y me puedo imaginar los comentarios y las bromas que se harán al respecto mientras decenas de periodistas bajan hasta Palermo a descubrir quién es esta mujer, la Monika Lewinsky de esta época, una tal María de República de la India.

El tipo, parece, era fuerte posible candidato repúblicano a las próximas elecciones y ahora todos lo dan como un muerto político. Siempre le cabe venir a BA, obvio, donde será recibido como un héroe... Y a falta de buenos candidatos de la oposición, Sanford podría ir en las próximas "elecciones testimoniales" por Buenos Aires... seguro que lleva más de unos años dando vueltas por ahi...

PD. No puedo creer que le publiquen en los diarios los emails personales entre ellos. En un momento pensé en linkearlos acá pero, tras leerlos, me parece tremendo (igual, están por todos lados). Se trata de un asunto personal y no entiendo cómo se vanaglorian de haberlos conseguido. Este país es increíble...

24.6.09

Oscars: habrá diez nominadas a mejor película


La noticia es simple, pero el análisis es mucho más complejo. Acabo de leer (ver abajo) que la Academia anunció que desde este año habrá diez candidatas al rubro Mejor Película en los premios Oscars, algo que existía hasta... 1943. La pregunta es: ¿por qué?

Se me ocurren pensar las siguientes cosas, al voleo:

-Al haber más nominadas habrá más películas con posibilidades de lograr éxito comercial en una época difícil, más títulos que digan "Academy Award Nominee...", etc etc?

-Tratar de que los estudios hagan más películas "adultas" y menos "Transformers 7"?

-Levantar comercialmente los meses difíciles del invierno en los Estados Unidos?

-Que los estudios gasten más dinero en publicidad para sus películas?

-Que levante el rating de la transmisión al entrar títulos que pudo haber visto más gente y no sólo películas chicas? Como fue el caso "The Dark Knight" o "Wall-E", los últimos años, que se quedaron afuera.

-Que entren más películas internacionales?

-¿Hay diez muy buenas películas por año en Estados Unidos? Este año no había cinco!!!

-Hacer algo porque, de otra manera, la Academia no hace nada todo el año.

-Queseyó... Darle una chance a "Tetro"???



Oscar is opening up his playing field in a big way next year.

The Motion Picture Academy announced Wednesday that for the first time in more than 65 years, the field of best picture nominees will be expanded to 10 contenders for the 82nd Annual Academy Awards.

“Having 10 best picture nominees is going allow Academy voters to recognize and include some of the fantastic movies that often show up in the other Oscar categories but have been squeezed out of the race for the top prize,” said Acad prexy Sid Ganis in announcing the shift. “I can’t wait to see what that list of 10 looks like when the nominees are announced in February.”

The last time the Oscar race featured 10 best pic contenders was the 16th annual contest in 1943, when "Casablanca" emerged with the top prize. There were 10 best pic noms for most of the Academy Awards' first decade. In 1935 there was a bumper crop of 12 nominees.

Acad's decision will undoubtedly add heat to next year's Oscar campaigning, especially in a year when no obvious front-runners have emerged in the first half. The move also comes on the heels of biz complaints that the Acad's rule of limiting the pic nominees to the top five vote-getters elbows out some of the more popular titles, such as last year's B.O. champ "The Dark Knight."

Oscar noms will be announced Feb. 2 with the awards handed out March 7 at the Kodak Theater in Hollywood.


Wilco - "I'm the Man Who Loves You" - Live @ Wiltern (6/22/09)



Wilco - "Jesus, Etc" - Live @ Wiltern (6/22/09)



Set list:

Wilco (The Song)
Muzzle of Bees
A Shot in the Arm
At Least That's What You Said
Bull Black Nova
You Are My Face
I Am Trying to Break Your Heart
One Wing
In a Future Age
Impossible Germany
Shouldn't Be Ashamed
Sonny Feeling
Jesus, Etc.
Handshake Drugs
You Never Know
Hate It Here
Walken
I'm the Man Who Loves You

Encores:

The Late Greats
Box Full of Letters
Misunderstood
Spiders (Kidsmoke)
Hummingbird
Red Eyed & Blue
I Got You (At the End of the Century)
Monday
Hoodoo Voodoo

Sugarplum Fairies - Chinese Leftovers (2009)



Sugarplum Fairies are an indie dream pop duo based in Los Angeles who mix hushed, melancholic female vocals with European guitar pop and Americana folksiness. They are comprised of Vienna natives Silvia Ryder (vocals) and Ben Bohm (guitars, background vocals) and supplemented by an array of rotating guest musicians.

The Sugarplum Fairies draw influence from French cultural icons such as Françoise Hardy, Anna Karina, and Jean-Luc Godard, as well as the Velvet Underground, John Lennon, and Lee Hazlewood. Frequently mentioned as a point of comparison by critics, Mazzy Star, a similarly styled female-singer, male-guitarist duo from the 1990s, are also cited as an influence.

Sugarplum Fairies’ upcoming release “Chinese Leftovers” veers from sleepy shoegaze pop to bouncy D.I.Y. indie rock, all with a subtle infusion of country-noir and the occasional hint of eclectic Vaudeville.

For “Chinese Leftovers” Sugarplum Fairies have teamed up with Joey Waronker (Beck, REM) on drums, Gus Seyffert (The Bird And The Bee, Sia) on bass, Jebin Bruni (P.I.L., Aimee Mann) on keyboards and Martin Tillman (Dark Knight, Rickie Lee Jones) on cello. The CD was mixed by Todd Burke (Belle & Sebastian, Ben Harper) and mastered by 3 time Grammy winner Gavin Lurssen (T Bone Burnett).

23.6.09

Toronto unveils N. American premieres (Variety)


Centenarian helmer Manoel de Oliveira's "Eccentricities of a Blonde-Haired Girl" is among 26 pics from the international circuit receiving their North American preems at the Toronto International Film Festival this September, it was announced Tuesday.

Joining Oliveira in the Masters program is Alain Resnais' romantic adventure "Les Herbes folles" and Hirokazu Kore-eda's "Air Doll."

"Police, Adjective," the latest from Romanian helmer Corneliu Porumboiu ("12:08, East of Bucharest"), and 2005 TIFF Discovery winner Sarah Watt's Adelaide fest opener "My Year Without Sex" are highlights in the Contemporary World Cinema section. Program also includes Haim Tabakman's "Eyes Wide Open," Alejandro Fernandez Almendras' "Huacho," Hong Sang-soo's "Like You Know It All," Jessica Hausner's "Lourdes," Asli Ozge's "Men on the Bridge," Elia Suleiman's "The Time that Remains" and Ciro Guerra's "The Wind Journeys."

Tsai Ming-Liang's nouvelle vague homage "Face" and Raya Martin's silent pic homage "Independencia" screen in Visions. TIFF's edgy program also includes: Alain Cavalier's "Irene," Chris Chong Chan Fui's "Karaoke," Pen-Ek Ratanaruang's "Nymph" and Joao Pedro Rodrigues' "To Die Like a Man."

"Fish Tank," U.K. helmer Andrea Arnold's follow-up to "Red Road," is programmed in Vanguard.

Discovery, for first- or second-time directors, will screen Adrian Biniez's "Gigante," Radu Jude's "The Happiest Girl in the World," Ermek Tursunov's "Kelin," Tizza Covi and Rainer Frimmel's "La Pivellina," Warwick Thornton's "Samson and Delilah" and Ismail Necmi's doc-drama hybrid "Should I Really Do It."

Tel Aviv, turning 100 this year, takes center stage in TIFF's inaugural urban-themed City to City program, also launched Tuesday.

"Films about cities show us how to live as urban citizens while reflecting our fantasies and fears," said TIFF co-director Cameron Bailey. "We need to take a moment to think about what it means to live in these large and growing communities, with increasingly diverse and multicultural populations." The full lineup will be announced later this summer.

The 34th TIFF runs Sept. 10-19.


Wilco @ The Wiltern (Los Angeles, 22-06-09)






Después les cuento. Me voy al aeropuerto...


22.6.09

"Public Enemies", de Michael Mann (HBO First Look)



Part 1



Part 2

De cualquier manera, viendo estos clips no se alcanza a apreciar la radicalidad estética de la propuesta de Michael Mann. Primero, porque la calidad YouTube no permite ver bien el específico grano y brillo de la imagen. Segundo, porque la edición de este Especial no respeta el montaje extraño y los planos "a mano armada" que tiene la película. Pero, bueno, algo es algo. Para el resto, mejor esperar a ver la peli...


First Look: Tim Burton's 'Alice in Wonderland' (USA Today)




Link

Pasen y vean esas fotos con zoom integrado... Impresionantes.

Diario de California (Parte 2) o dos o tres cosas sobre "Public enemies", de Michael Mann


Gracias a las posibilidades de la informática y a la magia del cine pasé una jornada excepcional. Primero, claro, sentado frente a esta misma computadora viendo en una pantallita tipo YouTube la transmisión de TyC de la enorme victoria de Huracán contra Arsenal y deleitándome especialmente con esa última media hora de abrumadora superioridad. Con un centrodelantero como la gente, este campeonato lo hubiéramos ganado hace tres fechas...

Después, un pequeño hueco para almorzar y ver la última media hora de la enorme "Colateral", de Michael Mann, para terminar de prepararme para "Public Enemies" (antes de salir de Buenos Aires volví a ver "Heat/Fuego contra fuego" y había llegado a ver la mitad de "Colateral") y de ahí directo al excelente teatro de la DGA para ver su nueva película centrada sobre el mítico ladrón de bancos de la década del '30 John Dillinger, encarnado por Johnny Depp.

No puedo --por motivos de responsabilidad profesional-- hablar mucho de la película hasta el momento de las notas previas a su estreno, pero sólo estoy tentado a adelantar que lo que está haciendo Mann está a años luz del resto de sus colegas generacionales. Allá donde todos empiezan a ir a lo seguro, a buscar el Oscar, el respeto de los premios o el éxito de taquilla, el tipo experimenta y se arriesga cada vez más. "Public Enemies" intenta un acercamiento jugadísimo a los filmes de gángsters y ladrones de los años '30, filmando en digital, con cámara en mano, con una imágen que podría parecer de un reality show, de un making off o de un drama realista callejero tipo "Cops". Pero todo atravesado por un riesgo formal que, hoy, me atrevo a comparar (en su relación, no sé todavía si en sus logros), al "Sin aliento", de Godard.

Deconstrucción del cine de gángsters para tornarlo políticamente relevante hoy, acción "in your face" --de imagen y sonido--, sacarse de encima por completo el look "prolijo" y "elegante" de "Heat" para ir hacia algo parecido a un amateurismo expresionista, colores vivos y la sensación de "estar ahí", viviendo todo eso hoy. Muchísimo más que "Colateral" y con más coherencia que en "Miami Vice". Una película alucinante. Scott Foundas, cenando, decía que era casi "videoarte". No diría tanto, pero sí que es admirable que el tipo siga probando y experimentando con el cine y no se quede en lo que todos sabemos que él sabe hacer.

Si bien sus riesgos redundarán en dificultades comerciales --la película es atrapante pero imagino que no será un enorme éxito-- y su antivirtuosismo formal la aleja por momentos de los conceptos de "emoción" cinematográfica clásica, me preocupa muy poco en ese sentido, ya que no soy el productor del filme. Como espectador y crítico que todavía cree que Hollywood puede encontrar resquicios para renovarse sin traicionarse del todo, "Public Enemies" me da esperanzas de que es posible tomar los clásicos y, con un enorme respeto que queda demostrado al final (no diré cómo), deconstruirlos y transformarlos en otra cosa.

Uno tiene la sensación de que "Public Enemies" no respeta los códigos del realismo cinematográfico de celuloide que hoy existe. Muchos la verán como un curioso "gangster-Dogma" o un "Blair Witch" del cine de ladrones. Y si bien puede ser eso, también es mucho más. Es un filme de transición hacia un tipo de películas que puedan vivir, a la vez, en el mundo del cine (de "lo cinematográfico") y en el de la experiencia "real", que es lo que parecen capturar esos urgentes planos en HD con nerviosa cámara en mano.

Y de los temas que trabaja... qué decir. Es una película de Michael Mann y trata de lo mismo que todas las películas de Michael Mann: sobre profesionales, persecusiones, "I'm what I'm after", el conflicto entre una forma de vida aventurera y la posibilidad de algo parecido a un hogar, el respeto, los códigos, el hampa, la policía, los espejos y dobles, autos y disparos. Si algo la diferencia, es que en su permanente fractura estética y narrativa, dejó de lado casi totalmente esos diálogos un poco explicativos/psicoanalíticos de sus anteriores películas (la escena en la que Dillinger le cuenta a su chica "su vida" es tan breve como divertida ("me gusta el béisbol, el cine, la buena ropa, los autos rápidos, el whisky y vos... ¿qué más querés saber?") y deja que los hechos, las miradas y los cortes disonantes hagan el resto.

No se, eso me parece ahora. Genial!

21.6.09

Beirut - Live at the Music Hall of Williamsburg (2009)


Diario de California (Parte 1)


Al final, es como estar en casa.

Once de la mañana del domingo, hora de Los Angeles (15 en la Argentina). Si no calculo mal salí a las 18 de ayer de casa. Haciendo cuentas: 21 horas para estar sentado acá, en el hall del hotel, esperando que la habitación esté lista para poder depositar lo que queda de mí.

El recibimiento fue extrañísimo, me presento al Front Desk Manager ("checking in"), le digo que me llamo Diego, se llama Daniel, de donde sos, de Argentina, yo también, a qué no sabés, qué?, se acaba de ir Pettinato, no me digas? le digo, me dice sí, estuvo haciendo entrevistas con Megan Fox y los de Transformers, mirá vos?, vos donde trabajás?, en Clarín, ah yo conozco uno de La Nación que viene siempre, Marcelo Stiletano le digo, sí, como sabías? muy macanudo, sí, macanudo, le digo a Daniel, la mejor onda, me regala cupones gratis de internet para la habitación, me da su tarjeta, y siento que después de casi un día de viaje estoy como si hubiera charlado con el encargado de mi edificio, avisame cualquier problema, me dice, si no te precupes, pienso, seguro que voy a ver si me da una mano para ver como corno hago para ir al Wiltern a ver a Wilco, pero por ahora no se me ocurre nada que pedirle, fuera de lo común...

El viaje en avión fue un viaje en avión, para qué agregar más que eso. Me resulto curioso que en el vuelo de Dallas a Los Angeles me siento en el medio de una fila de tres y en los otros dos asientos se sienta una pareja, afroamericana, bastante grandotes, les digo si quieren sentarse juntos asi zafo del medio y, bien ventana, bien pasillo, no, me dicen, y no hablan en todo el viaje. Bah, creo, porque yo me quedé dormido escuchando Brightblack Morning Light.

Recuerdo que mi primera vez en Los Angeles fue hace 16 años para un junket de "Philadelphia", con Tom Hanks, y fue en este mismo hotel. Yo era un niño y miraba y compraba todo lo que daba vueltas (remember el uno a uno?). Ahora no hay mucho para comprar que no te resulte carísimo. Igual, lo que más me llama la atención es que una de las cosas que mas amaba hacer al llegar era entrar a una tienda de revistas y comprar tres o cuatro. Ahora no hay nada para comprar! Rolling Stone es una mierda con tapa del perdedor de American Idol. Entertainment Weekly ofrece "Los mejores realities de la TV". Spin promete un especial de aniversario de PURPLE RAIN con Free CD pero el Free CD no pinta por ningún lado. La nota que necesito de Johnny Depp que hay en Vanity Fair ya la bajé de internet. El New York Times sale seis dólares. Todas las demás revistas tienen fotos de Robert Pattinson y la GQ, con Bruno/Baron Cohen, no me tienta ni medio. Obvio que en los aeropuertos no voy a conseguir las revistas "buenas", esas que ya comprás en la ciudad. Pero darme cuenta que mi única opción era el Dallas Morning News fue temible. Preferí volver a leer el Especial sobre Africa de la revista Ñ.

Sí, estoy acá por PUBLIC ENEMIES, de Michael Mann. La veo después del partido de Huracán que ya está por empezar...

"Action!": Kathryn Bigelow's "The Hurt Locker" (The New York Times)


LOS ANGELES

THE take on Kathryn Bigelow is that she is a great female director of muscular action movies, the kind with big guns, scenes, themes and camera movements as well as an occasional fist in the face, a knee to the groin. Sometimes, more simply, she’s called a great female director. But here’s a radical thought: She is, simply, a great filmmaker. Because while it is marginally interesting that she calls “action” and “cut” while in the possession of two X chromosomes, gender is the least remarkable thing about her kinetic filmmaking, which gets in your head even as it sends shock waves through your body.

Her latest is “The Hurt Locker,” a film about men and war. Set in Iraq in 2004 and shot just over the border in Jordan, it centers on a three-man American bomb squad that sifts through the sand day and night disabling explosives. It was first shown at the Venice Film Festival in September 2008 (it opens Friday), where it was greeted with rapturous praise and some misapprehension. Mostly, it seems, because its extraordinary filmmaking, which transmits the sickening addiction to war as well as its horrors in largely formal terms, doesn’t come wedded to a sufficiently obvious antiwar position. One British critic went so far as to say that while the film had “excellent acting, camerawork and editing, it could pass for propaganda.”

“The Hurt Locker” doesn’t traffic in the armchair militarism of Hollywood products like “Top Gun” and “Transformers,” but neither is it an antiwar screed. It’s diagnostic, not prescriptive: it takes an analytical if visceral look at how the experience of war can change a man, how it eats into his brain so badly he ends up hooked on it. And, like all seven of Ms. Bigelow’s previous feature films, this new one is also as informed by the radical aspirations of conceptual art as it is by the techniques of classical Hollywood cinema.

She might live and sometimes shoot within driving distance of the major studios that have distributed if not financed her films. But in many respects she remains an industry outsider.

“I’ve never made a studio film,” Ms. Bigelow gently reminded me during a leisurely conversation here not long ago. Although most of her movies have been released by studios, they have been bankrolled by independent companies, which nonetheless don’t necessarily grant the autonomy any artist seeks. The experience of making “The Hurt Locker” — the “purity” of it, as she puts it — marks her return to liberating conditions under which she thrives. She hasn’t had this kind of freedom since her 1987 breakthrough, “Near Dark,” an erotically charged vampire movie made on the cheap, or her 1995 science-fiction thriller “Strange Days,” which came with some heavy protection courtesy of one of its producers: her former husband, James Cameron.

It’s hard to imagine Ms. Bigelow letting anyone push her around. She’s unfailingly gracious — and tends to speak in the second person, preferring “you” over “I” — but there’s a ferocious undercurrent there too, as might be expected. She works to put you at ease, but even her looks inspire shock and awe. Because she was early for our interview and already tucked into a booth, I didn’t realize how tall she was until we both stood up, and I watched, from a rather lower vantage, her unfurl her slender six-foot frame. It was like watching a time lapse of a growing tree. Like a lot of tall women she describes herself as shy, but she has learned to take up space.

At first that space wasn’t on screen but on a canvas. An only child, she was born in 1951 and raised in a town, San Carlos, 25 miles south of San Francisco, where she first nurtured a lifelong love of art and horses. (When we meet again her arms are flecked with bruises after a perilous ride on her mare.) She was a student painter at the Art Institute of San Francisco and later the Whitney Museum’s Independent Study Program, where she studied with Vito Acconci and Susan Sontag. She joined a conceptual art group, appeared in the feminist movie “Born in Flames” and earned her master’s in the film division of the Columbia University School of the Arts, where she immersed herself in theories about signs and meaning and the cinematic spectacle.

“Film,” she says, “became the interchange where all these ideas were intersecting.”

As she moved between uptown and down, she also made her first film, “The Set-Up” (1978), a short in which two men (Gary Busey included) fight each other as the semioticians Sylvère Lotringer and Marshall Blonsky deconstruct the images in voice-over. Although she now plays down the film, it seems like a template for much of her later work, with its emphasis on men, masculinity, violence and power. A few years ago she elaborated on its themes: “The piece ends with Sylvère talking about the fact that in the 1960s you think of the enemy as outside yourself, in other words, a police officer, the government, the system, but that’s not really the case at all, fascism is very insidious, we reproduce it all the time.”

That enemy lurks in the anomie of the motorcycle biker (Willem Dafoe in his screen debut) who motors through her 1982 debut feature “The Loveless” (made with Monty Montgomery) and in the bloodstream of the young cowboy initiated into a gang of vampires in “Near Dark,” the western-horror hybrid that made her a cult favorite. It sneaks into the head of the undercover F.B.I. agent in “Point Break” (1991) who’s philosophically seduced by the koan-spouting leader of some bank-robbing surfers. And it slips into the rigid body of a devout 19th-century immigrant wife in “The Weight of Water” (2000), who, after sharing a chaste bed with another woman, responds to her awakened sexual desire with a murderous swing of an ax.

Much as she does in her far-out 1990 feminist freak-out “Blue Steel,” about a female cop (Jamie Lee Curtis) literally seduced by a male killer who fondles her gun with lethal results, Ms. Bigelow isn’t just playing with genre. She’s having her unruly way with gender, sometimes by inverting traditional masculine and feminine roles, as in “Strange Days,” a future shock love story that also explores voyeurism and the pleasures of violent spectacle. Shot in a Los Angeles still hurting from its 1992 civil unrest, it features Angela Bassett (whose bare, sculptured arms outmuscle those of Michelle Obama) rescuing a hapless white man (Ralph Fiennes) who, despite being the narrative’s center, never becomes its hero.

“Strange Days” originated with Mr. Cameron, who wrote the first draft before handing it over to her. With Jay Cocks, she finished the script and made the film her own. (She and Mr. Cameron divorced in 1991; she’s now in a relationship she prefers to keep private.) It was poorly released by its studio, which seemed unsure of how to sell it (kinky sex? millennial meltdown?), and it flopped. “The Weight of Water,” a trickily plotted drama that toggles between two bad marriages in separate time periods, and notably her only movie to touch on matrimonial life, followed and disappeared on impact. Two years later, in 2002, she returned to blockbuster form with “K-19: The Widowmaker,” an unnerving, very human thriller about the first Soviet nuclear submarine. It too died a quick box-office death.

She had to scale back for the next one. “I definitely wanted to have full creative control and final cut,” she says of “The Hurt Locker,” which was written by Mark Boal and based on his experience working as an embedded journalist in Iraq. She wanted up-and-coming actors who weren’t so famous that their characters couldn’t die, even if their names wouldn’t mean much in the ads. She also wanted to shoot in the Middle East. Her security detail talked her out of filming in Iraq, though she inched close to the border. Given her demands and the scant interest that American audiences have expressed in fiction films about the war, she looked outside the country for financing. The French company Voltage Pictures gave her money and control.

“It was a no-note experience,” she says, referring to the suggestions that movie executives like to issue — and enforce — “absolutely zero interference.” She laughs when I ask if she might become addicted to the freedom, much as the bomb tech played by Jeremy Renner in “The Hurt Locker” becomes hopped up on war. It’s a ludicrous comparison, granted. But moviemaking is littered with broken spirits, and there’s something improbable about the longevity of her career in the mainstream. Partly because, yes, she’s working in an sexist field where even female studio chiefs are loath to hire female directors, but also because of the stubborn persistence of her artistic vision and intellectualism. She’s still investigating signs and meaning, but now through genres she deconstructs and sometimes immolates.

It’s telling, then, that after she made “The Loveless” a postmodern motorcycle movie in which she stretched narrative to the limit, she started receiving scripts for high school comedies, which she quickly realized was considered a suitable subject for her gender. “It was an intersection of absolutely inappropriate sensibilities,” she said, though I would love to see what havoc she could wreak on that genre. She was living in New York in a condemned building without heat and electricity. A juvenile comedy might have paid the bills, but instead she accepted an offer from her friend, the artist John Baldessari, to teach at the California Institute of the Arts, just north of Los Angeles. Hollywood was the inevitable next step. Through the director Walter Hill, she landed a deal at a studio, but it led to nowhere.

It was at this point, she said, that she understood “if I had a prayer of shooting something that intrigued me, I was going to have to be the architect of my own fate.” She went off and made “Near Dark,” a vampire film steeped in the kind of hot, sticky, shocking violence that’s alternately exciting and appalling. It was the perfect vehicle for a director discovering that we go to movies for what they do to our bodies and not just the ideas they plant in our heads. She wants to take you on a mental journey: “To transport you to an event or a physicality or a location or an experience or an emotional odyssey that is purely experiential.” Her use of the word odyssey seems significant. I can’t imagine her sitting at home and weaving.

If anything, her refusal to make the types of movies most associated with women suggests that in American movies, at least, genre is destiny, to repurpose a familiar Freud maxim about gender. She’s steered clear of the industry ghetto to which female directors are usually consigned, bypassing the dreaded chick flick for stories and archetypes traditionally if reductively seen as the province of men. She still makes relationship movies, but the relationships evolve both through the chatter at which women are supposed to excel and the contact of bodies, often male, sometimes female, running, surfing, parachuting, living and dying out in the world. She learned from the masters — De Kooning, Peckinpah, Goya, Pasolini, Rembrandt and on and on — in order to become her own woman.

The number of male mentors and aesthetic influences seems instructive as does her seeming discomfort when I ask why she likes to make movies about men. It’s one of the few times when she searches for her words. She mentions Richard Serra, whom she’s known for years, and “Torqued Ellipses,” his curvilinear steel sculptures that weigh about 40 tons apiece and which she describes as “real statements of power.” Suddenly I’m reminded of the moment in “K-19” when the camera glides between two submarines sitting parallel on the surface of the water, a glorious image of heavy metal that is itself a statement of power. When she was painting, she says, she loved “big, gestural, visceral, raw, immediate pieces.” She starts to move her fingers, as if she were sewing.

“Nothing really struck me,” she says, of the art she first loved, “that was tight and precise and patient and careful and perhaps more introspective. Perhaps,” she laughs, “it’s just a sensibility defect.”

20.6.09

Entrevista a Mike Leigh: "El mundo es un lugar extraño"


Múm — Sing Along To Songs You Don't Know (2009)


En defensa de Woody Allen


Ok, me cansé. Acá, evidentemente, pasa algo muy extraño, algo que sostiene mi vieja teoría de los "localismos" o el "doble chequeo". Woody Allen estrena hoy una película en los Estados Unidos, la primera que hace allí luego de cuatro en el exterior. Se titula "Whatever Works" y la protagoniza Larry David. Ahora bien, las críticas que recibe son bastante malas.

No vi la película y creo que la última suya que realmente me gustó de Woody Allen debe haber sido "Todos dicen te amo", de 1996. Asi que mi defensa de Allen y de la película que no vi me resulta curiosa. Es que me llama la atención que los mismos críticos que defendieron casi todo lo que hizo Allen en "el exterior" (de "Match Point" a "Vicky Cristina Barcelona"), que son igual de malas o peores que las que había hecho antes, apenas el tipo pisa Manhattan lo crucifican.

Se lee en las críticas que los personajes no son creíbles, que los acentos sureños no corresponden, que los chistes son malos y viejos, que los diálogos no se ajustan a la época. Supongamos que están en lo cierto: ¿creerán ellos que los ingleses no veían lo mismo en su película inglesa y los españoles y muchos hispanoparlantes no pensamos lo mismo de la que hizo en Barcelona?

Parece que cuando un cineasta sale al exterior los críticos "locales" le permiten cagarse olímpicamente en cualquier tipo de realismo o plausibilidad porque no tienen forma de comprobarla, mientras que si cruza la calle 86 y el negocio de la esquina no es el correcto, pueden caerle encima sin ningún problema.

Así, seguramente, haremos los argentinos con "Tetro", película que los norteamericanos alaban y la que, imagino, nos pondrá los pelos de punta apenas veamos algo fuera de lugar, un cliché localista o una postalita turística de Buenos Aires. Y lo mismo hacen en EE.UU. con Allen cuando filma lo que todos conocen.

Sin haber estado en Cataluña más que dos semanas en toda mi vida, les puedo asegurar que el realismo y la plausibilidad de la historia de VCB es nula, y los diálogos --en castellano, especialmente-- son ridículos. Pero claro nadie fuera de España parece darse cuenta. Supongo que no sabremos tampoco nosotros si el acento sureño de Evan Rachel Wood es correcto o no en "Whatever Works". Pero el problema es que seguiremos juzgándolo con distintas varas.

Digamos, para ir a lo más probable, que WW debe ser tan mala como todas las películas que Woody hizo en la última década, más allá del realismo, de los acentos, de la forma de hablar y de si los chistes son viejos o no. Igual, me queda una esperanza de que Larry David me haga reír. Para misántropos, pocos como él.

¿Para cuando la película de Woody con Jerry Seinfeld?