
This is a fresh start to a year using the monthly-recap format that was adopted halfway through 2008. Before the format of Seen was a jotting down of thoughts on every film on my queue; the trouble with the old idea comes in its sheer volume. There simply was not enough time to complete a mini-review of every movie that I saw. By April of 2008 I had converted to monthly lists that considered my movie queue as a collective.
In the next 11 months my aim is to make those collectives a little meatier than they have been in the past. Many previous films received only a simple mention of their title accompanied by a still image; and while this was an easy way to complete a list of lackluster movies that did not give me much to contemplate (The Incredible Hulk, 2008; Sex and the City, 2008; La Vie en Rose, 2007), it diminished the status of movies that deserved attention and considered thoughts (Advise and Consent, 1962; WALL-E, 2008; Coming Home, 1978; Step Brothers, 2008).
If there is anything to take away from this little film journal, it's that it is a work in progress. I refuse to absolutely resolve to fuller thoughts on all movies--I'm already feeling the constraints of time--but I do promise to try. Especially for the cinematic gems that incite real viewing pleasure.
One note on the contents of the January 2009 movie queue. With the new class I am teaching on Film History (at the U of Chi. Graham School), you will notice an influx in the viewing of early cinema and silent era films. Not only do these screenings alter the usual, that is more contemporary, landscape of the Seen queue, each has served as a fantastic refresh on my perspective of movies overall. Some of these early silent pictures I had not seen in years, displacing my memory of them to what is written in popular film history texts. Seeing them again with fresh eyes turned out to be a real joy and an affirmation of my love for movies then and now. A delightful way to ring in the new year!
Oh, and by partaking in multiple viewings of the same films (in preparation for each week's class, then the in-class screening itself) I watched 30+ whole movies this January. Thank you, 15 second Thomas Edison short films!
The First of the Month
Chungking Express - (1994) - DVD
Seen: Thursday, January 1, 2009

The Secret of My Succe$s - (1987) - DVD
Seen: Saturday, January 3, 2009

But let's take a look at this poster! Okay, downtown New York City skyline circa mid-1980s, so that means Wall Street, subtext: money. Second, a magnificently bloated phallus, the champagne bottle; hands with vampy red-painted nails are wrapped firmly around its shaft, and who is this at the top, riding the wave of ejaculatory discharge? Oh! It's Brantley Foster (Michael J. Fox), the country boy turned cunning businessman in tennies. Male-centric, women-objectifying, money grubbing, sex hungry. And that is all you need to know about this movie. If you ever do watch it, look out for the particularly pornographic closeup of Helen Slater taking a drink at the water fountain. Kind of backpedals on the whole women progressing in the workplace thing.
Mishima: A Life in Four Chapters - (1985) - DVD (new Criterion edition!)
Seen: Saturday, January 3, 2009

Woman Is the Future of Man - (2004) - DVD
Seen: Sunday, January 4, 2009

Bear with me as I try to elucidate this idea more. Looking at the still above, the table is littered with items specific to the characters' national culture, and some that I recognize first-hand: the green liquor bottle and a Pringles potato chip can, respectively. The table itself is like none at which I have ever dined, low to the ground with its characters surrounding it on the floor. There is both symmetry and chaos in this frame. The characters are equally balanced in the shot, but they surround an asymmetrical mess below. I look at my desk at which I write this, the monitor stands in the middle, a lamp at left, a file organizer of similar dimensions at right. But while there is balance with regard to the primary objects atop the desk (like the characters surrounding the dining table in the still shot above) there are papers, books, pens, cords, and more, cluttering the area in between. I guess what I am trying to get at with this humble analysis of space, is simply that Hong Sang-soo's settings look very real and very relatable, to the extent that even the objects that I have never seen or touched before (i.e. the small green liquor bottles) have a sense of importance about them; there is a universality to their mere existence in the frame just as they are, completely unstylized. And that is sort of what it's like to watch a Hong Sang-soo film.
Frost/Nixon - (2008) - Film
Seen: Thursday, January 8, 2009

Anyway, to touch on the movie at hand, Frost/Nixon, I have a few ideas about this movie that primarily concern the question of "why?" I'm currently developing more formal thoughts on this and the greater topic of Nixon, so stay tuned for that. We'll see what happens with it. At the very least I'll post it here for your reading pleasure at a later date.
The Red Shoes - (1948) - DVD
Seen: Saturday, January 10, 2009

Before I watched Powell-Pressburger's ballerina film The Red Shoes (1948) I had one expectation: color, bright, vivid Technicolor, an expectation that it met and exceeded. Its chromatic aesthetics aside, it's a movie whose dance is analogous to the rises and falls of its characters; in other words, it's a story as much as it is a story about dance. Perhaps it does not present you with a display that says it is an exact replication of the day in the life of a dancer, but it describes it subtly enough to satisfy, and then bombards you with a love story as magical as its filmic reconstruction of staged ballet sequences. Mwah!
Milk - (2008) - Film
Seen: Sunday, January 11, 2009

Let's Watch Lumiere!
Seen: Monday, January 12 - Saturday, January 17, 2009

- Workers Leaving the Lumiere Factory
- Baby's Breakfast
- Swimming In The Sea
- Children Digging For Clams
On the same disc are whole swaths of Thomas Edison/W. K. L. Dickson shorts too. Here are the predictable highlights (all released between 1894-1897):

- The Kiss
- Serpentine Dances
- Sandow
- Seminary Girls

And Then There Was Griffith
Seen: Monday, January 12 - Saturday, January 17, 2009

Also from Kino is an equally important and well-put-together DVD of Griffith's Biograph films. Below is a list of those that I watched, and one--A Corner In Wheat--that was screened in class:
- Those Awful Hats (1909)
- A Corner In Wheat (1909)
- The New York Hat (1912)
- The Musketeers of Pig Alley (1912)
And a Picture Diary of the Rest
Silent Clowns
Police - (1916) - DVD
Seen: Monday, January 12 - Saturday, January 17, 2009

Cops - (1922) - DVD
Seen: Monday, January 12 - Saturday January 17, 2009

Silent Ford!
3 Bad Men - (1926) - DVD (from the "Ford at Fox" set! Wow!)
Seen: Sunday, January 18, 2009

Dancing on Air
Swing Time - (1936) - DVD
Seen: Wednesday, January 21, 2009

It's so surreal...
Un Chien andalou - (1929) - DVD
Seen: Friday, January 23 and Saturday, January 24, 2009

MONTAGE!
The Man With A Movie Camera - (1929) - DVD
Seen: Thursday, January 22 and Saturday, January 24, 2009

Somnambulistastic
The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari - (1919, 1920) - DVD
Seen: Friday, January 23 and Saturday, January 24, 2009

Old Story/New Western
The Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford - (2007) - DVD
Seen: Saturday, January 24, 2009

A Biopic Masterwork
Che - (2008) - Film (double-bill roadshow version!)
Seen: Sunday, January 25, 2009

Good Mornin'!
Singin' In The Rain - (1952) - DVD
Seen: Tuesday, January 27 and Wednesday, January 28, 2009

Portraits of the American Land
The Plow That Broke The Plains - (1936) - DVD
Seen: Thursday, January 29 and Saturday, January 31, 2009

Stagecoach - (1939) - DVD
Seen: Wednesday, January 28 and Saturday January 31, 2009

See you at the end of February!
No comments:
Post a Comment