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Little Stabs of Happiness Random Short Reviews of the Worthy and the
The earliest selection is 1999's The Tanti Man, an 11-minute evocation of a summer romance between Abate (who stars in much of his work) and a handsome drifter. Shot in Salisbury, Massachusetts, this sweet work deftly interweaves love scenes with memories of the melodrama of being a tortured high school homo, complete with wounded poetry and threats of suicide. Skeeter Davis's mournful ditty "The End of the World," excerpted in endlessly repeated loops, provides the hypnotic soundtrack to what is ultimately a bittersweet idyll. Among the arresting images: the boys making love sprawled over a Candyland gameboard. Chisholm, made the same year, ups the artistic ante with striking images of a porn film shot on high school graduation night at a cheesy motel. "All we wanted to do was get fucked up and party all night," a voiceover repeats against flickering, half-lit images of tits and asses and hard-ons, again accompanied by the homely looped refrain of an early ‘60s teen-girl tune, this time Little Peggy March wailing about lost innocence, presumably that of the mysterious stars: "My teenage castle is tumblin' down …"
One Mile Per Minute (2002) wittily portrays a literally topsy-turvy world (the camera is on its side for much of this one). In this fractured dreamscape, robot-consumers mouth commercial mantras, including such sacred cows as "hip" sitcoms "I love Frazier, I love ER…" and rest under a sun that's a corporate logo. The three-part Real Videos (1999-2001) are a heady mix of Pixelvision beefcake scenes, airplane crashes, and webcam homosex that show cocksucking, buttfucking, and whacking off as sources of solace in a capsized capitalist world. Abate exploits the chilliness of the modern techno-landscape to clever effect, placing his sexy porn boys in scintillating scenarios of pleasure even when one is on a computer and the other is watching. Naked rough trade, sleepy rimmers, a man (the director, it appears) licking a modem these are some of the denizens of Abate's sensual, skewed world. The American Astronaut (Cory McAbee, 2001)
Angela Mao was born in Taiwan on September 20, 1950. The child of Peking Opera star and director Mao Yung Kang, she took ballet classes before joining the Peking Opera herself at the age of 8. Her evident skill in kung-fu brought her a contract with Golden Harvest before she was 20. Her first film for the company, Angry River (1970), differs from most of her work in having supernatural elements. More typical are titles like Lady Whirlwind (Deep Thrust, 1972), Lady Kung Fu (Hapkido, 1972), and Deadly China Doll (1973), which were mostly "chop-socky" programmers with a stunningly athletic Mao consistently and sometimes literally rising above the material. The standard Angela Mao film features the diminutive star violently defending family or family honor, one religious or martial-arts sect against other, or her country and culture against an invader (often the Japanese). Foremost in her arsenal are rapid, dynamic hand movements and a dazzling array of high kicks, deployed with consummate athleticism and grace. Mao was not averse to using weaponry; the films show her adroitness with swords, spears, metal yo-yos, sashes, a spinning umbrella, even spinning razors on her shoes. But her body and its inner resources were always her most impressive weapon. Mao's pouty, innocent look, conscious lack of glamour, and often ruthless methods of dispatching her enemies are key elements in her appeal.
Mao's collaborators included many of today's best-known martial-arts stars Bruce Lee, Jackie Chan (who choreographed her 1976 film Dance of Death), and Sammo Hung, a frequent costar but Mao herself has slid into obscurity. After nearly three dozen films, she retired in 1980 and married her longtime boyfriend Kelly Lau. A 1974 profile in the magazine Fighting Stars reveals a thoughtful, unpretentious woman behind the kicks and whirls, a judgment seconded by critic Verina Glaessner's dead-on sketch of Mao, in the book Kung Fu: Cinema of Vengeance as a highly disciplined star who "approaches her roles seriously, directly, and without a trace of narcissism." Mao appeared, looking surprisingly unchanged at 49, in Tony Russell's 1999 documentary survey of "kung-fu women" Top Fighter 2: Deadly China Dolls. Broadway: The Golden Age (Rob McKay, 2003)
The "actor's life" as seen here is one of happy chaos and nerve-wracking promise. Carol Burnett talks about arriving in New York with no money and bursting into tears, but, having seen the bright lights of Broadway, refused to go home, taking herself and her "cardboard suitcase" to the Algonquin Hotel. Robert Goulet stole silverware from the automat. Betty Garrett and her mother put off getting an ironing board for two years in order to buy theater tickets And their initial forays into being working actors weren't always glamorous. Carol Lawrence laughingly recalls rehearsing for a month on West Side Story with no pay.
Hush! (Ryosuke Hashiguchi, 2001)
Gay filmmaker Ryosuke Hashiguchi is not exactly a household word, having made only three features since he began directing in 1993. The Slight Fever of a 20-Year-Old (1993), shot on a shoestring budget in 16mm, and the more ambitious Like Grains of Sand (1995) were enormously successful in Japan, but were mostly relegated to the gulag of the film festival circuit in America. Like Grains of Sand, particularly, has been called one of the best films of the 1990s for its penetrating portrayal of adolescent gay romance in a society that continues to view homosexuality as an aberration. Hush! is unlikely to change the director's standing in the West, which is a shame. This masterful exploration of an unusual triangle a pair of gay lovers and the woman who wants to use one of them to help her have a child deserves a wide audience. Asako (Reiko Kataoka) is a chain-smoking slacker girl working in a dental office making crowns. She's had two abortions, tried to kill herself, and is besieged by a self-centered suitor with whom she has unprotected sex. She meets Katsushiro (Seiichi Tanabe), a closeted but partnered engineer, and decides she likes his eyes enough to ask him to father a child with her not to marry her, simply to provide the sperm, along with a possible friendship. Katsushiro's lover, Naoya (Kazuya Takahashi), is not pleased with this possibility. He grooms dogs at a pet shop and, being out, is appalled by Katsushiro's apparent interest in a heterosexual model of family and children. Adding to the confusion are other memorable characters who float in and out of these three lives. Asako's creepy quasi-boyfriend pops up at the least opportune times. Katsushiro is plagued by an unhinged stalker girl himself, a pretty lunatic who throws massive fits in public over this unrequited love. Katsushiro's brother and the latter's family come to Tokyo to try to figure out his life and strange relationships. And Naoya's mother, a comical fag-hag type, laments with her irritated son that his luck with men is no better than hers.
Some of the social critique here takes the form of black comedy, with the pet shop, with its pampered pooches and ditzy housewives, a particularly rich locale in this regard. But there are plenty of other targets, including an arrogant medical establishment. When a doctor tells Asako she has a fibroid cyst, he also suggests that since she sleeps around she should have a hysterectomy to avoid future pregnancies. Nor does the film spare the queer community. Gay bar scenes, shot in a cinema verite style, show a particularly evil queen ridiculing Asako as only an evil queen can. Not everyone will appreciate the film's pacing, which tends toward the glacial, but patient viewers will be drawn into the film's powerful emotional spell. Hashiguchi is a master of the long take, and some of Hush!'s best sequences are shot uninterrupted, such as an extended quietly brutal confrontation between the three principals and Katsushiro's family. Hashiguchi's earlier films used amateur actors; here he uses experienced ones, who bloom beautifully under the camera's relentless gaze. Ultimately, all the film's spaces the pet shop, the various apartments, Katsushiro's brother's house offer no solace. In Hush!, there are no real refuges only small clusters of people trying to find each other in a chilly world. Kingpin (Bobby and Peter Farrelley, 1996)
The film, written and directed by Richard Kwietniowski, opens in autumnal colors, with stuffy Brit academic Giles De'Ath (get it?) emerging from the pain of his wife's death into a modern world that he's always steadfastly ignored. This "erstwhile fogey," as one of the newspapers calls him, accidentally buys a ticket to the wrong movie; expecting an adaptation of Forster, he's suddenly faced with Hotpants College II, a lowbrow American comedy in the Porky's mode. Bored by the pizza-scarfing, teacher-mooning antics of the story, De'Ath snaps to attention when Ronnie Bostock (Priestley) appears. You see, Ronnie's not like the other boys in the film he's handsome and sexy, but more important, he's sensitive, and doesn't go in for the kind of rough-housing the others engage in. In one scene that especially entrances De'Ath, Ronnie gets beat up and ends up stretched out on a counter in his pizza delivery uniform in a classic martyr-boy pose. Like an obsessed teenage girl, De'Ath begins to study his new idol and collect every possible bit of trivia on him in an album he labels "Bostockiana." He at least has enough sense to hide this fetish tome from his nosy housekeeper. His passion for Ronnie has the welcome effect of bringing De'Ath out of his doldrums, but what has up to this point been a whimsical study of the minutiae of an old curmudgeon's life takes on a darker tone as De'Ath decides he must meet Ronnie. Traveling from London to Long Island on the pretext of writing a book, he becomes a classic stalker setting up Operation Ronnie at a local adult motel, ingratiating himself with the locals, and exerting his peculiarly British hauteur on his target's trophy girlfriend, Audrey (Fiona Loewi).
The film gets some comic mileage out of its movies-within-the-movie, droll excerpts from Ronnie's films like Tex Mex and the Hotpants series. And some of the early humor is sweet and sharply observed. But Hurt is playing a throwback that will surely irritate modern audiences the tight-lipped, aging, desperate queer of the 1950s lusting hopelessly after 1990s boyflesh. The film persistently, but perhaps unconsciously, gives evidence of De'Ath's dark side his extreme self-absorption, his nasty treatment of practically everyone around him while also expecting us to sympathize with him as a tragic figure, since the film speaks literally with his voice through a voiceover. But when the key moment comes in which he must face his feelings and lay them out or maybe just pounce on Ronnie he does so with the pitiful whimpering of a pup, eclipsing even Mann's Gustav in the Sad Old Homo department. A Matter of Taste (Bernard Rapp, 2000)
Bruce, who wrote, directed, and photographed, also stars here as a hairdresser who obsesses over skinheads. Luckily, right near his apartment he finds a handsome specimen, sitting silently on a park bench. Before you can say "wash and set," Bruce has lured "Skinhead Guy," as he's known, into his apartment. There Bruce gives the bald beauty a bath (using Mr. Bubble), after which he locks his new pal in a bedroom. Of course, this being a Bruce La Bruce movie, Skinhead Guy quickly and easily escapes for a visit to his sister, a lesbian activist filmmaker and graffiti artist. But soon Bruce and Skinhead are reunited for more edgy fun.
Still, Bruce gets points for daring to bare all, and doing it with humor. A zany soundtrack that includes such ill-matched talents as Karen Carpenter, the Subhumans, and Tiny Tim adds to the foolish fun. Salmonberries (Percy Adlon, 1991)
Our first view of Katzebu reveals a stark, silent, but powerful personality that finds a perfect analogue in the mysterious glacial expanses of Alaska. The film plunges us into the story before it tells us much about the characters; Katzebu appears menacingly at the local library, which she inexplicably proceeds to tear up. A few establishing shots tell us that she works on the pipeline, that her coworkers assume she is a man, and that she's bothered bigtime. In a riveting dreamlike sequence, she appears in the dark library completely naked before an astonished Goswitha. Gradually, the film gives us tantalizing glimpses of her real personality and the forces that drive her. Salmonberries is about dislocation and duality, and Katzebu is its primary symbol of a divided identity: a loner abandoned at birth, a practically mute character desperate for ways to communicate, a woman believed by others (and herself, it seems) to be a man. The film traces her dogged, unswerving attempts to find some kind of reasonable identity by attaching herself to the embittered Goswitha, whose resistance she gradually wears down.
lang is another matter. She's a fantastically powerful, hypnotic presence, but eventually falters under the demands of the role. It could be argued that the stiffness and discomfort she exhibits here is exactly appropriate for a character as tortured as Katzebu, but either through her own uneasiness with acting or the director's inability to elicit the same richness we hear in her voice, she fails to bring her character's tragedy to life. The score benefits considerably from her singing, particularly her hit "Barefoot." Le Samourai (Jean-Pierre Melville, 1967)
With a director like Jean-Pierre Melville, who worshipped everything American, it's possible, in fact rewarding, to trace a character like Delon's Jeff Costello in Le Samourai back to these earlier rats. In fact, the name provides a clue to the film's ethos Jeff is the spiritual son of an earlier, American Jeff: Mitchum's doomed romantic Jeff Bailey in one of the greatest noirs, Out of the Past (1947). These two Jeffs are bound by something that 20 years and a few thousand miles can't break: a piercing sense of loneliness and alienation that dominates and finally consumes them. Delon's Jeff is a bloodless killing machine, a hit man who dispatches his targets with ruthless efficiency, but also simple, almost childlike in his wish to "do the job" without fanfare. In the opening scene of Le Samourai, we see him first stretched out alone on his bed, in an apartment so dreary it makes this color film look black and white. His first act is the methodical murder of a stranger, a nightclub owner. But this time he's seen, by a beautiful, cryptic black pianist (Cathy Rosier). According to Jeff's "samourai" warrior code, he should kill her, but he doesn't the first sign of weakness we see. She returns the favor by refusing to identify him in a police line-up. From here the film becomes an elaborate cat-and-mouse game, with the police convinced he's guilty and Jeff moving ever closer to oblivion as he becomes a double target turned on by the faceless men who hire him.
Le Samourai is a superior early example of the neo-noir, expertly manipulating the elements that go with the genre location shooting; drab, claustrophobic environments; a condensed time frame, noted by day and time printed on the screen; and an emotionally dead hero caught in the last moments of his life. In the cyclical nature of such things, Delon's Jeff inspired yet another Jeff, Chow Yun Fat's character in the John Woo films Hard-Boiled and The Killer. Woo has called Melville his favorite director, but the great Chow can't eclipse the subtle power Delon brings to this role. In one scene, Melville shows him behind a rainsoaked car window, staring ahead, with a cigarette in his mouth, an unforgettable image of stoicism and bravery in the midst of chaos. Street of No Return (Samuel Fuller, 1989)
Street of No Return (1989), made in France, mines familiar film noir territory. Based on a novel by noted hardboiled writer David Goodis, the film follows the progression of famed pop singer "Michael" (Keith Carradine in David Bowie-style glitter robes) into the urban gutter. The film opens with a spectacular set-piece of a race riot on a dark street, and continues with an unrelenting string of violent episodes that show how Michael's world is slowly closing in on him. His involvement with a mysterious fatale bit-player in one of his videos capsizes his career and hurls him into poverty and anonymity when she turns out to be a gangster's moll, and the gangster slits his throat. The characters are film noir archetypes a cigar-chomping dominatrix, a corrupt industrialist, and of course Carradine as an ambivalent, uncommitted character drawn into a seedy demi-monde that can mean self-actualization or destruction. Fuller's understanding of the mechanics of the modern American ghetto is surprisingly pointed. He strengthens Goodis' bleak original by fleshing out the idea of a white corporate gangster who introduces crack into the community, then orchestrates race riots in order to devalue property which he buys for nothing, renovates and resells. This social decimation provides a dramatic backdrop for Michael's attempts to redeem himself from the sterility of his now-lost pop career, and it's part of Fuller's approach that personal redemption must coincide with a sense of social purpose.
The scandalous behavior of New York officials in trying to isolate the hundreds of thousands of protestors (estimates vary from 500,000 to over a million) from the Republican National Convention is the backdrop here. But the real stars are the ordinary people exercising their rights in an increasingly elusive democracy. There are "Glamericans" trannies and their friends who carry signs like "Fashion Tip: Flip Flops Are In!" and add an always welcome sense of playfulness to the protests. There are little kids, one of whom responds to director Huestis's question of why he wants to get rid of Bush with a loud, heartfelt "Because he's stupid!" Also here are senior citizens flipping off the cops, union workers who passionately recount a (long) list of Bush's failures, and a poignant interview with a man whose son was killed in Iraq. Inspired by Haskell Wexler's famous 1969 documentary Medium Cool about the 1968 Democratic convention, Huestis captures the buzz of this event with panache. He unflinchingly records the sometimes whimsical, often heated exchanges between the protestors and convention attendees, who range from grimly smiling automatons to a goofy, screaming old man decked out in extreme patriotic kitsch. Huestis can't resist getting his own zingers, at one point insisting (to a befuddled Republican) "I'd rather have blow jobs than no jobs!" And really, who wouldn't? The Whale Rider (Niki Caro, 2002)
They make for powerful adversaries, one obsessed with an imperiled tradition, the other determined to reinvent it as the first girl "whale rider" a reference to the mythological character who started the Maori race millennia earlier by riding in on a whale. Pai learns the ancient songs and rituals, while Koro tries desperately to thwart her. Matters escalate when a pod of whales washes up near dead on the beach, a dire event that Koro blames entirely on Pai and her alleged hubris. The simple storyline of The Whale Rider, like that of The Fast Runner, has the poetic power of ancient myth, with a primal narrative enriched by an element of genderplay in its pitting of patriarchal Koro and the rigid, repressive ways he represents against the expansive feminine spirit incarnated by Pai. It's their conflict that gives the film much of its considerable force.
But the most riveting element of the film is the performance of Keisha Castle-Hughes as Pai. Castle-Hughes is simply extraordinary in this complex role. It's impossible not to be moved by her incarnation of this slight, sad, powerful girl, a character driven by a force that seems equally likely to transform and destroy her. It's hard to imagine an adult actor being able to meet the demands of such a role; that a 12-year-old girl does it this well approaches the miraculous. August 2005 | Issue 49 Note: These "stabs" are affectionately dedicated to and modeled on the pithy capsule film reviews pioneered by Calvin T. Beck's deservedly legendary Castle of Frankenstein magazine in the 1960s. Thanks, Cal, wherever the hell you are! ACCESS: Usually the hyperlink in the film's title goes to the Internet Movie Database entry, which in turn references official site, DVD release, photo galleries, and a wealth of other information; otherwise it links to an interesting article on the film or person. To purchase (if available), head for the usual sources moviesunlimited, deepdiscountdvd, dvdempire, dvdplanet, reel.com, etc. For tougher titles, try ebay and gray-market sites like Video Search of Miami, which feature many otherwise unobtainable titles, particularly from Europe and Asia. ALSO: More little stabs |
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New book from the
editor and writers of
Bright Lights Film Journal
Action! Interviews with Directors
from Classical Hollywood to
Contemporary Iran
(Anthem Art and Culture),
by Gary Morris (Editor),
Bert Cardullo (Introduction),
Jonathan Rosenbaum (Foreword).
London and New York:
Anthem Press, 2009.
"I dare anyone to squeeze between
two covers a more varied, useful and
flat out entertaining sampling of
the personalities that make the
seventh art the liveliest."
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Interviews
Robert Bresson
Roger Corman (with Bruce Dern
and David Carradine)
Allan Dwan
Clint Eastwood
Douglas Sirk
Robert Wise
Mania Akbari
Lars von Trier
Michael Haneke
Allie Light
Melvin and Mario van Peebles
Otto Muehl
The Brothers Quay
Barbara Kopple
Federico Fellini
Abbas Kiarostami
François Truffaut
Caveh Zahedi
Peter Bogdanovich and
Joseph McBride
on Orson Welles