Author Archive
by Lauren Wissot on September 11th, 2010 at 6:03 pm in Theater
As the economy crumbles all around us, Depression-era nostalgia is in the air. One of this summer's highlights for me was spending a gorgeous August evening watching a free screening of Duck Soup on a boat docked on the Hudson, courtesy of Cinebeasts. (This cool little collective had teamed up with the Lilac Preservation Project to raise funds to restore the good ship Lilac, built the same year the Marx Brothers classic hit screens.)
And now there's the New York Clown Theatre Festival at the Brick, running from September 3 - 26. Among the whopping 26 shows and cabarets, from an international array of performers, presented this year is "Diz and Izzy Aster – Vaudeville's Late Bloomers," which I caught on a double bill with "Ferdinand the Magnificent!" Diz and Izzy are the Burns-and-Allen type creation of multi-talented Mark Jaster and Sabrina Mandell—who sing, strum, and slapstick their way through familiar ditties, including a "new song by a young starlet" named Judy Garland. (Technically, Izzy plays "Over the Rainbow" on a musical saw.) Ferdinand the Magnificent, on the other hand, is a genuine big-nosed, diaper-wearing clown clad in an obnoxious, neon-pink bodysuit. Resembling a Dodo bird, this alter ego of puppeteer and musician Nick Trotter is a descendant of none other than Harpo Marx, and communicates mostly through physical gestures and the small cowbell tied about his waist. Continue Reading »
Tags: Charles Chaplin, Cinebeasts, Judy Garland, Lilac Preservation Project, Mark Jaster, Sabrina Mandell, The Brick Theater, The Circus, The New York Clown Theatre Festival
No Comments »
[Author's Note: Marcy will read and discuss her novel, Bad Marie, tonight, Monday, August 23, 7:30 PM at the Greenlight Bookstore (686 Fulton Street, Brooklyn, NY 11217).]
I first met Marcy Dermansky, author of the recently released Bad Marie—a novel that features an ex-con femme fatale the French New Wave would adore, and which seems to unfold frame by frame—at a press conference for Gus Van Sant's Milk. I was there covering the event for SpoutBlog, and trying to stay as far away as possible from the journalist groupies in the front row who were vainly attempting to maintain their professional veneers while obviously hoping to catch the eye of Sean Penn or James Franco. Marcy, film critic for About.com, happened to be sitting near the back with me, putting on no false airs whatsoever. We started talking and she told me unabashedly that she wasn't there in any writer's capacity. She simply wanted to see Sean Penn. And it's precisely this refreshing mix of honest fandom with a driving curiosity to observe the behavior behind the tabloids that Marcy brings to her second novel. Continue Reading »
Tags: Bad Marie, Greenlight Bookstore, Marcy Dermansky
No Comments »
by Lauren Wissot on July 31st, 2010 at 4:30 pm in Film
[Editor's Note: This is the latest entry in our annual "Summer of…" series, copresented by Aaron Aradillas of Blog Talk Radio's Back By Midnight and Jamey DuVall and Jerry Dennis of Blog Talk Radio's Movie Geeks United!.]
It's a shame I had to trek downtown to Tribeca to experience Pumping Iron II: The Women, which played as part of the 92YTribeca's "Outsider Sports" series (on a double bill with Afghan Muscles—kudos to the creative programmer!). Not that I have anything against attending a free screening of a 16mm print courtesy of the New York Public Library. It's just that George Butler's follow-up to his Schwarzenegger-starring Pumping Iron needs to be disseminated on DVD in a 25th-anniversary edition complete with all the bells and whistles. Yes, this semi-doc is a film geek's dream, one that leaves you thinking about things beyond its bodybuilding theme and hungering to learn more.
Arriving in theaters fresh on the heels of Flashdance fever, the film's nods to that cinematic time capsule are so transparent as to be laughable, ranging from its cheesy '80s pop soundtrack, to the competitors' Aqua Net heavy hairstyles and "Jane Fonda Workout" wear. But beneath the superficial knockoffs lie both filmmaking and a storyline rife with controversy. Pumping Iron II: The Women follows several muscle-bound females leading up to The Caesars World Cup in Las Vegas. Filling Schwarzenegger's shoes is Rachel McLish, a femme fatale, bodybuilding diva every bit the showboat as the future Governator. Australian Bev Francis, a former power-lifter turned bodybuilder whose masculine looks call into question the female bodybuilding ideal, is the outsider Lou Ferrigno character. Country girl Lori Bowen and brainy Carla Dunlap, the only black woman represented, fill lesser roles. Continue Reading »
Tags: Afghan Muscles, Bev Francis, Carla Dunlap, Charles Gaines, George Butler, Lori Bowen, Pumping Iron II: The Women, Rachel McLish, Summer of '85
1 Comment »
Filthy Talk for Troubled Times had its world premiere 20 years ago at NYC's Westside Dance Project in a production also directed by Neil LaBute and has rarely been seen since. Which comes as no surprise since the play, set in a topless bar ("out near the airport," of course) and featuring five men and two waitresses bemoaning the state of gender relations, is both dated and mediocre. Take, for example, this typical rant from Man 4: "'Silence equals death?' Bullshit! 'Silence' is not speaking out loud. (Beat.) 'Death' is letting some guy put his thing up your ass, right?" Which, in our current post-Borat era, is less offensive than it is pathetic. If anything, Filthy Talk only confirms what I've suspected for quite some time, that LaBute is sort of the Paris Hilton for the smart set, forever trying to be outrageous but often ending up the butt of his own joke.
Not that LaBute, with his gift for snappy dialogue, doesn't have anything to say—it's just that all his ideas can pretty much be summed up in his tour de force In The Company of Men, and since then, he's merely been repeating himself in variations on the theme of how men and women do wrong by each other. Because the playwright has been stuck on a loop for the past decade without challenging himself, how can he possibly challenge his audience? Interestingly, this goes a long way to explaining why he's a darling of theater critics to this day. In essence, LaBute serves up classic comfort food for the academically inclined. We've come to expect LaBute characters to have the self-control of a five-year-old, thus every mean-spirited thing they say and do becomes wearily predictable. As familiar but no deeper than an episode of Friends. His stage work is only a blank canvas onto which an audience can project its own insights, making them feel self-assured, smug knowing that they're better people than his immature characters. Continue Reading »
Tags: Aaron Eckhart, Filthy Talk for Troubled Times: And Other Plays, Helter Skelter, I Love This Game, In the Company of Men, Neil LaBute, Romance, The Furies, The New Testament, The War on Terror
3 Comments »
by Lauren Wissot on July 3rd, 2010 at 2:00 pm in Film

From glitzy, hipster-courting sponsors—including IFC Films and New York magazine—to the free flavored beverages (courtesy of Vitamin Water during the show) and free alcohol (courtesy of Radeberger Pilsner at the after-party around the corner), Rooftop Films Summer Series 2010, at first glance, seems to have taken a page from the slick playbook of the Gen Art Film Festival. There's the indie band to warm up the crowd before the screening and a bulky program the size of Interview magazine. There are trailers for the IFC channel's latest TV hit and for YouTube-sensation-turned-documentary-feature Winnebago Man. By the time the nine o'clock program finally rolls, inevitably fashionably late, you've nearly forgotten what you came there to see in the first place.
But then the sky goes dark, and one of the 23 features or 21 shorts programs included in this "14th Annual Summer Series of Underground Movies Outdoors" begins. And the magic of cinema slices right through the hype. Continue Reading »
Tags: Adam Gutch, Chu-Li Shewring, David Wilson, Elizabeth Henry, Henry David Thoreau, Malcolm Sutherland, Rooftop Films, Stewart Copeland, Tony Gault
2 Comments »
Annyong Yumika, making its North American premiere at this year's New York Asian Film Festival, takes its name from legendary Japanese porn starlet Yumika Hayashi, who also had a big career in Korea. But perhaps most intriguing about this odd nonfiction look at the woman who took top honors at the Pink Grand Prix for the softcore Japanese flick Lunchbox—and who met an untimely death in 2005—is that it's truly not made for Western eyes. Practically experimental in his whimsical collage approach, director Tetsuaki Matsue takes as his jumping off point the discovery of his subject's previously lost film, Junko: The Tokyo Housewife. That softcore Korean production, which cast Korean actors speaking Japanese, becomes the catalyst for not only retracing Yumika's life (through old home movie footage and bizarre reenactments at actual locations), but also for exploring, to use the title of one talking head professor's book, "the Japanese as seen in Korea." Continue Reading »
Tags: Annyong Yumika, Erotic Liaisons in Akasaka, Groper Train: School Uniform Hunter, Hardball Penis, Japanese Wife Next Door, Junko: The Tokyo Housewife, Lunchbox, New York Asian Film Festival, Part 2, Pink Power Strikes Back!, Yumika Hayashi
No Comments »

Moloch Tropical, which follows the political and mental disintegration of a fictional democratically elected president in Haiti, is the latest from Haitian-born director Raoul Peck, who tread similar territory a decade ago in Lumumba, the story of Congo's heroic prime minister Patrice Lumumba. However, it's not his own earlier work that Peck has audaciously repurposed, but Alexander Sokurov's Moloch, a chamber piece detailing the mundane existence of Adolf Hitler and Eva Braun at their Bavarian hideaway. (At least I think that's what Moloch is about—having seen it in the late '90s at a surreal Russian Film Festival screening with German subtitles and a live English translation.) Peck himself is a frustrating talent, one whose grandiosity is simultaneously his strength and his weakness—not unlike the lead character of Moloch Tropical. Continue Reading »
Tags: Abu Ghraib, Alexander Sokurov, Human Rights Watch International Film Festival, Lumumba, Moloch, Moloch Tropical, Raoul Peck, Saddam Hussein, Zinedine Soualem
No Comments »

"We're going to put it together and sell it to you as the truth," proclaims the lawyer for the villainous CEO Jeffrey Skilling, played with surprising nuance by song-and-dance man Norbert Leo Butz, at the outset of Enron, referring to the grand spectacle that's about to unfold before our eyes. The calamitous fall of the energy giant in 2001, a harbinger of the financial meltdown to come, has been exhaustively documented, first in the 2003 book Enron: The Smartest Guys in the Room by Bethany McLean and Peter Elkind, and later in Alex Gibney's 2005 Oscar-nominated doc based on that source. So the latest incarnation, a ballsy Broadway musical, is smartly less concerned with the how's of the scandal than with asking "Why?"—as the company's own tagline urged in its advertising. Continue Reading »
Tags: Andy Fastow, Bloody Bloody Andrew Jackson, Broadhurst Theatre, Enron, Gregory Itzin, Kenneth Lay, Lucy Prebble, Marin Mazzie, Rupert Goold, Stephen Kunken
No Comments »

At the heart of C. Scott Willis's The Woodmans is a tragedy that forever changed the lives of its world-renowned subjects Betty and George, a ceramic sculptor and painter and photographer, respectively, and their video artist son Charles. In the press notes, critics are gently nudged to refrain from revealing the exact nature of what happened to the couple's even more famous photographer daughter Francesca at the age of 22 "so that the audience can see her images without that filter." Which gets to the heart of the problem with The Woodmans.
Besides the fact that this unnamed tragedy is easily apparent from the first frame, Francesca—who photographed herself obsessively, often in the nude—has a cultish following that owes much to what happened to her, not unlike other tortured souls such as Sylvia Plath or Kurt Cobain. Sure, she created brilliant pictures so striking as to make the film's images pale in comparison, but so did a lot of other photographers whose fame she eclipsed. In other words, Willis most likely wouldn't have even made this film if it weren't for the sensationalist aspect of Francesca's tragedy so there's something gratingly disingenuous about the documentary's downplaying of the issue. Continue Reading »
Tags: Betty Woodman, C. Scott Willis, Charles Woodman, Francesca Woodman, George Woodman, In a Dream, Jeremiah Zagar, The Woodmans, Tribeca Film Festival
No Comments »

I confess that Ian Dury and the Blockheads were one of those early punk bands I never quite understood the appeal of. (But, then, as someone who grew up on the hardcore of Black Flag and the Dead Kennedys, the Ramones always seemed a bit slowpoke to my ears as well.) So perhaps Mat Whitecross, director of the Dury biopic sex & drugs & rock & roll, was driven by that not-unfounded fear that a rocker lacking the name recognition of Johnny or Sid or Ian Curtis would be a hard sell even to punk aficionados. (Sure, Madness for one owes its carnival sound and style to Dury, but he's still relatively unknown at least on these shores.) How else to explain a film so MTV-slick it's practically anti-punk rock? Not only does sex & drugs & rock & roll not have any bollocks, it's like the nerd of the class desperately trying to get the cool kids to like him.
Dury, like that other Ian (who suffered from epilepsy), was a man with a disability, struck with polio at the age of seven. Unlike Curtis, who hanged himself on the eve of Joy Division's American tour, Dury died of cancer in his late 50s, a ripe old age for rockers. In between, he married, had kids, and tried and often failed to balance family life with his unquenchable desire for fame. Sound familiar? The problem with Whitecross's film is that Dury's tale follows a fairly conventional rise-and-fall redemption arc. The only thing that separated the man from his fellow '70s rebels was his leg brace, which is not enough to hang a film on, though writer Paul Viragh certainly tries with a cringe-worthy script chockfull of clichés. Continue Reading »
Tags: Andy Serkis, Ian Dury, Ian Dury and the Blockheads, Mat Whitecross, Naomie Harris, Olivia Williams, Ray Winstone, sex & drugs & rock & roll, Toby Jones, Tribeca Film Festival
No Comments »

My Brothers, a coming-of-age tale set over Halloween weekend 1987 that follows three young siblings as they make their way to the Irish seaside to find a replacement watch for their dying father, on its surface bears all the hallmarks of a Shane Meadows film. So it's no surprise that the movie marks the directorial debut of Paul Fraser, a frequent writing collaborator of Meadows. Unfortunately, like another Tribeca Film Festival selection, sex & drugs & rock & roll by Mat Whitecross, co-director of Michael Winterbottom's The Road to Guantanamo, it's also in dire need of the auteur half of the partnership at its helm.
Seventeen-year-old Noel, played with lovely nuance by novice actor Timmy Creed, sets Will Collins's over-the-top script in motion when (in a metaphorical effort to stop time?) he takes a cheap watch from his half-conscious father's wrist. He then gets in a fight, which leads to both the watch and his wrist being smashed. But because the sentimental trinket had been won at an arcade in Ballybunnion, Noel is then forced to find a way to get to the tiny town, which leads to his borrowing his employer's bread van without permission. Unfortunately, though conveniently for the story, he can't shift the vehicle's gears with his injured hand, so he enlists the help of his pudgy, 11-year-old brother Paudie (Paul Courtney). Their seven-year-old, Star Wars-obsessed sibling Scwally (TJ Griffin) also comes along for the ride after threatening to tell their mum if they don't take him with them. Continue Reading »
Tags: Mat Whitecross, Michael Winterbottom, My Brothers, Paul Fraser, sex & drugs & rock & roll, Shane Meadows, Tribeca Film Festival
No Comments »

"It's too dangerous to get involved in soccer," offers a thug named Popeye, once a right-hand man to Colombian drug kingpin Pablo Escobar, as a lesson he learned from the boss's murder. "Narco-soccer," as it was called back when all the Latin American cartels from Medellin to Cali each owned their own teams, left the drug lords too out in the open. Which also goes a long way to explaining how Jeff Zimbalist and Michael Zimbalist, co-directors of the riveting and thoroughly researched doc The Two Escobars, managed to find such a treasure chest's worth of historical footage. The Escobars of the documentary's title are the infamous Pablo and Colombian soccer hero Andrés, unrelated and having little in common but a last name, a shared birthplace, a passion for soccer, and the fact that they lived and died under the constant watch of the media eye.
To the beat of an eclectic score and through seamless editing that weaves together a plethora of news accounts, personal photos, and interviews with relatives, teammates, and other firsthand—frontline—witnesses, the directors deftly segue between two stories, either of which could stand solidly on its own. What links the two is the dirty little open secret that Colombia's national soccer team, which rose all the way to the 1994 World Cup—where Andrés made the fatal mistake of kicking the ball into his own team's net during a match against the United States, costing the Colombians a shot at the title and Andrés his life—was a money laundering operation for the ruthless Pablo as well as a trophy. Which gives whole new meaning to the announcer's phrase "The winner will be determined by a shoot out" at the Cup of the Americas game, especially once a referee is killed for a bad call. Continue Reading »
Tags: Andrés Escobar, Jeff Zimbalist, Michael Zimbalist, Pablo Escobar, The Two Escobars, Tribeca Film Festival
No Comments »

"Show me one person in Russia who doesn't have a criminal record," a subject rhetorically challenges in Alexander Gentelev's Thieves by Law, a smart and fascinating peek inside the Russian mafia via three middle-aged "businessmen" old and wise enough to have both survived, and to be able to explain without bombast, the inner workings of the post-Perestroika underworld. And in a country that allows convicted criminals to run for government office, the guy's got a point. Like Matteo Garrone's Gomorrah, which would make a great narrative companion piece to this doc, Thieves by Law forgoes broad sensationalism for the riveting details of the matter-of-fact mafioso life.
From an opening sequence that quickly grounds the Russian mafia as an international issue (through news reports from around the world about its operations in various countries), to its catchy Russian tunes and swift editing, the movie moves as deftly as its globe-trotting subjects. Continue Reading »
Tags: Alexander Gentelev, Gomorrah, Thieves by Law, Tribeca Film Festival
No Comments »

A Behanding in Spokane is enfant terrible Martin McDonagh's first play to be set in America, and stars Christopher Walken, the one celebrity who would seem the perfect fit for the Tarantino-of-the-stage's mix of startling menace and hilarious absurdity. But the multiple Tony-nominated and Academy Award-winning Irishman's latest project—despite the presence of always finely tuned Walken and a nothing less than revelatory Sam Rockwell—is minor McDonagh. And that's being generous. Without those two tent-pole presences holding it up, Behanding would fold like a cheap house of cards. Continue Reading »
Tags: A Behanding in Spokane, Anthony Mackie, Christopher Walken, Gerald Schoenfeld Theatre, John Crowley, Martin McDonagh, Sam Rockwell, The Pillowman, Zoe Kazan
1 Comment »
by Lauren Wissot on February 26th, 2010 at 12:30 am in Film

Don Argott's suspenseful The Art of The Steal—which delves deeply into the government and corporate takeover of a beloved private institution, the Barnes Foundation, by the city of Philadelphia and the Pew Charitable Trusts among other "charitable" organizations—is propaganda at its finest. The film follows the gripping saga of the art collection of the visionary Albert C. Barnes, who had the foresight to buy up the best of the best by iconoclasts Van Gogh, Picasso, Cezanne and Matisse among other masters while the rest of the stuffy art world turned up its collective nose. In turn, Barnes gave the finger to the rarefied museum establishment by founding a school in Merion, Pennsylvania where the artworks—now estimated to be worth $25 billion—would hang above the faculty and students with limited hours open to the public. This didn't sit too well with Barnes's arch-nemeses, the Annenberg family, and the rest of Philly's notoriously corrupt power brokers. Continue Reading »
Tags: Don Argott, Errol Morris, Movie Review, The Art of the Steal, The Barnes Foundation
No Comments »
Recent Comments:
The Conversations: Michael Haneke
by Ed Howard
Links for the Day: The Yankee Comandante, Dunces Maybe Finds Its Ignatius, Michael Haneke on Amour, The Great Gatsby Trailer, & More
by shootthecritic
February House Composer Gabriel Kahane and Book Writer Seth Bockley Talk Communal Music
by David Ehrenstein
A Movie a Day, Day 83: Andrei Rublev
by murtazaali
Critical Distance: The Artist
by DRush76