Yearly Archives: 2012

FIFTY YEARS OF THE NEW YORK FILM FESTIVAL: THE WORLD

Jia Zhangke’s THE WORLD creates a microcosm of urbanization in a theme park

THE WORLD (SHI JIE) (Jia Zhangke, 2004)
Film Society of Lincoln Center, Walter Reade Theater
165 West 65th St. at Amsterdam Ave.
Friday, August 31, 2:30, and Monday, September 3, 2:00
212-875-5601
www.filmlinc.com

Jia Zhangke’s fourth film (following Pickpocket, Platform, and Unknown Pleasures) is set in a Beijing theme park called the World, where people come to see miniature versions of major international cities and landmarks, including Paris, New York, London, and Tokyo, the Taj Mahal, the Pyramids, the World Trade Center, Big Ben, and the Eiffel Tower. The luminous Zhao Tao stars as Tao, a park dancer dating security guard Taisheng (Chen Taisheng). She becomes friendly with Anna, a Russian woman who has come to the park to make money so she can reunite with her daughter. However, dreams don’t always come true in this microcosm of urbanization. As Tao questions her relationship with Taisheng, he starts seeing Qun (Wang Yiqun), a fashion designer who makes knock-offs and is trying to return to her husband, who lives in Belleville. Meanwhile, Xiaowei (Jing Jue) is trapped in an abusive relationship with Niu (Jiang Zhongwei) that threatens to explode. The World is a charming little film, not looking to make any grand statements, just concentrating on the problems of ordinary people all over the globe who are struggling to survive financially, emotionally, and romantically. The World, which was shown at the 2004 New York Film Festival and was followed by such other fine Zhangke works as Still Life, Useless, and 24 City, is screening at the Walter Reade Theater as part of the ongoing series “50 Years of the New York Film Festival,” which continues with such NYFF vets as Cristi Puiu’s The Death of Mr. Lazarescu, Jafar Panahi’s Offside, Carlos Reygadas’s Silent Light, and Nuri Bilge Ceylan’s Once Upon a Time in Anatolia. Individual tickets for the fiftieth anniversary of the New York Film Festival, which runs September 28 through October 14, go on sale to the general public on September 9.

FIFTY YEARS OF THE NEW YORK FILM FESTIVAL: THE DEATH OF MR. LAZARESCU

Ian Fiscuteanu brings to life the slow death of a unique character in Cristi Pui’s very dark comedy

THE DEATH OF MR. LAZARESCU (Cristi Pui, 2005)
Film Society of Lincoln Center, Walter Reade Theater
165 West 65th St. at Amsterdam Ave.
Friday, August 31, 8:45, and Sunday, September 2, 5:00
212-875-5601
www.filmlinc.com

Poor Mr. Lazarescu. He lives in a shoddy hovel of an apartment in Bucharest, where he drinks too much and gets out too little. He moves around very slowly and has trouble saying what’s on his mind, even to his three cats. His family is sick and tired of telling him to lay off the booze, so they ignore his complaints. Suffering from headaches and stomach pain, he phones for an ambulance several times, but it arrives only after a neighbor calls as well. Mr. Lazarescu then spends the rest of this very long night fading away as he is taken to hospital after hospital by the ambulance nurse, who gets involved in a seemingly endless battle with doctors to try to save him. Ian Fiscuteanu is sensationally realistic as Mr. Lazarescu; you’ll quickly forget that he’s not really a drunk, disgusting, dying old man. Luminita Gheorghiu is excellent as Mioara, the nurse who gets caught up in Mr. Lazarescu’s case. Winner of the Cannes Film Festival’s Un Certain Regard Award, cowriter-director Cristi Puiu’s very dark comedy is simply captivating; despite a slow start, it’ll pull you in with its well-choreographed scenes, documentary style, and careful camera movement. (Also look for the subtle and very specific naming of characters.) Using Erich Rohmer’s “Six Moral Tales” as inspiration, Puiu has said that The Death of Mr. Lazarescu is the first of his own “Six Stories from the Bucharest Suburbs,” this one dealing with “the love of humanity,” followed by 2010’s Aurora. The Death of Mr. Lazarescu, which was shown at the 2005 New York Film Festival is screening at the Walter Reade Theater as part of the ongoing series “50 Years of the New York Film Festival,” which continues with such NYFF vets as Jafar Panahi’s Offside, Carlos Reygadas’s Silent Light, and Nuri Bilge Ceylan’s Once Upon a Time in Anatolia. Individual tickets for the fiftieth anniversary of the New York Film Festival, which runs September 28 through October 14, go on sale to the general public on September 9.

SONG OF THE DAY: “MALDITO BENDITO” Y LA BAMBA REMIX BY TECHNICOLOR CATERPILLAR

Bilingual six-piece Latin folk band Y La Bamba is back in New York this week, playing two shows in support of their latest album, Court the Storm (Tender Loving Empire, February 2012). The follow-up to their 2010 debut, Lupon, the new record, produced by Los Lobos wiz Steve Berlin, features such songs as “Squawk,” “Moral Panic,” “Idaho’s Genius,” and “Michoacan” and includes an appearance by Neko Case on the title track. In addition, “Bendito” has been remixed as “Maldito Bendito” by fellow Portland group Technicolor Caterpillar. Y La Bamba is led by the unique voice of Luz Elena Mendoza, which wafts over Latin-inspired rhythms and harmonies, with lyrics that reveal her religious upbringing. “I can’t save my own life if I could / I can only save my dreams,” she sings on “Hughson Boys,” continuing, “Blessings to the world / Blessings to the dark places I give room to / Be free for so long / So long.” Y La Bamba will be at the Knitting Factory tonight and Mercury Lounge tomorrow, with Chris Pureka opening both shows.

THE AMBASSADOR

Mads Brügger goes for quite a ride in THE AMBASSADOR

THE AMBASSADOR (Mads Brügger, 2011)
IFC Center
323 Sixth Ave. at West Third St.
Opens Wednesday, August 29
212-924-7771
www.ifccenter.com
drafthousefilms.com

Danish journalist Mads Brügger risked a lot more than just his career in making The Ambassador; he put his life on the line as well. “If you do it the way we will set you up to do it, you have a very high probability of success,” he is told by Colin Evans, who works for a company that can allegedly make anyone a diplomat of a diamond-rich African nation for the right price. “If you do it any other way, the best that you can hope for is to be arrested and go to jail and lose everything you’ve got. That’s the best you can hope for. The worst you can hope for is that you end up dead in a ditch in Africa.” Using his full name, Mads Johan Brügger Cortzen seeks to become a Liberian diplomat to the Central African Republic, meeting with powerful, important, and dangerous people on his fascinating journey, handing out “envelopes of happiness” filled with cash while claiming to want to build a match factory with the help of native pygmies. As Brügger’s story gets more and more ridiculous, he gains greater access, with soon only President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf’s signature necessary to achieve his absurd goal. An intriguing mix of Sacha Baron Cohen’s Borat and Ali G characters and controversial filmmaker and activist Michael Moore, Brügger, whose previous film, The Red Chapel, found him leading a bizarre experimental theater troupe into North Korea, goes about his business with a sly confidence, balancing the serious nature of the proceedings with humorous moments that threaten to reveal his ruse, but nobody seems to catch on as the money keeps flowing. (The film was financed by Lars Von Trier’s Zentropa studio.) Primarily using hidden cameras that he keeps rolling even after being told that filming is not allowed, Brügger employs his unique brand of what he calls “performative journalism,” a blend of performance art and investigative journalism that results in an outrageously entertaining film that exposes surprisingly blatant international corruption and has led to a firestorm of debate. The film opens August 29 at the IFC Center, with Brügger on hand for a Q&A following the 8:20 screenings on August 29 and 30.

VIDEO OF THE DAY: “THE FIRST TIME EVER I SAW YOUR FACE” BY AMANDA PALMER AND THE FLAMING LIPS (NSFW)

In her previous video, “Want It Back,” Amanda Fucking Palmer covered her unclothed body in black ink. The former Dresden Doll has cleaned herself up, in a way, for the follow-up, a remake of the folk-pop ballad “The First Time Ever I Saw Your Face,” which became a hit for Roberta Flack in 1972. A collaboration with the Flaming Lips, the video features AFP rolling around in a bathtub, no ink to be seen anywhere, in what she calls “a very naked, very joyful little present from me and the Flaming Lips!!” Palmer and her band, the Grand Theft Orchestra, are about to hit the road in support of their upcoming album, Theatre Is Evil, which was financed on Kickstarter with the help of such friends as Kristin Hersh, David Mack, husband Neil Gaiman, Robyn Hitchcock, DJ Spooky, and others making artistic contributions. The record features such tracks as “Smile (Pictures or It Didn’t Happen),” “The Killing Type,” “The Bed Song,” and “Lost” in addition to “Want It Back.” AFP and the GTO will be celebrating the September 11 release of Theatre Is Evil with a show that night in the Grand Ballroom at Webster Hall.

JANET CARDIFF AND GEORGE BURES MILLER: THE MURDER OF CROWS

“The Murder of Crows” is an intriguing, involving immersive experience at the Park Ave. Armory (photo by James Ewing/Park Avenue Armory)

Park Avenue Armory
643 Park Ave. at 67th St.
Tuesday – Sunday through September 9, $12 (open Labor Day Monday)
212-933-5812
www.armoryonpark.org
www.cardiffmiller.com

“Close your eyes and try to sleep,” Canadian-born sound artist Janet Cardiff repeatedly sings in a lullaby that is part of “The Murder of Crows,” a beautifully immersive installation continuing at the Park Ave. Armory through September 9. “Dreams will come / And when they’re done / It won’t be long / Until the dawn,” she adds. Closing one’s eyes and waiting for the coming of the proverbial dawn is the best way to experience “The Murder of Crows,” which was originally commissioned for the 2008 Biennale of Sydney. A collaboration between Cardiff — whose wonderful installation “The Forty Part Motet” can be seen at P.S. 1 in Queens through September 4 — and her husband, George Bures Miller, the thirty-minute “sound play” features ninety-eight speakers, fifty-five chairs, twenty-one amplifiers, and a gramophone horn on a lone desk. It was inspired by Goya’s late-eighteenth-century print “The Sleep of Reason Produces Monsters,” number forty-three of eighty works that make up “Los Caprichos,” a series that was critical of Spanish society. In the print, Goya buries his head in his arms on a table, surrounded by bats and owls, as if his nightmares are coming to life. In “The Murder of Crows” — the title refers to the collective noun used for a group of crows, intelligent, opportunistic birds that do so many things together, including mourning — Cardiff recounts several disturbing dreams, speaking through the gramophone horn, with sound effects, a traditional Tibetan prayer chant, and orchestral compositions arranged by Tilman Ritter and performed by Deutsches Film Orchester Babelsberg emanating from the speakers, which reside on chairs, hang at different heights from the ceiling, and are set on stands surrounding the chairs. “The Murder of Crows” touches on such issues as racism, globalization, war, and loss in evocative narrative fragments, including a surprising dose of unexpected humor, that create visual landscapes despite being a sound-based project. Visitors can enter the expansive Wade Thompson Drill Hall at any time during the piece and stay as long as they’d like, letting the dreamlike sounds wash over them as they remain in their seats or wander around the speakers, each one emitting something different. “The Murder of Crows” is yet another fascinating production at the armory, which has quickly become one of New York City’s most exciting venues for inventive, often cutting-edge art, dance, film, and music programming.

VIDEO OF THE DAY: “GIMME THE SWEET AND LOWDOWN” BY SOCIAL DISTORTION

For more than thirty years, Southern California’s Social Distortion has been at the forefront of punk rockabilly, playing it hard, loud, and fast on such records as 1983’s Mommy’s Little Monster, 1988’s Prison Bound, and 1992’s Somewhere Between Heaven and Hell. Such powerful songs as “Story of My Life,” “Bad Luck,” “Ball and Chain,” and “99 to Life” came to define the genre, along with their killer cover of Johnny Cash’s “Ring of Fire.” Following an arena stint supporting the Foo Fighters, Social D, led by original front man Mike Ness along with guitarist Jonny “2 Bags” Wickersham, bassist Brent Harding, and drummer David Hidalgo Jr. (son of Los Lobos cofounder David Hidalgo), is back out on the road headlining smaller venues in support of their 2011 Epitaph release, Hard Times and Nursery Rhymes, which includes the driving “Gimme the Sweet and Lowdown,” for which the Mad Twins, Olya & Vira Ishchuk, just created an animated video that makes numerous references to Ness’s real life. “I can tell you now / you’ve really gotten the blues,” Ness sings. “I can tell you now / that I’ve walked in your shoes.” Social D will be at the Roseland Ballroom on October 26 with the Biters and Lindi Ortega.