
Goddamn you, Gaspar.
Your work is often so rife with childish ideas and cheap provocation, it can be exhausting trying to appreciate your singular formal precision. I mean, there's no one else making narrative cinema right now that comes close to your direct engagement with the psychotropic wing ...
2019-01-29 13:40:07 +0000 UTC
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What a joy. It's strange how few Rivette films I've actually seen, when compared with the amount of pleasure the ones I've seen have given me. With the exception of Celine and Julie Go Boating, I have only seen late Rivette thus far, those being his films from Secret Defense onward. Y...
2019-01-28 21:37:16 +0000 UTC
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Eli, Eli, Lema Sabachthani? (Shinji Aoyama, 2005)
I'll admit, I don't quite get why Shinji Aoyama fell out of fashion. Perhaps it's a case of gaining popularity with a non-representative entry, creating expectations that were destined to be disappointed. As wonderful as it is,
2019-01-27 19:10:04 +0000 UTC
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This is a somewhat straightforward documentary from the Bulgarian filmmaker Paounov, whose previous work was a bit more on the essayistic side. Georgi and the Butterflies and especially The Mosquito Problem and Other Stories had a certain ideational sprawl to them that Walking On ...
2019-01-26 16:57:44 +0000 UTC
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By almost anyone's reckoning, the 2000 Cannes Film Festival was in-SANE. In an average year, you're lucky to have maybe three, possibly four truly great films at the festival. But for whatever reason -- solid funding? pre-millennium tension? genetically modified Nespresso? -- the 2000 fest was just wal...
2019-01-25 18:33:48 +0000 UTC
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My viewing of Mekas's films has been a bit of a spotty patchwork. Of the confirmed masterworks, I have only just seen Reminiscences in full a few days ago, although I have seen large portions of it over the years. The same goes for Mekas's two key diary films, Walden and Lost Lost...
2019-01-24 23:01:27 +0000 UTC
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There's a particular caveat one finds in David Bordwell's writing, one that always gives me pause. Bordwell observes that critics and theorists frequently trumpet this or that film as having some extraordinary aspect, without ever demonstrating that they fully comprehend the ordinary way that films of ...
2019-01-21 02:28:18 +0000 UTC
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So the people have spoken. Thanks for your help.
As the great Nictate might put it, "Come at me, Daisy Kenyon."
2019-01-20 15:43:28 +0000 UTC
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A few things need to be gotten out of the way. First, I'm not sure why this got such a horrid reception at Cannes. It's entirely possible, likely even, that the decades of legendarily plagued production on this film have created an aura of doom around it, or conversely, the sense that, now that it's fi...
2019-01-20 03:57:14 +0000 UTC
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I can't decide what I should watch next. Help me out, folks. Listed in no particular order:
2019-01-20 03:15:15 +0000 UTC
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For a film I really don't like, I have quite a lot of sympathy for Touch Me Not. It's a film that aims to explore the hidden depths of the erotic imagination, and how women in particular become repressed in their desires by social pressures and gender expectations. More than this, director Adi...
2019-01-19 19:38:22 +0000 UTC
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Marcel Hanoun's Une simple histoire is a film more commonly heard about in vague whispers than addressed head-on. This is because its maker, Marcel Hanoun, remained a marginal figure in the French New Wave, despite the fact that it was he -- not Resnais or Rivette, and certainly not Godard -- ...
2019-01-18 19:12:15 +0000 UTC
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It's often a dicey proposition when a highly experimental filmmaker aims for greater accessibility. But it doesn't have to be, and Rojo, the third feature from Argentina's Benjamín Naishtat, proves that a radical artist can maintain his unique sensibility even while aiming for a wider audienc...
2019-01-15 03:08:22 +0000 UTC
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As hard as it may be to believe, even in 2019 there remains a significant dearth of films, television shows, or really any form of media in which trans folks are telling their own stories. This is why a show like "Pose," or the music of Sarah Jane Grace and Against Me!, is so revolutionary, even while ...
2019-01-13 18:07:51 +0000 UTC
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I know it's been awhile since I've posted any new material. My apologies. But the spring semester begins Monday and I've been prepping my five (!) courses. So not much in the way of movie watching. However, look for some new stuff soon! And thanks for your patience.
2019-01-12 22:45:55 +0000 UTC
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Based on the three films of Wang's I've seen, he is a perfectly solid director of unmemorable films. Granted, it must be difficult being the Phil Ochs of the 6th Generation with Jia is your Bob Dylan. But, to be fair, I have not seen Wang's debut film The Days which, I have it on good authorit...
2019-01-06 21:08:25 +0000 UTC
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Considerably more structured than You and the Night but no less decadent, Yann Gonzalez's latest ode to being queer, filthy and fabulous is centered around an ultra-low-budget gay porn production house. This allows Gonzalez to exercise his jones for Fassbinderian production design and on-set b...
2019-01-06 02:10:16 +0000 UTC
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No flies on Stephen Broomer! In addition to having made one of the most retro-poetic experimental films of the year, Fountains of Paris, he also completed a featurette of just over one hour, a film that bombards the senses with color and light and the occasional disturbing vision. The film is ...
2019-01-05 03:57:09 +0000 UTC
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Ashamed as I am to admit it, I have always liked the idea of Ben Wheatley more that I've liked his films. He is just the sort of shot in the arm that the British film industry needs, a young independent upstart with a sensibility that is equal parts arthouse and grindhouse, unafraid to work in...
2019-01-04 01:37:50 +0000 UTC
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In my recent appearance on Craig Lindsey's "The Sour Hour," I made mention of the fact that my education in film history was, to put it lightly, spotty and incomplete. That's because I never studied cinema in a formal way. My academic training as an undergrad was mostly in art history, and my later gra...
2019-01-03 12:16:23 +0000 UTC
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Sometimes you've just got to try the shitty soup.
2019-01-01 20:19:17 +0000 UTC
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God Straightens Legs (Joële Walinga, Canada)
This is a potent medium-length documentary portrait of a woman named Renée, who we gradually learn is afflicted with cancer. She cannot walk, which may or may not be a side effect of the cancer -- we cannot really tell (or at least I...
2018-12-31 18:03:25 +0000 UTC
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As many reviewers have already noted, the poignancy of Christophe Honoré's new film comes not so much from its depiction of the AIDS crisis and the losses taken during that period. It's the way that Sorry Angel shows a group of men, of various ages, struggling to live something approximating ...
2018-12-30 22:55:53 +0000 UTC
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Without the context of understanding that 1990 was the year that democracy returned to Chile after 17 years of dictatorship, the larger import of Too Late to Die Young is rather illegible. This isn't to say that the goings-on don't have inherent interest value in themselves. But there is clear...
2018-12-28 21:58:52 +0000 UTC
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30. The Other Side of the Wind (Orson Welles, U.S. / France, 1976/2018)

29. Commute (Vincent Grenier, U.S. / Canada)
2018-12-26 18:39:04 +0000 UTC
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Asako I & II (Ryûsuke Hamaguchi, 2018)
I would have expected to be providing a full-length entry on this one, but the truth is, it's surprisingly thin. Now to be fair, not every film is going to match the depth and expansiveness of Happy Hour. But in a lot of ways, ...
2018-12-26 02:28:33 +0000 UTC
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Nuri Bilge Ceylan is a filmmaker who generates highly original films that nevertheless wear their influences on their sleeve. Distant, the film that brought him to international attention, featured a comic scene in which the protagonist puts on a tape of Tarkovsky's Stalker in order t...
2018-12-23 19:06:16 +0000 UTC
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Ordinarily, a sense of ambivalence would indicate that a film-text was richer than usual and had more to offer its viewers. But in the case of Monrovia, Indiana, I think it just points of an overall confusion. Wiseman's worst film in a long time, Monrovia is both painfully one-note an...
2018-12-22 17:13:12 +0000 UTC
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...I am the guest on the newest edition of the great Peter Labuza's podcast, The Cinephiliacs. Peter and I talk about movies, politics, my son Jace, and Su Friedrich's Sink or Swim. Check it out! Oh, and that's about what I look like.
2018-12-20 16:40:11 +0000 UTC
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1. What if Africa were the center of the world? I mean, it's the cradle of humanity. So why not an economic superpower? Black Panther imagines a scenario in which a nation has the technological wherewithal to defeat colonialism, or at least ignore it.
2. What if a summer blockbuster were also a...
2018-12-19 05:25:23 +0000 UTC
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