Tag Archives: weekend classics

MILESTONE FILMS: 20 FOR 20 — KILLER OF SHEEP

KILLER OF SHEEP is part of twentieth anniversary of Milestone Films at the IFC Center

KILLER OF SHEEP (Charles Burnett, 1977)
IFC Center
323 Sixth Ave. at Third St.
November 24-28
Series runs through March 27
212-924-7771
www.ifccenter.com
www.killerofsheep.com

Founded in 1990 by Dennis Doros and Amy Heller as a way to preserve great orphaned works, Milestone Films is celebrating its twentieth anniversary with a series of weekend screenings at the IFC Center. The festival began November 12-14 with Luchino Visconti’s ROCCO AND HIS BROTHERS and November 19-21 with Michael Powell’s THE EDGE OF THE WORLD and continues this weekend with Charles Burnett’s low-budget feature-length debut, KILLER OF SHEEP, which Milestone recently restored with the soundtrack intact; the film had not been available on VHS or DVD for decades because of music rights problems that were finally cleared, setting up a wildly successful theatrical run at the IFC Center in 2007. (The soundtrack includes such seminal black artists as Etta James, Dinah Washington, Little Walter, and Paul Robeson.) Shot on weekends for less than $10,000, KILLER OF SHEEP took four years to put together and another four years to get noticed, when it won the FIPRESCI Prize at the 1981 Berlin Film Festival. Reminiscent of the work of Jean Renoir and the Italian neo-Realists, the film tells a simple story about a family just trying to get by, struggling to survive in their tough Watts neighborhood in the mid-1970s. The slice-of-life scenes are sometimes very funny, sometimes scary, but always poignant, as Stan (Henry Gayle Sanders) trudges to his dirty job in a slaughterhouse in order to provide for his wife (Kaycee Moore) and children (Jack Drummond and Angela Burnett). Every day he is faced with new choices, from participating in a murder to buying a used car engine, but he takes it all in stride. The motley cast of characters, including Charles Bracy and Eugene Cherry, is primarily made up of nonprofessional actors with a limited range of talent, but that is all part of what makes it all feel so real. KILLER OF SHEEP was added to the National Film Registry of the Library of Congress in 1989, the second year of the program, making it among the first fifty to be selected, in the same group as REBEL WITHOUT A CAUSE, THE GODFATHER, DUCK SOUP, ALL ABOUT EVE, and IT’S A WONDERFUL LIFE. The Milestone series continues December 3-5 with Orson Welles’s THE TRIAL and December 10-12 with Gillo Pontecorvo and Maleno Malenotti’s THE WIDE BLUE ROAD.

WEEKEND CLASSICS: YASUJIRO OZU

Eighteen-film festival honors master auteur Yasujiro Ozu at IFC Center

IFC Center
323 Sixth Ave. at Third St.
Weekends at 11:00 am, July 9 – November 7
212-924-7771
www.ifccenter.com

No one understood the Japanese family like master filmmaker Yasujiro Ozu. The Tokyo-born writer, cameraman, and director made poignant dramas that penetrated deeply into the relationships among husbands and wives, children and parents, bosses and employees, presenting honest portraits with care and intelligence. Interestingly, Ozu never married and never had kids of his own. A sake lover who died on his sixtieth birthday in 1963, Ozu made magnificent, meditative films featuring long interior takes, little action, and few camera movements, letting the story unfold at its own pace. The IFC Center is honoring his career and its own fifth anniversary by screening eighteen of his films on consecutive weekend mornings at 11:00 from July 9 through November 7. Shown chronologically, the series begins with the silent film AN INN AT TOKYO and includes such influential gems as EARLY SUMMER (1951), LATE SPRING (1949), TOKYO TWILIGHT (1957), FLOATING WEEDS (1959), and LATE AUTUMN (1960). Keep watching twi-ny for specific reviews as the series continues.

WEEKEND CLASSICS: LA CRÈME DU CRIME

Ferdinand and Marianne have little time to hang around in Godard classic

Ferdinand and Marianne have little time to hang around in Godard classic

PIERROT LE FOU (Jean-Luc Godard, 1965)
IFC Center
323 Sixth Ave. at Third St.
January 15-16, 11:00 pm
212-924-7771
www.ifccenter.com/series/weekend-classics/la-creme-du-crime
Art, American consumerism, the Vietnam and Algerian wars, Hollywood, and the cinema itself get skewered in Jean-Luc Godard’s fab feaux gangster flick / road comedy / romance epic / musical PIERROT LE FOU. Based on Lionel White’s novel OBSESSION, the film follows the chaotic exploits of Ferdinand Griffon (Jean-Paul Belmondo) and Marianne Renoir (Anna Karina, Godard’s then-wife), former lovers who meet up again quite by accident. The bored Ferdinand immediately decides to leave his wife and family for the flirtatious, unpredictable Marianne, who insists on calling him Pierrot despite his protestations. Soon Ferdinand is caught in the middle of a freewheeling journey involving gun running, stolen cars, dead bodies, and half-truths, all the while not quite sure how much he can trust Marianne. Filmed in reverse-scene order without much of a script, the mostly improvised PIERROT LE FOU was shot in stunning color by Raoul Coutard. Many of Godard’s recurring themes and style appear in the movie, including jump cuts, confusing dialogue, written protests on walls, and characters speaking directly at the audience, which is more or less along for the same ride as Ferdinand. And as with many Godard films, the ending is a doozy. The screening is part of the IFC Center’s twelve-film series of classic French crime thrillers, which continues on weekend nights at 11:00 through April 4; the upcoming lineup includes Henri-Georges Clouzot’s QUAI DES ORFEVRES and Jules Dassin’s RIFIFI, and that’s just January. Keep watching this space for more select reviews.

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Godard film inspired Bernardi Roig exhibit at Claire Oliver Gallery

BERNARDI ROIG: PIERROT LE FOU IS (NOT) DEAD
Claire Oliver Gallery
513 West 26th St. between Tenth & Eleventh Aves.
Through January 23 (closed Sunday & Monday)
Admission: free
212-929-5949
www.claireoliver.com

PIERROT LE FOU fans might want to squeeze in a visit to the Claire Oliver Gallery in Chelsea to check out this exhibit by Bernardi Roig inspired by the Godard film. Roig uses cast polyester resin, wood, and fluorescent lights in this multimedia installation to tell the story of the Man of the Fire Eyes, examining communication, desire, memory, and obsession as well as the nature of art itself.