Yearly Archives: 2011

CINEMACHAT WITH ELLIOTT STEIN: JAR CITY

Tense Icelandic thriller based on award-winning book will have a special screening at BAMcinématek

JAR CITY (MYRIN) (Baltasar Kormákur, 2006)
BAMcinématek
BAM Rose Cinemas
30 Lafayette Ave. between Ashland Pl. & St. Felix St.
Thursday, September 22, 7:20 & 9:30
718-636-4100
www.bam.org

Writer-director Baltasar Kormákur’s adaptation of Arnaldur Indriðason’s award-winning novel Jar City (Myrin) is a bleak but compelling police procedural that focuses on a fact-based controversial government initiative that is cataloging genetic research on all Icelandic families. When an aging man named Holberg (Thorsteinn Gunnarsson) is murdered in his home, brooding inspector Erlendur (Ingvar E. Sigurdsson) heads the investigation into the death, leading him to a thirty-year-old rape, a dirty cop, a trio of criminals (one of whom has been missing for a quarter century), a woman who killed herself shortly after her four-year-old daughter died, and a doctor who collects body parts. The divorced Erlendur also has to deal with his troubled daughter (Augusta Eva Erlendsdottir), a pregnant drug addict who hangs out with some very sketchy company. Meanwhile, a mysterious man (Atli Rafn Sigurdarson) is up to something following the traumatic death of his young daughter. Kormakur weaves together the story line of the two fathers side by side — in the book, the unidentified man appears only near the conclusion, although who he is still remains a mystery for most of the film — centering on the complex relationship between parents and children and what gets passed down from generation to generation, both on the outside and the inside. Sigurdsson plays Erlendur with a cautious seriousness, the only humor coming from the way he treats his goofy partner, Sigurdur Oli (Bjorn Hlynur Haraldsson). Iceland’s entry for the 2007 Foreign-Language Oscar and winner of the Crystal Globe at the Karlovy Vary International Film Festival, Jar City is a dark, tense intellectual thriller. Indriðason has turned Erlendur into a continuing character in such follow-ups as Silence of the Grave and Voices; here’s hoping Kormákur and Sigurdsson do the same. Jar City will be screening on September 22 at 7:20 and 9:30 at BAMcinématek as part of the ongoing “Cinemachat with Elliott Stein” series, with the early showing including a discussion with Stein.

CELEBRATE MEXICO NOW

Botellita de Jerez will rock out at SOB’s as part of annual celebration of Mexican art and culture

Multiple venues
September 21 – October 1
www.mexiconowfestival.org

The eighth annual Celebrate México Now festival celebrating Mexican culture begins tonight with the free panel discussion “México se escribe con J: A Celebration of Gay Culture in Mexico” at NYU’s King Juan Carlos 1 of Spain Center, with Nayar Rivera, Michael Schuessler, Alejandro Varderi, and Earl Dax talking about “The Famous 41” and other issues of sexual orientation in Mexico, and continues through October 1 with dance, music, theater, art, films, food, and parties. Anthology Film Archives will screen “Gen Mex: Recent Films from México,” the Queens Museum of Art will host the Trajinera Xochitl Project and the multimedia theatrical presentation “Hecho en Mexico: Estreno Nacional,” Mexican electronica band Sweet Electra will play the Church of All Nations, chef Daniel Ovadía will prepare special dishes for the panel demonstration “History and Traditions of Mexican Gastronomy” (yes, the audience will get to sample his food), Botellita de Jerez will rock out at SOB’s, the collective Rey Trueno will perform the multimedia Radio Soap Opera at the Bowery Poetry Club, and the folkloric Pasatono Orchestra will play a free show at the David Rubenstein Atrium at Lincoln Center and a ticketed show at Casa Mezcal.

BRYANT PARK FALL FESTIVAL

Elisa Monte Dance will perform in Bryant Park on Thursday night as part of annual fall festival (photo copyright Roy Volkmann)

Bryant Park
West 40th to 42nd Sts. between Fifth & Sixth Aves.
Through September 23, free
www.bryantpark.org

The annual Bryant Park Fall Festival concludes with several excellent programs, beginning today at 12:30 with the Rubin Museum of Art presenting “A Conversation with Peter Sellars,” in which the theater impresario will discuss his dramatization of The Vimalakirti Sutra, rehearsals of which can be seen Friday and Saturday night at the Rubin. On Thursday night at 6:00, the extremely talented Elisa Monte Dance will perform, followed on Friday night at 6:00 by Pascal Rioult’s RIOULT company, which will present Celestial Tides, set to Bach, and two works set to Ravel, Wien (La Valse) and Bolero. Each dance performance will be preceded at 5:00 by a workshop for kids. (For our recent twi-ny talk with Rioult, please click here.)

THE DEBT (HAHOV)

Israeli Mossad agents are after the “Surgeon of Birkenau” in THE DEBT

THE DEBT (HAHOV) (Assaf Bernstein, 2007)
JCC in Manhattan
334 Amsterdam Ave. at 76th St.
Tuesday, September 20, $11, 7:30
646-505-5708
www.jccmanhattan.org
www.thedebt-movie.com

Following a launch party for her book about how she and two fellow Mossad agents in 1964 captured and killed Max Reiner (Edgar Selge), the notorious “Surgeon of Birkenau,” Rachel Brener (Gila Almagor) immediately learns that there is an old man in a Ukrainian nursing home claiming that he is in fact the doctor who performed horrific experiments on Jewish men, women, and children in the German concentration camp during World War II. Rachel is reunited with Zvi (Alex Peleg) and Ehud (Oded Teomi), who come up with a plan to eliminate the doctor once again to protect a secret that has been haunting them for forty years. But they’re no longer the brash, finely chiseled spies they were when they were young, leading to crises of conscience and other physical and psychological dilemmas. Nominated for four Israeli Academy Awards, The Debt is a tense thriller from director Assaf Bernstein, who cowrote the screenplay with Ido Rosenblum. The story weaves back and forth between the present day, as Rachel meets Ehud in Ukraine and they hash out their plan, neither one having done anything like this in decades, and 1964, when Rachel (Neta Garty), Zvi (Itay Tiran), and Ehud (Yehezkel Lazarov) were younger and more idealistic. The scenes in which the young Rachel visits the doctor, who has become a gynecologist, and pretends she is trying to conceive a child are particularly gripping, setting up a powerful conclusion. With the release of John Madden’s American remake starring Helen Mirren, Ciarán Hinds, Sam Worthington, Jessica Chastain, and Tom Wilkinson, the Israeli original, which evokes such films as The Wild Geese, The Boys from Brazil, and QB VII, is screening Tuesday night at the JCC in Manhattan.

LEE UFAN: MARKING INFINITY

Lee Ufan, “Relatum — silence b,” steel and stone, 2008, and “Dialogue,” oil and mineral pigment on canvas, 2007, installation view (photo by David Heald © Solomon R. Guggenheim Foundation)

Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum
1071 Fifth Ave. at 89th St.
Friday – Wednesday through September 28, $18 (pay-what-you-wish Saturday 5:45-7:45)
212-423-3587
www.guggenheim.org

Two of the first works on view in the Guggenheim’s dazzling retrospective “Lee Ufan: Marking Infinity” sum up much about the Korean-born conceptual artist and philosopher and his work. In “Relatum — silence b,” a stone sits in front of a steel plate that leans against the wall. From certain angles, it appears as if the stone is actually viewing the steel piece, like it is a visitor in an art gallery looking at a painting. However, the public is invited to walk in between the two objects, placing themselves within the work, which, despite consisting of two solid, heavy parts, suddenly seems to mold itself into another being, its physicality shifting as humans interact with nature. Nearby is “Relatum” (formerly “Phenomenon and Perception B”), in which Lee dropped a boulder onto a sheet of glass placed atop another steel plate, creating a site-specific work filled with immediacy. In each case, one can feel the presence of the artist but also of something that goes past mere sculpture. “Infinity begins with the self but is only manifested fully when connected with something beyond the self,” Lee wrote in his 1993 essay “On Infinity,” continuing, “I do not want to fix or represent the self as self, but to recognize the existence of the self in relationship with otherness and perceive the world in a place where such a relationship exists.” Indeed, with such titles as “Dialogue,” “Correspondence,” “Things and Words,” and the oft-used “Relatum,” Lee emphasizes how experiencing his work is built on the concept of relationship, between humans and nature, the artist and the object, the viewer and the installation, different objects within a piece, and even the exhibition and the museum itself.

Lee Ufan, “Relatum (formerly Language),” cushions, stones, and light, 1971 (photo by twi-ny/mdr)

The critical element of time is also evident in his work, particularly in several series of paintings (“From Point” and “From Line”) in which he dips his brush in pigment, then draws a line or points across a horizontal or vertical axis until the color runs dry, then repeats the process over and over. In addition, several of the “Relatum” pieces at the Guggenheim are either temporary, made with stones and other elements that will be returned to nature after the show ends September 28, or are being shown here in a slightly different form than previously, never to be seen this exact way again. In “Relatum (formerly “Language,”) he places large stones on top of cushions, the weight of each stone crushing the soft cushion in what would otherwise be a peaceful gardenlike setting. And he also plays with light and perception in another “Relatum” composed of a lightbulb dangling over a canvas on the floor, seemingly creating a bright blast of light onto it but that has in fact already been painted on to mimic that effect. The exhibition concludes in the seventh-floor annex gallery with “Dialogue — space,” in which Lee painted single rectangular acrylic marks directly on three walls in the last room, a poignant echo of what has come before as well as an invitation into the infinite future. With “Marking Infinity” Lee, a leader of the Mono-ha (“School of Things”) movement who has also worked in Japan and France for many years, immerses visitors among his “living structures,” with people’s psychological, emotional, and physical engagement the keys to experiencing their often subtle grandeur.

DEERHOOF

Deerhoof is back in New York City to battle evil at the Music Hall of Williamsburg on Tuesday night

Music Hall of Williamsburg
66 North Sixth St.
Tuesday, September 20, $17, 8:00
www.myspace.com/deerhoof
www.musichallofwilliamsburg.com

Back in February, we wrote how San Francisco-based Deerhoof had come to the rescue of the stagnant music world with their latest album, Deerhoof vs. Evil (Polyvinyl, January 2011), on which guitarists John Dieterich and Ed Rodriguez, drummer Greg Saunier, and bassist Satomi Matsuzaki do what they do best, taking listeners on a journey through a multitude of crazy sounds, hard-to-decipher lyrics, and offbeat, ever-shifting melodies that delight while they confound. Well, they’re shaking things up again, collaborating with such guests as Physical Forms, Xiu, Xiu, WOOM, the Raccooonists, and Wilco’s Jeff Tweedy and his two sons, inviting them to play over instrumental tracks from the new record and releasing them on 7″ vinyl. In addition, they have reissued two earlier albums, 2004’s exciting Milk Man, featuring such killer tracks as “Giga Dance,” “Milking,” “C,” “Desapareceré,” and the title song, and 2007’s Friend Opportunity, with such songs as “The Perfect Me,” all of which have found their way into recent setlists. Deerhoof will be at the Music Hall of Williamsburg on September 20 with Mick Barr and White Suns.

REID FARRINGTON: THE PASSION PROJECT

Laura K. Nicoll takes an unusual look at Joan of Arc in Reid Farrington’s THE PASSION PROJECT, now playing at the 3LD Art + Technology Center (photo by Paula Court)

3LD Art + Technology Center
80 Greenwich St.
September 16-25, $20
www.3ldnyc.org
www.reidfarrington.com

Initially presented in November 2007 at the PS/K2 Festival in Copenhagen and staged several times at the downtown 3LD Art + Technology Center over the last few years, Reid Farrington’s The Passion Project is back for a special limited engagement at the Greenwich St. institution through September 25. The thirty-minute piece puts a solitary dancer inside a ten-foot-by-ten-foot square, surrounded by more than a dozen small wooden-framed screens on which are projected scenes from Carl Th. Dreyer’s epic 1928 silent classic, The Passion of Joan of Arc. The performer, Laura K. Nicoll, picks up various screens and moves them around, trapped much like the captured Joan of Arc (Maria Falconetti) is in the film, creating a living, breathing three-dimensional effect filled with powerful emotion. “I’ve been with the project for two years now and it’s so incredibly satisfying to perform,” Nicoll told twi-ny. Monday night’s show will benefit Foxy Films’ newest production, Farrington’s multimedia A Christmas Carol or Dickens: The Unparalleled Necromancer, which will run December 1-20 at the Abrons Arts Center. (For a look at Farrington’s Gin & “It,” which played PS 122 in April 2010, click here.)

Update: The Passion Project is a breathtaking tour de force for both creator and director Reid Farrington and performer Laura K. Nicoll. For thirty mesmerizing minutes, Nicoll, barefoot and dressed in sackcloth and ashes, a sullen yet determined look on her face, places and re-places small wooden-framed white screens on hooks dangling from rope knots (that evoke nooses), moving the screens to capture images being projected into the air that have been taken from three different versions (1928, 1935, and 1980) of Carl Th. Dreyer’s silent classic The Passion of Joan of Arc. With whirlwind fury, Nicoll shoots out a screen to show one of the characters discussing Joan of Arc’s fate, or holds another screen in front of her as she walks across the floor, moving with the characters, or suddenly falls to the ground with a screen outstretched to grab yet another part of the story. At other times she sits down next to a small close-up of Joan’s aching face or wanders out of the ten-foot-by-ten-foot area and approaches an audience member, looking into their eyes before continuing on. Translations are shown on three sides so the viewers, who are strongly encouraged to make their way around the set, experiencing the piece from multiple angles, can follow the plot, although every detail is not critical. What is critical is not to miss a moment of Nicoll’s awe-inspiring performance, including the dazzling finale.