August 3, 2010
Andrew
Personal Stuff
4 Comments

Still courtesy of Ryan Elsinger.
If posting has seemed light lately, there’s a damn good reason: I managed to land myself a semi-regular gig writing about film for Look / Listen, the newly re-launched arts and culture site for St. Louis Magazine. My inaugural piece for the launch is on Daniel and Abraham, the new film from Alton, Illinois native Ryan Eslinger. Check it out, and take a look at the other work posted there now and in the coming days. The staff of StLMag have done a great job of pulling together a diverse group of writers with a deep knowledge of the arts.
Duel of Wills: Ryan Eslinger’s Daniel and Abraham
And don’t worry: I’m not going anywhere. I’ll continue to post reviews, essays, and other short pieces here at Gateway Cinephiles, although the frequency of posts might decrease a touch to accommodate, you know, paying work.
A big thanks to all you loyal readers out there. Your interest in my meager thoughts on cinema have kept my own interest in writing about film alive for the past three years. That in turn led to the fortuitous series of events that brought me to Look / Listen, and for that I thank you.
July 20, 2010
Andrew
Personal Stuff
6 Comments
Blogger and prolific commenter MovieMan0283 has proposed an intriguing meme at his place, The Dancing Image. Taking a cue from the open gallery of reader-submitted film stills hosted by Stephen at Checking on My Sausages, MovieMan has proposed a bit of a free-form exercise, wherein participants assemble a collection of screen captures that follow a theme of their choice. MovieMan got the ball rolling with a stellar series of stills from opening shots. My own submission is below. I think the theme is self-evident, although in a couple of instances it is realized in an unconventional way. The films are identified at the bottom.













Throne of Blood (Kumonosu-jô) (Akira Kurosawa, 1957)
Don’t Look Now (Nicolas Roeg, 1973)
Deep Red (Profundo Rosso) (Dario Argento, 1975)
Jaws (Steven Spielberg, 1975)
Predator (John McTiernan, 1987)
Wild at Heart (David Lynch, 1990)
Fight Club (David Fincher, 1999)
Kill Bill: Vol. 1 (Quentin Tarantino, 2003)
Hellboy (Guillermo del Toro, 2004)
Caché (Michael Haneke, 2005)
Sin City (Robert Rodriguez and Frank Miller, 2005)
No Country for Old Men (Ethan and Joel Coen, 2007)
Let the Right One In (Låt den rätte komma in) (Tomas Alfredson, 2008)
They may not even notice (or they may already have participated), but I’m tagging Tim at Antagony and Ecstasy, Troy at Elusive as Robert Denby, The Film Doctor, Bill at The Kind of Face You Hate, and Jason at The Cooler.
April 26, 2010
Andrew
Personal Stuff
1 Comment
Roger Ebert was in attendance at his festival this year. It was the first time that I have been able to see him in person. Cancer has taken his lower jaw, and therefore his voice, but he was still very much a presence at the festival. His populist, humanistic, literate approach to film obviously informs the programming, but it also permeates the spirit of the event. There’s a sense of genial adoration towards the guy that is actually a bit disconcerting. No one who attends the festival is there because they dislike Ebert or his taste in film. They’re there to bask in an event dedicated to Stuff He Likes. What’s fascinating is that now that Ebert is, by his own admission, on the downslope of his remaining years on Earth, his presence at the festival seems to engender joy as much as melancholy. People just love seeing him and knowing that whatever his physical limitations, his enthusiastic cinephilia is the animating force behind the festival.

Whenever Ebert appeared, he seemed to be deliriously good spirits. His frequently threw his iconic thumbs-up gesture, not so much a seal of approval as a generalized cheer-leading pose struck to convey the pleasure of good movies. Chaz Ebert introduced each film, but Roger also offered some words from time to time, using prepared text read by a computerized voice on his laptop. What was truly unexpected was how integral Ebert’s physical presence at the podium was for these introductions, and for the festival as a whole He could certainly have had someone else read his remarks. Instead, he got up, clicked on the laptop himself, mouthed the words with his now-slack lips, mugged enthusiastically for the audience, and gestured flamboyantly. His lines consistently got the best laughs. It drove home how essential his celebrity is to the festival’s pulse, and how his boisterous cinephilia is itself a kind of defiant stance against his physical diminishment.
The first screening of the day was Tim Fywell’s 2003 coming-of-age feature, I Capture the Castle, based on the novel by Dodie Smith. Ebert pitched it as a family film, but I suspect Castle is bit much for younger kids. It’s not the stray bits of nudity (tasteful and humorous) that present a challenge, but the subject matter, which treads on class, madness, violence, virginity, and a thorny romantic melodrama that veers between the subdued and the exaggerated. The real pleasures here are the green, damp locales of the English countryside, and the familiar faces: the captivating Romola Garai (eighteen-year-old Briony in Atonement) as lovelorn narrator Cassandra; Bill Nighy as a writer languishing in poverty and flirting with madness; and a baby-faced Henry Cavill (The Tudors‘ resident Adonis) as a servant boy seduced by London’s pleasures.
The DIY slot this year was filled by Jennifer Burns’ 2008 directorial debut, Vincent: A Life in Color. Burns profiles Chicago’s “Fashion Man,” Vincent P. Falk, who takes it upon himself to entertain river tour boats by dancing on the city’s bridges in a seemingly endless collection of shockingly bright suits. Vincent is strictly low-budget, unaffected, human-centered documentary film-making, so naturally it sinks or swims on the strength of its subject. The appealing thing about Vincent is how easily he evolves from a one-note joke to a fascinating figure with a rich history of achievement, tribulation, and tragedy. Burns clearly admires the guy’s unflagging spirit, but the film is at its best when it probes deeper than “Do Your Own Thing” bromides and upends our assumptions about disability, celebrity, ego, work, and the urban community.
First time director James Mottern’s Trucker hits all the American indie beats: a plot driven by an economic squeeze, battered and tricky human relationships, a pop-drizzled soundtrack, and plenty of dusty gazing into the distance. While the territory is familiar, what Mottern and his performers get spooky-right is the sense of despair that prevails when your expectations for your own life are simple, selfish, and maddeningly thwarted. As a sullen truck driver whose abandoned eleven-year-old son falls back into her life, Michelle Monaghan is called upon to go through one emotional whiplash after another, and acquits herself beautifully. Firefly alum Nathan Fillion brings a witty, warm-hearted appeal to Monaghan’s too-eager (married) friend. It was Ebert that correctly discerned Trucker’s most potent gesture: It ends at exactly the right moment, a merit more films (and more indies specifically) should endeavor to emulate.
Saturday (and our time at the Festival) ended with Barbet Schroeder’s biographical snapshot of Charles Bukowski, Barfly. There’s a scuzzy genius to the simplicity of this film, which doesn’t have a plot so much as a character arc that circles around right back to where it started. Essentially, what we’re treated to is the tale of two serious alcoholics–a battered, limp-haired Mickey Rourke and a waxen Faye Dunaway–who meet in a Los Angeles of endless dive bars and seedy apartments. They then spend nearly every waking hour pursuing a state of perpetual drunkenness. The attraction here is almost entirely due to Bukowski’s screenplay, which is deliciously quotable from beginning to end, and Rourke’s mesmerizing performance. It’s a ridiculously affected role, but so languidly fierce (if such a phrase is applicable anywhere, it’s here), you find yourself grinning ear to ear before you realize that the guy you’re grinning at is, well, an unrepentant addict. Under Bukowski, Schroeder, and Rourke, alcoholism becomes a font of gutter wisdom, repugnant and undeniable.
April 25, 2010
Andrew
Personal Stuff
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My wife and I had been batting around the notion of attending Roger Ebert’s annual film festival in Champaign, Illinois for a few years, but this was the first year in which we actually had the will and the wherewithal to make the three-hour trek up from St. Louis. Two factors sealed the deal in 2010: 1) Charlie Kaufman was going to be at the festival for a screening of Synecdoche, New York, a film for which I have been enthusiastic evangelist; and 2) Ebert has, of course, been engaged in a remarkably public struggle with cancer, and, frankly, I wanted to see him in person and experience his peculiar cult of personality firsthand while he was still around.

Time off from work is at a premium right now, so the wife and I made plans to attend on Friday and Saturday only, heading up to Champaign on Thursday night. As one might expect, the festival is fairly small in scale. The only screening venue is the Virginia, an 89-year-old downtown theater built in the Italian Renaissance and Spanish Renaissance styles, and now owned by the city’s parks district. Given its age, the Virginia has been maintained fairly nicely, although there is apparently plenty of ongoing restoration. The facade of the building is especially gorgeous, with classy touches like the painted relief sculptures above the second-story windows. (The marquee, however, is in rough shape, and could use some attention.) The interior is evidently on the cusp of a round of restoration, and it definitely feels a bit more worn and cheap than the exterior, epitomized by the the acoustic drop ceiling and track lighting in the lobby.
On the upside, the theater has balcony seating–which is rare in St. Louis–and state-of-the-art projection and sound systems, not to mention two vintage projectors capable of showing 70-mm films. The lush auditorium boasts a full, retractable curtain and an elevated stage deep enough to accommodate post-film discussion panels. The seats are adequate, if not the most comfortable. The main problem I had with the seating was the spacing of the rows, which is both very tight and apparently variable from row to row. Long-limbed guy that I am, I quickly tumbled to which rows gave me an extra couple of inches, so that my knees weren’t pressing painfully on the seats in front of me. (The festival staff were fairly strict about the no-camera policy in the auditorium. Hence the dearth of photos. I really didn’t want to get bounced on my first day.)

The admittance system for the festival is interesting. Festival pass holders show up very early each day and line up to claim their seat for that day. The staff allows pass holders to “mark” their seat with an article of clothing, program, or other item. This permits them to leave between screenings, and then breeze back in just before the film to reclaim their seat. People with tickets to individual screenings (which was our situation) line up about a half-hour before a film starts, and are let in about fifteen minutes prior, whereupon they scramble for the better seats not already claimed by pass holders. Finally, just before the screening starts, the theater permits people to buy “rush tickets” for all the empty seats in the house (due to pass holders who skip out on that screening, or to absent ticket holders). As you can imagine, getting everyone seated for each screening ends up being a fairly chaotic, laborious process, with the theater repeatedly urging viewers to find their seats and ushers sweeping through to find open spots for the rush ticket holders. It’s definitely a system that privileges pass holders; if I ever attend the festival again, I’ll likely be putting the money on the barrelhead for a pass.
Our first screening on Friday was Yōjirō Takita’s Depatures (Okuribito), which won the Best-Foreign Language Film Oscar in 2009. It screened briefly in St. Louis last year, but I had missed it. The film tells the story of a young cellist who, hard up for work after his orchestra folds, takes a job in his hometown “encoffining” corpses for cremation. While more comedic and conventionally sentimental than Tokyo Story or Ikiru, Departures is consistent with the melancholy aura and emotionally unabashed character of those those classics, and further bolsters the notion that Japanese film-makers understand better than their peers elsewhere how to use cinema to confront mortality. The film takes some predictable turns in its final act, but I misted up just the same, big squish that I am.
Next up was Dziga Vertov’s 1929 avant-garde silent classic, Man with a Movie Camera (Chelovek s kino-apparatom), which was screened with a live original soundtrack performed by the three-man Alloy Orchestra. This was a real treat. I had to miss the film when it screened at the Webster Film Series last year, and it’s been one of my silent must-sees for a while. What can I say about it that hasn’t already been said? It’s essentially an eighty-year-old metafilm about modernity and the omnipresence of both the camera eye and the moving picture in our lives. The film has a sense of both progressive triumphalism (befitting its Soviet origins) and disquieting anxiety about it. The pacing is precisely what makes it function so spectacularly well. While so many silent films are glacial and stagey, Man with a Movie Camera is frenetic and defiantly cinematic. It wouldn’t have been half as memorable without the live soundtrack, however, which was relentless, thunderous, and even occasionally humorous.
We finished off Friday night with 2008’s Synecdoche, New York, which is the only film we attended that I’ve previously seen. The appeal, then, was viewing it with Kaufman in the house, as well as Ebert, who has been such a dogged booster for the film. Synecdoche sold out in a couple of hours when tickets went on sale the first week of April, so we lined up for two hours to buy rush tickets. With about forty-five minutes to go, one of the festival volunteers apparently took pity on us as we sat in the drizzle, and offered us her unused passes for Synecdoche only, provided we turned them in at the box office afterward. Needless to say, I couldn’t thank her enough. There seemed to be a healthy number of people in attendance who hadn’t seen the film before. It garnered a surprising amount of laughter throughout, and a bit of applause in response to “Fuck everybody. Amen.” I’ve said my piece on this remarkable film before. What’s amazing is how, despite its reputation as a morbid drag, Synecdoche gets funnier every time I see it. I think I’m the only person who has to stifle a cracked guffaw when Olive responds to Caden’s coerced confession and plea for forgiveness with, “No.” What does that say about my sense of humor?
Tomorrow: Saturday’s films and brief thoughts on Ebert in person.
March 24, 2009
Andrew
Personal Stuff
2 Comments
Kevin J. Olson at Hugo Stiglitz Makes Movies has tagged me with the Favorite Films Characters Meme, which appears to have originated over at FilmSquish. I don’t have a film to review at the moment, so what the heck? Bear in mind that my film literacy skews recent, and my own life experience skews… er, white and male. Therefore my list perhaps inevitably reflects those biases. Here we go, in chronological order:
1. Norman Bates (Anthony Perkins), Psycho (1960)
People always mean well. They cluck their thick tongues, and shake their heads and suggest, oh, so very delicately.
Hitchcock may be the hand behind Psycho’s whipsaw narrative shift and its preternaturally sneaky diversion of audience sympathies, but it’s Anthony Perkins’ timeless and astoundingly skillful portrayal that lends the film its humanity (paradoxically enough). Never mind the crude Freudian outlines to Norman Bates. Psycho is scarcely big enough to contain the chilling, contradictory gestalt that Perkins creates: placid, defensive, genial, resentful, anxious, seething, all capped with a dose of awkward schoolboy eroticism. The effect is simultaneously disquieting and pitiable. Norman is a monster who is acutely cognizant of his own guilt, but completely unable and unwilling to cease his atrocities. Traumatized and wracked to his core, the viewer almost feels sorry for him. Then again, there’s that ghost of an impish smile as Abergast’s car sinks into the pond: “I’ve been a bad boy, haven’t I?”
Read the rest…
November 7, 2008
Andrew
Personal Stuff
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One year ago today, I resolved to start writing reviews for every film I saw in theatrical release and post them on the Cinephiles site. Now here we are and I have fifty-seven full-length reviews in the tank, as well as seven capsule reviews. (Full archive here.) That’s a little more than one full-length review per week, rain or shine. Not too shabby, I suppose. Thanks to the handful of readers who continue to stop by on a regular basis.
Next week I’ll be launching the biggest feature I’ve ever embarked upon for the Cinephiles site. Stay tuned.
March 7, 2008
Andrew
Personal Stuff
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One personal boon to organizing a local film club and producing content for this site is that I am probably watching more films—and, significantly, more interesting films—right now than at any previous point in my life. Even setting aside the essential, classic, cult, and overlooked cinema that the club tends to focus on, I’m watching a hell of a lot more quality films of recent vintage.
I set a goal for myself last November to see every feature film released in 2007 that achieved a score of 70 or greater on Metacritic. “Released in 2007” in this case means a film that premiered in the United State outside the film festival circuit in wide, limited, or select city release between January 1, 2007 and December 31, 2007. Four months or so later, what’s the score?
Read the rest…