Saturday, 14 December 2013

Making the Cut



I put together a list of the films I saw for the first time, that had most impressed me during the year, as I have been doing for an inordinate amount of time. It came out -


 LES MISERABLES (2013), THE GREAT GATSBY 3D (2013, Fitzgerald’s characters swimming in 3D decoration - first film of Baz Luhrmann I’ve liked since Strictly Ballroom),  THE LAST STAND (Jee-woon Kim and Schwarzenegger in destructive mood)  BLISS (Glück: Dorris Dörrie handling Alba Rowacher, both repeat offenders on my lists),  DJANGO UNCHAINED,  ZERO DARK THIRTY, Der GEHEIME KURIER (The Secret Courier / Le Rouge et le Noir: Righelli1928, with Ivan Mozjoukine and Lil Dagover, who could ask for anything more?), SILVER LININGS
Mozjoukine
PLAYBOOK, NIGHT & FOG
(Tin shui wai dik ye yu mo: Ann Hui fields Simon Yam as a psychopath)  GRAVITY 3D,  RUST & BONE (De rouille et d'os: Bidegain)  Le GRAND SOIR (Gustave de Kervern offers Benoît Poelvoorde, another regular) BREATHING (Atmen: Karl Markovics - Stockinger on delinquents) THIS MUST BE THE PLACE, Wreck It Ralph, Hara-Kiri: Death of a Samurai 3D (Ichimei: Miike), Gangster Squad,  Prisoners,  Chokher Bali  (Sand in the Eye:Rituparno Ghosh with Aishwarya Rai as a colonial Indian widow 2003) Young Adult, Golden Door (Nuovomondo: Crialese of Terra Firma),  Ernest & Celestine (Aubier, Patar, Renner animate a bear and a mouse in French), God Bless America (Goldthwaite), How to Kill a Judge (Perché si uccide un magistrato: Damiani with Franco Nero yet again, 1974) Performance, Paper Man (John Kahrs short cartoon), On My Way (Elle S’en va: Bercot), L'attentat/The Attack (Doueiri on the Palestinian situation), Lincoln, The Flapper (Alan Crosland directs the winning Olive Thomas, 1920) The Hunt (Jagten:Vinterberg and Mads Mikkelsen), Tokyo Godfathers (Satoshi Kon off kilter animé), 11.6 (Philippe Godeau fields François Cluzet in an armoured car caper), Human Scale (Dalsgaard: city documentary) Une exécution ordinaire (Dugain: last days of Stalin) Those Happy Years (Anni felici: Daniele Luchetti nails the seventies) The Mighty (1929 John Cromwell directs George Bancroft  - why did it take me this so to find this one?) 

Gravity
I’m surprised at the heavy presence of Multiplex movies, which seemed to have been falling away. Is this the result of Quality? Accessibility? Personal taste? Dollars spent? The breakdown is - Multiplex 12, Fringe Cinemas 7, TV (SBS) 5, Festivals 4, DVD 3 and assorted (in-flight, enthusiast events, private shows) 3, with (included in our total for the first time) Streaming One. One non fiction movie, two silents, one short. The numbers don’t come out because some movies figure under two headings.

Just as I was doing this, the British Film Institute lobbed theirs onto the computer - The Act
of Killing, Gravity, Blue Is the Warmest Colour, La grande bellezza, Frances Ha, A
Touch of Sin, Upstream Color, The Selfish Giant, Norte, the End of History, Stranger by
the Lake -
a close match with it’s members' list - The Act of Killing, Gravity, Blue Is the
Warmest Colour, The Great Beauty, Frances Ha, Upstream Color,  Stranger by the Lake,
The Selfish Giant, A Touch of Sin, Norte, the End of History.
How's that for conforming?


Not only is there minimal overlap with mine but I’ve only managed to see  a couple of those,
though that will equalize over a few years. The Great Beauty got my nomination for the
year’s most pretentious bomb but I did enjoy watching the star of  Blue is the
Warmest Colour chew gum through her South Bank interview.

Intriguingly, the Sydney Film Fesitval, the local custodian of establishment taste, only
managed to run three of the British picks.

Make a similar comparison with eg.  Time Magazine’s 10.  The Hobbit: The Desolation
of Smaug, 12 Years a Slave, The Act of Killing,  Frozen, Fast & Furious 6, The
Grandmaster (Wong ka-wai),  Her (Jonze), American Hustle, La grande bellezza,
Gravity.
Intriguingly, while most of these have yet to surface here, seven of their ten
worst have hit the complexes.

So what does it all prove or even suggest? Any one here has to work much harder to see
what is admired, let alone what’s good. The Australian experience of cinema is drifting
away from the European and (as always) the yanks are better at getting their stuff out
... and everyone loves Gravity.


Sunday, 24 November 2013

USERS AND LOSERS.



I've placed four hundred plus assessments on the International Movie Data Base. Five got up the noses of anonymous users. See if you can figure out why.


Yet another Unnecessary Australian film., 21 September 2007
(This review was deleted by IMDb based on an abuse report filed by another user)
The story of Norma Khouri's apparently bogus autobiographical best seller and the unsavory allegations that investigation brought to life about the woman, were splashed about print media extensively.

The only reason for pouring this amount of time and effort into turning them into a documentary film is the none too endearing one that there's money for making these and a nationalistic demand that they arrive.

Khouri is not an engaging personality and spending hours in her company is not appealing. She may be a more intriguing subject than a man who went round scribbling the word "Eternity" on footpaths or a movie director's deceased auntie but a passing attempt to incorporate her in a CIA plot or an investigation of the fraudster mentality fail to produce the kind of revelation that would justify the time and money to watch this film, let alone make it.

The film's ambitious production values (computer graphics, re-enactments, a trip to the location) are not merited by the piddling subject matter or any insight the film maker brings to it. 



Accomplished Ray drama., 21 May 2007
(This review was deleted by IMDb based on an abuse report filed by another user)
It's amazing to find no comments on this widely shown work of the most respected of the Indian film makers. So much for the glory of this world.

The plot and setting are not unfamiliar in Satyajit' Ray's other films but it's a little surprising to see them stage centre. We are given the background of a rising executive in the Calcutta Peter's Fan Company. Good job, attractive wife, comfortable seventh floor apartment, above the smog and noise. He seems to have it made but two things happen.

They are visited by his sister in law, Shamila Tagore, star of Ray's first major film PATHER PANCHALI and daughter of the celebrity writer Rabinrinath Tagore, about whom Ray made an impressive documentary. She comments that Chanda's salary is as much as Tagore's Nobel Prize. Next up an export order for which our hero is responsible gets into trouble - wrinkling of the underside.

The outcome is predictable with the high fliers emerging as leading empty lives by comparison with the family back in Patna and the montages, opticals and fake commercial are not as slick as the film makers think but the director's humanist outlook gives the characters a validity which it is hard not to register. 



Early Christian narrative., 15 April 2007
(This review was deleted by IMDb based on an abuse report filed by another user)
If this is the Pathé film issued re-coloured in the late Twentieth Century, it can be considered state of the art for the time of it's production.

The angels fade in and out of their scenes, Christ is superimposed on the waves he's supposed to be walking on and they've cut holes in the scenery for the cast to walk through. The form is basic - tableaux of familiar incidents introduced by captions identifying the action.

The smallness of scale (about a dozen extras) is obvious now. However the makers show a good command of their task. There are only a few giggle worthy moments - the Holy Family picnicking in front of a painted Sphinx, Jesus turning over a pair of card tables representing money lenders in the Temple. Also it has it's Mel Gibson touches with a protracted and enthusiastic scourging.

It's an example of a model the serious film makers soon abandoned and it is hard to imagine this one impressing current audiences. 



Vintage Arab comedy from the Gogol., 4 January 2007
(This review was deleted by IMDb based on an abuse report filed by another user)
 

The 1952 military revolution in Egypt seems to have been a key event for their cinema, the most vigorous in the Arab world - as far as we can tell from the thin stream of material that makes it's way to us. It was the point at which Youseff Chahine, their best known director, and Omar Sharif/Omar El-Cherif, their best known star, both appeared.

This update on Gogol's "Inspector General", which they tell us is both timeless and an exact fit with pre-revolutionary Egypt, is passably amusing. A fertiliser inspector is mistaken for a touring investigator and feted by the corrupt village head Odma. The film seems to have been contaminated by the Danny Kaye version, complete with romance with the daughter and songs. What happened to the real Inspector?

The comic duo leads are practiced, though their material is thin. The production values are adequate. Technique is largely a matter of playing scenes with the characters facing the camera and the odd, jarring close-up cut in. Studio shooting is broken up by a few intriguing location sequences. We get the impression that the whole thing was post synchronised roughly.

As entertainment the piece gets by but as a novelty it is fascinating, a glimpse of a movie culture pretty much unknown to us a half century later. It's home audience appear to regard this one highly. It has just been subject of a nice sharp (though slightly contrasty) remastering with impeccable English (and French) sub-titles. 



One reel melodrama set in the (then) exotic east., 21 August 2005
(This review was deleted by IMDb based on an abuse report filed by another user) 

Functional would be the best way to describe this one reel melodrama. the vengeful Hindoo/u (the James Young, director of "Hearts in Exile"?) got up in boot polish and a turban, plans on avenging himself on Maurice Costello's family, somewhere West of Suez.

Chief interest is in seeing the distinguished cast early in their careers. Hard to reconcile the two children (Helen keeps on standing in front of the taller Dolores, blocking our view) with the glamorous stars of the 1920s Michael Curtiz movies.

Compositions are often awkward and the playing is unremarkable, outside of Young's unrelenting hamming. Hard enough to see any of these one reelers - let's not be greedy!





PORDENONE 2013.



From Australia, getting to the Italy's Pordenone Gionate de Cinema Muto or ”Week of Dumb Films”, as my Google Translator calls these Italian events, is such a heroic effort that I wonder about it every time.  In 2013, just battling Trennitalia drained me. I expected them to chain Klaus Kinsky to my seat at any moment, like Dr. Zhivago -  but the rewards do out way the costs.

While,  even in Paris the epicenter of movie culture, early film only seems to draw customers old enough to have lived through the great days of Langlois’ Cinematheque, the welcome surprise at Pordenone was finding a real spread of ages and backgrounds among the people who turned out. For a while you could believe that film history had followed exploitation, gender politics or Asia  in that passing parade of  buzz movie interests, 

Mixing with serious enthusiasts again comes as a shock, after Australia, with the void left by National film Theatre after the A.F.I. merger wiped it out nearly forty years back. Pordenone’s survey revealed that, among the thousand attendees, four came from Australia-New Zealand, that number inflated by Meg Labrum’s getting an award for her work on the Corrick Collection.

I must admit that, when I mentioned that Daniele Luchetti’s so nice new Anni Felici was playing in the town’s commercial movie house, I was met with waves of apathy. Can’t win ‘em all.

At Pordenone, people in their twenties were among those most interested in discussing the films and cross referencing them to the wave of  titles suddenly accessible on DVD (think De Sica-Camerini and silent Naruse box sets or Richard Oswald’s restored Cagliostro).  Even if they didn’t show any films, Pordenone would be a great meeting point.

Of course, Pordenone  did show films and people watched them, sometimes for fifteen hour days. It’s is not one of the festivals, where all the heavies spend their time sitting in the bar outside the screenings, making their deals.

Whatever way you carve it, 2013 was not one of Pordenone’s best. Their featured talents disappointed. The Karl Lamac/Anny Ondra team were still in the primitive phase of Czech film making when we lost sight of them, though they did seem to be on a learning curve. Gerhard Lamprecht is not as well known as the major players of the German silent film, and, watching his studies of urban gloom, he emerges as a one note film maker, while director Gustav Molander’s work suggested that stories of the twenties decline of Swedish film making, that drove Stiller, Garbo, Seastrom and Lars Hanson abroad, which the program disputed, seemed quite plausible.

There was more talk of cut backs and a few presentation glitches. The  demands of new digital systems occasionally meant freezing images or vanishing sub-titles. The time and money to rehearse and perfect showings appears to have thinned. On the up side, this seems to have spurred the contributing musicians into collaborations, producing multi instrumentalist accompaniments and live music integrated with original recordings. The often exceptional scores at Pordenone have been enhanced by experimentation.

Throw in the Cordenons/Pordemone children’s band playing with a couple of nice comedy two reelers.

The handsome, rebuilt Cinema Verdi is not always a movie-friendly environment, with it’s awkward sight lines and distracting red aisle lighting but having an orchestra pit, with the accompanist(s) playing to a video display out of sight, is a luxury many purpose built cinematheques should envy.

This didn’t always work out. There was a truly awful running of  a Ukranian piece, with a blasting electronic score played too loud, or the use of Japanese benshi narrator Icharo Kataoka, who proved in conversation to be an authoritative and amusing commentator on his work but was just distracting noise accompanying a screening of the weepy Chikemuri Takatanobaba / Blood Spattered Takatanobaba without translation. Subtitling a benshi represents a challenge, though I have seen it done successfully.

In more detail,  we pick up director Lamac and star, blonde Mary Pickford curled Anny Ondra(kova) (right), in the near incoherent 1920 Gilly Poprvé v praze and followed their exploits through the Fairbanks style lumberjack adventure Drvostep of 1923 and the fey 1925 Lucerna, the  to peak with Chyr’te ho!/ The Clumsy burglar, as their industry approached proficiency, taking Gustav Machaty and cameraman Otto Heller along with them. A couple of these would have made the point adequately.

Gustav Molander on the other hand was an assured technician, who deployed adequate resources on a variety of subjects. His Polis Paulus Paskasmall/ The Smugglers is represented as the peak achievement of the Pat and Patachon team comedian duo leads, here battling mean matriarchs and corrupt nobility in the snow country.

Flicka I Frack/ Girls in Tails had a sex equality message, where Magda  Holm, denied the expense of a ball gown, goes in her brother’s tuxedo, setting off gender tensions in the community - less than biting satire. Forseglade lappar/ Sealed Lips was novice Mona Matenson tempted away from the cloisters by a married artist, against alpine scenery. Hans englesk fru/ Matrimony of 1928 looked more promising, fielding the great Lil (Caligari, Congres Dances) Dagover (left), subdued  as a British widow edged into a marriage with her company’s major creditor Urho Somersalmi, another rugged timberland hero, when lounge lizardy Gosta Ekman seemed a more suitable mate. As in contemporary Hollywood, the sanctity of the marriage knot diverted proceedings away from the logical ending, which would have united  Somersalmi with Dagover’s spunky younger sister Brita Allgren.

Pordenone also showed Konstgjorda Svensson/ Atrificial Svenson, an agreeable military training knockabout from the transition to sound, with a to-camera synch. intro. and the nice gag of lead Fridolf Rhudin singing in shaky synchronization, which proved not to be the result of primitive recording but him lip synching his serenade to a phonograph. Ivar Johanson’s 1929 Ragens rike / Kingdom of the Rye, also on show, was a ponderous rural drama.

There was nothing startling here, though Molander did also come through for us eventually.

Gerhard Lamprecht is someone who figures on the edge of our awareness of  German cinema, mainly for the celebrated sound film Emil & the Detectives. His mix of studio with real street locations and people, along with seeing players familiar from Fritz Lang’s work (George John, Aud Egede Nissen and regular lead Bernard Goetzke) made his films seem promising. The work on show proved unrewardingly one note affairs organized round Lamprecht’s notions of the dignity of labor and “hundesleben”, a dogs life, the wretched existence of the urban poor. There were occasional moments of recognition, like jail bird Arthur Bergen telling the kids not to go to school because it would trap them in a life of employed drudgery but these only spaced the elements of melodrama - whores with hearts of gold, heavy fathers and unworthy authority. Lamprecht’s boarding house melodrama Menschen\Untereinander/ People among Each Other didn’t even make it into his authentic exteriors.

The event also aired a number of other streams, including Ukrainian silents. Most interesting was Heorhii Stabovyi's 1927 Dva Dni / Two Days centering on Emil Jannings-like Ivan Zamycchhorskyi, the servant of a rich family, which flees the Bolsheviks leaving him at the mansion, where their son, detached from the escape, returns for shelter. The film makes a fascinating comparison with Benjamin Christenson’s U.S.made 1927  Mockery covering much the same ground. Also Mykola Shykoskyi’s nicely handled  Shkurnyk / The Opportunist of 1929 has comedian Ivan Sadovskyi trapped, when his attempt to loot abandoned revolutionary supplies lands him with the job of caring for a camel in the camps of both the reds and the whites. Comparing Buster Keaton in Go West or Fernandel in La Vache et moi doesn’t disgrace the Ukrainian film. These were embedded in a collection of more familiar pieces, which had outlasted their propagandist intent.

Throw in a few Italian melodramas from the teens, of which Eleuterio Rodolfi’s version of I Promessi sposi was the pick, trying to mount the work’s large scale drama in the static terms of post WWI Italian film.

There was also the notion of  “revisiting the canon.” One of the things Pordenone has done is demonstrate that the work that was considered significant is not always the most enduring. Witness Alezander Dovzhenko. Still, being faced with yet another run of Arsenal did give me a welcome forty minutes to nod off. It’s actually dispiriting to see these “classics” in dim grey copies, often inferior to the ones which some of us saw decades back and newcomers know from accessible DVDs - the history of cinema fading before our eyes.

The copy of Wellman’s always impressive Beggars of Life did prove to be superior to the circulating discs. A couple of unfamiliar Hollywood silents also got an airing,  Francis X Bushman (left), as a Zorro minus mask and black whip, in the undistinguished 1928 The Charge of the Gauchos and a nice, sharp copy of an enjoyable De Mille Company programmer Hold ‘em Yale from the same year, with Rod La Roque as yet another college sportsman.

Hard to work up all that much sympathy for the 20th Century silents, some ordinary shorts and the currently circulating Blancanieves, which wastes Maribel Verdu. I let go Too Much Johnson, the work print of the film content for Orson Welles’ stage show, for another time.

These were spaced by programs of “early film”, which occasionally fielded oddities like primitive Max Linder or Feuillade but were just as often likely to face you with Mexican Revolution coverage of lines of guys in sombreros riding past the camera for ten minutes.

I’ll never forgive them for offering Conrad Veidt in Richard Oswald’s Lucrezia Borgia at three in the morning, when I was already knackered. Surely a more suitable time for riders in big hats, Sports and Pastimes in Batavia (Java) or Dovzhenko back from the vault.

 Still, picking through the program, it wasn’t hard to find material that made coming from the other side of the planet worthwhile.

Book-ending the days with their beautiful sharp copies of  twenties animation (Felix, Koko and the already slap dash Terry Toons) was always welcome.

It was four decades since I’d seen Alf Sjöberg’s first movie Den Starkaste /The Strongest, a Tale from the Arctic Ocean and it was re-assuring to find it as imposing as I’d remembered. In an environment  where control of the sealing waters goes to the strongest, sailor become farm hand become marksman Sivert Brækemo has to assert his claim to the contested rifle, the position of gunner and the retiring captain’s daughter, in the middle of clambering round the real ice flows, where they filmed. Attention is riveted. Hard to relate it’s Polar realism with the director’s great, later Strindberg films, beyond the authority he already showed.  This one should have been circulating to acclaim for the last seventy years.

Hanson in a Swedish Richard III
Most intriguing among Molander’s films was the 1928 Synd, which already had the noir elements of the director’s 1938 Ingrid Bergman film En kvinnas ansikte/ A Woman’s Face. The cast is stellar. Lars Hanson, back from Hollywood, Elissa Landi (now we all remember her in Sign of the Cross and the Donat Count of Monte Christo) and Gina Manés, then the great, vampy star of French cinema, Josephine in Gance’s Napoléon and the object of desire in Duvivier’s brilliant Tete d’un homme.
Gina Manes
 They provided an imposing triangle. Studio staging around writer Hanson’s flat and in the theatre, restaurant and police station is deftly menacing and the script (again derived from Strindberg), while being simple minded romance melodrama, does keep attention.


We got a great, unfamiliar 1928 Ivan Mozjoukine (right) adventure Der Gehehime Kurier, a purport version of “Le Rouge & le Noir”, with Ivan, also back from Hollywood with his new nose. It was agreed that he came across as more like Julien Sorel’s dad than the Stendhal protagonist but it wasn’t long before he was out-fencing the snobby officers, whose company he wanted to join, making out with a much more animated Lil Dagover in her unwrapping wrap and outwitting inn keeper’s daughter Valeria Blanka, trying to seduce him away from delivering the crucial dispatch. He leaves the girl naked, staring after him dazzled. It looks like Ivan/Julien has made it big time but his dreams are snatched away and, on the steps of the Cathedral, he avenges himself. Our hero’s trial arouses the revolutionaries led by Agnes Petersen, his aristocrat lover, to storm the barricades.

This is delivered with the best silent movie relish by one Gennaro Righelli, a long serving Italian director, of whose work only the amiable De Sica-Anna Magnani Abbasso la ricchezza! ever came my way. He must have felt a connection with the material, having a 1947 do-over with Rossano Brazzi as  Il corriere del re.

Pordenone is at its best retrieving the output of luminous silent star talents like Veidt and Dagover, Mozjoukine and Dita Parlo, Willy Fritsch and Lillian Harvey, whose filmographies are bulging with intriguing work that has dropped from view. Throw in Hollywood celebrities like Thomas Meighan, Milton Sills or John Barrymore. Whether these can be had is another question but it's always possible that the reason we never see, say, Alan Crosland’s Under the Red Robe, is that no one is looking for it.

Whatever way you hack it, Pordenone's now been going for thirty two years and it's still finding superior wok and people who value it. That's pretty impressive.



Barrie Pattison 2013







Wednesday, 6 November 2013

Italian Film Festival in Sydney



ITALIAN Film Festival 2013.


The 2013 Italian movie event proved pretty lively, though my viewing may not be a good test. At twice Palace’s normal concession price, I became very selective.

The alarming thing is that after a few weeks in Italy itself,  picking through the stock in their neighborhood DVD stores, this was disturbing. Watching the Italian material the Australian National Weeks, art cinemas and SBS provide doesn’t mean we catch up the slack. Anyone in here is just falling further behind on both the historical material and new releases.

Of course we lose out on their great comics. Aldo, Giacomo and Giovanni or Leonardo Pieraccione have now joined Adriano Celantano and Lino Banfi on the “who?” list. The trio are five films ahead of me and Leonardo has brought out nine (!) since we last saw him on a local screen. However even the heavyweights, who used to be the backbone of festivals, are thinly represented. Pupi Avarti did get a showing with his so nice Il cuore grande delle ragazze a couple of years back but that’s the one of his last ten films to appear. Even the great Ettore Scola has a five film backlog.

On the other side, we get offered the amiable Alessandro Siani’s life’s work, including
another best friend spot in La Peggior Settimane della Ma Vita and his directorial debut,
the perverse Cinderella fantasy Il Principo Abusivo, which is better when Siani and
Christian De Sica do role reversal. The chancellor, showing our drop out hero court
etiquette, to make plausible his fake courtship of Princess and Gwyneth Paltrow lookalike
Sara Felberbaum, starts  getting training in the common touch from Alesandro.

The basis of selection for the current season defies any logic I can apply to it. La Grande
Bellezza
from the Paolo Sorentino - Tony Sevillo combination, who did the accomplished
2008 Il divo: La spettacolare vita di Giulio Andreotti, has been singled out most places but proves to be a ponderous twenty first Century Dolce Vita, with a few startling moments spacing it’s 142 minutes. Sorentino’s musical interludes again get attention but do we need the rest? Couldn’t the imposing Servillo have been used on something better?

He was doing an Eduardo de Filippo play while I was in Verona. Only the language barrier kept me out.

The Festival’s Viaggo Solo/ A Five Star Life was a less engaged version of the kind of film they used to mount round Annie Giradot. In middle age, Margherita Buy is a commanding presence and her life as a “mystery guest”, doing accreditation reports for the hotels association, provides a chance for great international scenics (complete with superimposed temperature captions) and some convincing encounters with old flame Stefano Accorsi or her sister Fabrizia Sacchi and family. It all rounds out nicely in the meeting with Mike Leigh star TV guru Leslie Manville.

Particularly choice was Una Famiglia Perfetta/ Perfect Family an even better transcription of the 1996 Spanish Familia, with Sergio Castelitto making his own the Juan Luis Galiardo role, the patriarch who buys a (now Xmas) family gathering. Castelitto is in his element and the unfamiliar support, often with twenty years on their resumés, are spot on.

More challenging and grimmer was Gli Equilibristi /Balancing Act a convincing account
Gli equilibristi - Valerio Mastandrea & Anita B
of disgraced father Valerio Mastandrea’s attempt to meet his commitments, causing his decline into abject poverty, though he still has a job, car and cell ‘phone. Barbora
Bobulova and young Rosabell Laurenti Sellers register in an excellent cast.

Miele/ Honey is the first film as director of star Valerio Golino, who has been great in so
many US and Italian films. The

sparse, high seriousness impresses in this account of
assisted suicide. Jasmine Trinka scores as the anguished lead.

Masimiliano Bruno’s  Viva L’Italia was also a class act - political burlesque in the
manner of Moretti’s The Caiman, with a great cast. Michele Placido, a terrific performer
since the seventies, comes on as an opportunist politician, whose break down leaves him
incapable of his usual deceits. Rather than re-play Liar Liar or Nothing But the Truth, the
film centres on his family, represented by the star power of Alessandro Gassman, Raul
Bova and Ambra Anglioni, getting a great innings as a stuttering soapie star who had
parts because of her father. They manage the difficult shift from farce to rather winning
character comedy.

Throw in La Peggior Settimana della Mia Vita / The Worst Week of My Life, a nice
knockabout showcasing comedian Fabio de Luigi (also excellent in Masimo Vernier’s
Aspirante vedovo), where the star goes from calamity to disaster in the week before his
wedding to appealing Cristiana Capotondi. Chiara Francini gets a particularly good
innings as the co worker who claims to be carrying his baby two years after his night with
her. The ambivalent ending resonates.

Also saw the rather disappointing Ben Hur, centering on injured stunt man Nicola Pistoia,
reduced to posing for photos in a gladiator suit with tourists outside the Coliseum. It
might have been expected to echo Álex de la Iglesia’s great 800 Bullets which covered
the pasta western crews down to doing Almaria’s visitor show, but serves up something
much less involving.

I could probably have landed on the same number of  items of interest among the ones I
let go but that’s the penalty for getting all your Italian movies in one over priced season a
year. How nice it would have been to be able to recognise all the talent players, who front
these films. After this lot or items like Daniele Lucetti’s current Anni felici / Those Happy Years , you can’t but feel Italian movies deserve our attention more than the art house and multiplex films we are served.

Well, that’s what happens when heavies wipe out the National Film Theater and won’t
give it back for three decades.




   

Monday, 28 January 2013

UNDER THE BEDS.



UNDER THE BEDS.


 Well I wasn’t around when Melbourne’s Coldicutt and Mathews were crossing swords with ASIO in the forties but I was there for the Great Red Scares of the 1950s.
 
Up to that point, the film people had all got along quite nicely in a we-all-did-in-Hitler-together atmosphere. The church groups ran BATTLESHIP POTEMKIN and the leftists put on MONSIEUR VINCENT - on the principle that they were works of art. They’d go to one another’s Xmas parties.

The problem was that everyone showed the same forty odd  films. I kept  on seeing John
Huston’s WE WERE STRANGERS, BERLIN OLYMPICS, SPANISH EARTH or BACK OF BEYOND. The D.of I.’s THE QUEEN IN AUSTRALIA got a run because it was so much nicer than the (American owned) Movietone version. The British Film Institute publications and Penguin Film Review were Holy Writ,  even though a lot of their revered material - include nearly all Luchino Visconti or Luis Buñuel - hadn’t been aired here. Discussions centered on whether Eisenstein or Pudovkin was the true artist.
This was a bad fit with my own experience of cinema, derived from Newtown Majestic, The Capitol and judicious use of the kiddie matinees which had provided me with NANOOK OF THE NORTH, De Mille’s CRUSADES, the Fleischer Brothers and METROPOLIS. To these the Savoy added Jean Cocteau and Martine Carole. The Americans, with their veneration of David Wark Griffith and 1939 Hollywood seemed a better proposition.
I was as curious as the next man about the leftist material - the Russian SADKO, the American NATIVE LAND and SALT OF THE EARTH, the Chinese BUTTERFLY LOVERS on their new colour stock that was near impossible to splice. To this day I follow the career of Czechoslovakia’s Otaka Vavra with some fascination. However my interest quickened when John Howard Reid retaliated, showing a near complete Elia Kazan retrospective.
The big score seemed to be the old Hollywood movies on which the often battered Sixteen Millimetre prints looked like they would be our last glimpse of many notable titles - Litvak’s BLUES IN THE NIGHT, George Stevens’ MORE THE MERRIER, Boleslawski’s THEODORA GOES WILD. Bad guess actually. Though these never made it back onto projection screens, the new commercial TV companies bought three digit studio packages, which turned Australia into the best place in the world to see the early Hollywood sound film for a decade, even if  Nancy Carroll and John Gilbert were still ignored by the old Sight & Sound readers, soon joined by the newly minted Sam Fuller fans.
Then as now, there were unfamiliar movies tucked away in under-used libraries. One had a hundred or so US silents, many printed on the original tinted stock from the camera negatives – Sidney Franklin’s THE SAFETY CURTAIN, William S. Hart in RETURN OF DRAW EGAN and the William Seiter - Lewis Milestone LISTEN LESTER. Along with, these you could find Gallone’s ULTRIMI GIORNI DI POMPEII or the short films of William Cameron-Menzies, Danielle Darrieux in RETOUR À L’AUBE and a raft of intriguing British material - Conrad Veidt in UNDER THE RED ROBE, the Powell-Pressberger SMALL BACK ROOM, Doug Fairbanks in ACCUSED, Cary Grant in THE AMAZING QUEST or George Arliss in DR. SYN.
Some of these proved to be unique and would never be seen again.

All this changed brutally. As well as the ASIO spook activity, there was a fear of the Communist world in the local high art circles.  Many professionals were alarmed at the humiliation of creative people like Eisenstein and Shostakovich in Russia, where portraits painter teams, combining on group canvases of receptions, were considered to be the peak of Socialist Realism.
Whether Eisenstein was any less humiliated in Hollywood is speculative but concern over control passing from artists to doctrinaire bureaucrats is legitimate. The deterioration of the Czech film, after the ascent of the Communists, had been remarkable and, closer to our time, Mainland ownership of Hong Kong film has dropped it from being the world’s number two movie industry to nowhere. It didn’t take long for a mixture of Political Correctness and salaried bureaucracy to stifle the emerging seventies Australian film, either.
In the fifties Sydney, Neil Gunther’s Film User’s association set itself up to steer things away from the ubiquitous Soviet block material and Andrea, a now forgotten tabloid columnist, ran an item about finding a flier for the Sydney Film Society’s screening of a (shock horror) Polish film about YOUNG CHOPIN, on her seat at the Sydney Film Festival. “Non political, non sectarian I wonder", she fumed.
 This was a trigger for much name calling and finger pointing. Selecting the East German film DER RAT DER GÖTTER caused a split in the Sydney Film Society, with Robert J. Connell’s dissident faction scurrying off to start their own screenings at Anzac House.
I watched all this with some concern. I’d had good nights with Eddie Allison’s Realists or the Kings Cross Film Club, as well as the Catholics - not to mention the Christian Anti-Communist League, who had access to a killer library, including Project 20:  NIGHTMARE IN RED and Stuart Rosenberg’s QUESTION 7. I’d found them all amiable people.
The declining Sydney Film Society was a particular concern. The oldest group in the country, it had Stanley Hawes, John Heyer, Bruce Beresford and radio writer Colin Free on its board at different times. The Society had imported  INTOLERANCE and it was the one group to run regular, open previews of possible material.
I signed on, doing donkey work. To the standards (LAURA, JOURNAL D’UN CURÉ DE COMPAGNE, POTEMKIN with the then new Kruikov score) we added in some of the neglected films and continued to space this with politically sensitive material. The audience seemed as willing to be amused by Stalin as the comic sidekick in LENIN V OKTABRE,  as they were prepared to ponder the clerical anguish in Harald Braun’s NACHTWACHE  (Lutherans and Catholics combine post WW2). I premiered the Lindsay Anderson MARCH TO ALDERMASTON (good cause - dreary film) but never could get Clouzot’s MANON (founding Israel) or Mike Curtiz’ SANTA FE TRAIL (nasty abolitionists) into the schedule.
The Sydney Film Society did manage to draw respectable numbers for unfamiliar work, organised joint showings with other groups, created translations of items like Helmut Kaütner’s FILM OHNE TITEL, did 35mm. screenings on MÄDCHEN IN UNIFORM and the Germi-Fellini CAMINO DELLA SPERANZA. They utilised collectors, with Don Harkness’ copy of the Syd Chaplin CHARLEY’S AUNT a hit. I suspect it was the world’s first such group to run any Anthony Mann.
Screenings became more frequent and numbers went back up, though never reaching those of the pre-confrontation days and it outlasted the disintegration of the breakaway group by many years.
These disputes were never really about politics. They were about personalities. The Anzac House lot themselves ran DER RAT DER GÖTTER - couldn’t find enough German films without it. The Sydney University Film Group dug its heels in against Film Users but refused to support the Sydney Film Society over the even more obvious red baiting.

It all became so acrimonious that many of the people, whose efforts and good will the film societies had coasted on, just went home to their TVs, never to return. It meant an end to the days of a the movement as a lobby of any consequence, though it had generated the Festivals, the AFI and a few of the country’s more influential critics. The Sydney specialist film scene’s debilitated condition caused the center to shift to Victoria, where film society types were more interested in the profits of the Melbourne Film Festival. They even still sustain a Clayton’s Cinémathèque there.
Ten years after, at the height of the Vietnam war, Keith Gow joked about the effect his work with warfies' film unit would have on his Film Australia security clearance and their unit covering L.B.J.’s motorcade said they filmed one of the staff throwing themselves in front of the Presidential limo. No one cared. That was the scariest part of all.

EPILOGUE: David Stratton’s Sydney Film Festival inherited a movie called SONS & DAUGHTERS, about the youth movement ‘Nam protest in San Francisco. Remembering the Andrea incident, the recently bearded director shifted from foot to foot. Everyone over twenty five stormed out in the first ten minutes and the sympathiser audience remaining cheered when Jane Fonda came on, cheered when Joan Baez came on, cheered when the Hells Angels came on - and suddenly went quiet, realising that the Angels were against the protesters and for the war. (“This is America!”) The rest of the film played in silence.
It’s not easy being trendy.


Barrie Pattison – this article first appeared in Australian Film Files.

Sunday, 27 January 2013

Michael Winner.

The System : Reed and David Hemmings (standing) 

At his zenith, Michael Winner upset one of the mix technicians, who turned round and said “Michael, why are you such a shit?” Winner looked back and offered “In fifty years people will think of me as a nice guy, George - and no one will remember who you were.”

Well, now Michael Winner has died and he is being recalled with affection and the only reason we remember George is that he once sassed Michael Winner.

It’s hard to make the connection between the flamboyant Young Turk of British movies and the TV food critic personality, who published an autobiography with a picture of himself with the Queen at his National Police Memorial.

Winner’s path was not an unfamiliar one. He came from Jewish wealth and privilege (Michael Apted claimed to be the first British working class movie director - which is rough on Ken Hughes, who started as re-wind boy at Harrow Road Prince of Wales) and having an MA, he used that background to by-pass the usual process of clambering up through the ranks of TV or establishing as a celebrity writer, actor or Theater personality.  He put family money into productions if they let him direct and plowed through awful shorts, quota crime features, pop movies, a nudist flick and a Mikado fresh out of copyright. He was the youngest director in British movies.

Michael Winner.
However something happened with Michael Winner. Starting with West 11, his films connected. The Carry Ons and Naval Sagas were already faltering but Winner’s films were more involving than the new working class realist cinema the critics were celebrating. With The System, where Winner first fielded Hammer horror star Oliver Reed, writer Peter Draper and cameraman Nicholas Roeg, he was offering a picture of a Britain not divided by class or crippled by memories of a faded empire but more fundamentally dysfunctional. In his films, Reed might organise the seduction of Brighton tourist crumpet, steal the Crown Jewels or take to his Ad Agency desk with an ax, like the one Michael Gothard uses in Herostratus,  but he will be engulfed by self-loathing by the ending. The military of his You Must Be Joking or the Oxford Dons of  Winner’s masterpiece I’ll Never Forget Whats’is Name are treated with equal contempt. For these films and this statement to come out of the Britain of the 1960s was arresting.

Winner’s similarly disenchanted The Games curiously was one of the English trio that sparked the rise of Australian filming - along with Walkabout and Wake in Fright.

For the main part, he didn’t make it into the NFT, the Classic Repetory Cinemas or Hampstead Everyman, though London’s Films and Filming, where Winner had written and whose editor was alleged to be on a payback to include his name in every issue, did take him with a deserved seriousness. It was only in the ‘States that his work was noted.

Came 1969 and the British film industry went into arrest and its established talent headed for Hollywood or washed about in dodgy Euro Trash movies.

However Michael Winner proved the most adaptable of the British exports, to the dismay of his admirers watching Stone Killers or The Sentinel. The director wasn’t worried, with an association with the Go Go boys at Globus, or Burt Lancaster and Charles Bronson to keep him busy. Challenged on his new profile, he commented that he was genuinely disturbed that British film, which accounted for much of his best work, had disintegrated.

In this period he made one of the most alarming films of all time, his Bronson thriller  Death Wish, spun off the subway vigilante incident.

 There was more to come in movies - Lancaster and Alain Delon together, Mitchum as Philip Marlowe, Anthony Hopkins in Alan Aykbourn - to add to his work with Orson Welles and Marlon Brando - but this was muted for the film maker who had come closest to being a Shakespearean fool telling us about a society where  “Most friendship is feigning, most loving mere folly.”

The Michael Winner who boasted about blowing up cars in Piccadilly circus and commissioned a giant hoarding that said “Michael Winner hates self publicity” was more endearing and more fun than the jolly TV celebrity of his last years. 

Whether, as Michael Caine suggested, there was a sensitive artist hidden behind the bombast, there was certainly a unique talent.











Barrie Pattison 2013