Yearly Archives: 2011

MODERN MONDAYS: AN EVENING WITH ALEJANDRO JODOROWSKY

The beautiful weirdness never ends in Jodorowsky cult classic THE HOLY MOUNTAIN, being screened Halloween night at MoMA

TO SAVE AND PROJECT
MoMA Film
Museum of Modern Art
11 West 53rd St. between Fifth & Sixth Aves.
Monday, October 31, 7:00
Tickets: $10, in person only, may be applied to museum admission within thirty days, same-day screenings free with museum admission, available at Film and Media Desk beginning at 9:30 am
212-708-9400
www.moma.org

Inspired by Rene Daumal’s Mount Analogue: A Novel of Symbolically Authentic Non-Euclidean Adventures in Mountain Climbing, Alejandro Jodorowsky’s The Holy Mountain also involves symbolically non-Euclidean adventures in mountain climbing, funneled through Carlos Castaneda, Stanley Kubrick’s 2001: A Space Odyssey, and magic mushrooms and LSD galore. What passes for narrative follows a Jesus look-alike thief (Horacio Salinas) and an alchemist with a thing for female nudity (Jodorowsky) on the path to enlightenment; along the way they encounter the mysterious Tarot, stigmata, stoning, eyeballs, frogs, flies, cold-blooded murder, naked young boys, chakra points, life-size plaster casts, Nazi dancers, sex, violence, blood, gambling, turning human waste into gold, death and rebirth, and the search for the secret of immortality via representatives of the planets, each with their own extremely bizarre story to tell. Jodorowsky, who is credited with having invented the midnight movie with the acid Western El Topo (1970), literally shatters religious iconography in a kaleidoscopic whirlwind of jaw-droppingly gorgeous and often inexplicable imagery composed from a surreal color palette, set to a score by free jazz trumpeter Don Cherry and Archies keyboardist Ron Frangipane. (Frangipane also worked with John Lennon and Yoko Ono, who produced this film with their business manager, Allen Klein.) The Holy Mountain — which brings a whole new insight to Matthew Barney’s Cremaster Cycle — is filled with psychedelic mysticism centered around the human search for transcendence in a wilderness of the sacred and profane. Jodorowsky’s work can move you deeply, but don’t expect it to make much sense. Sit back and let in pour in and over you — you’ll feel it. You may hate it, but you’ll feel it. Although you’ll definitely hate the very end. The Holy Mountain is screening on Halloween night at MoMA as part of the Modern Mondays program and the To Save and Project series; Jodorowsky will be on hand to introduce the film, then take part in a Q&A with MoMA’s Klaus Biesenbach and Joshua Siegel afterward. Advance tickets are sold out, but a limited number of seats will be released Monday morning at 9:30 at the Film and Media Desk. Jodorowsky will be at the Film Society of Lincoln Center the next night for a screening of El Topo and a conversation with Richard Peña.

THALIA FILM SUNDAYS: AMERICAN TEACHER

Documentary examines the sorry treatment of teachers in America today

AMERICAN TEACHER (Vanessa Roth, 2011)
Symphony Space Leonard Nimoy Thalia
2537 Broadway at 95th St.
Sunday, October 30, $13, 2:15 & 6:15
212-864-5400
www.symphonyspace.org
www.theteachersalaryproject.org

“It’s the best job in the world, no comparison,” Jonathan Dearman says in American Teacher, Vanessa Roth’s eye-opening documentary about the sorry treatment of teachers in the United States today. Based on the book Teachers Have It Easy: The Big Sacrifices and Small Salaries of America’s Teachers (New Press, 2005) by Dave Eggers, Daniel Moulthrop, and Nínive Clements Calegari, the eighty-one-minute film looks at the surprising lack of status, salary, respect, and training afforded what is considered in other countries the most important profession by examining the cases of four current or former American teachers, dedicated men and women who are born educators but who have been deeply affected by a seriously flawed system. Texas history professor and sports coach Erik Benner sees his marriage fall apart as he works two jobs to help support his wife and two daughters. Brooklynite Jamie Fidler is following in her father’s footsteps as a teacher, but her pregnancy complicates her future in part by revealing the relatively poor health benefits. Maplewood’s Rhena Jasey is a Harvard grad with two masters degrees from Columbia who is considering leaving the kids she loves so much for a Washington Heights charter school that pays a far more substantial salary. And Dearman, a beloved San Francisco educator, turns to the family real estate business when teaching just can’t pay the bills. Part of the nonprofit Teacher Salary Project, American Teacher is at its best when it shows the teachers in the classroom and talking about what they love about their job, but when it focuses on the many negatives, it feels too much like a telethon, as if a crawl should be running across the bottom of the screen soliciting donations. The film includes numerous statistics involving turnover rates, the declining number of men in the industry, and, of course, various financial figures, dryly narrated by Matt Damon. In addition to following around the four protagonists, Roth speaks with students and their parents, superintendents, principals, professors, and other industry professionals who want to see the system changed. Interestingly, one word that never comes up is “union,” which is often at the center of any discussion about the state of education in America. Although it can pull too much at the heartstrings while stating the obvious, American Teacher is an important documentary that makes a strong case for the United States to fix this growing problem, and fast. The film is screening twice on October 30 as part of the Thalia Film Sundays series at Symphony Space, with Roth participating in a Q&A following the 6:15 show.

MY REINCARNATION

Documentary looks at the complex relationship between a father and son

MY REINCARNATION (Jennifer Fox, 2010)
Cinema Village
22 East 12th St. between University Pl. & Fifth Ave.
Opens Friday, October 28
212-924-3363
www.myreincarnationfilm.com
www.cinemavillage.com

More than twenty years in the making, Jennifer Fox’s My Reincarnation tells the fascinating story of a very unusual father-son relationship amid the modern world of tulkus, or reincarnated Tibetan lamas. World-renowned high Tibetan Buddhist Master Chögyal Namkhai Norbu travels around the world teaching meditation and Dzogchen practice. He meets with the Dalai Lama, advises students and fans, signs copies of his many books, and builds support for his beleaguered native land, Tibet. But his son, Yeshi Silvano Namkhai, who was born in 1970 in Italy (where Rinpoche Namkhai Norbu taught at university from 1964 to 1992), had no desire to follow in his father’s footsteps and instead went into the computer business, starting a family and rejecting nearly everything his father believes in — including that Yeshi might just be the reincarnation of his great-uncle, Khyentse Rinpoche Chökyi Wangchug, and so is destined for a life of service and tradition. “Everybody knows about me and nobody knows me at all,” Yeshi says about trying to establish his own identity. Father and son and the rest of the family allowed Fox remarkable access, holding nothing back as they talk about their lives and each other; Yeshi is particularly vocal about his father’s treatment of him over the years. But soon Yeshi has a change of heart, and the documentary takes an unexpected turn. Fox, who has previously made such films as Beirut: The Last Home Movie, Flying: Confessions of a Free Woman, and An American Love Story, shot more than one thousand hours of footage, which she edited down to a tight seventy-five-minutes, including archival and newsreel footage as well. As much as it is about a father and a son, My Reincarnation is also about the old vs. the new, tradition vs. modernization, private love vs. public responsibility, the spiritual vs. the technological, and, above all, familial legacy. My Reincarnation opens at Cinema Village on October 28; Fox and Yeshi will participate in several Q&As and/or introductions on October 28 and 29, with Fox also taking part in Q&As following the 7:00 screenings on November 2 and 3.

TAMMAR

Bloomington band Tammar makes rare NYC visit this weekend for three area shows

Bloomington, Indiana’s Tammar is making a rare visit to New York City this weekend, playing three shows in three nights in support of their debut full-length, Visits (Suicide Squeeze, September 20, 2011). The seven-track, forty-five-minute disc bristles with epic-sounding psychedelic rock that soars with lilting, heavenly melodies, courtesy of lead singer Dave Walter, percussionist Josephine McRobbie, guitarist Evan Whikehart, drummer Sarah Wyatt Swanson, and keyboardist Ben Swanson (who also runs the Secretly Canadian record label, which features Jens Lekman, Antony and the Johnsons, Here We Go Magic, Yeasayer, and others). Tammar will be at Cameo in Brooklyn for a record release party on October 28 ($10, 8:00) with Heaven’s Gate and Spindrift, followed by visits to the Lower East Side at Pianos on October 29 ($10, 10:00) with Gross Relations, Little Racer, and the Rotaries, and Bowery Ballroom on October 30 ($15, 9:00) with Moonface and Talkdemonic.

WEEKEND CLASSICS — AKI KAURISMÄKI: THE MATCH FACTORY GIRL

Aki Kaurismäki concludes the Proletariat Trilogy with THE MATCH FACTORY GIRL

THE MATCH FACTORY GIRL (TULITIKKUTEHTAAN TYTTÖ) (Aki Kaurismäki, 1990)
IFC Center
323 Sixth Ave. at West Third St.
October 28-30, $13, 11:00 am
Series continues through December 18
212-924-7771
www.ifccenter.com

Finnish director Aki Kaurismäki completes his conceptual Proletariat Trilogy with the bleakest, most deadpan of the three examinations of working-class life with the wickedly funny, blacker-than-black comedy The Match Factory Girl. The follow-up to 1986’s Shadows in Paradise and 1988’s Ariel, the finale tells the sad story of a poor young woman who just can’t seem to catch a break. Kaurismäki regular Kati Outinen stars as Iris, an assembly-line drone who makes way too much out of a rare one-night stand with the devastatingly disinterested Aarne (Vesa Vierikko), leading to all kinds of problems for her, both professionally and personally. Continuing the subtly dramatic color scheme of the previous two films, cinematographer Timo Salminen, set designer Risto Karhula, and Kaurismäki add sly bursts of blue and orange as things keep getting worse and worse for Iris, who, despite her name, doesn’t really see the world for what it is, instead living in a bizarre kind of fantasy until she decides to do something about it. The Match Factory Girl cemented Kaurismäki’s reputation as one of the most fascinating young international filmmakers, which he’s lived up to with such later favorites as Juha, Cannes Grand Prix winner The Man Without a Past, and his latest, Le Havre, which is currently playing at Lincoln Plaza and the IFC Center. The Match Factory Girl is screening October 28-30 as part of the IFC Center’s Weekend Classics series, which will keep showing Kaurismäki films through December 18.

HALLOWEEN WEEKEND: THE SHINING

All work and no play makes Jack Nicholson far from a dull boy in THE SHINING

THE SHINING (Stanley Kubrick, 1980)
Museum of the Moving Image
35th Ave. at 36th St., Astoria
Saturday, October 29, free with museum admission, 7:00
Series runs October 28-30
718-777-6800
www.movingimage.us

The classic horror story The Shining has been back in the news of late, first with a wrongly rumored special screening that was said to include the two-minute finale that Stanley Kubrick cut out immediately after the film opened in 1980 — one that we thought we had imagined seeing for many years until we discovered the truth, which also involved the iconoclastic director riding his bicycle to various theaters, armed with a pair of scissors — and then with Stephen King’s “announcement” that he was writing a sequel to the original 1977 book, this time focusing on a grown-up Danny Torrance. Anyway, Kubrick’s film is one of the all-time-great frightfests, a truly scary movie about a writer named Jack Torrance (Jack Nicholson at his overacting best) who has agreed to become the caretaker of the old Overlook Hotel in Colorado during the snowy winter when the enormous mountain resort closes down for the season. He is joined by his perpetually nervous wife, Wendy (Shelley Duvall), and their young son, Danny (Danny Lloyd), who seems to have brought along his invisible friend, Tony, who speaks through Danny’s finger. Between taking care of the Overlook and working on his novel, Jack finds a whole bunch of other folks to hang out with, people who have populated the place during the ritzy establishment’s golden age, including a strange woman in room 237. Kubrick plays with horror conventions as he seeks to scare the crap out of the audience, something he accomplishes time and time again as Jack grows more disturbed, Wendy’s shrieks become more and more ear piercing and annoying, and Danny’s visions get more and more bloody. No matter how many times you’ve seen it, it still gets you, even when you know exactly what’s lurking around that corner. The Shining is screening on Saturday night at 7:00 as part of the Museum of the Moving Image’s Halloween Weekend programming and the “See It Big!” series, which also includes Ridley Scott’s Alien on Friday night at 7:00 and Sunday afternoon at 4:00. (You might not want to see that one on a full stomach.) On Saturday at 1:00 & 4:00 and Sunday at 1:00, Frank Oz’s Little Shop of Horrors will be shown, in conjunction with the “Henson Screenings and Programs” series, and on Sunday afternoon at 2:30, “Movie Monsters and More: A Master Class with Special Effects Makeup Artist Mike Marino” will be held. The weekend concludes Sunday night at 7:30 with an eightieth anniversary screening of Frankenstein (James Whale, 1931) with Sara Karloff, Boris’s daughter, who will discuss her father’s life and career and show home movies.

HELL AT THE HALL

Webster Hall
125 East 11th St. between Second & Third Aves.
Saturday, October 29, $20, 6:00
www.websterhall.com
www.vice.com

One of the craziest live bands of the twenty-first century, Atlanta’s Black Lips have earned their reputation by putting on shows powered by great songs and plenty of mass destruction. From tearing up boats to taking part in fierce toilet paper wars to dancing with fans onstage who broke down security barricades, you never quite know what you’re gonna get at a Black Lips show, but you can always count on its being memorable. On October 29, the bad boys will be headlining Hell at the Hall, an evening of insane partying at Webster Hall, with Cole, Jared, Ian, and Joe being joined by appropriately named Puerto Rican punk rockers Davila 666, who kicked ass at this summer’s 4Knots Festival with a raucous set that included a Spanish-language cover of the Nerves’ / Blondie’s “Hanging on the Telephone,” and Brooklyn psychedelic goths Xray Eyeballs, who are afraid of nothing. Vice, who is throwing this wild shindig, strongly encourages costumes and plenty of TP; in addition, if you want to win a pair of free tickets, e-mail the best / worst / strangest / sickest / weirdest Halloween trick you ever pulled to Vice, who advise, “If you send us a story about actually beating up a child for candy, you will not win these tickets, and we hope you don’t win anything. Ever. Stories about egging people who give out walnuts are totally fine though. Fuck those people.”