The House Next Door

Archive: May, 2008

Sundance Institute at BAM: American Teen

American Teen

Documentary focus is something that, like car keys, should not be given unquestioningly to high schoolers. American Teen, Nanette Burnstein's particularly irritating Sundance favorite, follows a group of students into their senior year and, despite intimate access into its subjects' triumphs and anxieties, can't offer a single insight about adolescence that wasn't already rancid in reruns of The Real World. ("My life sucks right now. What if it's even worse after high school," is about as contemplative as things get.) The Warsaw, Indiana setting—"mostly white, mostly Christian, and red-state all the way"—is promising, but the film is less interested in seeing how young people are formed by and react to their environment than in how they flatter audiences' views of teen clichés. On the popular side, there's basketball star Colin trying to wow potential college recruiters, and princessy "total bitch" Megan getting revenge on a rival prom-night decorator by spray-painting "fag" on his window. On the misfit side, there's arty Juno-wannabe Hannah, who hopes to fulfill her "alternative girl" duties by leaving town for film school, and "marching band supergeek" Jake, who takes occasional time off from self-pity to tend to his video game collection and Kurt Cobain portraits. American Teen cries for some perspective: A crush, a break-up, or a game can be staggering events to a 17-year-old mind, but is that enough meat for a documentary? Then again, Burnstein's previous project was The Kid Stays in the Picture; from propping up Robert Evans's monumental self-infatuation to indulging adolescent egos is but a skip. The problem isn't so much with the subjects per se as it is with the film's insistently slick, reductive attempts to mold them into real-life counterparts to characters from some John Hughes comedy circa 1986. Tricked out with graphics and winking musical cues, the film looks for emotional truth in high school cliques but instead ends one Ally Sheedy cameo short of Not Another Teen Movie, Part Deux.




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Lichman & Rizov "Live" at Grassroots Tavern (Episode 11: "Matt Zoller Seitz's scarily accurate Cookie Monster impersonation")

By John Lichman & Vadim Rizov

[Editor's Note: The views expressed in this podcast are those of the commenters, and do not necessarily reflect the official policies, positions, or opinions of The House Next Door.]

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914 (55). The Outlaw Josey Wales (1976, Clint Eastwood), featuring video commentary by Matt Zoller Seitz

[Editor's Note: This is the latest entry in House contributor Kevin B. Lee's Shooting Down Pictures, a record of his ongoing quest to see every title on the list of the 1000 Greatest Films compiled by They Shoot Pictures, Don't They?]

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"An army of one," the poster for The Outlaw Josey Wales proclaims, its space dominated by director-star Clint Eastwood brandishing his trademark feral squint and massive six-guns, an icon of rugged individualism carried over from his immortal starring roles for Sergio Leone. Eastwood wrestles - perhaps not altogether successfully - with his protagonist's proto-Ramboesque vigilantism, alternately ingratiating audience blood lust while pointing out the emotional vulnerabilities of this otherwise remorseless killing machine. The film both indulges in and subverts Western formula, gradually chipping away at Josey Wales' stolid, trauma-borne impassivity by gathering around him a ragtag band of frontier types (an aging chief, a squaw and two Jawhawk pioneers, all perfectly played) who ultimately combine to form a progressive vision of a diverse, self-determining Western culture. The script (by Sonia Chernus and initial director Philip Kaufman) and direction reference a litany of Western classics and directors: not just Eastwood's mentors Leone and Don Siegel, but also Ford (characterization through broad typing) , Hawks (vibrant ensemble work and budding sense of community), and Peckinpah (ecstatically choreographed violence). Sharing a concern with Eastwood's Unforgiven for the necessity of violence and the responsibilities of citizenry under the rule of societal corruption, this is more expansive and subtle in its re-visioning of the West, as well as the more optimistic; for all of its contradictions, it's one you could actually build a future upon.


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To read the rest of the article at Shooting Down Pictures, click here.




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Links for the Day (May 27th, 2008)

1. "Sydney Pollack, Film Director, Is Dead at 73": Please share your thoughts and remembrances in the comments section.

["Sydney Pollack, a Hollywood mainstay as director, producer and sometime actor whose star-laden movies like "The Way We Were," "Tootsie" and "Out of Africa" were among the most successful of the 1970s and '80s, died Monday at home here. He was 73."] Continue Reading »




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Cannes Film Festival 2008: Vicky Cristina Barcelona

Vicky Cristina Barcelona

"This guy goes to a psychiatrist and says, 'Doc, my brother's crazy. He thinks he's a chicken.' And the doctor says, 'Well, why don't you turn him in?' And the guy says, 'I would, but I need the eggs.' Well, I guess that's pretty much now how I feel about relationships. You know, they're totally irrational and crazy and absurd, but I guess we keep going through it, because... most of us need the eggs."—Woody Allen (Annie Hall)

Woody Allen ended his Oscar-winning Annie Hall with that joke, one of the most unconventional yet appropriate odes to love to ever be committed to film. Since then, he has spent nearly 30 years trying to recapture the mix of humor and pathos that have helped make Annie Hall such an enduring classic, and, with Vicky Cristina Barcelona, he has finally found it again. If not quite up to the level of Annie Hall or his masterpiece Manhattan, Vicky Cristina Barcelona is nonetheless Allen's strongest, most philosophically and morally profound film since 1989's Crimes and Misdemeanors. Continue Reading »




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Cannes Film Festival 2008: Days 7 and 8

Changeling

Changeling (Clint Eastwood). Few things over the past week have been more baffling to me than when the solid but deeply flawed Changeling began racking up the most positive reviews of the fest. I'm not sure whether it's the international press' tendency to praise Eastwood for anything he does, or whether I was simply too exhausted to recognize that it is, in fact, a near-masterpiece, but there has yet to be another film on which my opinion and the reviews have differed so strongly.

In the first line of his Variety review, Todd McCarthy favorably compares the film to the overwrought Mystic River, which might, despite my inability to see what the hell thematic similarities the films have, help to explain my reservations. Because despite his typically graceful and lovely directorial hand, Eastwood seems, with Changeling, to have embraced his melodramatic side whole-heartedly. Some of the film is beautiful and moving. The rest tends toward the unbelievable and shrill. Continue Reading »




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Keith's Korner: Confessions from the Editor (#4)

By Keith Uhlich

I'd hoped to mention the below scene from Munich in my Kingdom of the Crystal Skull review, but couldn't find an entry point. An addendum, then, as slightly remixed photo essay (click images to enlarge). A sequence from a work prior that I recall in reflection on Spielberg's latest. A key, perhaps, to the labyrinth. Continue Reading »




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Directorama #27

Click to enlarge: (To navigate previous episodes, click here.)

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Peet Gelderblom directs, edits and develops commercials, TV programs and broadcast design in Amsterdam. His writing and graphic criticism can be found at Lost in Negative Space and 24LiesASecond.




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Links for the Day (May 26th, 2008)

1. "Palme d'Or goes to France's 'Entre les Murs'": From the L.A. Times. The complete list of winners can be found here.

["What a difference 21 years makes. In 1987, the last time a French film won the Palme d'Or, the audience at the Palais du Festival was so angry at the choice of "Under the Sun of Satan" that it hooted furiously and the director, Maurice Pialat, yelled right back. But when Laurent Cantet's masterful "Entre les Murs" won the top prize at the Festival de Cannes on Sunday night—one of only two unanimous votes, jury president Sean Penn revealed—the audience erupted in ecstatic rhythmic applause, which only increased as most of the 24 middle-school students who made up the cast joined the director onstage."] Continue Reading »




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Migration and Exodus: Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull

By Keith Uhlich

[SPOILER WARNING IN EFFECT]

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Cannes Film Festival 2008: Award Predictions

Palm d'Or

What a long, strange week it's been. My first visit to the Cannes Film Festival was one of the greatest experiences of my life, but also one of the most surreal. For those who haven't experienced it, it's almost impossible to explain the sheer emotional and physical exhaustion that comes from rushing from theater to theater, from movie to movie; from attempting to engage fully with each film you see while running on four hours of sleep and at most two meals a day. The emotional extremes are tiring. You can go from the red carpet, certain in your belief that your life will never get any better, to furious three hours later because the panini stand put mustard on your sandwich when you specifically asked them not to. Any little thing can send you spiraling from joy to despair and back again. Such is the nature of Cannes; even when you hate it, you fucking love it. Continue Reading »




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This Moment in History: Recount

By Todd VanDerWerff

Recount, debuting tonight on HBO at 9 p.m. EDT, is the sort of movie that might have been mounted by a studio with hopes of Oscar success twenty years ago. Dole out juicy roles to a mostly all-star cast, toss a middlebrow director (Sydney Pollack might have done the trick in 1988) into the mix, let the generally excellent script carry the weight, and you might have had something. Laced with dark humor and somehow making what amounts to a long chess game dramatically compelling, Recount is probably the best made-for-TV movie of the year, a distinction which would carry more weight if a) the various networks made more made-for-TV movies and b) it hadn't arrived at such a fortuitous moment, six days before the Democratic National Committee's Rules and Bylaws panel meets to decide what to do about Florida in yet ANOTHER election-related brouhaha. In another 20 years, Recount probably won't play as persuasively as it does right now, in this moment, when it largely stirs up feelings long dormant in an electorate that desires, at some primal level, a do-over. Largely unable to take the long view because of when it was made, Recount is definitely a chronicle of its time and place, but it can't find anything larger to say about the political process than, "Wasn't it sad that Al Gore lost and we had to put up with this?" Continue Reading »




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Links for the Day (May 24th & 25th, 2008)

1. "Toad aphrodisiac kills man, NY issues warning": Ribbit.

["Health officials are warning New Yorkers to stay away from an illegal aphrodisiac made from toad venom after the product apparently killed a man. The city's poison control center issued the warning Friday after receiving a hospital report that a 35-year-old man who ingested the hard, brown substance died earlier this month. The product is sold under names including Piedra, Love Stone, Jamaican Stone, Black Stone and Chinese Rock at sex shops and neighborhood stores. It is banned by the Food and Drug Administration."] Continue Reading »




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Cannes Film Festival 2008: Days 4, 5, and 6

Serbis

The only film I managed to see on Day 4 was Woody Allen's Vicky Cristina Barcelona, a long-form review of which should be posted soon. Hint: It's awesome.

Serbis (Brillante Mendoza). I pulled my first D'Angelo of the festival by walking out of this miserable slog, which has been racking up the most universally vicious reviews of the festival. Set in a family-run porno theater in the Philippines, the film wants to be a chronicle of the difficulty of living in the run-down alleys and backstreets of Asia. But instead of creating any sort of social or political context, Mendoza instead resorts to self-consciously shocking imagery and pointless, unremitting ugliness. I bailed soon after an explicit sex scene that culminated with the man changing positions so as to not irritate the giant, pus-filled boil on his ass. Reportedly, the timing of my exodus allowed me to just barely miss the first of several extended scenes of unsimulated fellatio between two of the male hustlers that frequent the theater. Lucky break, I think. Continue Reading »




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"Are you f***ing serious?": Postal

By John Lichman

[Postal opens in select theaters today. Good luck finding them.]

Many criticize Dr. Uwe Boll as a hack, a horrible filmmaker and a blow-hard. They see the crazed German threatening to box critics—knocking out a college colleague of mine, Jeff "MiraJeff" Sneider, who became the unwitting shield for Ain't It Cool when the two original critics refused to appear—and even directors who embody the "Hollywood Hack" moniker (yes, I mean him.)

But after six years, Boll has released his finest film. Yes, it is another video game adaptation of an 11-year-old first-person shooter—technically of its sequel—about a guy who simply gives up on society and begins a kamikaze attack on the stereotypes he's been forced to live with. And why is it so good? Continue Reading »




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