Yearly Archives: 2011

NYPD: THE NAKED CITY

THE NAKED CITY will screen as part of “NYPD” series at Film Forum on September 11

THE NAKED CITY (Jules Dassin, 1948)
Film Forum
209 West Houston St.
Sunday, September 11, 3:40 & 7:35
Series continues through September 13
212-727-8110
www.filmforum.org

Jules Dassin’s police procedural was one of the first films shot on location in New York City, bringing to life the grit of the streets. Barry Fitzgerald stars as Lt. Muldoon, an Irish cop who knows the game, never allowing anything to get in the way of his sworn duty to uphold the law while never getting too emotionally involved. A model has turned up dead, and young detective Jimmy Halloran (Don Taylor) is heading up the investigation, which includes such suspects as swarthy Frank Niles (Howard Duff). Producer Mark Hellinger’s narration is playful and knowing, accompanying William Daniels’s great camerawork through Park Avenue and the Lower East Side, stopping at little city vignettes that have nothing to do with the story except to add to the level of reality. The thrilling conclusion takes place on the Williamsburg Bridge. The Naked City will be screening on September 11 with Richard Wilson’s 1960 Black Hand thriller Pay or Die!, starring Ernest Borgnine, at Film Forum as part of the “NYPD” festival, which pays tribute to the work of New York’s Finest on and since 9/11.

BROADWAY WEEK

Half-price tickets are now available to see Samuel L. Jackson play Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., in THE MOUNTAINTOP

Multiple venues
September 18-30, half-price tickets
www.nycgo.com/broadwayweek

As much as we all love the TKTS booths that offer half-price tickets to Broadway shows, you often have to wait on long lines, hoping that there are still decent seats left to the show you most want to see, if it’s even up on the board in the first place. But you can get twofers in advance right now for Broadway Week, September 18-30, selecting your own seats to sixteen of Broadway’s finest. But you better hurry to get half-price tickets to such musicals as The Addams Family, Billy Elliot, Chicago, Jersey Boys, The Lion King, Mamma Mia!, Mary Poppins, Memphis, Priscilla Queen of the Desert, Rock of Ages, Sister Act, and Wicked as well as the soon-to-open plays Relatively Speaking, three one-act comedies by Ethan Coen, Elaine May, and Woody Allen, directed by John Turturro, and starring Steve Guttenberg, Danny Hoch, Marlo Thomas, Mark Linn-Baker, Julie Kavner, and the great Richard Libertini, and The Mountaintop, in which Samuel L. Jackson stars takes on the role of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., on the night before his assassination.

THE BLACK POWER MIXTAPE 1967-1975

Angela Davis speaks out about the Black Power movement in compelling documentary

THE BLACK POWER MIXTAPE 1967-1975 (Göran Hugo Olsson, 2011)
IFC Center, 323 Sixth Ave. at Third St., 212-924-7771
Lincoln Plaza Cinemas, 1886 Broadway at 63rd St., 212-757-2280
Opens Friday, September 9
www.blackpowermixtape.com

From 1967 to 1975, a group of more than two dozen Swedish journalists came to America to document the civil rights movement. More than thirty years later, director and cinematographer Göran Hugo Olsson discovered hours and hours of unused 16mm footage — the material was turned into a program shown only once in Sweden and seen nowhere else — and developed it into The Black Power Mixtape 1967-1975, a remarkable visual and aural collage that focuses on the Black Panthers and the Black Power movement, a critical part of American history that has been swept under the rug. Olsson and Hanna Lejonqvist have seamlessly edited together startlingly intimate footage of such seminal figures as Eldridge Cleaver, Bobby Seale, Huey P. Newton, Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., and Stokely Carmichael, including a wonderfully personal scene in which Carmichael interviews his mother on her couch. But the star of the film is the controversial political activist Angela Davis, who allowed the journalists remarkable access, particularly in a jailhouse interview shot in color. (Most of the footage is in black and white.) Davis also adds contemporary audio commentary, sharing poignant insight about that tumultuous period, along with Abiodun Oyewole of the Last Poets, singer Erykah Badu, professor, poet, and playwright Sonia Sanchez, Roots drummer Ahmir Questlove Thompson (who also composed the film’s score with Om’Mas Keith), and rapper Talib Kweli, who discusses specific scenes in the film with a thoughtful grace and intelligence. The Black Power Mixtape 1967-1975 is an extraordinary look back at a crucial moment in time that has long been misunderstood, if not completely forgotten. The filmmakers will be at the IFC Center for the 8:15 and 10:20 shows on Friday and Saturday night to talk about the work. In conjunction with the film’s opening, Third Streaming at 10 Greene St. is hosting an art exhibition through October 15 featuring film stills and additional footage from The Black Power Mixtape 1967-1975. And for more on the Black Power movement, the Maysles Institute in Harlem will be holding the third annual Black Panther Party Film Festival from September 30 through October 8; this year’s theme is “Remembering Our Political Prisoners,” celebrating the forty-fifth anniversary of the founding of the party.

THE JIM JONES REVUE

The Jim Jones Revue will be burning the house down in Brooklyn and Jersey this month (photo by twi-ny/mdr)

Saturday, September 10, Music Hall of Williamsburg, 66 North Sixth St., $16, 9:00
Sunday, September 18, Maxwell’s, $12-$15, 9:00
www.myspace.com/thejimjonesrevue

Nominated — with good reason — for Best Live Act by Mojo magazine, England’s Jim Jones Revue knows how to rip it up. When we saw them last summer at the Mercury Lounge, they nearly tore the place down with their pulse-pounding energy. And they’ve now captured that inextinguishable passion on their latest album, Burning Your House Down (Punk Rock Blues, August 2011), thirty-three frenetic minutes of electrifying rock and roll. The record explodes out of the gates with a fiery machine-gun-like fury of scalding vocals, scorching guitars, sizzling piano riffs, and smoking drums. Songs such as “Dishonest John,” “Premeditated,” and “Killin’ Spree” whip by at a near-suicidal pace, while “Elemental” blows up bigger than July Fourth fireworks, reaching an earth-shaking “9.9 on the Richter scale,” as Jones shouts. “Shoot first,” he sings on another song, “ask questions later,” and that could stand as the band’s motto, especially when he adds, “Make sure it’s loaded!” Also featuring Rupert Orton on guitar, Gavin Jay on bass, Nick Jones on drums, and new keyboard player Henri Herbert, the Jim Jones Revue will be igniting the crowd at the Music Hall of Williamsburg on September 10 (with Kid Congo Powers and the Pink Monkey Birds and Des Roar) and then setting Maxwell’s ablaze on September 18 (with Kid Congo Powers and the Pink Monkey Birds again). We have to admit, we have drunk the Kool-Aid, and we strongly advise you do the same.

WHERE SOLDIERS COME FROM

Dom grows disillusioned as he serves his country in Afghanistan (photo by Heather Courtney)

WHERE SOLDIERS COME FROM (Heather Courtney, 2011)
Village East Cinemas
181-189 Second Ave. at 12th St.
Opens Friday, September 2
212-529-6799
www.wheresoldierscomefrom.com
www.villageeastcinema.com

Returning to her small hometown of Hancock in Northern Michigan, documentarian Heather Courtney (Letters from the Other Side) wanted to make a film about the Upper Peninsula area and its residents, and she came up with quite a story. For several years, Courtney followed a group of young men who had enlisted in the National Guard because they either didn’t have enough money for college or didn’t know what else to do with their lives; she then traveled with them as they got called up and sent to fight the war in Afghanistan. Dominic Fredianelli, Cole Smith, and Matt “Bodi” Beaudoin never fully considered what they were getting into when they signed up; they clearly did not join up merely for patriotic reasons, so it doesn’t take long before they start questioning what America is doing over there. The three men, along with their families back home, allowed Courtney remarkable access, holding nothing back as they share their bittersweet emotions, their politics, their fears, and their overwhelming confusion. The men’s National Guard unit is assigned to an IED sweeper team that goes out in heavily protected vehicles, searching for and detonating hidden improvised explosive devices, but even carefully monitored explosions take their toll on the soldiers, not to mention the surprise bombs that nearly blow them to pieces. Courtney, who served as producer, director, cinematographer, and coeditor, does not add any voice-over narration or accumulate facts and statistics; instead, she lets the story tell itself, avoiding propaganda and grand statements. At first it is hard to have much sympathy for Dom, Cole, and Bodi, who should have thought a lot more about their decision to join the National Guard, but as they and their families get more deeply involved in the war, Where Soldiers Come From grows ever-more poignant and frightening.

THE WHATEVER BLOG SEPTEMBER PARTY: AMY’S B-DAY BASH

The Rock Shop
249 Fourth Ave., Brooklyn
Friday, September 9, $10, 7:00
www.therockshopny.com
http://wwwwhatever-amy.blogspot.com

One of our favorite music bloggers, Amy Grimm, who runs the Whatever…. site, hosts monthly concerts at Brooklyn venues featuring up-and-coming local bands as well as hot indie groups from around the country. Her September show at the Rock Shop should be extra special, since it’s also her official birthday bash. To help her celebrate, she’s got five Brooklyn bands, followed by a very hot Chicago duo. First up is Backwords (7:30), who just a few weeks ago wrote and recorded a special Hurricane Irene EP as the storm made its way to New York. After that comes the progressive Afro-Cuban stylings of Afuche (8:15), touring behind their most recent release, Highly Publicized Digital Boxing Match. There’s no telling what might happen when Rachel Mason leads her intergalactic experimental Little Band of Sailors to the stage (9:00). The difficult job of following them goes to Sleepwalk (9:45) and twi-ny fave Shark? (10:15), who can wish Amy a musical happy birthday by stringing together such songs as “Hey Girl” “Hip Hip Hooray” “Let’s Roll” from their True Waste album, which they made with legendary bassist Tony Maimone. Closing out the night is redheaded Chicago brother-sister garage rockers White Mystery (11:00), consisting of Miss Alex White and Francis Scott Key White and some very fine coiffure. Happy birthday, Amy!

FASHION IN FILM

William Klein’s surreal WHO ARE YOU, POLLY MAGOO? kicks off weekend “Fashion in Film” series at MAD

The Theater at MAD
Museum of Arts & Design
2 Columbus Circle
September 9-11, $10
800-838-3006
www.madmuseum.org

Fashion and film go together like Dolce and Gabbana, like Viktor and Rolf, like Edith Head and Oscar. (The longtime costume designer took home eight Academy Awards during her distinguished career.) In conjunction with Fashion Week, the Museum of Arts & Design is presenting the weekend series “Fashion in Film,” screening eight cinematic works that delve into the world of fashion either very specifically or through its creative use of wardrobe. The diverse lineup ranges from William Klein’s bizarrely surreal black-and-white curiosity Qui Êtes-Vous, Polly Magoo? (Who Are You, Polly Magoo?) to Jacques Demy’s colorful musical The Umbrellas of Cherbourg (Les parapluies de Cherbourg), starring Catherine Deneuve; from Elizabeth Taylor and Michael Caine in Brian G. Hutton’s stylish X, Y, and Zee to Russ Meyer’s rowdy and raunchy Faster, Pussycat! Kill! Kill! The series, cosponsored by Vanity Fair and the Film Society of Lincoln Center, also features Faye Dunaway as a fashion photographer risking her life in Irvin Kershner’s The Eyes of Laura Mars, Jean-Jacques Beneix’s eye-popping, fast-paced thriller Diva, a pair of documentaries, special introductions and receptions, and the free panel discussion “Spotlight on Fashion Innovation: Creative Inspiration from Cinema,” moderated by “Fashion in Film” cocurator Simon Doonan from Barneys New York. But wait — no Zoolander?