Tag Archives: film forum

ON THE BOWERY / THE PERFECT TEAM

Ray Salyer and Gorman Hendricks are two of the forgotten men in Lionel Rogosin’s unforgettable ON THE BOWERY

ON THE BOWERY (Lionel Rogosin, 1956)
Film Forum
209 West Houston St.
September 17-23
212-727-8110
www.filmforum.org
www.ontheboweryfilm.com

One of the greatest documentaries ever made about New York will be shown in a stunning 35mm restoration at Film Forum September 17-23. ON THE BOWERY offers a new look at an underground classic that caused quite a stir upon its release in 1956, winning prizes at the Venice Film Festival while earning criticism at home for daring to portray the grim reality of America’s dark underbelly. After spending six months living with the poor, destitute alcoholics on Skid Row as research, idealistic young filmmaker Lionel Rogosin spent the next four months making ON THE BOWERY, a remarkable examination of the forgotten men of New York, ne’er-do-wells who can’t find jobs, sleep on the street, and will do just about anything for another drink. Rogosin centers the film around the true story of Ray Salyer, a journeyman railroad drifter stopping off in New York City seeking temporary employment. Salyer is quickly befriended by Gorman Hendricks, who not only shows Salyer the ropes but also manages to slyly take advantage of him. Although the film follows a general structure scripted by Mark Sufrin, much of it is improvised and shot on the sly, in glorious black and white by Richard Bagley. The sections in which Bagley turns his camera on the streets, showing the decrepit neighborhood under the El, set to Charles Mills’s subtle, jazzy score and marvelously edited by Carl Lerner, are pure poetry, yet another reason why ON THE BOWERY is an American treasure. The film is screening with THE PERFECT TEAM, a behind-the-scenes look at the making of ON THE BOWERY directed by Rogosin’s son, Michael, which includes a terrific 1999 interview with Lionel in which he talks about his attempt to get James Agee on board, his firing of Helen Levitt as editor, the relationships he developed with the cast and crew, and his intense desire to get at the truth.

PATHS OF GLORY WITH DAVID SIMON

Kirk Douglas discovers that war is indeed hell in PATHS OF GLORY (courtesty Photofest)

PATHS OF GLORY (Stanley Kubrick, 1957)
Film Forum
209 West Houston St.
Monday, September 20, 7:40
212-727-8110
www.filmforum.org

Stanley Kubrick’s harrowing PATHS OF GLORY, based on the novel by Humphrey Cobb, is quite simply the best English-language antiwar film ever made. Kirk Douglas stars as Colonel Dax, a French military man who disagrees with his superiors’ insistence on sending his men into certain annihilation in order to take a worthless hill during World War I. Dax’s verbal battles with Generals Broulard (Adolphe Menjou) and Mireau (George Macready) are unforgettable, as are the final scenes, in which three random men are chosen to pay the price for what the generals call cowardice. Filmed in stunning black and white, PATHS OF GLORY puts you right on the front lines of the folly of war. Kubrick, who wrote the unrelenting script with Calder Willingham and Jim Thompson, also made the best film about the cold war (DR. STRANGELOVE OR: HOW I LEARNED TO STOP WORRYING AND LOVE THE BOMB), the Roman slave revolt (SPARTACUS), and, arguably, the Vietnam War (FULL METAL JACKET). PATHS OF GLORY will have a special screening at Film Forum on September 20, introduced by HOMICIDE, THE CORNER, and THE WIRE creator David Simon, who should have some fascinating things to say about one of the most emotional, powerful stories ever put on celluloid.

THE RETURN OF WILLIAM CASTLE

Film Forum
209 West Houston St.
August 27 – September 6
212-727-8110
www.filmforum.org

Maverick film director and producer William Castle titled his 1976 memoir STEP RIGHT UP! . . . I’M GONNA SCARE THE PANTS OFF AMERICA. And for some thirty-plus years, that’s exactly what he did. The guru of film gimmicks, who died in 1977 just as Sensurround was taking hold, was the mastermind behind such tantalizing tales as THE TINGLER, filmed in Percepto; HOUSE ON HAUNTED HILL, made in Emergo; HOMICIDAL, which came complete with a Fright Break; MR. SARDONICUS, which had a climactic Punishment Poll; MACABRE, which offered Fright Insurance; STRAIT-JACKET, in which the audience was given toy axes; and THIRTEEN GHOSTS, shown in “bloodcurdling” Illusion-O. All of those films and more are part of Film Forum’s ten-day retrospective, totaling fifteen works in all, starring the likes of Joan Crawford, J. Carrol Naish, Kim Hunter, Martin Milner, Barbara Stanwyck, and, of course, the great Vincent Price. Castle was quite the character himself, introducing many of his films and warning the audience about the frightening experiences they were about to encounter; as he says in the above trailer for THE TINGLER, “Remember this: A scream at the right time may save your life.” Castle’s daughter Terry will be at Film Forum to introduce the 8:10 screening of HOMICIDAL on Friday and the 10:00 showings for STRAIT-JACKET Saturday and Sunday.

LE AMICHE

Antonioni’s magnificent melodrama returns to Film Forum by popular demand

LE AMICHE (Michelangelo Antonioni, 1955)
Film Forum
209 West Houston St.
August 25–31
212-727-8110
www.filmforum.org

After its much-hailed one-week run in June at Film Forum, the 35mm restoration of Michelangelo Antonioni’s LE AMICHE returns by popular demand, playing August 25-31, and there’s just no reasonable excuse for missing it again. Winner of the Silver Lion at the 1955 Venice Film Festival, the sublimely marvelous LE AMICHE follows the life and loves of a group of oh-so-fabulous catty, chatty, and ultra-fashionable Italian women and the men they keep around for adornment. Returning to her native Turin after having lived in Rome for many years, Clelia (Eleonora Rossi Drago) discovers that the young woman in the hotel room next to hers, Rosetta (Madeleine Fischer), has attempted suicide, thrusting Clelia into the middle of a collection of self-centered girlfriends who make the shenanigans of George Cukor’s THE WOMEN look like child’s play. The leader of the vain, vapid vamps is Momina (Yvonne Furneaux), who carefully orchestrates situations to her liking, particularly when it comes to her husband and her various, ever-changing companions, primarily architect Cesare (Franco Fabrizi). As Rosetta falls for painter Lorenzo (Gabriele Ferzetti), who is married to ceramicist Nene (Valentina Cortese), Clelia considers a relationship with Cesare’s assistant, Carlo (Ettore Manni), and the flighty Mariella (Anna Maria Pancani) considers just about anyone. Based on a novella by Cesare Pavese, LE AMICHE is one of Antonioni’s best, and least well known, films, an intoxicating and thoroughly entertaining precursor to his early 1960s trilogy, L’AVVENTURA, LA NOTTE, and L’ECLISSE. Skewering the not-very-discreet “charm” of the Italian bourgeoisie, Antonioni mixes razor-sharp dialogue with scenes of wonderful ennui, all shot in glorious black and white by Gianni Di Venanzo. LE AMICHE is a newly rediscovered treasure from one of cinema’s most iconoclastic auteurs.

CLASSIC 3-D

Film Forum takes audiences back to the 3-D craze of 1953-54 (Courtesy Photofest)

Film Forum
209 West Houston St.
August 13-26
212-727-8110
www.filmforum.org

The current 3-D fad, which includes several films that were not actually filmed in 3-D but transferred later, has nothing on the original craze, begun back in the ’50s. Film Forum is taking people back to that time with Classic 3-D, comprising fifteen films and two shorts, all from 1953-54, shown over the course of two weeks, beginning August 13. The films will be screened using the original double-system projection with Polaroid filters and lenses to capture real 3-D. The series begins Friday with Edmond O’Brien in the noir thriller MAN IN THE DARK, preceded by the Three Stooges in PARDON MY BACKFIRE, and also includes such films as the classic musical KISS ME KATE with Howard Keel and Kathryn Grayson, the Raoul Walsh Western GUN FURY with Donna Reed and Rock Hudson, the André de Toth shoot-’em-up THE STRANGER WORE A GUN with Randolph Scott, Ernest Borgnine, and Lee Marvin, the superb Alfred Hitchcock mystery DIAL M FOR MURDER with Ray Milland and Grace Kelly, and the most famous 3-D film of them all, de Toth’s unforgettable HOUSE OF WAX, starring Vincent Price, Charles (Bronson) Buchinsky, and Carolyn Jones. Film Forum will be providing what they’re calling “super-cool 3-D glasses” for this super-cool festival.

JEAN-MICHEL BASQUIAT: THE RADIANT CHILD

Tamra Davis examines the life of her friend Jean-Michel Basquiat in revealing documentary (photo courtesy of Lee Jaffe)

JEAN-MICHEL BASQUIAT: THE RADIANT CHILD (Tamra Davis, 2010)
Film Forum
209 West Houston St.
July 21 – August 3
212-727-8110
www.filmforum.org
www.jean-michelbasquiattheradiantchild.com

Director Tamra Davis (GUNCRAZY) transports viewers back to the 1980s New York art scene in the intimate documentary JEAN-MICHEL BASQUIAT: THE RADIANT CHILD. In 1986, just as the career of street artist Jean-Michel Basquiat was exploding, Davis filmed him being interviewed by designer Becky Johnson, a revealing portrait that she put away in a drawer for more than twenty years. Davis finally brings out that footage, making it the centerpiece of this new examination of the ambitious, influential artist and musician who experienced massive success before falling hard and fast and dying of a drug overdose at the age of twenty-seven in 1988. Davis, a friend of Basquiat’s, conducts new interviews with many of the people from his inner circle, including art dealers Jeffrey Deitch, Larry Gagosian, Annina Nosei, Tony Shafrazi, and Bruno Bischofberger; Basquiat’s girlfriends Suzanne Mallouk and Kelle Inman; close Basquiat friends Diego Cortez and Fab 5 Freddy; NEW YORK BEAT cable TV host Glenn O’Brien; and fellow artist Julian Schnabel, who directed Basquiat in DOWNTOWN 81. Davis has also dug up amazing footage from the 1980s of Basquiat that shows him to be a unique, driven figure who used whatever he could — from broken windowframes and doors he’d find on the street to immense canvases — to spread his art and world view, which began with drawings in which he identified himself as Samo, criticizing contemporary art as “the same old shit.” Ultimately, though, it was his relationship with Andy Warhol that was the beginning of the end. JEAN-MICHEL BASQUIAT: THE RADIANT CHILD is a dazzling document of a fascinating time and a cautionary tale of success that comes too fast, too soon. Davis will be at Film Forum for the 8:00 shows on July 21-22, with Fab 5 Freddy appearing at the 8:00 screening on July 23.

CHAPLIN

Charles Chaplin gets all choked up when he hears about movie festival at Film Forum (courtesy Janus Films)

Film Forum
209 West Houston St.
Through August 5
212-727-8110
www.filmforum.org

As part of Film Forum’s ongoing fortieth anniversary celebration, the famed institution is featuring many outstanding programs throughout the year. Currently, Charles Chaplin’s relatively little-known 1928 comedy, THE CIRCUS, is in the midst of a one-week run, along with the 1922 short THE IDLE CLASS. That double feature is just the appetizer in a three-week cavalcade of Chaplin classics that continues through August 5, consisting of some of the Little Tramp’s most famous and influential works. Born in London in 1889, Chaplin had a troubled childhood that perhaps paved the way for his unique view of the world. One of cinema’s earliest multidisciplinary artists, Chaplin wrote, directed, starred in, and composed original scores for his films, which mix slapstick comedy with incisive social and political commentary. Film Forum will be screening nine of his full-length works in addition to several shorts, all in new 35mm prints, beginning July 22-25 with one of his masterpieces, 1931’s CITY LIGHTS, one of the most heartbreaking films ever made. The series then shifts gears to more sophisticated fare with A WOMAN OF PARIS (1923) and MONSIEUR VERDOUX (1947) before heading to Alaska for THE GOLD RUSH (1925). Chaplin burst through the limitations of film while commenting directly on the impact of sound in 1936’s MODERN TIMES, then took on no less a figure than Adolf Hitler in 1940’s THE GREAT DICTATOR. Five years after Herbert Hoover exiled Chaplin from the United States for his Communist leanings, Chaplin made KING OF NEW YORK (1957), not afraid to take on America on celluloid. The series ends with quite a bang, with Chaplin’s first big hit, THE KID (1921), on August 4, followed the next day by LIMELIGHT (1952), in which he and Buster Keaton mourn the death of the silent film era. Chaplin was one of cinema’s true originals, a man who created a genre-busting visual language that was way ahead of his time.