• About
  • Contact
  • Privacy
  • Terms
  • DMCA
  • Sitemap
  • Write For Us
Saturday, February 27, 2021
Daily illinois - USA | News, Sports & Updates Web Magazine
  • Covid-19
  • News
    • All
    • Education
    • Politics
    • Sports
    • World
    Crown prince's actions in Khashoggi killing leave Saudi fund vulnerable, ex-Obama official says

    Crown prince’s actions in Khashoggi killing leave Saudi fund vulnerable, ex-Obama official says

    LeBron to Zlatan: No way I'll ever 'stick to sports'

    LeBron to Zlatan: No way I’ll ever ‘stick to sports’

    Chrishell Stause and Keo Motsepe

    Selling Sunset’s Chrishell Stause slams ex Keo Motsepe ‘playing the victim’

    House passes $1.9 trillion Covid relief bill, sends it to Senate

    House passes $1.9 trillion Covid relief bill, sends it to Senate

    The battle over voting restrictions is playing out nationwide. Arizona Republicans are leading the way

    The battle over voting restrictions is playing out nationwide. Arizona Republicans are leading the way

    Legendary F1 designer Murray names latest car after Lauda

    Legendary F1 designer Murray names latest car after Lauda

    7NEWS.com.au

    Democrats aim to pass virus aid bill

    Sandals sit in the dirt following an attack on a Nigerian school

    Nigeria’s Zamfara school abduction: Hundreds of girls missing

    Black Americans have disproportionately suffered from pollution. It’s time for a new policy.

    Black Americans have disproportionately suffered from pollution. It’s time for a new policy.

    Pelosi mistakenly refers to Wisconsin Sen. Ron Johnson as 'Don Johnson'

    Pelosi mistakenly refers to Wisconsin Sen. Ron Johnson as ‘Don Johnson’

  • Science & Tech
    • All
    • Mobile
    FDA advisors endorse Janssen's single-shot COVID-19 vaccine

    FDA advisors endorse Janssen’s single-shot COVID-19 vaccine

    Facebook apologizes for 'mistake' in threatening to ban 81-year-old woolen pig knitter for hate speech

    Facebook apologizes for ‘mistake’ in threatening to ban 81-year-old woolen pig knitter for hate speech

    How will NASA's Perseverance rover engineers pilot first helicopter on Mars?

    How will NASA’s Perseverance rover engineers pilot first helicopter on Mars?

    Sir David Attenborough narrates the "exhibits" in this AR iPhone app

    Sir David Attenborough narrates the “exhibits” in this AR iPhone app

    There's a secret code in the Mars rover's parachute

    There’s a secret code in the Mars rover’s parachute

    Spotify reveals HiFi tier, 80-country expansion, new exclusive podcasts

    Spotify reveals HiFi tier, 80-country expansion, new exclusive podcasts

    ‘Follow the Sun’ is a new Mac app to automate brightness and color temperature of HomeKit lights - 9to5Mac

    ‘Follow the Sun’ is a new Mac app to automate brightness and color temperature of HomeKit lights – 9to5Mac

    Democrats ask cable and streaming providers about their role in spreading misinformation ahead of Capitol riot

    Democrats ask cable and streaming providers about their role in spreading misinformation ahead of Capitol riot

    Bradley Voytek

    The Brain’s ‘Background Noise’ May Be Meaningful After All

    This Android's under-display selfie camera isn’t great, but it's a sign for future phones

    This Android’s under-display selfie camera isn’t great, but it’s a sign for future phones

  • Entertainment
    • All
    • Gaming
    • Movie
    • Music
    Review: Billie Eilish is an ordinary teen with extraordinary talent in 'The World's a Little Blurry'

    Review: Billie Eilish is an ordinary teen with extraordinary talent in ‘The World’s a Little Blurry’

    Coronavirus in Illinois updates: United Center COVID-19 vaccination site could distribute up to 6,000 doses a day; 2,441 new cases and 55 additional deaths reported

    Coronavirus in Illinois updates: United Center COVID-19 vaccination site could distribute up to 6,000 doses a day; 2,441 new cases and 55 additional deaths reported

    Writer-director Lee Isaac Chung (right) with actors Steven Yeun (left) and Will Patton (center) on the set of "Minari."

    What the controversy over ‘Minari’ says about being American

    Review: Mexico's 'I'm No Longer Here' spans the gap between alienation and connection

    Review: Mexico’s ‘I’m No Longer Here’ spans the gap between alienation and connection

    ACMs shut women out of top country category but say female representation improving

    ACMs shut women out of top country category but say female representation improving

    CPAC organizers begged attendees to wear masks — and got booed

    CPAC organizers begged attendees to wear masks — and got booed

    Gary Oldman, left, and Ben Affleck joined a Hollywood Reporter roundtable on COVID-19 and the movie

    Ben Affleck And Gary Oldman Reflect On The Changing Business Of Moviemaking During COVID-19

    Tobias Ighofose, Founder of BisonPlay

    Meet Tobias Ighofose: Entrepreneur Creating Diverse Mobile Games Inspired By His Daughter

    What’s playing at the drive-in: 'Minari,' 'Tom & Jerry,' a Billie Eilish doc and more

    What’s playing at the drive-in: ‘Minari,’ ‘Tom & Jerry,’ a Billie Eilish doc and more

    Dennis Stroughmatt's Cajun-Creole Trio entertains at Hill Prairie Winery near Oakford this Saturday evening for a Mardi Gras celebration.

    February finals

  • Lifestyle
    • All
    • Fashion
    • Food
    • Travel
    second co. apparel

    The Second Co. Drops Apparel + More Canadian Fashion News

    The inaugural Sunshine & Sunflower Day is happening at Kalbar – March 27, 2021 | Australian Food News

    The inaugural Sunshine & Sunflower Day is happening at Kalbar – March 27, 2021 | Australian Food News

    How did Bad Bunny end up as a snake plant on SNL? The team behind the skit explains

    How did Bad Bunny end up as a snake plant on SNL? The team behind the skit explains

    Demi Lovato shared a post on Instagram written by someone else that called gender reveal events 'transphobic.'

    Demi Lovato shares post claiming gender reveals contribute to transphobia, draws mixed reactions

    20 of the world's best soups

    20 of the world’s best soups

    Brandy, a brown tabby cat, was reunited on Feb. 22 with her owner, Charles, after she went astray for 15 years.

    Man reunited with cat after it vanished 15 years ago: ‘It was very emotional’

    Lady Gaga dognapping: FBI ‘investigating political motives’

    Lady Gaga dognapping: FBI ‘investigating political motives’

    Covid vaccine passports are being considered. And health experts and rights groups are deeply concerned

    Covid vaccine passports are being considered. And health experts and rights groups are deeply concerned

    product image

    32 Reusable Cloth Face Masks You Can Buy Now

    Supplier Catalog - Reiser

    Trends and Challenges in Pet Food and Treat Packaging – Food Industry Executive

34 °f
Chicago
39 ° Sun
28 ° Mon
30 ° Tue
41 ° Wed
No Result
View All Result
Daily illinois - USA | News, Sports & Updates Web Magazine
No Result
View All Result
Home Entertainment Movie

From film’s toughest year, a critic’s favorite discoveries

by Staff Writer
December 13, 2020
in Movie
Reading Time: 8min read
0
From film's toughest year, a critic's favorite discoveries
491
SHARES
1.4k
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter


There’s a moment in Béla Tarr’s 1988 film, “Damnation,” one of many excellent retrospective titles to emerge on virtual screens this year, that I’m tempted to describe as “very 2020.”

Related posts

Review: Mexico's 'I'm No Longer Here' spans the gap between alienation and connection

Review: Mexico’s ‘I’m No Longer Here’ spans the gap between alienation and connection

February 26, 2021
What’s playing at the drive-in: 'Minari,' 'Tom & Jerry,' a Billie Eilish doc and more

What’s playing at the drive-in: ‘Minari,’ ‘Tom & Jerry,’ a Billie Eilish doc and more

February 26, 2021

We are in a mud-soaked Hungarian coal-mining town, awash in gloomy spirits and gloomier weather. Amid a torrential downpour, a broken man clambers up a slope and finds himself face to face with a large, growling dog. Rather than back away, the man drops down on all fours and growls right back, seething and snarling and eventually scaring the poor creature off. The dog is defeated; so is the man, a loser in life and in love. But as is often the case in Tarr’s cinema, although the character’s motives may be specific, his condition is curiously, even banally universal. It’s as though we are all feral animals under the skin, destined to slog our way through a rain-pelted hellscape before tearing one another and ourselves apart.

Happy holidays! In all seriousness, the aptly titled “Damnation,” which was released in a digital 4K restoration back in October and can now be rented on Vimeo, might be just the perfect bleary-eyed, existentially bleak tragicomedy with which to close out this saddest and strangest of recent years. (The film, restored by the Hungarian National Film Institute — Film Archive, is available on demand through Arbelos Films, with a Blu-ray coming in the spring.)

Tarr, 65, notably announced his retirement from filmmaking almost a decade ago (he’s made a couple of documentaries since), but there is something about his films that feels eerily suited to the present moment. At times this Hungarian master has seemed less a filmmaker than an oracle of the seventh art, handing down doom-laden prophecies that just happen to be inscribed in the medium of motion pictures. Tarr’s films can be despairing, but they are also reminders that great art is never truly depressing.

The cultural and commercial apparatus that delivers that art to the world is another story. The pandemic has brought forth a yearlong stream of dispiriting film-industry headlines — mass layoffs across the industry as well as the painful but necessary closure of movie theaters, in some cases permanently. The crisis of distribution and exhibition draws little distinction between the art house and the multiplex, as Warner Bros.’ recent crushing vote of no confidence in movie theaters can attest.

I hope sincerely that the obituaries are premature, that some of the damage can be reversed, and that the post-pandemic era will find movie lovers returning joyously (and safely) to theaters in droves. But if 2020 has taught us anything, it’s to take nothing for granted. It has been a year of grief and loss at the movies, marked by indefinitely postponed releases, shuttered film festivals and row after row of empty seats. What hasn’t been lost — what has, in fact, been as ripe for discovery as ever — is an enormous swath of movies good and great, old and new.

Diogo Dória as José Augusto in a scene from Manoel de Oliveira’s “Francisca.”

(Grasshopper Films)

Two newly restored and rereleased gems that I recently watched for the first time, and which I frankly might not have gotten to in a more conventional year, were Tarr’s “Damnation” and Manoel de Oliveira’s “Francisca” (1981). It was a strange and unexpected double bill but one I would wholeheartedly recommend you duplicate at home. Both films will shake up your understanding of what constitutes an ’80s movie, to say the very least. There is no easy nostalgia in the offing here, just two very different films about humans flailing for meaning in a social order that cruelly mocks their pursuits and passions at every turn. They offer consolations that are never easy and sometimes elusive, which is another way of saying they offer the consolations of art.

Back in March, not long after the coronavirus sent many of us into lockdown, I opened a spreadsheet and began logging every movie I watched — new or old, good or bad, first viewing or 11th. It was the continuation of a project I had begun years ago, only to give up on it through some combination of forgetfulness and laziness. I’d thought about reviving it any number of times; scrolling the Letterboxd accounts of friends, acquaintances and random strangers over the years was certainly enough to make me feel guilty. But it took a year like 2020, with its grim prospect of many months without movie theaters, to make me a diligent logger again, eager to impose some semblance of order on a situation ruled by anything but.

As someone who often struggles to reply to the oft-asked question “How many movies do you watch a week?” (the short answer: It varies!), I was particularly curious to see how extended stay-at-home time — and, presumably, more time in front of my TV set — would affect the numbers. I was also curious to see not only how many new films I was watching to review each week, but also how many older films I was streaming for pleasure or research, or both.

Quite a few, as it turns out. Some were favorites I happily rewatched for the umpteenth time, like “The Shop Around the Corner” or “The Rules of the Game,” the latter occasioned by my friend and fellow critic Alonso Duralde’s classic-cinema podcast. Some were brand-new, where-have-you-been-all-my-life discoveries, like Yasujiro Ozu’s wonderful 1952 marital drama, “The Flavor of Green Tea Over Rice,” which landed in my Criterion Channel queue at just the right time. Others, like Luis Buñuel’s “Viridiana” (1961), were longtime gaps finally and gratifyingly corrected.

A man in sunglasses leans with both arms over the side of a convertible. On the care are the words "Arnold Friend."

Treat Williams in Joyce Chopra’s “Smooth Talk,” being rereleased by Criterion.

(Janus Films)

Some were films that enjoyed retrospective screenings at festivals, like “Smooth Talk,” Joyce Chopra’s stunning 1985 drama about a teenager (Laura Dern) as she inches toward a sexual awakening that tilts, with delicately lacerating horror, into the stuff of nightmares. Others became assignments: I couldn’t resist writing about Tsai Ming-liang’s beguiling 1998 pandemic romance, “The Hole,” when it aptly resurfaced in September in virtual cinemas. A key work for this gifted and recondite Taiwanese filmmaker, it had never received a proper theatrical release in Los Angeles and thus had never been reviewed in The Times.

The same was true of “Damnation,” a breakthrough work for Tarr that now plays like a prelude to his later, longer masterpieces, such as “Sátantángo” (1994), “Werckmeister Harmonies” (2001) and “The Turin Horse” (2011). If you’ve seen those films, you know what he’s building toward here stylistically, with his carefully choreographed long takes, his deliberate, measured pacing and his intense scrutiny of the desolate landscapes through which his characters move. Those who are new to Tarr’s work may wonder at first why a seemingly straightforward romantic drama has been freighted with so much atmosphere, so much metaphysics, so much — well, cinema. Imagine “Double Indemnity” as remade by Andrei Tarkovsky and you’re almost there.

The romantic triangle in “Damnation,” though, is made of rather sadder, thinner stuff. Our dog-confronting protagonist, Karrer (Miklós B. Székely), is hopelessly in love with a cabaret singer (Vali Kerekes). She has dreams of musical stardom; she also has a husband (György Cserhalmi). Both will prove inconvenient to her on-and-off affair with Karrer. But even as Karrer schemes to remove the cuckold from the picture, the convolutions of the plot matter less than the free-floating ennui that defines this sad little town, seen during the waning days of communism, where dogs roam, rain pours and cable cars pass overhead with soul-crushing repetition.

Karrer’s paramour sings — with transfixing moroseness — at a local bar called the Titanik, which brings to mind the old saying about rearranging deck chairs on board that doomed shipliner. In “Damnation,” the chairs might as well be musical: Tarr was still finding his way, but he had already discovered his penchant for filming human bodies in shuffling, perpetual motion. The extended scenes of drunken revelers on their feet here anticipate similar moments in “Sátantángo” and “Werckmeister Harmonies,” where the band plays on and the dancing stretches into the wee hours. We never know if we’re watching people in their death throes or clinging insistently and defiantly to life.

Amid a downpour, a small car sits outside a darkened bar with the neon sign "titanik bar."

A scene from the film “Damnation.”

(Arbelos Films)

As it happens, there is also a fair amount of dancing in “Francisca,” a two-hour-and-45-minute tour de force from the late Portuguese master Oliveira. (The film, restored by Cinemateca Portuguesa, can be streamed via Grasshopper Film.) Like “Damnation,” this drolly funny, ravishingly beautiful and daringly stylized feast of a movie is filmed in long, unbroken takes and centers on a doomed romantic triangle. The similarities largely end there, as one might expect from two filmmakers as distinct as these two: Tarr stepped back early, leaving behind a small yet monumental oeuvre; Oliveira remained tirelessly prolific until his death in 2015, at the age of 106. His body of work is enormous by comparison, and no less worthy of sustained attention.

Adapted from Agustina Bessa-Luís’ 1979 book, “Fanny Owen,” which was itself drawn from real-life events, “Francisca” is novelistic in structure, a succession of short, self-enclosed chapters that unfold with tableau-like deliberation. In mid-1850s Portugal, José Augusto (Diogo Dória), an aspiring novelist, declares his love for Fanny Owen (Teresa Menezes), the daughter of an English army officer, and provokes the envious disapproval of his close frenemy, Camilo Castelo Branco (Mário Barroso). In real life, Camilo goes on to become one of Portugal’s most celebrated 19th century writers. In this film, he and José Augusto are petulant antiheroes, enacting not a romantic rivalry so much as a snooty pantomime of one. For each of them, Fanny is less an object of uncontrollable desire than an unfortunate pawn in a lofty intellectual exercise.

Oliveira lays out the context for this state of affairs, so to speak, in the opening titles: The drama unfolds against a backdrop of barely glimpsed political turmoil, during Portugal’s gradual transition from an absolute monarchy to a more constitutional government. Camilo and José Augusto are thus silver-tongued members of a dying aristocratic breed, oblivious to the ever-changing world around them but still intent on proving their superiority to it and also to each other. Oliveira’s quasi-Brechtian staging — including his decision to have his actors speak past each other, directing their gazes and their words toward the audience — evokes a world in which individual deeds and motives are hilariously and tragically out of sync with collective reality.

In the sumptuousness of its mise-en-scène, the elusiveness of its desires and the poignancy of its requiem for a vanishing era, “Francisca” owes something to the historical epics of Luchino Visconti and, despite its much more stationary camera, the swirling romantic roundelays of Max Ophüls. It’s somehow both dryly funny — this is, among other things, the greatest insult comedy I’ve seen in many a moon — and overpoweringly sad. Oliveira’s characters may be archly cynical automatons, but there is something immensely touching about their inability to be touched. “Francisca” is a cautionary tale that sounds a note of hope, a movie about cruelty, ego and disconnection that nonetheless feels deeply, generously human. Reemerging in a year many of us would love to forget, it’s a work of art to remember.





Source by www.latimes.com

Share196Tweet123Share49
  • Trending
  • Comments
  • Latest
Van Morrison teams with Eric Clapton for anti-lockdown song

Van Morrison teams with Eric Clapton for anti-lockdown song

December 19, 2020
Sen. Rand Paul's ‘Festivus Report’ claims $54B in tax dollars was 'totally wasted'

Sen. Rand Paul’s ‘Festivus Report’ claims $54B in tax dollars was ‘totally wasted’

December 23, 2020
'Zombie' greenhouse gas lurks in permafrost beneath the Arctic Ocean

‘Zombie’ greenhouse gas lurks in permafrost beneath the Arctic Ocean

December 24, 2020
second co. apparel

The Second Co. Drops Apparel + More Canadian Fashion News

0
Fact check: New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo announced he would defer his annual raise

Fact check: New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo announced he would defer his annual raise

0
Swedish government sidelines epidemiologist who steered country's no lockdown experiment as deaths rise

Swedish government sidelines epidemiologist who steered country’s no lockdown experiment as deaths rise

0
second co. apparel

The Second Co. Drops Apparel + More Canadian Fashion News

February 27, 2021
The inaugural Sunshine & Sunflower Day is happening at Kalbar – March 27, 2021 | Australian Food News

The inaugural Sunshine & Sunflower Day is happening at Kalbar – March 27, 2021 | Australian Food News

February 27, 2021
Review: Billie Eilish is an ordinary teen with extraordinary talent in 'The World's a Little Blurry'

Review: Billie Eilish is an ordinary teen with extraordinary talent in ‘The World’s a Little Blurry’

February 27, 2021
Daily illinois - USA | News, Sports & Updates Web Magazine

Copyright © 2020 Dailyillinois.com.

Navigate Site

  • About
  • Contact
  • Privacy
  • Terms
  • DMCA
  • Sitemap
  • Write For Us

Follow Us

No Result
View All Result
  • About Us Page
  • Contact
  • DMCA Policy
  • Home 1
  • Privacy Policy
  • Submit, Guest Post, Write For Us and Become a Contributor
  • Terms of Use

Copyright © 2020 Dailyillinois.com.

This website uses cookies. By continuing to use this website you are giving consent to cookies being used. Visit our Privacy and Cookie Policy.