Friday, February 25, 2011

New Korean Cinema

Hong Sang-Soo's Hahaha and Lee Chang-Dong's Poetry

A few brief thoughts about two great recent Korean films: Hong's Hahaha reflects his increasing formal mastery, and it's also one of his funniest films. The film is told in complexly interlocking flashbacks told by two narrators who are presented only in black-and-white still photos. Each of their recollections is set off by the sound and the still image of the men toasting each other during a long drinking session.

Lee's Poetry, which I just saw for the second time, has a haunting concluding sequence which draws great emotional force from revisiting locations seen earlier in the film, but now highlighting the absence of some or all of the major characters. This is a motif which runs through some of my favorite films of all time: Antonioni's L'Eclisse, of course, but also Resnais's Muriel (playing this weekend at Museum of the Moving Image) and Richard Linklater's Before Sunrise. I don't know whether Lee was influenced by Antonioni's film in this sequence, but he starts with the structural absence of L'Eclisse's famous conclusion and subtly reverses it by introducing the dead girl, absent throughout the film but suddenly given life through the poetry of the main character.

Wednesday, February 2, 2011

Fritz Lang in Hollywood

The Big Heat
Human Desire 

Film Forum kicked off its indispensable 2-week “Fritz Lang in Hollywood” series last Friday with a great Glenn Ford/Gloria Grahame noir double feature, The Big Heat and Human Desire. I’ve seen both films many times on TV, but neither has ever looked as good as they did in these pristine 35-millimeter prints. I was particularly impressed by Gloria Grahame’s performances in both films, especially by her sympathetic mob mistress to Lee Marvin in The Big Heat. The script is full of classic lines, including her comment to the crooked cop's widow played by Jeanette Nolan, "We're sisters under the mink." Her sacrificial death at the end, cradled in that iconic mink by Glenn Ford as he tries to comfort her in her final moments, moved me as deeply as any noir ending I can recall.

Lang’s expressionistic geometry of paranoia and entrapment, frequently emphasized by overhead shots, is on view in all of his black-and-white Hollywood films, and even in his beautiful color Cinemascope period adventure film, Moonfleet. Another must-see coming next week is his moody, heartbreaking version of the Bonnie and Clyde myth, You Only Live Once.

Tuesday, February 1, 2011

Eternity



I was alerted to this trailer for the new Thai film Eternity by a post on Filipino film blogger Adrian Mendizabal's excellent site, Auditoire. Based on the serenely beautiful long takes in the trailer, this film scheduled for the upcoming Rotterdam Film Festival could be one of the best of 2011.

UPDATE 2/4: Just 3 days after posting this trailer, I learn that Sivaroj Kongsakul's Eternity is one of three new films to win a Tiger Award at Rotterdam. In the words of the jury, "With a great sense of cinematic duration, this film builds its own universe, finding its own pacing, so consistently, to tell its particular story. A film that seems on the surface to be about death but which is really about love, a beautiful and delicate love story."