this week in film and television

LA VITA E CINEMA — THE FILMS OF NANNI MORETTI: THE SON’S ROOM

Nanni Moretti’s deeply personal THE SON’S ROOM, part of IFC Center retrospective, looks at family tragedy

LA VITA E CINEMA: THE FILMS OF NANNI MORETTI: THE SON’S ROOM (LA STANZA DEL FIGLIO) (Nanni Moretti, 2001)
IFC Center
323 Sixth Ave. at West Third St.
Sunday, April 1, and Monday, April 2
Series continues through April 5
212-924-7771
www.ifccenter.com

Winner of the Palme D’Or at the 2001 Cannes Film Festival, The Son’s Room is a moving look at life, love, and loss. Italian writer-director-actor Nanni Moretti stars as Giovanni, a psychiatrist who can’t control the dissolution of his family following a terrible tragedy. Moretti (Caro Diario, Ecce Bombo) has made a heart-wrenching work that will always be compared with Todd Field’s powerful In the Bedroom, which came out the same year. Both films examine family tragedy with honesty and believability, but whereas the family in In the Bedroom considers revenge, the father in The Son’s Room, achingly played by Moretti, can’t get over wrongly blaming himself, while his wife (Laura Morante, who won the Best Actress award at Cannes for the role) seeks solace in her son’s girlfriend (Sofia Vigliar), whom she had not known about. Moretti is a deeply personal filmmaker; at times you will feel like you are watching a documentary, and it will break your heart. The Son’s Room is screening Saturday and Sunday as part of the IFC Center series “La Vita e Cinema: The Films of Nanni Moretti,” being held in conjunction with the U.S. theatrical release of Moretti’s latest, We Have a Pope, which opens at the IFC Center on April 6. Moretti will discuss the film at the 7:30 screening on March 31. Other films in the retrospective include I Am Self-Sufficient, Bianca, Sweet Dreams, and The Mass Is Ended.

NEW DIRECTORS, NEW FILMS: FEAR AND DESIRE

Stanley Kubrick’s first film, FEAR AND DESIRE, is screening at MoMA as part of New Directors, New Films series

FEAR AND DESIRE (Stanley Kubrick, 1957)
MoMA Film, Museum of Modern Art
11 West 53rd St. between Fifth & Sixth Aves.
Saturday, March 31, 2:00
Tickets: $12, in person only, may be applied to museum admission within thirty days, same-day screenings free with museum admission, available at Film and Media Desk beginning at 9:30 am
212-708-9400
newdirectors.org

The annual New Directors, New Films series, a joint presentation of MoMA and the Film Society of Lincoln Center, has been highlighting works by up-and-coming international directors for more than forty years. But the 2012 slate of films includes one intriguing surprise: Stanley Kubrick’s 1953 seldom-seen psychological war drama, Fear and Desire. Kubrick’s first full-length film, made when he was twenty-four, is a curious tale about four soldiers (Steve Coit, Kenneth Harp, Paul Mazursky, and Frank Silvera) trapped six miles behind enemy lines. When they are spotted by a local woman (Virginia Leith), they decide to capture her and tie her up, but leaving Sidney (Mazursky) behind to keep an eye on her turns out to be a bad idea. Meanwhile, they discover a nearby house that has been occupied by the enemy and argue over whether to attack or retreat. Written by Howard Sackler, who was a high school classmate of Kubrick’s in the Bronx and would later win the Pulitzer Prize for The Great White Hope, and directed, edited, and photographed by the man who would go on to make such war epics as Paths of Glory, Full Metal Jacket, and Dr. Strangelove or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb, Fear and Desire features stilted dialogue, much of which is spoken off-camera and feels like it was dubbed in later. Many of the cuts are jumpy and much of the framing amateurish. Kubrick was ultimately disappointed with the film and wanted it pulled from circulation; instead it was preserved by Eastman House in 1989 and restored twenty years later, which is good news for film lovers, as it is fascinating to watch Kubrick learning as the film continues. His exploration of the psyche of the American soldier is the heart and soul of this compelling black-and-white war drama that is worth seeing for more than just historical reasons. “There is a war in this forest. Not a war that has been fought, nor one that will be, but any war,” narrator David Allen explains at the beginning of the film. “And the enemies who struggle here do not exist unless we call them into being. This forest then, and all that happens now, is outside history. Only the unchanging shapes of fear and doubt and death are from our world. These soldiers that you see keep our language and our time but have no other country but the mind.” Fear and Desire lays the groundwork for much of what is to follow in Kubrick’s remarkable career.

THE BEAT HOTEL

Documentary examines Paris hotel where the Beat Generation came to live and play between 1957 and 1963 (photo by Harold Chapman, 1960)

THE BEAT HOTEL (Alan Govenar, 2011)
Cinema Village
22 East 12th St. between University Pl. & Fifth Ave.
Opens Friday, March 30
212-924-3363
www.thebeathotelmovie.com
www.cinemavillage.com

Between 1957 and 1963, a group of American Bohemians moved to Paris in the wake of obscenity trials against the publication of Allen Ginsberg’s Howl, settling into a cheap, dirty, nameless hotel in the Latin Quarter run by a woman known as Madame Rachou. Soon christened the Beat Hotel, the site became home to such writers, artists, and poets as Ginsberg, Peter Orlovsky, Gregory Corso, William S. Burroughs, Ian Somerville, and Brion Gysin. “The Beat Hotel was a temple of the mind,” resident and artist Elliot Rudie says early on in Alan Govenar’s The Beat Hotel, a new documentary that examines the history and influence of that time. “Once you went through the door into the hotel, you were in another world,” adds photographer Harold Chapman, who took subtle pictures that capture the flavor and essence of what went on at the hotel, where Burroughs finished Naked Lunch, Corso wrote Bomb, and Ginsberg began Kaddish. The eighty-two-minute film features recollections from some of the hotel’s former residents, including Chapman, artist Jean-Jacques Lebel, and Rudie, whose art inspired animations used in the documentary, in addition to book dealers Cyclops Lester and George Whitman, who hung out with the Beats while they were in Paris. Govenar fills in the details with talking heads and reenactments of important scenes, supplemented by Chapman’s photographs. Among the more entertaining stories is one of Corso cutting off Marcel Duchamp’s tie at a party. Although the film never quite achieves the liveliness of the Beat Generation that it seeks to evoke, it is still an interesting look inside a wonderfully creative and fascinating period in twentieth-century literature and the counterculture movement.

GOON

Everything is not quite kosher in Mike Dowse’s GOON, which explores the bloodier side of the great sport of hockey

GOON (Mike Dowse, 2012)
Opens Friday, March 30
www.magnetreleasing.com

Mike Dowse’s ultraviolent hockey comedy, Goon, comes along at a pivotal moment in the history of the NHL. More than ever before, the league is disciplining most kinds of physical contact that result in injuries, particularly concussions, following the early death of three current and former enforcers last summer. Fighting, however, has been allowed to continue, regularly argued that fisticuffs are necessary in order to avoid other, more vicious attacks on the ice. Somehow Dowse and cowriters Evan Goldberg (Superbad, Pineapple Express) and Jay Baruchel manage to skirt the more serious issues, making a very funny, extremely lowbrow movie that truly honors the sport that it loves so much while celebrating the bloodier aspects of the game. Seann William Scott (American Pie) stars as Doug Glatt, a none-too-swift Jewish bouncer whose parents (Eugene Levy and Ellen David) could not be more disappointed in him. When a minor-league hockey coach sees Glatt lay out one of his players who jumped into the crowd, he decides to turn Glatt into a hockey goon — but first he has to teach him how to skate. Soon Glatt is promoted to a better league, where his fists make him an instant star and lead to a growing fan club headed by his best friend, Pat (Baruchel), and Eva (Alison Pill), a self-admitted slut whom Glatt immediately falls for. As Glatt’s team starts winning, the hockey world prepares for the ultimate showdown between the up-and-coming Glatt and living legend Ross “the Boss” Rhea (noted thespian Liev Schreiber), a nasty player who wants to go out with one last bang before he retires. You don’t have to know much about hockey to get a kick out of Goon, which was inspired by real-life enforcer Douglas Smith’s book, Goon: The True Story of an Unlikely Journey into a Minor Hockey League, as well as the escapades of minor league fighter Mike Bajurny and Baruchel’s own father, who played on a Jewish youth team when he was a kid. The film is filled with offensive jokes that sometimes teeter on that fine line between funny and homophobic, but such locker-room talk is ultimately trumped by the film’s endearing good nature that makes it likable even when it crosses various lines of ethics and taste. There have been fewer than twenty movies made about hockey, from the classic (Slap Shot) to the solid (Miracle, The Rocket), to the absurd (Youngblood, MVP: Most Valuable Primate). Goon might not be in the same league as Slap Shot, but it can stand its ground and duke it out with the best of the rest. (Stick around for the closing credits, which include video of some of Smith’s greatest battles.)

SUNSHINE AT MIDNIGHT: HOUSE

Japanese cult horror comedy finally gets a theatrical release

Japanese cult horror comedy will delight midnight-movie fans at Landmark Sunshine


HOUSE (HAUSU) (Nobuhiko Obayashi, 1977)

Landmark Sunshine Cinema
143 East Houston St. between First & Second Aves.
Friday, March 30, and Saturday, March 31, 12 midnight
212-330-8182
www.landmarktheatres.com
www.janusfilms.com/house

One of the craziest movies ever made, Nobuhiko Obayashi’s 1977 cult classic, House (Hausu), is truly one of those things that has to be seen to be believed. House is a psychedelic black horror comedy musical about Gorgeous (Kimiko Ikegami) and six of her high school friends who choose to spend part of their summer vacation at Gorgeous’s aunt’s (Yoko Minamida) very strange house. Gorgeous, whose mother died when she was little and whose father (Saho Sasazawa) is about to get married to Ryoko (Haruko Wanibuchi), brings along her playful friends Melody (Eriko Ikegami), Fantasy (Kumiko Oba), Prof (Ai Matsubara), Sweet (Masayo Miyako), Kung Fu (Miki Jinbo), and Mac (Mieko Sato), who quickly start disappearing like ten little Indians. House is a ceaselessly entertaining head trip of a movie, a tongue-in-chic celebration of genre with spectacular set designs by Kazuo Satsuya, beautiful cinematography by Yoshitaka Sakamoto, and a fab score by Asei Kobayashi and Mickie Yoshino. The original story actually came from the mind of Obayashi’s eleven-year-old daughter, Chigumi, who clearly has one heck of an imagination. Oh, and we can’t forget about the evil cat, a demonic feline to end all demonic felines. The film was released theatrically in 2010 prior to its appearance on DVD from Janus, the same company that puts out such classic fare as Federico Fellini’s Amarcord, Akira Kurosawa’s Rashomon, Jacques Tati’s M. Hulot’s Holiday, François Truffaut’s Shoot the Piano Player, Jean Renoir’s The Rules of the Game, and Jean-Luc Godard’s Vivre sa Vie, so House has joined some very prestigious company. And who are we to say it doesn’t deserve it?

LA VITA E CINEMA — THE FILMS OF NANNI MORETTI: CARO DIARIO

Doctors can’t help Nanni Moretti find out what’s wrong with him in charming CARO DIARIO

CARO DIARIO (DEAR DIARY) (Nanni Moretti, 1994)
IFC Center
323 Sixth Ave. at West Third St.
March 31 – April 2
Series continues through April 5
212-924-7771
www.ifccenter.com

Nanni Moretti’s highly personal and very funny memoir, Caro Diario, is simply wonderful; Moretti plays himself, a filmmaker roaming around Rome on his Vespa and riding into charming little vignettes, including bumping into Jennifer Beals, with whom he’s obsessed. Moretti then travels to the Eolie Islands with his friend Gerardo (Renato Carpentieri), and more comic adventures ensue. The mood changes when Moretti comes down with a rash that doctor after doctor diagnoses differently. This international hit earned Moretti nominations and awards galore, including being named Best Director at the David di Donatello Awards and at Cannes. Caro Diario is screening Saturday, Sunday, and Monday as part of the IFC Center series “La Vita e Cinema: The Films of Nanni Moretti,” being held in conjunction with the U.S. theatrical release of Moretti’s latest, We Have a Pope, which opens at the IFC Center on April 6. Moretti will discuss the film at the 5:45 screening on April 1. Other films in the retrospective include I Am Self-Sufficient, Bianca, Sweet Dreams, The Son’s Room, and The Mass Is Ended.

YOU MUST REMEMBER THIS: CITIZEN KANE

Rubin Museum screening of Orson Welles masterpiece focuses on memory

CITIZEN KANE (Orson Welles, 1941
Cabaret Cinema, Rubin Museum of Art
150 West 17th St. at Seventh Ave.
Friday, March 30, free with $7 bar minimum, 9:30
212-620-5000
www.rmanyc.org/cabaretcinema
www2.warnerbros.com/citizenkane

Citizen Kane is the best-made film we have ever had the pleasure to watch — again and again and again — and it is even more brilliant on the big screen. A young, brash, determined Orson Welles created a masterpiece unlike anything seen before or since — a beautifully woven complex narrative with a stunning visual style (compliments of director of photography Gregg Toland) and a fabulous cast of veterans from his Mercury radio days, including Everett Sloane, Joseph Cotten, Ray Collins, Paul Stewart, and Agnes Moorehead. Each moment in the film is unforgettable, not a word or shot out of place as Welles details the rise and fall of a self-obsessed media mogul. The film is prophetic in many ways; at one point Kane utters, “The news goes on for twenty-four hours a day,” foreseeing today’s 24/7 news overload. And it doesn’t matter if you’ve never seen it and you know what Rosebud refers to; the film is about a whole lot more than just that minor mystery. Like every film Welles made, Citizen Kane was fraught with controversy, not the least of which was a very unhappy William Randolph Hearst seeking to destroy the negative of a film he thought ridiculed him. Kane won only one Oscar, for writing — which also resulted in controversy when Herman J. Mankiewicz claimed that he was the primary scribe, not Welles. The film lost the Oscar for Best Picture to John Ford’s How Green Was My Valley, but it has topped nearly every greatest-films-of-all-time list ever since. Citizen Kane will be screening March 30 at 9:30 as part of the Rubin Museum series “You Must Remember This,” focusing on memory in conjunction with its current Brainwave series and will be introduced by Israeli journalist Rula Jebreal. Admission to the Rubin is free on Friday nights, so you should also check out the exhibitions “Hero, Villain, Yeti,” “Modernist Art from India,” and the outstanding “Casting the Divine.”