20 January 2012

Sundance 2012 Filmmakers on Twitter

Sundance is in full swing this weekend.   If you like following your film festivals on Twitter, you may want to follow some of the filmmakers that are active Twitter users.

This is a list of filmmakers, writers, editors, etc who have films in this year's Sundance film festival.

Rick Alverson The Comedy   http://twitter.com/ralver

Mark Webber The End of Love  http://twitter.com/likemark

Ira Sachs Keep the Lights On  http://twitter.com/irasachs

Ava DuVernay Middle of Nowhere  http://twitter.com/avadva

Lena Dunham (Screenwriter) Nobody Walks  http://twitter.com/lenadunham

Colin Treverrow Safety Not Guaranteed  http://twitter.com/colintrevorrow

James Pondsalt   Smashed   http://twitter.com/jamesponsoldt

Jamie Travis  For a Good Time Call  http://twitter.com/jamietravis

Marshall Lewy California Solo  http://twitter.com/marshalllewy

Spike Lee Red Hook Summer    http://twitter.com/spikelee

Laurence Thrush The Pursuit of Loneliness  http://twitter.com/growthfilms

Michael Birbiglia Sleepwalk With Me  http://twitter.com/birbigs

Carrie Preston That's What She Said  http://twitter.com/carrie_preston

Tim Heidecker & Eric Wareheim Tim and Eric's Billion Dollar Movie  http://twitter.com/TimHeidecker & http://twitter.com/ericwareheim

Terence Nance An Oversimplification of Her Beauty http://twitter.com/terencenance

Rodney Ascher Room 237     http://twitter.com/rodney_ascher

Ice T Something from Nothing: The Art of Rap  http://twitter.com/finallevel

Joe Berlinger Under African Skies  http://twitter.com/joeberlinger

SHORTS

Todd Sklar 96 Skybox Alonzo Mourning Rookie Card   http://twitter.com/rangelifeent

Craig MacNeill  Henley  http://twitter.com/craigmacneill

Eileen Meyer (Editor) The Thing  http://twitter.com/eileeneditor

























11 January 2012

9 Films About Money


(Edward Hopper's New York Movie)
The scene of a couple hunched over the kitchen table, sorting through the bills and balancing the checkbook is familiar enough reality for most people, but on the screen it seems to to be represented mostly in commercials for politicians and tax attorneys. In fiction, do we need a break from household financial  drudgery?

In our popular culture, the familiar incantation is "People go to the movies to escape!"  From what, exactly, the masses are fleeing is tough to pin down, and no doubt changes with the times.  But for Americans, one issue seems to be almost deliberately elided on the silver screen: Money. 

The independent film circuit showcases a number of ventures into these areas, but Hollywood tends to shy away.  Outside of releases in the heist and crime genres, it is the rare major motion picture in which money fuels engine of the plot, or serves as an overarching antagonistic force which helps the film thematically.

After critic and blogger Tom Garvey asked about popular movies that use money as a driving force, I took a look through the past 30 years or so of popular film. 

Indeed, there are no films that use money and class in precisely the same way the novelists  Eliot, Trollop or even our American giant of that era Henry James did.

However, there are a few mega-hits in which money is consistent and conspicuous in both plot and theme.  These are films that appear in the box office range of #1-20 or so for their given years.  


(The Country Club as societal microcosm.)
This 1980 film sits atop the pantheon of movie comedies, and its tagline - "The snobs versus the slobs " - is just as famous.  It is a still a delight to watch Ted Knight's smug, privileged judge being slowly driven insane by Rodney Dangerfield's boorish, working-class climber.  However, we sometimes forget that the real plot of the film involves Danny, a young caddy trying to get some money to attend college,  ingratiating himself to the wealthier members.   


(Marrying well? )
Dudley Moore's iconic performance as the alcoholic multi-millionaire playboy does not age as fast as the rest of the movie does, (nor does Sir John Gielgud's turn as the understated butler.)  However, the other thing that remains fresh about this comedy of attraction between classes, is the way money is talked about quite openly by Arthur and the object of his affection, Liza Minelli.  When the chips are down, and it looks like Minelli won't be marrying into Arthur's family fortune, her father weeps like a baby.


Trading Places (1983)



 Another comedy from the eighties.  Mortimer and Randolph Duke perform a Pygmalion-like social experiment by switching the financial fortunes of two very different individuals.  When Dan Aykroyd's lock-jawed, Harvard-educated broker loses his money, he becomes persona non grata, almost immediately.  Eddie Murphy's hustler is given entree, a nice home and a great salary and goes on to succeed admirably. We also get a lesson in commodities trading, (video above) prompting a memorable breaking of the fourth wall by Murphy

(Like father?)

Oliver Stone's slight homage to the classic film Sweet Smell of Success, introduced us to Gordon Gekko. Some argue that rather than simply reflecting the reality of arrogant traders, the movie served as a kind of Dress for Success manual for the corporate raiders and hedge fund wizards of the next few decades. (In a smart scene in the 2000 film BoilerRoom, group of young brokers sit around watching Wall Street and mimicking of Michael Douglas's iconic performance.)  Budd Foxx, Gekko's protege, starts off the film asking his Dad, a blue collar worker for a small airline, for money to support him in his apprenticeship in New York City. 


(The best shot in the film.)
The War of the Roses may be the darkest film on this list and it's a comedy!  I recently re-watched it and couldn't imagine it being made today.  It approaches that kind of fiction about class and money that reigned in the novels of the late 19th and early 20th centuries.  We are dazzled by the beauty and wealth of the Roses, but then we are flinching at the deadly battles over the couple's communal wealth.


(Sweet dreams, America?)

Ah yes, this movie prompted so much public discussion, outrage and dismissal at the time.  Roger Ebert correctly places it in that class of films that put acceptable people in unacceptable situations so that we can safely watch it play out . For instance, the idea of a lonely businessman hiring a hooker is a pretty unsavory prospect for a night at the theater, but looking at Richard Gere and Julia Roberts amidst high society ain't so bad.  Still there was something so delightfully wicked about Robert Redford, (of The Great Gatsby fame,) confidently proposing that anybody can be bought. 


(Into the financial abyss.)
"Show me the money!"  Indeed. Tom Cruise's idealistic sports agent finds himself immediately down on his luck after he is ousted from a top agency.  Coming along with him to form a start-up is a single mom (Renee Zelwegger) who, inspired by Cruise's farewell speech, leaves her good job as an accountant at the former firm.  Soon, the two of them find their bank accounts drained and their hopes for a financial and romantic future pinned on their one free agent client.


The Perfect Storm (2000)
(A life and death decision.)
The 90-foot wave that threatens to swallow the crew of the Andrea Gail in this disaster epic is nothing compared to the debts, bills and lost wages that are awaiting the fishermen back on shore.  What drives George Clooney's crew ever further into the Atlantic?  The promise of a big catch and more money.  And, tragically, this is also what drives them back into the fateful storm.


The Pursuit of Happyness (2006)
(A true light of hope in a bleak film.)
This was supposed to be the Rocky of urban class issues, but audiences tended to leave the theater in shock.  The relentless penury of Will Smith's aspiring stockbroker pushed viewers and some critics to the edge.  THIS is what it takes to pull yourself up from the grasp of poverty?  While watching in amazement at the resourcefulness of the protagonist, it still made many people ask: "Isn't there an easier way for a man like this to succeed?"


So there you have it.  Some big hit films about money.  I also noticed some things about hit films and how they handle class - specifically comedies.  More about that soon.
  

02 January 2012

A Few Small Films of 2011 That Stayed With Me


1. The Trip



"Everything's exhausting when you're past 40."

Two British stars take a trip to the North of England together in this Michael Winterbottom project that  was edited down from a BBC series. 

The Trip is a long form improvisation with a spine created around the imagined (or real)  middle-career and middle-aged malaise of the actor Steve Coogan.  Divorced, in the middle of a break-up with his American girlfriend, Coogan calls his friend Rob Brydon, a comedian and impressionist, to accompany him on an all-expense paid trip to visit restaurants in the North of England for a magazine piece he has been commissioned to write by the Observer.

Their talents are on full display with Coogan playing broody and barely amused to Brydon's optimistic, playful needling.  Several of the movie's centerpieces involve the two men dueling with their impressions of iconic stars such as Michael Caine or Sean Connery. These can go on for a bit, but one of them will always hit on something deeper in their own relationship as friends or the others career. 

The pair travel through the desolate, but beautiful moors and end up in the Lake Country, while the deeper themes of time passing us by and the desperation to make some type of mark on the world start to present themselves more clearly.  Finally, the two are walking in the footsteps of immortal poets like Coleridge and Wordsworth, but rather than things getting burdened with too much pretension, the biting humor of Coogan and Brydon constructs a sturdy engine fueled with just enough gallows humor to keep us moving along.








2. Bellflower



I wasn't sure what to think of this film once it finished, but I was feeling many things.  Bellflower is a rambling interestingly-shot trip through depression, jealousy and anger as could only be properly filmed by the twenty- something renegade filmmakers who made it.

Evan Glodell, the director and writer, puts himself in the lead as the slacker Woodrow who spends his time fixing up a muscle car named Medusa.  He also tries to build the perfect flamethrower with his friend Aiden.  Their shared buddy fantasy is that they will be prepared for an imagined Road Warrior-type apocalypse.  However, after Woodrow gets mixed up with a new girl, he and Aiden's lives become very difficult, very fast.

Flawed, but with a raw artistry and vision, there is no doubt that these guys have something here, but what it is, I'm afraid I  or any critics I have read elsewhere can't describe fully.




3. Another Earth


Yes, the science fiction elements are shaky of course.   If you have seen the ads or the poster for Another Earth, you would know that an identical planet to the size of the Earth would create all sorts of gravity issues if we could see it looming in the sky like that. Best seen closer to the fantasy end of science fiction (think Twilight Zone) Mike Cahill's film is really about coming to terms with ourselves as we are, with all of our history and finding a way to move forward.

Earth's citizens become aware of another planet, one that seems remarkably similar to their own, drifting closer to them This unleashes the  imagination  of woman who caused a fatal car accident that derailed her promising young life, (she was on her way to an MIT scholarship) and wrecked the family of another man.  She tries to find a way to somehow make retribution. 

One can easily forgive some of the science flubs, but the credibility issues with the young woman's strange plan to make amends seems a bit more outlandish than the huge doppleganger planet that hangs in the sky.  However, the haunting tone and the camera's love of the beautiful Brit Marling, (also a co-writer on the film,) makes for a hypnotic experience.

And the first contact of  our NASA with the sister organization of that other Earth is a spine-tingling sequence matched only by the finale, which is closest thing to the chills I received when I first saw some of the classic Rod Serling masterpieces.








4. Senna



Know nothing about NASCAR and even less about Formula One racing? Then you actually might want to check out this documentary about Senna, Brazil's legendary Formula One racing champion.  

An aggressive driver on the track, Senna is portrayed as a gentler and more contemplative man out of the car.  Though the film doesn't hide that he was an intense character,  he comes across as humble and self-aware.  While he obviously dated some of the world's most beautiful women, the filmmakers seem uninterested in his romantic life and only fleetingly feature his family.  The politics and rules of the international governing body of Formula One racing provide the obstacles and Senna emerges as a pure competitor who must somehow negotiate his way through this thicket to the championship, despite sometimes being the best driver. Unfortunately, the movie becomes a little bit of a hagiography in this area, with only a hint of Senna's own infractions.

With the high decibel roar of the exclusive Formula One footage to serve as a pillar, the story eschews the static documentary convention of the talking head, and Senna instead uses actual period interview audio and a few voiceovers to thrillingly recreate the fast rise and short life of this athlete dying young.  Senna was killed in an accident at the age of 34 and the footage taken from his racing car allows us to be right next to him until the very moment of his fatal collision. 






5. Buck




A kind of serene twin to Senna, the documentary Buck shows us another man was born to be the best at what he does. Rather than Senna's high octane pace, this film ambles along and waits until its last moments to throw you.

Buck Brannaman travels the country running training camps and seminars for horse owners. He is a protege of a famous horse trainer who was the inspiration for the novel The Horse Whisperer, which was made into a movie with Robert Redford.  Buck himself served as a consultant on that film, and his own horse was used for many of the stunts.

With beautiful sunsets and mountain vistas as a backdrop, director Cindy Meehl gradually reveals Buck's past.  His brother and he were young prodigies who performed rope tricks around the country, managed by their increasingly abusive father. Buck's gentleness and understanding of horses is almost magical, but the film has an ace up its sleeve that leaves the sage cowboy and the audience off-balance.





6. Five Days Gone




Playwright Anna Kerrigan made her first feature film by scraping together 60,000 dollars and securing an interesting location - a large estate out in Western Massachusetts.  Five Days Gone starts in a New York City bar as two sisters, who never knew each other existed, meet for the first time after their successful father has recently died. 

While one sister, Camden, grew up with her father and all the money that that entailed, Alice, played by the writer Kerrigan, grew up poor, never really knew her absentee Dad and doesn't seem to really care. Camden and her reluctant husband, invite Alice and her boyfriend to stay for a weekend at the family estate, recently inherited..

A few days on the grounds of  the house, and a slow tension builds, with hints of Chekhov or Turgnev (Kerrigan admits these are her influences.) The sparks come a little too slowly and there are some inconsistencies in the characters that seem engineered to create some needed conflict.   However, the performances of Kerrigan as the skeptical Alice and Brooke Bloom as the nervous Camden, keep moving the film into the territory where it is at its most interesting: as a tentative coming of age story about family and class.


Five Days Gone Trailer from Anna Kerrigan on Vimeo.




 7. God Willing






Remember that 60 Minutes piece years ago about the Jim Roberts cult? You know, the sketchy church that seduces away bright young college students into a Spartan, separatist lifestyle that prohibits them from ever talking to the their families again and has them riding bicycles and eating out of garbage cans?  

Well, that cult still exists and is as active as ever.  Only now, bereaved family members who have had children seduced into the organization can connect with each other over the internet.  As a network, the families can run surveillance on the nomadic cult if they suddenly pop up in a metro area.  They share photos online so that families can see if their sons or daughters are hiding out in the houses the cult members rent.

Filmmaker Angeline Griego followed this group of family members closely, and her film, God Willing, documents the attempt of one woman in particular to make contact with her daughter.   It is as suspenseful as any Hollywood thriller - the cult has been known to completely blow town at the slightest hint they are being watched.

As they circle their target, the family members talk about what they know about the cult and about their loved ones, some of whom have been out of touch for decades



God Willing - Trailer from About Time Productions on Vimeo.