4
Apr/11

THE NEW SCHOOL ARTS FESTIVAL: NOIR

4
Apr/11

Guy Maddin’s HAUNTINGS will be shown as part of the New School’s noir festival

Theresa Lang Student and Community Center (and other venues)
Arnhold Hall, 55 West 13th St.
Admission: free
www.newschool.edu/artsfestival/noir

Dark, shadowy tales filled with double crosses, murder, heated sexuality, creepy corners and alleyways, mysterious characters, flippant dialogue, shootouts, and dangerous women — there’s nothing like a good noir story. The inaugural New School Arts Festival continues this week, using the institution’s resources for a thorough cultural examination of the theme of the noir genre in film, theater, literature, music, and art. All events are free but require advance reservations via the above website. Today at 6:00, author and professor James Naremore will deliver the keynote address, followed by a screening of the Coen brothers’ 1984 neonoir classic, Blood Simple, introduced by cultural writer Kim Morgan and Hirshon Festival Director-in-Residence Guy Maddin. Blood Simple star Frances McDormand will participate in a special conversation with Cecilia Rubino following a screening of the Coens’ Fargo on Friday at 2:00, with the reservation line opening today at noon. On Tuesday at 4:00, the 1913-14 silent crime serial Fantômas will be shown, followed by a panel discussion with Geoffrey O’Brien, Howard Rodman, Luc Sante, and David White; at 6:00, Molly Haskell will deliver a paper on the femme fatale that lies at the center of the noir genre, followed by a discussion with Morgan, Susie Linfield, and Laura Frost, moderated by Bill Goldstein; and at 8:00, Robet Polito, Mary Gaitskill, and Robert Pinsky will read poetry accompanied by live improvised jazz from Ben Allison, Frank Kimbrough, and Rudy Royston in the program “Noir — Poetry, Fiction and Jazz.” On Wednesday at 4:00, Eugene Lang College students and alumni will present John Webster’s 1612 play The White Devil; blues expert Michael Gray will discuss the life and career of Blind Willie McTell at 6:30; and Maddin will screen Hauntings, his short reimaginings of lost films by major directors, then take part in a talk with Polito. On Thursday night from 6:30 to 11:30, “Noir Now” will include creative writing students reading their winning noir-inspired work, video excerpts from composer Paul Moravec and librettist Terry Teachout’s noir opera The Letter, poetry reading by Frank Bidart, and Greil Marcus and Todd Haynes discussing Haynes’s fine miniseries adaptation of James M. Cain’s Mildred Pierce, currently being shown on HBO. On Friday at 11:00 am, New School students have curated an excellent noir double feature at the IFC Center, consisting of Billy Wilder’s Sunset Boulevard (1950) and David Lynch’s Mulholland Drive (2001), and the festivities conclude that night at 8:00 with the Dorothy H. Hirshon Film Festival: Original Script Reading Event, featuring multimedia excerpts from students finishing up their Screenwriting Certificates, followed by a public reception.