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Ouvertures (The Living and the Dead Ensemble, 2019)

The Martinican writer Édouard Glissant, whose play Monsieur Toussaint forms the core of this film, wrote of the "right to opacity." In his theoretical work Poetics of Relation, Glissant explained that a subaltern aesthetics needed to claim for itself a space of incomprehensibility, u...

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The Last City (Heinz Emigholz, 2020)

As I briefly mentioned on Letterboxd, I wasn't really prepared for The Last City, which as far as I am concerned is Heinz Emigholz's "Hal Hartley film." Think about it. Much like Hartley's Flirt or The Girl From Monday, The Last City is a highly stylized, semi-low bu...

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The Works and Days (of Tayoko Shiojiri in the Shiotani Basin) (Anders Edström and C.W. Winter, 2020)

There is an essential monumentality that is sealed into the very making of this film, fired like clay, such that it seems designed to flout the typical standards with which we evaluate cinematic objects. It is not just the daunting length of The Works and Days, although at eight hours, it is a...

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Dear GOP: Take the L

Just a brief word on the Rose Garden Massacre super-spreader event, and the illness of President Trump and others.

I have seen all sorts of things on social media, mostly written in desperation, by Republican loyalists. A lot of them are conspiracy theories, people wondering why no Democrats have...

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Beginning (Dea Kulumbegashvili, 2020)

This is a film that is probably less suited to home streaming than anything else I've seen so far in 2020. It really requires the complete, enveloping atmosphere of the darkened cinema to fully accomplish what its maker sets out to do. I myself came away from watching Beginning with a deep amb...

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I Carry You With Me (Heidi Ewing, 2020)

I turned this off after 48 minutes.

I didn't realize until after I stopped watching (and checked in with Letterboxd, where I saw Steve Erickson's comments) that Ewing has been making documentaries for years with filmmaking partner Rachel Grady. Is this provenance part of the problem? Hard to say;...

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Her Name Was Europa (Anja Dornieden & Juan David González Monroy, 2020)

Here's a hypothesis. Just as Stan Brakhage was the defining figure in experimental film for a particular generation, and Hollis Frampton sort of became the dominant figure for the subsequent generation, we are going to look back at this period in avant-garde cinema and determine that, despite the obvio...

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My Mexican Bretzel (Nuria Giménez, 2019)

[SPOILERS. BUT FRANKLY I WISH SOMEONE HAD SPOILED IT FOR ME.]

As was the case with The Year of the Discovery, My Mexican Bretzel purports to be a reexamination of a particular period of time based on the recorded materi...

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Mangrove (Steve McQueen, 2020)

Based on the rapturous reviews in the trades, we can probably expect to see Mangrove staking out some significant real estate in this year's admittedly-unorthodox Oscar race. That's fine; it's certainly well directed, and although it suffers from a script that functions squarely within Loach-L...

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Nomadland (Chloé Zhao, 2020)

My lovely wife Jen, who is, shall we say, "cinema adjacent," came in and out while I was watching Nomadland, and after it was over, she said flatly, "seems like that should've been a Kelly Reichardt film." And, well, she's not wrong. As much as I admired The Rider, I was concerned abo...

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Isabella (Matías Piñeiro, 2020)

A consensus seems to be building that Isabella is a bit of a disappointment from Pineiro. I'll have to disagree, although I certainly see that it represents a somewhat different path for this filmmaker whose work has been thus far marked by an almost modular consistency. Several years ago, I m...

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The Human Voice (Pedro Almodóvar, 2020)

As it happens, I was tasked with writing the catalogue blurb for the Viennale for this one. Here's what I came up with:

"Working primarily in English for the first time, Pedro Almodóvar adapts Jean Cocteau’s one-act play about a woman on one end of a telephone call, gradually falling apart as ...

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The Year of the Discovery (Luis López Carrasco, 2020)

One of the most undeniably impressive films of 2020, The Year of the Discovery is also one of the most frustrating. A fiction / documentary hybrid, or perhaps more properly, a creation of a supporting document for an event whose traces have all but evaporated, The Year of the Discovery View Post

Slow Machine (Joe DeNardo and Paul Felten, 2020)

A fascinating first effort, Slow Machine belongs to a grand tradition of highly ambitious American independent cinema whose reach exceeds its grasp. That's not necessarily a bad thing, and will be closely watching to see what this team does next. But I worry, because projects this unusual and ...

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The Plastic House (Allison Chhorn, 2019)

Despite its obvious third-person perspective, this is probably the Currents feature I've seen that comes closest to the intensely personal first-person cinema that we've tended to associate with the avant-garde for many years. With its opening shots depicting what appear to be the locations of the deat...

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There Are Not Thirty-Six Ways of Showing a Man Getting On a Horse (Nicolás Zukerfeld, 2020)

Well, like it or not, the "supercut" is now officially a film genre. This means we're going to be seeing a lot more of these found-footage slice-and-dice efforts devoted to all manner of themes -- internet images of Native peoples (Of the North), cinematic depictions of the heavens (★), and ...

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Fauna (Nicolás Pereda, 2020)

Pereda, now on this ninth feature, seems like a director who should have made the leap to Main Slate status by this point. This year, in particular, Pereda is joined in NYFF by two filmmakers whose work his superficially resembles -- Tsai Ming-liang and Mathías Piñeiro. Like those two, Pereda has mad...

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The Lobby (Heinz Emigholz, 2020)

It's weird. Streetscapes [Dialogue] was such a tonic precisely because, after so many years of silently walking us through some of the world's most important buildings, Emigholz suddenly burst forth with a million ideas about the world, the self, human consciousness, sexuality, cinema, the wor...

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The Inheritance (Ephraim Asili, 2020)

I'm actually a bit envious of those viewers for whom the righteous glory of The Inheritance appears to be coming out of nowhere. This often when an experimental filmmaker crosses the threshold and enters slightly more accessible territory, but so often the forms and ideas that made that artist...

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A Potentiality (Dana Berman Duff, 2020)

I wanted to take a quick break from NYFF-mania, and so I thought I'd check in with an experimental film that wasn't programmed by the team, from a maker who has shown at TIFF, Rotterdam, Crossroads, and a number of other prominent showcases. I myself have run hot and cold with Duff's films, particularl...

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NYFF Currents (Short Takes 5)

See You In My Dreams (Shun Ikezoe, 2020)

Neither flesh nor fish, not exactly a narrative short but not particularly avant-garde either. A grainy para-narrative work with shades of Maya Deren (sort of), but a general lack of organization or motility. Images and sounds never assert...

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The Monopoly of Violence (David Defresne, 2020)

At the risk of the sort of hyperbole that rightly gets you put in Critic Jail, I'd love to mail a copy of this film to every citizen in the United States. But then, of course, would that do a damned bit of good? Most of them wouldn't watch it, and a large percentage of it would dismiss it as fake news....

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The Calming (Song Fang, 2020)

This one is getting roundly panned by the NYFFers, and I can understand why. "Tasteful" is being thrown around as a pejorative, and there is indeed a strange despondency to Song's film, like it isn't certain what sort of spell it wants to cast but knows that whatever it is, it doesn't want to break it....

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Gunda (Victor Kossakovsky, 2020)

[SPOILERS, IF YOU DON'T KNOW WHAT HAPPENS TO ANIMALS ON THE FARM...]

At the risk of national stereotyping, Gunda represents one serious case of Russian-style whataboutism. Designed to tug at the tear ducts of the middlebrow arthouse audience, Kossakovsky's film asks us to watch a litter ...

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NYFF Currents (Short Takes 4)

Ekphrasis (Riccardo Giacconi, 2019)

"Ekphrasis" is a term from classical art history, and it means the detailed description of the contents of an image. It was one of the key principles of art writing in Vasari's day since, of course, there were no reproductions to be placed alon...

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Figure Minus Fact (Mary Helena Clark, 2020)

For quite some time now, I've been struggling to come up with some sort of parallel or analogy for the highly evocative, poetic formalism of Mary Helena Clark's films. Clark tends to organize her work in a very capacious fashion, joining together sounds and images that do not have an immediate affinity...

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Her Socialist Smile (John Gianvito, 2020)

In 2007, filmmaker and scholar John Gianvito made Profit Motive and the Whispering Wind, a feature documentary / landscape study that followed a trail of forgotten historical markers and gravesites, tracing a silent testimonial network that told of an often-forgotten, seldom spoken-of leftist ...

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Lovers Rock (Steve McQueen, 2020)

Mostly because I have been focused on the Currents selections, I have not paid a great deal of attention to the Main Slate, at least apart from knowing what's in it. I am not reading reviews, and have mostly avoided synopses, just because I have a lot going on at the moment. I would like to congratulat...

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NYFF Currents (Short Takes 3)

An Arrow Pointing To a Hole (Steve Reinke, 2020)

This is a sufficiently complex work that demands more analysis than I can provide at the moment, unfortunately. I have grown more and more impressed with Reinke as an artist over the past few years, partly because I don't think the...

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The Tango of the Widower and Its Distorting Mirror (Raúl Ruiz and Valeria Sarmiento, 1967/2020)

If The Wandering Soap Opera was analogous to Eyes Wide Shut -- a work that a master had all but completed, that only needed minor technical finishes in order to bring to fruition -- then I'm afraid The Tango of the Widower... is more along the lines of "Free As a Bird" by "Th...

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