Posts Tagged: Sundance Film Festival
by R. Kurt Osenlund on February 19th, 2012 at 3:47 pm in Film
[Editor's Note: Poster Lab is your weekly dose of movie poster dissection, wherein the House examines the pluses, minuses, and in-betweens of the poster design(s) for a buzzworthy film.]

Mystery seems to shroud every aspect of Fox Searchlight's Sound of My Voice, a micro-budgeted curio snatched up by the specialty branch at Sundance 2011. Plenty of good ink followed the movie's festival premiere (including a list-topping IndieWIRE citation), but try to find a great deal of official online content, and you'll come up surprisingly short. The cryptic buzz continues with the release of the film's second poster, a dog-eared and thrice-unfolded secret-handshake diagram, which relegates the sonar-style title to the bottom right corner.
The only way to gain an inkling as to what this drawing represents is to watch the 12-minute snippet Fox Searchlight unveiled on Thursday, showing the film's entire opening chapter. Turns out there are all kinds of initiation rituals necessary to enter the movie's cult microcosm, including the Miss Mary Mack action shown here, airline style.
I wouldn't exactly rush to call this poster artful, but it's certainly one of the more intriguing one-sheets to go viral this year, its WTF factor just as juicy as that of the best Being John Malkovich design, to which the wrinkled red hand signals hold a definite relation. Like Malkovich, Sound of My Voice also boasts time travel, but unless you chilled at Sundance or can beam yourself to April 27, precisely how remains, yes, rather mysterious. Continue Reading »
Tags: Another Earth, Being John Malkovich, Brit Marling, Fox Searchlight, haywire, indieWIRE, road trip, sound of my voice, Sundance Film Festival, Todd Phillips
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Susan G. Komen for the Cure said on Friday it was retreating from a decision to cut funding to Planned Parenthood.
Megaupload founder refused bail in New Zealand.
U.S. jobless rate falls to 8.3 percent, a three-year low.
Roseanne Barr is running for president as a Green Party candidate.
Joshua Land on David Cronenberg and the challenge of the impossible adaptation.
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Tags: Academy Awards, David Cronenberg, Give Me All Your Luvin', Green Party, Joshua Land, Karina Longworth, M.I.A., Madonna, Mark Olsen, Megaupload, Nicki Minaj, Planned Parenthood, Roseanne Barr, Sundance Film Festival, Susan G. Komen for the Cure, The Film Experience
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by staff on February 1st, 2012 at 9:00 am in The House

[Editor's Note: House Rewind is a collection of House articles from the month gone by—a recap of the posts you loved and those you might have missed.]
In the second episode of Season 1 of our SlantCast, R. Kurt Osenlund dished on the Oscars, while Jaime N. Christley sat down with filmmaker Joe Swanberg.
Reporting from the Sundance Film Festival, Simon Abrams and Michał Oleszczyk reviewed Tim and Eric's Billion Dollar Movie, Simon Killer, Red Hook Summer, Keep the Lights On, The Surrogate, Beasts of the Southern Wild, and more.
In the latest installment of the ever-popular "Conversations" series, Jason Bellamy and Ed Howard chatted about 3D.
Leading up to the announcement of the Oscar nominations on Jan. 24, Eric Henderson and R. Kurt Osenlund made nominee predictions in the Academy's top categories. They fared best in the areas of Picture, Cinematography, and Directing (but don't miss Eric's killer write-ups on Best Actor and Adapted Screenplay).
In Music, the House added to its playlist the the latest from Wild Nothing, Zebra Katz & Blood Orange; The Shins, The Magnetic Fields, New Build & Fort Romeau; Tanlines, Sleigh Bells, Rick Ross & John Talabot; Grimes, Labyrinth Ear & Napolian; and Destroyer, SBTRKT, D'Angelo & Warm Weather.
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Tags: Blade Runner, Global Lens, Grey Matter, House Playlist, House Rewind, International Film Festival Rotterdam, Joe Swanberg, Justified, lists, Luck, Man on a Ledge, Rise of the Planet of the Apes, Roberto Bolaño, Rooney Mara, Santigold, slant cast, Sundance Film Festival, The Conversations, The Oscars, the paperboy, The Third Reich, the words, Understanding Screenwriting
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The Help cleaned up and Jean Dujardin pulled an upset at last night's Screen Actors Guild awards.
In other news of The Artist's march toward Oscar, Michel Hazanavicius beat out Fincher, Allen, Scorsese, and Payne at Saturday's DGA awards.
This year's Sundance Film Festival winners have also been announced.
A look back at the film and art career of the Eiffel Tower, a 122-year-old movie star prepping for her facelift.
Matt Zoller Seitz recaps the latest episode of HBO's Luck.
Over the weekend, Mitt Romney widened his lead over Newt Gingrich.
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Tags: Blake Lively, David Bordwell, Directors Guild of America, HBO, Jean Dujardin, Luck, M.I.A., Madonna, Matt Zoller Seitz, Michel Hazanavicius, Mitt Romney, Newt Gingrich, Nicki Minaj, Rick Perry, Rooney Mara, Screen Actors Guild, Steven Soderbergh, Sundance Film Festival, The Artist, The Help
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As a Southern-gothic fairy tale about post-Katrina New Orleans, Beasts of the Southern Wild could have easily turned out to be a crass and unwittingly exploitative work. Co-writer/director Ben Zeitlin's fanciful approach to his understandably touchy subject matter theoretically seems glib. Thankfully, every time Zeitlin and co-writer Lucy Alibar threaten to oversimplify their story with mawkishly twee sentimentality, they steer the film's elemental narrative in another direction. The hopefulness that viewers take away from the film, the most buzzed-about title at this year's Sundance, feels earned thanks to Zeitlin and Alibar's focus on their characters' fears of imminent abandonment and annihilation. As a film about the seductive and essential power of hope, Beasts of the Southern Wild is a warm, accomplished, and fitting tribute to the fighting spirit of New Orleans.
This is the film you might get if Terry Gilliam conflated David Gordon Green's George Washington with Alice in Wonderland. We follow Hushpuppy (Quvenzhané Wallis), a six-year-old girl that lives with her single father, Wink (Dwight Henry), in a remote region of New Orleans only referred to as "The Bathtub." Since Hushpuppy spends much of her time by herself, all of her fears are filtered through a convoluted system of icons and symbols. This proves that she's a product of her environment. She listens to animals and people's hearts because her father has a heart condition, fears cannibalism after a Bathtub resident teaches her that all living things are "meat," and even fantasizes about wild rampaging boars because Wink has a big fat black hog on his farm. Continue Reading »
Tags: Alexis Dziena, Alice in Wonderland, Beasts of the Southern Wild, Ben Zeitlin, David Gordon Green, Dwight Henry, Eric Judor, George Washington, Jack Plotnick, Lucy Alibar, Quentin Dupieux, Quvenzhané Wallis, Sundance Film Festival, Terry Gilliam, William Fichtner, Wrong
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Shut Up and Play the Hits, Will Lovelace and Dylan Southern's documentary about the emotional toll that LCD Soundsytem's final live show had on frontman James Murphy, dances around the fact that the band was essentially a solo act. (Though Murphy performed all of the instruments on LCD Soundsystem's self-titled debut, a number of people, Nancy Whang and Pat Honey among them, became an integral part of the band's sound after Murphy took the album on the road.) This is presumably the reason why Murphy is the only person associated with LCD Soundsystem who's interviewed in the film and therefore gets to tell us what the end of the band signifies.
Since we know Murphy isn't retiring from making music, why are we seriously mourning the death of what was originally a one-man band? The answer is we're not really mourning, because Murphy isn't completely serious about burying the band. The doc starts with a sarcastic, tongue-in-cheek epitaph: "If it's a funeral, let's have the best funeral ever." Still, there's genuine sentiment behind that opening intertitle. This is shown in footage of Murphy dazedly walking around after the band's final performance and later during a lunchtime interview conducted by Chuck Klosterman. He also tells the crowd at Madison Square Garden that he wears his father's watch while performing for good luck, which suggests he's sentimental about the prospect of ditching the band. But isn't it enough that Murphy will just move on to his next project? Continue Reading »
Tags: Bloody Disgusting, Brad Miska, Chuck Klosterman, David Bruckner, Dylan Southern, Glass Eye Pix, Glenn McQuaid, James Murphy, Joe Swanberg, Laura Mulvey, LCD Soundsystem, Madison Square Garden, Nancy Whang, Paranormal Activity, Paranormal Activity 3, Pat Honey, Radio Silence, Shut Up and Play the Hits, Skype, Sundance Film Festival, The Blair Witch Project, The Devil Inside, Ti West, V/H/S, Will Lovelace
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The Artist didn't get the most César nominations today.
Sasha Frere-Jones peers at Lana Del Rey's fixed image.
Related: Lana has bought the rights to her first "unreleased" record.
Fidel Casto is sometimes right.
The London 2012 Olympics opening ceremony will reflect "people's Games," and hundreds of children will be pulled from ghettos all over the world for the production, says Danny Boyle.
D'Angelo is back.
The 12 worst ways to be killed by Liam Neeson.
John Hawkes chats with Jada Yuan at Sundance.
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Tags: César Awards, China, D'Angelo, Fidel Castro, John Hawkes, Joseph Gordon-Levitt, Lana Del Rey, Liam Neeson, Olympic Games, Republican Party, Sasha Frere-Jones, Sundance Film Festival, The Artist, The Walking Dead
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With Rodney Ascher's fantastic hoot of a movie, this year's omnipresent Sundance tagline ("Look Again") has finally lived up to its promise. Room 237 is a sustained act of tireless scrutiny, representing a near-kabbalistic approach to cinema, in which a sacred celluloid text is all that matters, and one can only aspire to offer a tentative interpretation of it—if only to then reread it yet again.
The text in question is Stanley Kubrick's supremely conceptual mind-fuck The Shining, and Room 237 serves largely as a hospitable soapbox for a few devoted fans and scholars who are free to unravel their theories on the film's "hidden meanings." The scale of devotion at play is indicated early on, when one of the speakers describes a childhood screening of 2001: A Space Odyssey as the "first religious experience" of his life. The entire movie—the full title of which actually reads Room 237: Being an Inquiry into "The Shining" in 9 Parts—plays a bit like an awe-stricken medieval exegesis of the Bible, taking the chilly story of Jack Torrance's legendary psychological meltdown as a mere starting point to comment on the nature of, well, everything. Continue Reading »
Tags: 2001: A Space Odyssey, Blade Runner, Errol Morris, Joseph Cornell, Ridley Scott, Rodney Ascher, Room 237, Rose Hobart, Stanley Kubrick, Sundance Film Festival, The Shining
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"Cleansing…but victorious" is how the lead protagonist of The Surrogate describes his first sexual experience. The former emotion comes close to describing the resonance of writer-director Ben Lewin's film about the libidinal awakening of Mark O'Brien (John Hawkes), a real-life polio-afflicted poet and journalist. Thanks to Hawkes's fantastic performance as Mark and Lewin's clever, nuanced dialogue, The Surrogate is an accomplished portrait of a resilient man that, through sex therapy, was able to experience something new and extraordinary.
Mark, a Catholic with all kinds of stereotypical faith-based hang-ups about sex, first starts thinking about doing it after he develops a crush on Amanda (Annika Marks), a pretty young woman who briefly serves as his caretaker and assistant. Mark's temporarily crushed when Amanda doesn't reciprocate his feelings, but after he starts to research an article about how the handicapped have sex, repressed passions are suddenly aroused within him. So after talking candidly with Father Brendan (William H. Macy), a conflicted by empathetic Catholic priest, Mark agrees to meet with Cheryl Greene (a frequently naked Helen Hunt), a sexual surrogate that teaches Mark about his body and how to stimulate a woman's body too. Continue Reading »
Tags: Ben Lewin, Chase Williamson, Don Coscarelli, H.P. Lovecraft, Helen Hunt, Jason Pargin, John Dies at the End, John Hawkes, Sundance Film Festival, The Surrogate, William H. Macy
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Award-winning Greek filmmaker Theo Angelopoulos was killed yesterday in a road accident.
The director's career in clips.
Lana Del Rey...can she live?
Related: And it begins.
How Victoria Jackson went from the big leagues of comedy to the rabid right of modern politics.
Why do we lock up so many people?
Sundance announces the jury prizes and honorable mentions in short filmmaking.
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Tags: Academy Awards, Cynthia Nixon, Dan Kois, Facebook, Hollywood, Jon Stewart, Lana Del Rey, Mitt Romney, Robert Bresson, Sundance Film Festival, Theo Angelopoulos, Victoria Jackson
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When it comes to Julie Delpy, the key question remains the old Barbra Streisand one. Namely, how much of her can you take in one sitting? A dedicated movie-polymath, effortlessly bilingual and scooping the best of both Old and New World, Delpy resembles a bizarre version of Miranda July: Instead of celebrating lonely quirks of a self-centered sensibility, she throws herself (and the viewer) into a comic vortex of agitated, super-busy scenes of noisy familial squabbles and cerebral lovers' quarrels, which seems a projection of her own coyly humane view of life.
Her new movie is a sequel to 2 Days in Paris, in which she played a fabulously promiscuous European chick to Adam Goldberg's perpetually shocked American straight man. Five years have passed, and Goldberg is no longer in the picture: Delpy's character, Marion, is now living in New York with a new partner, Mingus (Chris Rock), and two children—one of hers and one of his. As befits a typical New York couple, Mingus is a radio-show host (and a Village Voice reporter, no less), while Marion prepares to open a debut photo exhibition, frankly examining her previous sexual relationships and involving a public act of a (literal) "selling of her soul" to an anonymous buyer. Continue Reading »
Tags: 2 Days in New York, 2 Days in Paris, Adam Goldberg, Albert Delpy, Alex Nahon, Alexia Landeau, Ari Graynor, Barbra Streisand, Boudu Saved from Drowning, Chris Rock, For a Good Time Call..., Ginger Rogers, Glee, Jamie Travis, Jean Renoir, Julie Delpy, Justin Long, Kim Cattrall, Lauren Anne Miller, Lowell Sherman, Michel Simon, Miranda July, Sex and the City, Sundance Film Festival, The Greeks Had a Word for Them, Vincent Gallo, Whit Stillman
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There's such a world of difference between Ira Sachs's second and third features—Forty Shades of Blue is as beautifully delicate as Married Life is self-consciously smarmy—that I approached his new movie with anxious trepidation. I'm happy to report that Keep the Lights On is a major achievement that puts Sachs back where Forty Shades of Blue left him: as a supreme observer of the perils of shared intimacy. The paradox at the heart of his style seems to be that lyricism doesn't make him foggy-eyed; the grainy haze he bathes his scenes in doesn't blur the edges of the masterfully rendered personalities of his characters.
The new film shares some thematic concerns with Forty Shades of Blue, again focusing on a foreign-born character living in the U.S. and undergoing a severely confusing relationship, in which strong sexual connection goes hand in hand with self-destruction. But where Forty Shades of Blue told a story of marital infidelity, Keep the Lights On explores the ways in which one lover's drug abuse steadily undermines a couple's mutual trust. Continue Reading »
Tags: Avery Willard, Forty Shades of Blue, Ira Sachs, Keep the Lights On, Married Life, Sundance Film Festival, Thure Lindhardt, Zachary Booth
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It opens with a series of attentive glances thrown every few seconds toward an unseen object, which then proves to be a stuffed doe being sketched by a group of art students. Within that single opening scene, director Denis Côté both establishes his main theme and prescribes the viewer how to approach his film, since a hard, focused look is exactly what's required to appreciate Bestiaire's wordless, unlovely splendor.
As we start scrutinizing an unfamiliar space populated by a surprising variety of animal species (introduced in an ascending order of exoticness), we slowly realize we're inside zoo facilities. Contrary to, say, Frederick Wiseman, whose habitually mammoth 1993 documentary Zoo examined the practical ways the eponymous facility was run, Côté is so disinterested in the mundane aspects of the institution he portrays as to make it look positively abstract. Instead of a narrative of a specific place in time, what we get is a distillation of a place into a string of visions that can work both as documentary and as a free-associational ode to life and stillness alike. Continue Reading »
Tags: Bestiaire, Denis Côté, Frederick Wiseman, Le Quattro Volte, Sundance Film Festival, Zoo
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It takes a little time to get used to the sprawling scope and the blocky dialogue of Red Hook Summer, director Spike Lee and co-writer James McBride's follow-up to Lee's own Do the Right Thing. In Red Hook Summer, Lee and McBride take the dialectical mode of discourse that Lee employed so masterfully in Do the Right Thing and explode it in order to create a unkempt but invigorating and deeply moving daisy chain of opposing ideas. The thematic preoccupations—gentrification, religion, familial history, love—of Lee's breakthrough film are no longer phrased as an easy-to-delineate back-and-forth between two types of interlocutors; now the conversation is a mosaic. Lee's not just talking about condos vs. projects, but about faith, self-discovery, fear of change, and a generational inability to communicate with one another. Lee and McBride have created a new microcosm of uncertainty and shaky hopefulness and it's a shambling, wonderful mess. Continue Reading »
Tags: Aaron Paul, Clarke Peters, Do the Right Thing, James McBride, James Ponsoldt, Jules Brown, Mary Elizabeth Winstead, Megan Mullally, Nick Offerman, Red Hook Summer, Smashed, Spike Lee, Sundance Film Festival
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So Yong Kim's latest feature, For Ellen, while certainly not an abject failure, is a disappointment nevertheless, and may cause concern to all those to whom the director's 2006 debut, In Between Days, was as dear as it remains to this writer. The story concerns a no-good, conspicuously disheveled rock singer, Joby (Paul Dano), who redeems his longstanding neglect of his five-year-old daughter by bonding with her on the eve of divorcing her mom. Joby's hectic, self-centered lifestyle is rendered in a succession of predominantly shallow-focused long takes of observational persistence as daring as it is tiresome.
Kim's deliberate diluting of dramatic elements of the plot to the point of its near-obliteration, so highly effective in the case of In Between Days, yields rather emaciated results in For Ellen. The reason is that there's a barely concealed generic mechanism at play here, built upon a trite premise of a prodigal father slowly winning back the affection of a cute neglected child by means of spontaneously shared fun. Even if Kim may wince at the comparison, she's not that far from mushy Kramer vs. Kramer territory when Dano wells up at the sight of his cute lil' girl banging out a garbled version of Für Elise on her electric piano. Continue Reading »
Tags: Eugene Jarecki, Five Easy Pieces, For Ellen, In Between Days, Paul Dano, Rob Rafelson, So Yong Kim, Sundance Film Festival, The Help, The House I Live In, Why We Fight
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