Yearly Archives: 2012

DOC NYC: MEN AT LUNCH

MEN AT LUNCH attempts to unlock the many mysteries behind an iconic New York City photograph (© Bettmann/CORBIS)

NEW YORK’S DOCUMENTARY FESTIVAL: MEN AT LUNCH: THE UNTOLD STORY OF A CITY’S LEGEND (Seán Ó Cualáín, 2012)
Saturday, November 10, SVA Theater, 333 West 23rd St., $16.50, 7:30
Wednesday, November 14, IFC Center, 323 Sixth Ave. at West Third St., $16.50, 3:15
DOC NYC festival continues through November 15
212-924-7771
www.menatlunchfilm.com
www.docnyc.net

Seán Ó Cualáín puts one of the most iconic photographs ever of New York City under the microscope in the interesting yet too often slipshod documentary Men at Lunch. In 1932, a photographer snapped a picture of eleven construction workers having lunch while sitting atop a girder on what would become the sixty-ninth floor of the RCA Building in Rockefeller Center. The men are casually talking, having a smoke, and holding white cardboard lunchboxes while dangling their feet some 850 feet in the air, a bustling city below them, Central Park sprawled out behind them. Narrated by Fionnula Flanagan (Ulysses, Waking Ned Devine), the film delves into who the men might be, attempts to figure out whether it was indeed Charles C. Ebbets who took the photo, and seeks to put the picture into the social and cultural context of the depression and the wave of immigration, focusing on the Irish (the film is an Irish production), many of whom went into the construction industry. “This is a photograph in which every element of photography and of New York City kind of come together with spectacular panache,” filmmaker Ric Burns says. But while Ó Cualáín employs captivating archival footage as he tries to solve the photograph’s many mysteries, he extends the focus too far, biting off more than he can chew in a mere seventy minutes, as a handful of talking heads and Niall Murphy’s text make grand statements about the human condition in the twentieth century that are too often a reach, then spends too much time with a pair of Irish characters who believe they are related to two of the men in the picture. Still, the part of the film that zeroes in on the taking of the photograph is absolutely fascinating. Men at Lunch is making its U.S. premiere at the DOC NYC festival November 10 at the SVA Theatre and November 14 at the IFC Center, with Ó Cualáín on hand at the first screening to talk about the film.

TICKET GIVEAWAY: 5 LESBIANS EATING A QUICHE

Fringe winner 5 LESBIANS EATING A QUICHE is a tasty treat at the SoHo Playhouse (photo by Christina Stradone)

5 LESBIANS EATING A QUICHE
SoHo Playhouse
15 Vandam St.
Saturday – Tuesday through January 6, $40-$50
www.5lesbianseatingaquiche.com
www.sohoplayhouse.com

In the 1983 thriller 10 to Midnight, tough guy Charles Bronson plays a cop who grabs a slice of quiche in a hospital cafeteria. When his daughter asks him about it, he angrily says, “I thought it was pie!” There’s no telling what the Death Wish star would think of the New Colony’s 5 Lesbians Eating a Quiche, which is currently satisfying audiences at the SoHo Playhouse. One of the winners of Best Overall Production at this summer’s New York International Fringe Festival, the show, written by Evan Linder and Andrew Hobgood and directed by Sarah Gitenstein, follows the madcap adventures of members of the Susan B. Anthony Society for the Sisters of Gertrude Stein in 1956 as they prepare for their annual quiche breakfast but also have to deal with the cold war, as a communist nuclear strike might be on its way. “New York’s theatrical elite hoped this show would never see the light of day, but after the amazing response it received at the Fringe they had no luck trying to stick their finger in the dyke,” SoHo Playhouse artistic director Darren Lee Cole said when announcing the limited engagement. The playful show stars Caitlin Chuckta, Rachel Farmer, Megan Johns, Thea Lux, and Maari Suorsa as the hungry title characters.

TICKET GIVEAWAY: The run of 5 Lesbians Eating a Quiche has been extended to January 6, and twi-ny has four pairs of tickets to give away for free. Just send your name, daytime phone number, and all-time favorite quiche flavor to contest@twi-ny.com by Monday, November 12, at 3:00 to be eligible. All entrants must be twenty-one years of age or older; four winners will be selected at random. In addition, twenty free tickets are being given away every night to those displaced by Hurricane Sandy; just provide proof of identification that includes your ZIP code and use the code word “Sandy.”

SUNSHINE AT MIDNIGHT: THE MIAMI CONNECTION

Just don’t ask; all you need to know is that the one and only MIAMI CONNECTION is playing at midnight this weekend at the Landmark Sunshine

THE MIAMI CONNECTION (Y. K. Kim & Park Woo-sung, 1987)
Landmark Sunshine Cinema
143 East Houston St. between First & Second Aves.
Friday, November 9 & 16, and Saturday, November 10 & 17, 12 midnight
212-330-8182
www.landmarktheatres.com
www.drafthousefilms.com

Ever since Bruce Lee became a superstar in America in such action flicks as Fist of Fury, Enter the Dragon, and Game of Death, there has been an unending search for the next martial arts master to become a cinematic superhero in the United States. Over the years, there have been hits and misses with Jackie Chan, Sonny Chiba, Jet Li, Tony Jaa, Stephen Chow, and others, each one showing off his remarkable adeptness at karate, judo, jiu-jitsu, Muay Thai, or other disciplines in movies both good and not-so-good. It has also led to such good and not-so-good Hollywood films as The Karate Kid and the unforgettable Gymkata. One of the lesser-known attempts involved Korean taekwondo grandmaster Y. K. Kim and a little 1987 film that is being resurrected from the near-dead, looking to become a cult classic in a new HD version. Directed by Kim with Park Woo-sung, The Miami Connection stars Kim as a high school student and taekwondo teacher who is also the guitarist in the band Dragon Sound, which gets into a heated, violent battle against a group of men led by a tough-talking dude who looks like G.I. Joe with Kung Fu Grip and is dangerously overprotective of his sister, who sings in the band. With its 1980s hairstyles, insipidly bad music, ridiculous story lines, and absurd taekwondo scenes, The Miami Connection has plenty of potential to become an underground cult classic as it turns twenty-five. Initially scheduled to play the Landmark Sunshine Cinema November 2-3 but postponed because of Hurricane Sandy, it will now be screened the next few weekends at midnight on Friday and Saturday. Prepare to be amazed.

DOC NYC: NEW YORK DOLL

NEW YORK DOLL follows a potential reunion of seminal New York City glam band

NEW YORK’S DOCUMENTARY FESTIVAL: NEW YORK DOLL (Greg Whiteley, 2005)
IFC Center
323 Sixth Ave. at West Third St.
Saturday, November 10, $16.50, 11:59 pm
212-924-7771
www.onepotatoproductions.com
www.docnyc.net

New York Doll is an unforgettable documentary about Arthur “Killer” Kane, a man who went to the heights of ecstasy as a member of the New York Dolls in the early 1970s, hit the depths of depression in the late 1980s, and rediscovered himself in the 1990s as a Mormon librarian. As bassist for the New York Dolls, Kane, dressed wildly in heavy makeup and women’s clothes, anchored the glam rock idols, which also included David Johansen, Sylvain Sylvain, Johnny Thunders, and Jerry Nolan. The band dissolved after only two studio albums, and while the rest of the band remained in the music business (Thunders and Nolan died in the early ’90s), Kane’s drug- and alcohol-addled life spiraled downward. As Johansen started showing up in mediocre Hollywood movies (Married to the Mob, Scrooged, Car 54, Where Are You?) and his alter ego, Buster Poindexter, could be heard singing “Hot, Hot, Hot” at every bar mitzvah and wedding in town, Kane languished in obscurity until, in 1989, after a ridiculous suicide attempt, he became a Mormon. Fellow Mormon Greg Whiteley follows Kane around with a handheld camera as the former underground rock star goes about his daily life, working in a Mormon Family History Center library in California, taking the bus to work, hanging out with old ladies, paying “rent” on his pawned basses, and living a simple existence — until he gets a call from British pop star Morrissey, who wants the Dolls to reunite for the 2004 Meltdown festival in London. Kane is a soft-spoken, earnest, gentle man who seems a little bit off yet genuine, but this is what he’s been waiting for — although he is also afraid of failure yet again. Whiteley intersperses classic Dolls songs (“Looking for a Kiss,” “Lonely Planet Boy,” “Private World,” “Puss ‘n’ Boots,” “Trash,” and Johnny Thunders’s “You Can’t Put Your Arms Round a Memory”) with talking heads who share their love of the band (including Sir Bob Geldof, Chrissie Hynde, Mick Jones from the Clash, Blondie’s Clem Burke, and especially Morrissey, who is always seen in extreme close-up and is oh-so-serious), although we wish the film included more music, of a higher quality. Yet the remarkable story and ridiculously bizarre ending, which has a This Is Spinal Tap quality to it throughout — except it’s very real — rises above it all to create one of the best rockumentaries we’ve ever seen.

Arthur “Killer” Kane recalls his days as a New York Doll in outstanding documentary

New York Doll is screening November 10 at midnight at the IFC Center as part of DOC NYC, a weeklong celebration of nonfiction film at IFC and the SVA Theatre comprising more than seventy documentaries, along with panel discussions and master classes. Among the other music films are Artifact, about Jared Leto’s band, Thirty Seconds to Mars, and their battle with their record label; Drew DeNicola & Olivia Mori’s Big Star: Nothing Can Hurt Me, with Big Star member Jody Stephens on hand to talk about the highly influential band with the film’s directors and producer as well as record producer John Fry; Beth Toni Kruvant’s David Bromberg Unsung Treasure, with the director and legendary musician on hand; and Andy Grieve and Lauren Lazin’s Can’t Stand Losing You, a look at the life and career of Police drummer Andy Summers, with Summers, Grieve, and producer Norman Golightly participating in a discussion.

THE 2012 NEW YORK CHOCOLATE SHOW

Håkan Mårtensson admires his deluxe chocolate creations for Fika from last year but unfortunately is unable to attend 2012 show because of Hurricane Sandy (photo by twi-ny/mdr)

Metropolitan Pavilion
125 West 18th St. between Sixth & Seventh Aves.
November 9-11, $35-$40
www.chocolateshow.com
2012 chocolate show photo album

According to the Journal of the American Medical Association, the American Heart Association, and other health-related organizations, the consumption of dark chocolate is good for you. It improves coronary circulation, provides antioxidants that might help battle cancer, and is even beneficial for the teeth. Not that we needed that information to continue out steady intake of dark chocolate, but it’s great to know as we prepare for the fifteenth annual Chocolate Show, being held November 9-11 at the Metropolitan Pavilion. A bevy of chocolatiers, pastry chefs, cookbook authors, and other gourmands will fill four thousand square feet with all kinds of chocolate, which has been a beloved part of the human diet dating back four thousand years to the Amazon. One of our favorite things to do every year is to sample the dark chocolate as companies strive to make a nonbitter delight reaching toward the 99% mark. Among the standouts from past shows that we’ll be looking forward to again are the Grenada Chocolate Company, 5th Avenue Chocolatiere, Rogue Confections, Co Co. Sala, Salt of the Earth Bakery, and Guittard. (Several exhibitors had to pull out because of Hurricane Sandy; keep watching this post for further changes.) Founded by Sylvie Douce and François Jeantet, the Chocolate Show is an international affair, now being held in cities in France, Russia, Korea, England, and Japan as well as the United States. This year’s fête features a Kids Zone, cooking demonstrations, book signings, culinary discussions, and more, featuring appearances by such chocolate specialists as Fritz Knipschildt, Donald Wressell, Chocolatina, Steve Klc, Johnny Iuzzini, Debbie Prinz, Francine Segan, Martin Howard, and a slew of chefs from the Institute of Culinary Education. This year the Chocolate Show has also teamed up with New York Cares for a coat drive to help those people in the tristate area affected by Hurricane Sandy, so bring a jacket along with the admission price, which is $35 on Friday and Sunday and $40 on Saturday, with two children (between the ages of five and twelve) admitted free with each adult.

Mott Green’s Grenada Chocolate Company is once again one of the standouts at the annual New York Chocolate Show (photo by twi-ny/mdr)

Update: The 2012 New York Chocolate Show did not disappoint, despite some late cancellations because of Hurricane Sandy and the concurrent running of the second show in Lyon. Among our new and returning favorites this year are the Grenada Chocolate Company’s Salty-Licious bar, Prestat’s Dark Chocolate with Raspberry bar, 5th Avenue Chocolatiere’s cold signature truffle, H.S. Chocolate’s maple bacon chocomel, Pacari’s Cuzco Pink Salt & Nibs bar, Salt of the Earth’s oatmeal chocolate-chip cookie, François Payard’s Parisian macarons, Gnosis’s health-conscious healing raw chocolate peach Goddess Bar, Maria Luisa Rodriguez’s orange zest Jazz Brownies, and Fleur Jerusalemy’s elegantly designed, hand-painted, New York-centric Fleur de Xocoatl collection. As usual, we came home with more chocolate than we could possibly imagine — in addition to gorging ourselves at the show with all the free samples — but is that really so bad? As we noted above, chocolate is good for you, so why not indulge?

ALICIA JO RABINS: A KADDISH FOR BERNIE MADOFF

Alicia Jo Rabins investigates a yearlong obsession with Bernie Madoff in one-woman show at Joe’s Pub (photo by Jason Falchook)

Joe’s Pub
425 Lafayette St. by Astor Pl.
Thursday, November 8 & 15, $15-$20, 7:00 pm
212-539-8778
www.aliciajo.com
www.joespub.com

Brooklyn-based musician, composer, poet, and fiddler extraordinaire Alicia Jo Rabins is also a Torah and Kabbalah scholar whose duo, Girls in Trouble, writes and performs songs about overlooked women in the Old Testament. A former member of local Klezmer favorites Golem, with whom she still occasionally plays, Rabins is now turning her attention to a different kind of Jewish character: seventy-four-year-old imprisoned business fraud Bernard Lawrence Madoff, whose Ponzi-scheme scandal rocked the world and who became the new symbol of selfishness and greed as the economic crisis reached epic proportions. Rabins has turned the story into the one-woman show A Kaddish for Bernie Madoff, taking place at Joe’s Pub on November 8 and 15 at 7:00. Violinist and vocalist Rabins, who is also a poet and has served as a cultural ambassador for the State Department, will be backed by cellist and musical director Colette Alexander, percussionist David Freeman, and guitarist Lily Maase. The show, which promises an evening of mysticism and finance, is directed by Jessi D. Hill, with lighting by Jon Harper. “Everyone likes to think of Madoff as a monster, an aberration — but are we really so different?” Rabins wonders. “Markets go up, markets go down. But Madoff’s returns went up, more or less. In a straight line. For forty years. Who wouldn’t want that kind of security — no downturns, just growth? No failure, no loss, no death. It’s beautiful. But it’s impossible.”

DOC NYC: HOW TO SURVIVE A PLAGUE

HOW TO SURVIVE A PLAGUE provides a fascinating inside look at AIDS activists fighting the power

NEW YORK’S DOCUMENTARY FESTIVAL: HOW TO SURVIVE A PLAGUE (David France, 2012)
IFC Center
323 Sixth Ave. at West Third St.
Friday, November 9, $16.50, 11:00 am
212-924-7771
www.ifccenter.com
www.surviveaplague.com
www.docnyc.net

Contemporary activists stand to learn a lot from the gripping documentary How to Survive a Plague. For his directorial debut, longtime journalist David France, one of the first reporters to cover the AIDS crisis that began in the early 1980s, scoured through more than seven hundred hours of mostly never-before-seen archival footage and home movies of protests, meetings, public actions, and other elements of the concerted effort to get politicians and the pharmaceutical industry to recognize the growing health epidemic and do something as the death toll quickly rose into the millions. Focusing on radical groups ACT UP and TAG (Treatment Action Group), France follows such activist leaders as Peter Staley, Mark Harrington, Larry Kramer, Bob Rafsky, and Dr. Iris Long as they attack the policies of President George H. W. Bush, famously heckle presidential candidate Bill Clinton, and battle to get drug companies to create affordable, effective AIDS medicine, all while continuing to bury loved ones in both public and private ceremonies. France includes new interviews with many key activists who reveal surprising details about the movement, providing a sort of fight-the-power primer about how to get things done. The film also shines a light on lesser-known heroes, several filled with anger and rage, others much calmer, who fought through tremendous adversity to make a difference and ultimately save millions of lives. How to Survive a Plague is ending its extended run at the IFC Center on November 9 at 11:00 am as part of the 2012 DOC NYC festival, which runs November 8-15 there and at the SVA Theatre with such other socially relevant documentaries as Amy Berg’s West of Memphis, about the West Memphis 3, with Berg, Damien Echols, Lorri Davis, and Henry Rollins expected to attend; Douglas Sloan’s Eddie Adams: Saigon ’68, which tells the story of the iconic photograph of a gun pointed at the head of a Vietnamese man, with an all-star lineup on hand for a discussion, including Sloan, Morley Safer, Bob Schieffer, Hal Buell, Bill Eppridge, and James S. Robbins; and Deborah Dickson’s The Lost Bird Project, about sculptor Todd McGrain’s attempt to preserve the memory of five birds facing extinction.