Writer and director Pedro Almodovar once said, “The characters in my films are assassins, rapists and so on, but I don’t treat them as criminals, I talk about their humanity.” Rarely is this as true than in…
Read MoreThe past two weeks have seen a number of “experience” movies grace the screen here at the Secret Movie Club Theater. Movies like the 1970 documentary Woodstock, the Who’s rock opera Tommy directed by British maximalist Ken Russell, Pink Floyd’s The Wall directed by Alan Parker, and even David Lowery’s A Ghost Story all employ music in service of narratives that are meant to be more like “journeys” or “trips” then straight ahead storytelling.
You know the experience movie even if…
Read MoreThe week after The Batman opened, there wasn’t a lot new coming out: only X, Umma, and The Outfit. I was going with a friend who does not care for horror, so The Outfit, a film I had not heard one solitary word about before going, won out.
Mark Rylance plays an English Saville Row tailor…
Read MoreWhat is the collective noun for a group of percussionists? How about a clattering?
In 2001, the writer / directors Ola Simonsson and Johannes Stjärne Nilsson created a nine-and-a-half-minute short film called Music for One Apartment and Six Drummers in which a clattering of percussionists break into an elderly Swedish couple’s apartment and performs four songs. Each song is entirely instrumental, percussion-based, and played on found objects specific to one of four rooms. The opening number titled Kitchen, for example, incorporates cupboard doors, wooden spoons on juice glasses, an egg beater, dog bowls, and a food processor. One can – and should – find the short in the usual internet places with ease.
Whatever magic makes a short or a sketch work is not necessarily going to be able to support the weight of a ninety minutes plus feature. Rather than attempt to extend the single concept of the short Sound of Noise uses Music for One Apartment and Six Drummers as a seed to create something…
Read MoreOne of the most renowned movies from the animation company Studio Ghibli is the late Isao Takahata’s 1988 masterpiece The Grave of the Fireflies. The movie is almost unbearably emotional in showing the daily struggles of two adolescents in Japan during WWII, but in the end offers us a sense of relief. While it is Takahata’s best known film, perhaps his most underrated is quite the polar opposite of The Grave of the Fireflies in tone and style, and that’s his 1999 film My Neighbors the Yamadas.
Based on…
Read MoreI’ve heard many directors ultimately say that while cinema is cinema, if it’s close to any other art form it’s most likely music.
This has always been interesting and instructive to me. An initial reaction might be to think cinema is most related to the novel or to the theater or even to opera. And of course, cinema takes from and is inspired by all these art forms and more (radio, painting, sculpture, dance, architecture, design, to name just a few).
But somewhere in my twenties (I think, maybe it was my early thirties, man time moves fast. . .), I came to feel that movies are most like music and dreams.
A great movie often…
Read MoreWhen Sally Kellerman died a couple of weeks ago, I chose Last of the Red Hot Lovers as the movie to watch for her, a Neil Simon play that I was very familiar with, but had never seen the movie, and put it on my list. Then, last week, Mitchell Ryan died, and when I was looking for something for him, I found that both he and Sally Kellerman had worked together in A Reflection of Fear, and decided to pay tribute to two birds with one stone, so to speak.
I am going to assume that everyone knows…
Read MoreSince his 2010 breakout film Rubber – previously covered in this blog under the rubric of Absurdities in the 21st Century – Quentin Dupieux has cemented himself as one of the most idiosyncratic and consistent filmmakers working today. An auteur in the truest sense (he is French, after all), a Dupieux film is almost instantly recognizable. They are…
Read MoreWhen famed musical composer and innovator Stephen Sondheim passed away November 26th of last year, I vaguely knew of some of his musicals and his contribution to the theater and the arts.
Three months later, I find myself in awe of an artist who not only created some of the most important American innovations to an art form but also made sure to pass his knowledge on to students and the next generation in a very open, practical way.
I don’t know if you’ve ever done this but sometimes when someone dies, I seek out interviews on YouTube. Every now and then I fall down a rabbit hole of wanting to know everything about that person.
This happened to me with Sondheim.
In December and January, along with…
Read MoreEverything about The Little Girl Who Lives Down the Lane screams, “b-movie”. Awkwardly long title? Check. Made in the late seventies? Check. Canadian co-production? Check. And in many (probably most) ways that’s exactly what it is. But then the cast makes one seriously reconsider that first impression. Led by a 13-year-old Jodie Foster…
Read MoreWhen I saw the trailer for Studio 666 I immediately wanted to see it, I thought it looked like a lot of fun. And do you know what? I was totally right, it is a lot of fun!
It’s time for the Foo Fighters to make their tenth album, so they…
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