twi-ny recommended events

SARAH SZE IN CONVERSATION WITH JENNIFER EGAN: TRIPLE POINT

triple point

192 Books
112 Tenth Ave. at Twenty-First St.
Tuesday, November 12, free, 7:00
212-255-4022
www.192books.com
www.sarahsze.com

Boston-born, New York-based visual artist Sarah Sze creates fragile, intricately constructed architectural environments using such materials as string, bottle caps, colored tape, Styrofoam cups, paper, and other items that combine elements of painting and sculpture. Sze, whose “Infinite Line” show ran at Asia Society in 2011-12, is currently representing America at the U.S. Pavilion at the fifty-fifth Venice Biennale with the massive installation “Triple Point,” about which she said in a statement, “Central to the exhibition is the notion of the ‘compass’ and how we locate ourselves in a perpetually disorienting world.” In May 2012, Pulitzer Prize-winning author Jennifer Egan (A Visit from the Goon Squad, The Keep) began posting her New Yorker short story “Black Box” on Twitter in paragraphs of no more than 140 characters, weaving together a written narrative that echoes the ones that Sze builds with objects. On November 12 at 7:00, Sze and Egan will be at 192 Books in Chelsea, celebrating the release of the new book Triple Point (Gregory R. Miller / Bronx Museum of the Arts, October 2013, $45), which examines the installation in detail, featuring an introduction by Biennale co-commissioners Holly Block and Carey Lovelace, an essay by curator Johanna Burton, a conversation between Sze and Egan, and the complete text of Egan’s “Black Box.”

THE LaGUARDIA CHORAL CONCERT: AN EVENING TO REMEMBER

Riverside Church
Riverside Dr. between 120th & 122nd Sts.
Tuesday, November 12, $10, 7:30
www.laguardiahs.org
www.theriversidechurchny.org

Fiorella H. LaGuardia High School of Music & Art and Performing Arts, which served as the model for the 1980 film Fame, boasts a long list of famous alumni, including such singers, composers, and musicians as Nicki Minaj, Béla Fleck, Jean Grae, Sammy Kahn, Liza Minnelli, Kelis, Billy Cobham, Melissa Manchester, Joshua Rifkin, Eartha Kitt, Slick Rick, Laura Nyro, Steve Jordan, Janis Ian, Marcus Miller, Bridget Kelly, Bill Charlap, Suzanne Vega, and Lunachicks, among so many others, in a multiple of genres. You can catch the next generation of LaGuardia Arts stars at the annual LaGuardia Choral Concert, “An Evening to Remember,” taking place November 12 at 7:30 at the Riverside Church. The Girl’s Chorus will be conducted by Audrey Bishop, the Mixed Chorus by Deepak Marwah, and the Women’s Choir & Senior Chorus by Jana Ballard. Admission is $10 at the door, with proceeds benefiting the school, which has been promoting the arts to students for more than seventy-five years.

BOULE & BILL (BILLY & BUDDY)

A French family has its hands full when it adopts a needy cocker spaniel in BOULE AND BILL

A French family has its hands full when it adopts a needy cocker spaniel in BOULE & BILL

BILLY & BUDDY (BOULE & BILL) (Alexandre Charlot & Franck Magnier, 2013)
Quad Cinema
34 West 13th St.
November 8-14
212-255-2243
www.quadcinema.com
www.distribfilms.com

In 1976 France, it’s love at first sight when eight-year-old Boule (Charles Crombez) sets his eyes on cocker spaniel Bill (voiced by Manu Payet) in Alexandre Charlot and Franck Magnier’s utterly delightful Boule & Bill, based on Jean Roba and Maurice Rosy’s popular comic strip. While Boule’s mother (Marina Foïs), a piano teacher, wants to adopt the dog for her son, his father (Franck Dubosc) is firmly against it. He’s not exactly in favor of adding a lost tortoise, Caroline (voiced by Sara Giraudeau), to the family either. Soon Bill and Caroline are on their way home with the clan, but Boule’s father, a stick-in-the-mud appliance designer, immediately begins planning how to get rid of the dog, even moving the family to an oddball apartment complex in the middle of nowhere. Once there, Bill continues wreaking havoc, including perpetually annoying the depressive neighbor (Nicolas Vaude) one floor below. Meanwhile, Caroline falls madly in love with Bill. But when Boule and Bill go too far, his parents begin considering whether they have to give the dog away. From the opening scene, it’s apparent that Boule & Bill is no mere silly kiddie movie, as Mother, Father, and Son are in their little red car, singing a song about male genitalia. Charlot and Franck, who previously collaborated on Imogène McCarthery, load the charming tale with laugh-out-loud flourishes, from the mother’s encounters with the downstairs depressive to Bill’s turning himself into a stuffed animal in an emergency. A series of brief dream sequences, along with several plot twists, feel forced and unnecessary, but Charlot and Franck always manage to turn things around and get back on track. And they really have a ball with Bill’s deepest dog thoughts, reminiscent of Jean Shepherd’s narration in A Christmas Story. Running at the Quad November 8-14, Boule & Bill is a colorful, fun adventure that is more than just your average boy meets dog movie.

FUN HOME

(photo by Joan Marcus)

Small Alison (Sydney Lucas) and her father (Michael Cerveris) try to find common ground in FUN HOME (photo by Joan Marcus)

The Public Theater, Newman Theater
425 Lafayette St. by Astor Pl.
Extended through January 12, $81.50 – $91.50
212-967-7555
www.publictheater.org

In the opening scene of the Public Theater’s marvelous adaptation of Alison Bechdel’s 2006 graphic novel Fun Home, the forty-three-year-old Alison (Beth Malone) is watching her father, Bruce (Michael Cerveris), play with her eight-year-old self (Sydney Lucas). “Dad, I know you think cartoons are silly, but I draw cartoons,” she says. “And I need real things to draw from because I don’t trust memory.” That adult version of Alison is onstage throughout the 105-minute musical, standing at her drawing table or walking around David Zinn’s changing sets as she watches her younger selves, ages eight and eighteen (Alexandra Socha), deal with their difficult father and not-so-clueless mother, Helen (Judy Kuhn), who chooses to look the other way at her husband’s dangerous indiscretions. The award-winning graphic novel was subtitled A Family Tragicomic, and the show maintains that sensibility as it centers on Bechdel’s (Dykes to Watch Out For) complex relationship with her father, an English teacher and funeral home (“fun home”) director obsessed with historic restoration and, as it turns out, young men and boys. Composer Jeanine Tesori (Thoroughly Modern Millie; Caroline, or Change) and book writer and lyricist Lisa Kron (In the Wake, Well) have transformed Fun Home into a compelling musical that intelligently brings the intimate coming-of-age story to life, with plenty of charm and humor accompanying the anger and fear. When the teenage Alison goes off to college, she discovers that she is a lesbian, falling in love with the strong-minded Joan (Roberta Colindrez); “I’m changing my major to sex with Joan,” Alison sings in one of the show’s most entertaining numbers. As Alison learns more about herself, she also discovers her father’s big secret, leading to a tragedy that she is still trying to understand.

(photo by Joan Marcus)

Current-day Alison (Beth Malone) watches in darkness as teenage self (Alexandra Socha) gets serious with her mother (Judy Kuhn) in stirring adaptation of graphic novel (photo by Joan Marcus)

Director Sam Gold (The Flick, Circle Mirror Transformation) does a terrific job navigating among the three Alisons, each one dealing with Bruce in different ways as they grow up, along with the various musical styles, which include the Partridge Family send-up “You Are Like a Raincoat” and Small Alison and her brothers’ (Griffin Birney and Noah Hinsdale) mock commercial “Come to the Fun Home.” Cerveris (Assassins, Nikolai and the Others) infuses his character with an edgy creepiness that is always threatening to explode, while Kuhn (Chess, Les Misérables) excels in her significantly smaller role. The three Alisons form a fascinating whole, with Lucas a bundle of positive energy in her off-Broadway debut, Socha (Spring Awakening) displaying a complex combination of dread and hope, and Malone remaining cool and calm as her childhood passes before her eyes. Fun Home, which has been extended through December 29, is a uniquely told, thoroughly satisfying story that examines those critical moments in life that help define who we are, and who we become.

THALIA DOCS: NICKY’S FAMILY

NICKYS FAMILY

Emotional documentary tells the story of an unassuming hero who helped save hundreds of children from the Nazis

NICKY’S FAMILY (Matej Minác, 2011)
Symphony Space, Leonard Nimoy Thalia
2537 Broadway at 95th St.
Sunday, November 10, 17, and 24, $14, 6:00
212-864-5400
www.symphonyspace.org
www.menemshafilms.com

“There are some stories which we are not only an audience to, but may become their participants,” Canadian journalist Joe Schlesinger says at the beginning of Matej Mináč and Patrik Pašš’s poignant, powerful documentary Nicky’s Family. Schlesinger is one of hundreds of Czech and Slovak men and women who, as children, were saved from the Nazis by unassuming Englishman Nicholas Winton on the eve of World War II. Winton’s story remained virtually unknown for sixty years, until his wife found a suitcase in the attic filled with documentation detailing her husband’s quiet heroism. Over the last fifteen years, the “British Schindler” has been celebrated around the world, being knighted by the queen, meeting many of the people he helped save, and inspiring children who are not directly part of “Nicky’s Family” to help others in what is called the “Winton virus of good.” It’s an unforgettable story centered around a man who didn’t set out to be a hero and still appears to be somewhat uncomfortable with all the accolades, which include being nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize. The film interviews such members of Nicky’s Family as Alice Masters, Ben Abeles, Liesl Silverstone, Dr. Lenata Laxova, Tom Berman, and Tom Schrecker, who have made significant contributions to society that might have never happened had they not been rescued as children by Winton. Director-producer-cowriter Mináč and producer-cowriter-editor Pašš include unnecessary staged re-creations of some of the events of 1938 that actually detract from the central narrative, and the documentary overplays the emotional card in its final scenes, but it tells a story that needs to be told, of a remarkable man who, even at age 104, continues to be an inspiration and proves that one person can indeed make a difference. Nicky’s Family is screening on three successive Sundays, November 10, 17, and 24, at Symphony Space as part of the Thalia Docs series.

THX BKLYN: THE LANDLORD

Young Elgar Winthrop Julius Enders’s (Beau Bridges) spoiled life of privilege is about to dramatically change in THE LANDLORD

Young Elgar Winthrop Julius Enders’s (Beau Bridges) spoiled life of privilege is about to dramatically change in THE LANDLORD

THE LANDLORD (Hal Ashby, 1970)
Nitehawk Cinema
136 Metropolitan Ave. between Berry St. & Wythe Ave.
November 9-10, 11:45 am
718-384-3980
www.nitehawkcinema.com

When rich kid Elgar Winthrop Julius Enders (Beau Bridges) finally decides to do something with his spoiled life of privilege, he takes a rather curious turn, buying a dilapidated tenement in a pregentrified Park Slope that resembles the South Bronx in Hal Ashby’s poignant directorial debut, The Landlord. At first, the less-than-worldly Elgar doesn’t quite know what he’s gotten himself into, believing it will be easy to kick out the current residents and then replace the decrepit building with luxury apartments. He pulls up to the place in his VW bug convertible, thinking he can just waltz in and do whatever he wants, but just as his car is vandalized, so is his previously charmed existence, as he gets to know wise house mother Marge (Pearl Bailey), the sexy Francine (Diana Sands), her activist husband, Copee (Louis Gossett Jr.), and Black Power professor Duboise (Melvin Stewart), none of whom is up-to-date with the rent. Meanwhile, Elgar starts dating Lanie (Marki Bey), a light-skinned half-black club dancer he assumed was white, infuriating his father, William (Walter Brooke), and mother, Joyce (a delightful, Oscar-nominated Lee Grant), who are in the process of setting up their daughter, Susan (Susan Anspach), with the white-bread Peter Coots (Robert Klein).

Elgar has a whole lot of learning to do in Hal Ashby’s New York City-set black comedy

Elgar has a whole lot of learning to do in Hal Ashby’s New York City-set black comedy

Based on the novel by Kristin Hunter, The Landlord is a telling microcosm of race relations and class conflict in a tumultuous period in the nation’s history, as well as that of New York City, coming shortly after the civil rights movement and the free-love late ’60s. The film is masterfully shot by Astoria-born cinematographer Gordon Willis (Klute, Annie Hall, Manhattan, all three Godfather movies), who sets the bright, open spaces of the Enderses’ massive estate against the dark, claustrophobic rooms of the dank tenement. Screenwriter Bill Gunn (Ganja and Hess) and Ashby avoid getting overly preachy in this at times outrageous black comedy, incorporating slapstick along with some more tender moments; the scene in which Joyce meets Marge is a marvel of both. And just wait till you see Coots’s costume at a fancy fundraiser. The Landlord began quite a string for Ashby, who followed it up with Harold and Maude, The Last Detail, Shampoo, Bound for Glory, Coming Home, and Being There in a remarkable decade for the former film editor (In the Heat of the Night) who died in 1988 at the age of fifty-nine. The Landlord is screening November 9-10 at 11:45 am as part of the Nitehawk Cinema series “November Brunch & Midnite: Thx Bklyn,” a month-long collection of films either set in Brooklyn or written and/or directed by Brooklynites, being shown on weekend mornings and midnights, continuing with Darren Aronofsky’s Requiem for a Dream, J. Michael Muro’s Street Trash, Morris Engel’s Little Fugitive, Sidney Lumet’s Serpico, and Noah Baumbach’s The Squid and the Whale.

PETER METTLER — PICTURES OF LIGHT: MANUFACTURED LANDSCAPES

Documentary about Edward Burtynsky and his large-scale photographs is filled with unsettling beauty

MANUFACTURED LANDSCAPES (Jennifer Baichwal, 2005)
Film Society of Lincoln Center
Elinor Bunin Munroe Film Center, Howard Gilman Theater
144 West 65th St. between Broadway & Amsterdam Ave.
Tuesday, November 12, 9:00
Series runs November 8-12
212-875-5601
www.filmlinc.comg
www.zeitgeistfilms.com

Photographer Edward Burtynsky has been traveling the world with his large-format viewfinder camera, taking remarkable photographs of environmental landscapes undergoing industrial change. For Manufactured Landscapes, cinematographer Peter Mettler and director Jennifer Baichwal joined Burtynsky on his journey as he documented ships being broken down in Chittagong, Bangladesh; the controversial development of the Three Gorges Dam Project in China, which displaced more than a million people; the uniformity at a factory in Cankun that makes irons and the Deda Chicken Processing Plant in Dehui City; as well as various mines and quarries. Burtynsky’s photos, which were on view at the Brooklyn Museum in late 2005 and often can be seen in New York City galleries (two shows just closed last week), are filled with gorgeous colors and a horrible sadness at the lack of humanity they portray. As in the exhibit, the audience is not hit over the head with facts and figures and environmental rhetoric; instead, the pictures pretty much speak for themselves, although Burtynsky does give some limited narration. Baichwal lets the camera linger on its subject, as in the remarkable opening shot, a long, slow pan across a seemingly endless factory. She is also able to get inside the photographs, making them appear to be three-dimensional as Mettler slowly pulls away. Manufactured Landscapes is screening November 12 as part of the Film Society of Lincoln Center series “Peter Mettler: Pictures of Light,” a midcareer retrospective of the innovative Canadian artist that also features eight shorts and full-length documentaries he directed, including Picture of Light, The End of Time, Plastikman, Petropolis, and Gambling, Gods, and LSD, with Mettler on hand to talk about his work at most shows. In addition, Mettler will participate in the free White Light Festival panel discussion “It’s a Matter of Time” on November 9 at 4:30 with Sylvia Boorstein, Daniel Casasanto, Georg Friedrich Haas, and Alan Lightman and a performance of Steve Reich’s “Clapping Music” by Alan Pierson and Chris Thompson, moderated by John Schaefer.