Friday, April 20, 2012

Le retour de Bresson


The return of the traveling Robert Bresson retrospective to New York is most welcome. The touring series, which began at Film Forum in January and played several other cities (including Chicago, where my cinephile friend Dan caught The Devil, Probably at my urging), is now comfortably ensconced at the less crowded BAM Cinematek in Brooklyn. At last night's screening of Mouchette I was particularly focused on Bresson's extraordinary sound design. The climactic suicide scene gains much of its tragic power from the alternation of the sound of nearby gunshots with an eerie church bell that periodically rings in the distance.

After the film I bought James Quandt's revised, 700-page edition of Robert Bresson at the concession stand, trying not to get greasy popcorn butter on the cover. The first piece I read in the book is a wonderful photo-essay by Mark Rappaport which discusses the homoeroticism of Pickpocket and compares it to other films of the period like The Wrong Man and The Killing. Will I get sick of reading about Bresson after 700 pages? I think he is one filmmaker whose work remains inexhaustible.

Wednesday, April 4, 2012

New Directors/New Films

 Las Acacias

Neighboring Sounds


Porfirio


I saw only three films at this year's edition of New Directors/New Films, all from Latin America. Pablo Giorgelli's Las Acacias, from Argentina, Kleber Mendonça Filho's Neighboring Sounds, from Brazil, and Alejandro Landes's Porfirio, from Colombia, each reveal a high degree of formal and narrative assurance for beginning filmmakers. Las Acacias and Porfirio are moving examples of what J. Hoberman calls "situation documentary," blending a loosely-structured narrative with elements of documentary, somewhat in the manner of Lisandro Alonso (particularly evident in the opening woodcutting sequence of Las Acacias).

Neighboring Sounds is notable for its superb sound mix, its dark sense of humor and the escalating tension of its interconnected dramas about sex, petty crime, violence and class relations in the city of Recife. It marks the arrival of a major new director.