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I had the privilege of sitting with Warren Sonbert (1947-1995) at some of San Franciscos press screenings in the several years that preceded his death at age 47 from AIDS. There was something inexpressibly charming in his furtive whispers under the films dialogue usually about how bad the film was. Sonbert was an old-school cinephile with wide knowledge of the field. He was also a formidable if failing presence, increasingly curdled by his disgust with the slick emptiness of what he had to review but engaged enough, at least until the last few times I saw him, to drop daggerlike digs sotto voce. Those last times were painful to watch. Crouching, his hands shading his eyes as if to ward off the world, he was obviously living in his own grim melodrama that must have made any onscreen high jinks seem tame indeed.
Sonbert hated the dogmatism of labels, and he rejected the one most widely applied to him: diarist. This is indeed too limiting to contain the work, which is much more ambitious than random visual jottings on celluloid. Sonbert was an avid globetrotter, never without a movie camera. Many of the films Friendly Witness (1989) and Whiplash (1995) are two draw on this footage, transforming his trips into heady collages of sheer experience: brief, gorgeous, sometimes whimsical images of everything from a dog on a high wire to handsome Bedouin men cleaning a carpet in the desert. Sonberts impressionist approach incorporates the whimsical, the poignant, and the absurd with equal grace, often punctuated by classical music or Motown (The Supremes kitsch-poignant "Where Did Our Love Go?" was a favorite). He evokes a world of aching beauty and fleeting pleasure in a way that no linear narrative approach could. The films short running times most are in the 20 to 30 minute range, with only Carriage Trade (1972) approaching feature status reinforce this sense of life as transitory.
Not all of the films follow the kaleidoscopic pattern of Friendly Witness, Whiplash, and Short Fuse. The rarely screened Tenth Legion (1967), perhaps named in tribute to his idol Douglas Sirks The First Legion, focuses on sex, using Rembrandt-like lighting to render the bliss of bodies intertwined. Another of his masters, Hitchcock (and specifically Marnie), is the subject of a hommage in a claustrophobic reduction of the Hollywood weepie, A Womans Touch (1983). Sonbert was also something of a prodigy, only 19 when he made Amphetamine (1966), with Wendy Appel. This 10-minute black-and-white ode to sex and drugs echoes the work of Warhol and Morrissey in luring the viewer into a self-consciously decadent, queer closed space. A booted boy is seen shooting up in methodical detail, and he and another boy passionately make out. The film makes no reference to the outside world, and its sheer insularity is rendered through the drone of an endlessly repeated "Where Did Our Love Go?" from a scratchy LP. The sense of transgressive pleasure is intense here but also ephemeral. Like Sonberts short life, its a diversion that will end as surely and quickly as the secret pleasures it celebrates. October 2000 | Issue 30 ACCESS: Sonberts work is not available commercially on tape but does pop up at museum and cinematheque venues. Watch for it. For information on the restorations, check out www.sfiff.org/fest98/awards/awards10.html. ALSO: More experimental and avant-garde cinema, director profiles, and gay and lesbian cinema |