Showing posts with label shame. Show all posts
Showing posts with label shame. Show all posts

Friday, September 18, 2020

lovers rock


After watching Steve McQueen's "Lovers Rock," I was reading Langston Hughes and came across these lines from his poem "Harlem Night Club": "Jazz-boys, jazz-boys,-- / Play, plAY, PLAY! / Tomorrow.... is darkness. / Joy today!" The sensuous dance party held in "Lovers Rock" encapsulates a fleeting, joyful party in a particular moment in time. Even within the party, as undercurrents of disharmony and moments of distress arise, we know paradise can't last forever. "Lovers Rock" is a gem within McQueen's Small Axe series, about the Black West Indian experience around 1980. 


I have been a fan of McQueen's work, especially 12 Years a Slave which, despite being a story that had been told before and despite its subversively old-fashioned presentation in the vein of familiar "heroic" white cinematic tales, was still a  startling movie and one that struck like a bolt of lightning in the middle of 2013. I was enraptured too with both Shame and the very underrated Widows, both of which didn't get the same galvanizing response from audiences and critics, but offered similarly complicated characters and unflinching subject matter within rapturously specific tales that few films of today offer. There is something broadly painted about his films, yet so honed-in and microscopic.


"Lovers Rock," a day into night into the morning after piece, begins with a train moving through darkness akin to a rolled-up carpet we see being moved for the dance floor. Much of the opening, elegantly filmed, is the set-up for the event in bay-windowed sun-glinted, paint-chipped interiors, elegantly filmed (photography is by Shabier Kirchner). Immediately we are eased into the rich, transporting sound mix. Women in a kitchen preparing food happily singing "Silly Games" (an overture to an unforgettable, what's-to-come centerpiece moment of the film). Young women gleefully singing Blondie's "Sunday Girl" with handclaps. The textured sound of flipping through papered-45 sleeves. Getting the sound-systems and speakers right and the echoing mic checks. Usually I am sensitive to and irked by the over-amplification of the rustling sound of burning cigarettes / joints in films (a phenomenon in indie films of recent years), but here it doesn't seem superfluous--its intrinsic to the atmosphere. As the film moves to the party, the lighting morphs to a rosy orange glow, a bulb hung around the DJ's neck, and here we begin to see the frictions (big and small) between men and women in a social setting--women on the dancefloor in the beginning chopping it up with "Kung Fu Fighting" and then down with a strand of Chic's "He's the Greatest Dancer" (compare and contrast that to Chic's desperate, chilly appearance with "I Want Your Love" in Shame) as the men pose as wallflowers, scoping out the scene, and then soon, the men and women are dancing together, with some on the outs, vibing, eyeing on in moments of loneliness. Like a ballet, a dancer enters out-of-rhythm and off-kilter, setting a new, impassioned tone on the floor. Time literally stopped and nothing else mattered when I first saw the dance set to Janet Kay's "Silly Games." It's such an unbelievably gorgeous, haunting experience--one of the most ecstatic filmmaking moments of song and dance I've seen in a while. And as the flitting images of crosses suggest, this party is communal, holy. As with much of McQueen's other work, the movie is more about experience rather than complex narrative, so the encounter, potential-relationship story at the center of "Lovers Rock" of young Martha (Amarah-Jae St. Aubyn) in a faintly glittering purple sheath (perfect costuming all-around by the reliably great Jacqueline Durran) and Franklyn (Micheal Ward), isn't as riveting as the world rotating around them. But as this paradise moves into the morning after with a beautifully-shot bike ride and our buzz killed by a red-haired white man, "we can see it in" her "eyes," Martha relives her night with resplendent joy. ****


-Jeffery Berg

Sunday, February 26, 2012

my dream oscar picks: the jdb awards

Sometimes they are pretty lame, but I guess I'm a sucker for the Oscars every year. Here are some of my favorite films and performances of the year I would have nominated.  Some were overlooked and hopefully some will get some recognition tonight.






BEST PICTURE






nominees:






BEST DIRECTOR


Nicolas Winding Refrn, Drive



nominees:

Asghar Farhadi, A Separation
Michel Hazanavicius, The Artist
Steve McQueen, Shame
Alexander Payne, The Descendants





BEST ACTOR


Michael Fasssbender, Shame



nominees:

George Clooney, The Descendants
Tom Cullen, Weekend
Jean Dujardin, The Artist
Ryan Gosling, Drive




BEST ACTRESS

Charlize Theron, Young Adult



nominees:

Viola Davis, The Help
Yoon Jeong-hee, Poetry
Elizabeth Olsen, Martha Marcy May Marlene
Anna Paquin, Margaret




BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR


Christopher Plummer, Beginners



nominees:

Albert Brooks, Drive
John Hawkes, Martha Marcy May Marlene
Patton Oswalt, Young Adult
Brad Pitt, The Tree of Life




BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS

J. Smith-Cameron, Margaret



nominees:

Sareh Bayat, A Separation
Jeannie Berlin, Margaret
Mary Page-Keller, Beginners
Shailene Woodley, The Descendants






ADAPTED SCREENPLAY

Nat Faxon, Alexander Payne, & Jim Rash, The Descendants




nominees:

Everything Must Go
Incendies
Jane Eyre
Moneyball




ORIGINAL SCREENPLAY

Asghar Farhadi, A Separation




nominees:

Beginners
Midnight in Paris
Weekend
Young Adult






ENSEMBLE

Margaret




nominees:

Beginners
The Descendants
Midnight in Paris
A Separation





FOREIGN FILM

A Separation




nominees:

Incendies
Le Havre
A Screaming Man
Tomboy





CINEMATOGRAPHY

Emmanuel Lubezki, The Tree of Life





nominees:

Manuel Alberto Claro, Melancholia
Lech Majewski & Adam Sikora, The Mill and the Cross
Guillaume Schiffman, The Artist
Newton Thomas Sigel, Drive






FILM EDITING

Mat Newman, Drive




nominees:

Kirk Baxter & Angus Wall, The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo
Anne-Sophie Bion & Michel Hazanavicius, The Artist
Hayedeh Safiyari, A Separation
Joe Walker, Shame





ORIGINAL SCORE

Ludovic Bource, The Artist




nominees:

The Chemical Brothers, Hanna
Cliff Martinez, Drive
Alexandre Desplat, The Tree of Life
John Williams, War Horse




ORIGINAL SONG

"Think You Can Wait," Win Win




nominees:

"Masterpiece," W.E.
"Piledriver Waltz," Submarine





ART DIRECTION / SET DECORATION

The Mill and the Cross




nominees:

The Artist
Midnight in Paris
Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy
The Tree of Life




COSTUMES

Sonia Grande, Midnight in Paris






nominees:

Mark Bridges, The Artist
Michael O'Connor, Jane Eyre
Anaïs Romand, House of Tolerance
Dorota Roqueplo, The Mill and the Cross



VISUAL EFFECTS

Mission Impossible - The Ghost Protocol




nominees:

Attack the Block
The Rise of the Planet of the Apes
Super 8
The Tree of Life



SOUND

Drive




nominees:

Incendies
Mission Impossible - The Ghost Protocol
The Rise of the Planet of the Apes
The Tree of Life





SOUND EDITING

Drive





nominees:

The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo
Mission Impossible - The Ghost Protocol
The Rise of the Planet of the Apes
The Tree of Life




DOCUMENTARY FILM

Bill Cunningham New York




nominees:

The Black Power Mixtape 1967 - 1975
Paradise Lost 3: Purgatory
Project Nim
We Were Here


Sunday, January 22, 2012

top 10 films of 2011

Here are my Top 10 Films of 2011.

10.

Bill Cunningham New York





This was a pleasant fashion doc for the first half (and oddly more illuminating about the Gray Lady than this year's Page One: Inside the New York Times) but then it struck an unexpectedly deft emotional chord and became a truly moving story about an elusive man with a keen eye who could have easily been overlooked.

"Bill traverses so many disparate layers and overlapping social milieus of New York City. I thought it essential to interview people who not only have a relationship with Bill but who span the spectrum of New York to help tell his story. I tried to lessen the tyranny of the bland talking head by filming each character in the form of a photographic portrait – one that gives as much visual insight into who they are and how they live or work—and trying to make each person a character in the film in their own right." - Richard Press, Director.



9.

Beginners





Writer/ Director Mike Mills crafts a bittersweet elegy for his father, who like Christopher Plummer's (a beautiful performance) character, came out as a gay man late in life.

"My dad was very poised and polite. He was born in 1924, kind of shy and very aesthetic. He wore a suit and was very proper.... I had seen my real dad gravitate towards all these guys – not just romantically, but his gay friends – who were way wilder, way more messy, way less aesthetic, way juicier, more emotional, less 'boundaried' and kind of messy. It was really beautiful and heartbreaking to realize, 'Wow, that’s what he wants. He wants to be more like that. Consciously and unconsciously, he’s attracted to these guys.' I knew that, but I knew it better after writing about it." - Mike Mills.


8.

Weekend





Andrew Haigh's poignant look at the lives of two men who spend a few days together.  A strong, naturalistic script by Haigh and lovely acting by Tom Cullen and Chris New.  One of the best, most authentic gay films I've seen.

"I spent a long time working on the script, trying to make it feel as real as possible, make it sound like actual dialogue rather than script talk. Then when we got to shooting the film, I always left room for improvisation. I would sit down with the actors each night and we would go through the script, taking out what didn't work, adding things we felt necessary. And then during shooting, we would continue this method. If the actors wanted to add things, then they did and if they wanted to take things away, they did that also. I was always looking for something spontaneous." - Andrew Haigh, from my interview with him.


7.

Midnight in Paris



It's been a while since Woody Allen has made such an indelible comedy.  His nostalgic and whimsical ode to the City of Light hits the sweet spot.

"I was an amateur magician, and to this day I can do sleight of hand and card tricks and coin tricks. And I always feel that only a magical solution can save us. The human predicament is so tragic and so awful that, short of an act of magic, we're doomed. Many people feel they will be saved by their religion in some way, and that's a version of magic -- some all-powerful magician is going to give them an afterlife or in some other way make life meaningful. But in fact, that doesn't seem to be the case. If they suddenly discovered tomorrow that the universe had been created by a god and there was meaning to it, then everyone would be very cheerful and it would be a big help. You'd notice a lot of smiling faces." - Woody Allen.


6.

Young Adult




Mavis Gary is quite ridiculous in her quest to reignite an old flame but her insecurity is palpable and raw.  Banal discussions over how 'likable' Gary's character is have undermined the brilliance of Theron's performance, Diablo Cody's darkly funny script and Jason Reitman's precise, sensitive direction.

"I feel like I'm part of a generation of people who are stuck in the past and are really self-absorbed. I mean, we're actually taking pictures of ourselves and posting them on Facebook, and keeping in touch with people that should have been out of our lives 15 years ago. Obsessing over who's getting married, who's having kids, who's more successful. It's like we're recreating high school every single day using social media. And it's weird." - Diablo Cody.


5.

Shame





An arresting, bleak film of a man's addictions in contemporary New York with a wonderful performance by Michael Fassbender.


"We all use our bodies, that’s how we are. We hardly ever talk. In film, people are talking all the time about how they feel and whatnot, and in reality that’s just not the case. We made Hunger in the way we did to reflect some kind of reality, and I feel the same way about “Shame.” The whole idea of back story and what could have happened to them — I wanted to make that situation familiar rather than unrecognizable. I wanted it to be about what we know, about what happens to them in everyday life. You meet someone for the first time and you have no idea who that person is really. What they do is present themselves the best way they can, and possibly through a period of time, after getting to know them, through the present you might see the past in them. And that’s exactly what I wanted to do with Sissy and Brandon and the audience." - Steve McQueen.



4.

The Descendants




George Clooney gives another impeccable performance as a father of two young daughters, grieving over the comatose state of his wife after a boating accident.  Writer / Director Alexander Payne's adaptation of a novel by Kaui Hart Hemmings is rife with distinctive observations.


"I had never seen exactly this story in a movie before, and then the fact that it was told in Hawaii, and not just generally in Hawaii, but amidst that decaying aristocracy, made it very interesting to me. I wasn’t so much interested in Hawaii as I was Honolulu. I had never seen Honolulu in a film. So I was eager to see it. As the years go by and I make more films, I am increasingly interested in capturing place as a vivid backdrop for my films." - Alexander Payne.



3.

The Artist




It's a bit of a stunt and a message to craft a silent film in an era of noisy blockbusters, but the supple direction of Michel Hazanavicius and lead performances of Jean Dujardin and Bérénice Bejo make this a joyous homage.


"In my mind, he [the film's main character, George] is everything but an artist. He is a film star, but that’s his job in a way. That’s not his principle characterization. To me, he is a proud man. That’s what defines him. He refused to adapt himself to a changing of his world. I think he’s afraid of losing something that he thinks he controls."  - Michel Hazanavicius.


2.

Drive



I enjoyed this movie more than any other this year since its slick 70s / 80s neo-noir atmosphere is in my aesthetic wheelhouse.  And Gosling is so magnetic (and hot!) in the lead.


"I wanted to lift the notion of time, because like fairy tales, they're symbolic storytelling. They're metaphors. The fairy tale always takes place in worlds that are between, unidentifiable." - Nicolas Winding Refn, Director.



1.

A Separation




This portrait of the unexpected consequences of a disintegrating marriage of a middle-class Iranian couple is both taut and timely.


"For the Americans it is not attractive to hear what the similarities are between them and the Iranian people. It is attractive to hear how different the Iranians are. These kinds of films, however, can fill that gap that the media doesn't show. Of the similarities between us. This is the most recurrent of the things I've been saying these last two days. That the similarities between people are far greater than the differences between people." - Asghar Farhadi, Director.


--


There were many great, memorable films this year which didn't make the Top 10.  They are:

Incendies, MargaretMartha Marcy May Marlene, The Skin I Live InTomboyEverything Must GoMoneyballWe Were HereThe Tree of LifeSing Your SongA Screaming ManMeek's CutoffJane EyreMelancholiaHugoProject NimRise of the Planet of the ApesThe Girl with the Dragon TattooCarnageLe HavreParadise Lost 3: Purgatory, PariahBeautiful BoyTrustPoetryThe Myth of the American SleepoverSuper 8The Black Power Mixtape 1967 - 1975The TripBridesmaidsA Better LifeMission Impossible - Ghost ProtocolThe Guard, PinaBeats, Rhymes & Life: The Travels of A Tribe Called QuestBuckUncle Boonmee Who Can Recall His Past LivesTinker Tailor Soldier SpyCertified CopyLast NightSennaAttack the BlockIn A Better WorldContagionNedsWin WinHouse of ToleranceCave of Forgotten DreamsHannaTuesday, After ChristmasThe ArborOf Gods and MenTabloid

Saturday, December 3, 2011

shame


Chic's "I Want Your Love" spins on the record player in the apartment of Brandon Sullivan (Michael Fassbender in another devastating performance) where his sister Sissy (Carey Mulligan) has broken into.  The song not only illustrates her perpetual neediness and her want of something deeper from her soulless brother, but it's also a ghostly reminder of promiscuous, (but perhaps, more emotionally vibrant?) pre-AIDS Manhattan.  In the same way that John Schlesinger's Midnight Cowboy took us to the grit and grime of New York in 1969, in Shame, the gifted director Steve McQueen takes us to a very of-the-moment wealthy, Bloomberg-era Manhattan.  Here, Brandon takes a run past sleek, mysterious and nondescript glass offices (one of which he works in) and Chase banks and glimpses the Hudson River, with its rotting stumps of the infamous abandoned piers once hothouses for sexual hookups.


In a city that's constantly revamping, for good and bad, Brandon and Sissy seem unable to change their lives.  Pale and dead-eyed, Brandon is addicted to no-strings-attached sex and sexual imagery of all kinds. For whatever reason, (he comes "from a bad place," as his sister lets us know), he's just not cut out for relationships. When he attempts a date with a workmate (an incredibly present and believable Nicole Beharie who figures in two of the film's many great , long take scenes), he fails miserably, unable to be considerate or even create "small talk."  Sissy is suicidal and lost (her relationship with Brandon has shades of incestuousness), staying at Brandon's apartment, trying to find work as a singer.  In a heart rendering ode to pain and vulnerability, Mulligan sings a weak, small-voiced version of the usually bombastic "New York, New York."  It would never happen in reality, but McQueen forces the lounge (and the film) to stop to listen and watch.



McQueen's harrowing Hunger viewed the Irish hunger strike of Bobby Sands with a startlingly aesthetic eye (it attempted to create beauty out of its perfectly composed shots of excrement-streaked walls and Sands' emaciated body).  Bold and bleak, Shame speaks the language of the emotionally barren Brandon while taking out the aestheticism of what is usually aesthetic. ****



-Jeffery Berg