The cinema of Alfonso CuarĂ³n is the cinema of immersion. His long takes in Children of Men plunged the audience into the middle of a war zone, while the dynamic camerawork in Gravity allowed us to share Sandra Bullock's panic and disorientation as she was spun off into space. In Roma, the director wants to draw us into his own memories of Mexico in 1971, meticulously recreating the period and filling every inch of the screen with bustling activity. So why does this, his most personal work, keep us at such a distance?
Read the rest of my review at The Skinny
Thursday, November 29, 2018
Wednesday, November 28, 2018
Bernardo Bertolucci 1941-2018
Bernardo Bertolucci was always destined for a life as an artist. “I could say like Judy Garland in A Star is Born (1954): ‘I was born in the trunk of a Paris theatre’,” he told an interviewer in 1984. “I mean that somehow I am a son of art.”
Born in 1941 to the poet and critic Attilio Bertolucci and the literature professor Ninetta Giovanardi, the young Bernardo spent much of his childhood writing poetry before picking up a 16mm camera at the age of 15. He shot two short films with his younger brother Giuseppe (who would also go on to become a filmmaker), and his path was set. It was a path he wasted no time in following. By the age of 20 Bertolucci had dropped out of university and was working as an assistant to Pier Paolo Pasolini, and when he was 21 years old he was presenting his debut feature The Grim Reaper (1962), based on a story by Pasolini, at the Venice Film Festival.
It was an auspicious beginning to an extraordinary career. Within a decade of his debut, this prodigiously talented director had established himself as not only a leading light of the burgeoning Italian cinema, but as a major international artist. Working primarily with the cinematographer Vittorio Storaro, Bertolucci developed a vivid and sensual aesthetic style in his films. He was fascinated by questions of sexual and political identity, with his own leftwing politics being pushed to the forefront of many of his pictures, notably his second feature Before the Revolution (1964), which feels like the first real Bernardo Bertolucci film. The protagonist Fabrizio (Francesco Barilli) is torn between his comfortable middle-class existence and the radical Marxist politics of his fellow students, and we can view this character as a representative one for Bertolucci, who later said that his epic Novecento (1976) was partly motivated by his sense of shame at coming from a bourgeois family.
Read the rest of my obituary at Sight & Sound
Born in 1941 to the poet and critic Attilio Bertolucci and the literature professor Ninetta Giovanardi, the young Bernardo spent much of his childhood writing poetry before picking up a 16mm camera at the age of 15. He shot two short films with his younger brother Giuseppe (who would also go on to become a filmmaker), and his path was set. It was a path he wasted no time in following. By the age of 20 Bertolucci had dropped out of university and was working as an assistant to Pier Paolo Pasolini, and when he was 21 years old he was presenting his debut feature The Grim Reaper (1962), based on a story by Pasolini, at the Venice Film Festival.
It was an auspicious beginning to an extraordinary career. Within a decade of his debut, this prodigiously talented director had established himself as not only a leading light of the burgeoning Italian cinema, but as a major international artist. Working primarily with the cinematographer Vittorio Storaro, Bertolucci developed a vivid and sensual aesthetic style in his films. He was fascinated by questions of sexual and political identity, with his own leftwing politics being pushed to the forefront of many of his pictures, notably his second feature Before the Revolution (1964), which feels like the first real Bernardo Bertolucci film. The protagonist Fabrizio (Francesco Barilli) is torn between his comfortable middle-class existence and the radical Marxist politics of his fellow students, and we can view this character as a representative one for Bertolucci, who later said that his epic Novecento (1976) was partly motivated by his sense of shame at coming from a bourgeois family.
Read the rest of my obituary at Sight & Sound
Friday, November 09, 2018
The Other Side of the Wind
It’s hard to believe that The Other Side of the Wind is
finally here, 48 years after Orson Welles began shooting the film and 33 years
after his death. The film has been hauled over the finish line by Peter
Bogdanovich, Frank Marshall, Oja Kodar and others, with the financial muscle of
Netflix being the key required to unlock the various legal entanglements and
propriety claims the project has been embroiled in. For decades it seemed like the
completion of this project was an impossible dream, and there was even a
certain poetry in it continuing to languish out of sight; a final
representation of the many setbacks and frustrations that blighted Welles’
career. The Other Side of the Wind is, after all, a film about the
impossibility of finishing a film, with the arty feature being shot by Jake
Hannaford (John Huston, on grand cigar-and-dialogue-chewing form) falling apart when the leading man walks off the set. Even before that incident, the
film appears to be on shaky ground, with money rapidly running out and Hannaford’s
loose style bewildering even his closest confidants. “Is Jake just making it up
as he goes along?” a producer asks, as he watches the rushes. “He’s done it
before,” comes the weary response.
How much of The Other Side of the Wind was Welles making up
as he went along? The film was shot in bits and pieces across the span of six
years, and much of it has a fizzing, improvisatory quality. The film has two
components, with the bulk of it taking place at Hannaford’s 70th birthday
party where the director imperiously holds court amid a swarming and chattering
crowd of acolytes and critics. These scenes
are shot with handheld cameras, many from the vantage point of the news
cameramen and media students in attendance, with the image flipping
back-and-forth between colour and black-and-white stock. Given the ad-hoc method
of production and the confluence of multiple perspectives and film stocks, it’s
remarkable how fluid and coherent it feels. Taking his cue from footage Welles
had already cut together before the money ran out, editor Bob Murawski creates
a swirling, cacophonous atmosphere that can be maddening at times, but which
possesses an entrancing rhythm and energy.
Occasionally, the filmmakers give us a break from this claustrophobic
environment, when Hannaford screens the rushes of the film he has been working
on, also titled The Other Side of the Wind; an Antonioni-esque oddity,
consisting of a young man (Bob Random) and a woman (Oja Kodar) as they wander wordlessly
through a series of desolate landscapes, shedding their clothes along the way. The
image stretches from 1.33 to 1.85 in these scenes and explodes into vivid
colour. It’s a trippy, deliberately obtuse endeavour – it plays like a parody
of existential ‘60s art films – but it has been made with a sense of craft and
imagination that allows it to transcend pastiche. Cinematographer Gary
Graver delivers dynamic compositions film with bold primary colours and
lighting, and a couple of the set-pieces in this film-within-the-film take the
breath away. Kodar strides through a unisex toilet in a nightclub, where carnal
activities are taking place in every stall, and she pulls off her wet clothes
before pushing an ice cube into the mouth of a young woman who observes her,
agog. This sequence is followed by a sex scene inside a car, with the camera
getting uncomfortably close to the actors within the cramped vehicle, as rain
lashes the windows and red lights flash. These are intensely erotic piece of
filmmakings, with astounding framing and cutting.
The film inside The Other Side of the Wind is like little
that Welles had ever made before, and that’s by design. Welles intended The
Other Side of the Wind as a departure, and in fact he allowed Oja Kodar (who
co-wrote the screenplay with him) to direct herself in the ‘movie’ sections of
the film. Even so, the way his camera watches Kodar reveals how fixated he was
on her, in awe of her beauty and the way her body moved. Welles’ relationship
with his partner/collaborator/muse is one of the key relationships that The
Other Side of the Wind throws into a fascinating light. Others include Pauline
Kael (represented here by the terrific Susan Strasberg), who peppers Hannaford
with criticism throughout the party scenes, Marlene Dietrich (Lilli Palmer), and
Bogdanovich himself, who plays a cocky young filmmaker on the rise and perhaps
surpassing his old mentor. "For years I didn't want this document shown
because frankly, I didn't like the way I came off in the piece. But I'm old
enough now not to care anymore about how my role in Jake’s life is interpreted,”
Bogdanovich states in character in the film’s opening narration. “My name is
Brooks Otterlake, probably Hannaford's most successful acolyte.” The Other Side
of the Wind is a caustic examination of the myriad ways in which filmmaking can
define, warp and destroy people, with Hannaford's loyal gofer Billy (played
with a note of vital pathos by Norman Foster) emerging as one of the film’s
most tragic and empathetic figures. “Movies and friendship,” Hannaford intones,
“those are mysteries.”
The Other Side of the Wind is rife with mysteries,
references and revelations. It’s a dense and sometimes overwhelming experience,
with the adventurous editing style Welles utilised in F for Fake being pushed
even further here by Murawski and his collaborators. That question of
collaboration is an interesting one to ponder – how much can we consider this
picture, finished three decades after his death, ‘an Orson Welles film?’ I’m
reminded of a passage from Simon Callow’s recent Welles biography One Man Band,
where he writes: “Welles packed more living into his life, pursued more
professions, thrust out in more directions and formed more intense
relationships, than any twenty men put together.” That’s what The Other Side of
the Wind feels like, a film that is intensely alive from moment-to-moment;
pushing, exploring and thrusting in multiple directions at once. The Other Side
of the Wind might not have been finished under the supervision of its creator,
but it has undeniably been made in his spirit. “You old guys are trying to get with it. Is
that what this movie's about?" one critic asks when looking at Hannaford’s
footage, but this is a film that was always destined to exist out of time. The Other Side of the
Wind would surely have been greeted as an audacious, singular achievement in
1976, but in 2018 it feels even more exhilaratingly like a great and radical work
of art to grapple with.
Monday, November 05, 2018
Happy New Year, Colin Burstead
At the end of his review of Free Fire (April 2017, Sight & Sound), Tony Rayns suggested that Ben Wheatley and his partner Amy Jump “could yet turn out to be England's belated answer to Rainer Werner Fassbinder.” Whether they will end up earning such a lofty comparison remains to be seen, but there's no denying that the pair share Fassbinder's knack for working in a way that's fast, cheap and prolific. Wheatley shot his micro-budget debut Down Terrace (2009) in eight days, and even after making his breakthrough as a filmmaker he has still shown a willingness to turn away from high-profile pictures for experimental fare like his hallucinogenic black-and-white odyssey A Field in England (2013), which was shot in less than two weeks. Now, after the ambitious spectacle of the J.G. Ballard adaptation High Rise (2015) and the starry shoot-'em-up Free Fire, Wheatley has cut loose once more with Happy New Year, Colin Burstead. Shot earlier this year in just 11 days, it's a notable picture for a couple of reasons: this is the first film Wheatley has made since his debut that doesn't have a co-writing or co-editing credit for Jump, and it's the first Ben Wheatley film that doesn't contain any violence.
That's not to say people don't get hurt in Happy New Year, Colin Burstead - Doon Mackichan stumbles within the first 15 minutes and spends half of the film with a bag of frozen peas strapped to her ankle - but the pain is primarily emotional rather than physical. Colin (Neil Maskell) has decided to hire a grand country mansion for his family's New Year's Eve party, but when we see him nervously vaping and listening to meditation music under the opening credits, we can sense that he's already regretting this decision. The family has barely settled at Cumberland House before Colin has to deal with his mother's ankle injury and his almost bankrupt father (Bill Paterson) tapping him for an emergency loan, and every additional guest only seems to add to Colin's anxiety. The wild card is David (Sam Riley), Colin's tearaway brother, who has been persona non grata since some unspecified transgression five years earlier. He has been invited by their sister Gini (Hayley Squires) as a surprise for their mother, but he's a most unwelcome surprise for the many partygoers who still harbour ill feelings towards him.
Read the rest of my review in the December 2018 issue of Sight & Sound
That's not to say people don't get hurt in Happy New Year, Colin Burstead - Doon Mackichan stumbles within the first 15 minutes and spends half of the film with a bag of frozen peas strapped to her ankle - but the pain is primarily emotional rather than physical. Colin (Neil Maskell) has decided to hire a grand country mansion for his family's New Year's Eve party, but when we see him nervously vaping and listening to meditation music under the opening credits, we can sense that he's already regretting this decision. The family has barely settled at Cumberland House before Colin has to deal with his mother's ankle injury and his almost bankrupt father (Bill Paterson) tapping him for an emergency loan, and every additional guest only seems to add to Colin's anxiety. The wild card is David (Sam Riley), Colin's tearaway brother, who has been persona non grata since some unspecified transgression five years earlier. He has been invited by their sister Gini (Hayley Squires) as a surprise for their mother, but he's a most unwelcome surprise for the many partygoers who still harbour ill feelings towards him.
Read the rest of my review in the December 2018 issue of Sight & Sound
Friday, November 02, 2018
Peterloo
For a director who will forever be primarily associated with his intimate studies of ordinary British families, it's an odd coincidence that the past two Mike Leigh films have opened on foreign soil. Leigh's scope has expanded the further he has pushed back into the past. His 2014 biopic Mr. Turner began with a bucolic scene in the Netherlands, as the artist sketched a windmill in contented isolation, but his new film Peterloo begins with a much less tranquil scene. Leigh plunges us straight into the carnage as the battle of Waterloo reaches its bloody final days. We take the viewpoint of a startled bugler (David Moorst), staggering through the explosions and the bodies, with Dick Pope's camera circling him to capture the chaos. Joseph simply wants to make it home, but when he does return to Manchester he finds little comfort. Stricken by PTSD and with no work available to him, Joseph rejoins a family that is already struggling to make ends meet.
This opening suggests that Joseph will be one of Peterloo’s key protagonist, but he soon recedes into the background. Mike Leigh’s films are usually built around a strong central figure or a key relationship, but in examining the events that led to the massacre at St Peter's Field, Manchester in 1819, Leigh has taken a panoramic view of history. The film is a sprawling ensemble piece, cutting between multiple points of view and different classes to expose the inequality and oppression of 19th century Britain. It’s by far the biggest subject that this great filmmaker has ever tackled and at times the scale of the project seems to preclude the qualities that usually distinguish his work. Our time with each character is fragmented as Leigh switches his focus between the various factions, and he struggles to locate the film’s emotional centre. It seems Joseph’s family – including his mother (Maxine Peake) and father (Pearce Quigley) – should be where our interest and sympathies lie, but these characters don’t come to life in the way we’ve come to expect from Leigh’s pictures.
Instead, it’s the more colourful characters who make the biggest impression, or in some cases the ones who speak loudest. One of Peterloo’s central themes is the power of oratory, with characters such as Samuel Bamford (Neil Bell) or the renowned but vainglorious Henry Hunt (Rory Kinnear) frequently stating the need for reformation through impassioned speeches, emboldening the disenfranchised masses. Leigh’s decision to construct his film largely through these town meetings and exchanges of rhetoric makes it feel intermittently stimulating and rousing, but oddly static. Offset against these working class declaimers are the upper classes, presented as sneering grotesques, with Vincent Franklin’s bringing an entertainingly theatrical edge to his furious pomposity as the Magistrate Reverend Ethelston, and Tim McInnerny going into Blackadder mode as the oblivious Prince Regent.
There is unmistakable and justifiable anger in the filmmaking here, and that anger is what carries us through Peterloo’s uneven and rough patches, with the film gradually building a cumulative force. All roads lead inexorably to August 16th, 1819, with the build-up to the massacre taking up much of the film’s climactic hour. Leigh follows the massive crowds – families walking hand-in-hand, clad in their Sunday best – as they converge on St Peter's Field, developing a queasy tension and we anticipate their fate. As they gather below, the magistrates sit in their elevated vantage point, drinking wine and preparing to unleash the assembled military forces on the crowd. The ensuing carnage is shocking and brutal, shot in close quarters and cut with a visceral energy by Jon Gregory. The panic and fear is tangible, the atrocity indefensible. It’s by far the most ambitious and complex sequence Leigh has ever staged, and he carries it off with breathtaking assurance.
And then we have the calm after the storm, with the Prince Regent – reclining as he is fed sugared treats – praising the magistrates for restoring “tranquillity,” as a family stands huddled over a grave and a group of journalists surveying the scene of the bloodshed prepare to share what they have seen. The massacre at Peterloo has been spoken of as a defining moment in the history of the working class struggle for enfranchisement, but Leigh doesn’t place the film in its historical moment; there are no blocks of text at the end of the film to explain what happened next or why Peterloo matters. Leigh’s aim is to make this story feel immediate and current rather than demarcate it as a piece of ancient history, leaving it open for us to draw our own contemporary parallels with what we have seen. Peterloo isn’t consistently involving enough to rank among the very best Mike Leigh films, but the film’s aggressive, blunt power – alongside the typically immersive attention to period details and language – is enough to make this story come to vivid life right at the painful end.
This opening suggests that Joseph will be one of Peterloo’s key protagonist, but he soon recedes into the background. Mike Leigh’s films are usually built around a strong central figure or a key relationship, but in examining the events that led to the massacre at St Peter's Field, Manchester in 1819, Leigh has taken a panoramic view of history. The film is a sprawling ensemble piece, cutting between multiple points of view and different classes to expose the inequality and oppression of 19th century Britain. It’s by far the biggest subject that this great filmmaker has ever tackled and at times the scale of the project seems to preclude the qualities that usually distinguish his work. Our time with each character is fragmented as Leigh switches his focus between the various factions, and he struggles to locate the film’s emotional centre. It seems Joseph’s family – including his mother (Maxine Peake) and father (Pearce Quigley) – should be where our interest and sympathies lie, but these characters don’t come to life in the way we’ve come to expect from Leigh’s pictures.
Instead, it’s the more colourful characters who make the biggest impression, or in some cases the ones who speak loudest. One of Peterloo’s central themes is the power of oratory, with characters such as Samuel Bamford (Neil Bell) or the renowned but vainglorious Henry Hunt (Rory Kinnear) frequently stating the need for reformation through impassioned speeches, emboldening the disenfranchised masses. Leigh’s decision to construct his film largely through these town meetings and exchanges of rhetoric makes it feel intermittently stimulating and rousing, but oddly static. Offset against these working class declaimers are the upper classes, presented as sneering grotesques, with Vincent Franklin’s bringing an entertainingly theatrical edge to his furious pomposity as the Magistrate Reverend Ethelston, and Tim McInnerny going into Blackadder mode as the oblivious Prince Regent.
There is unmistakable and justifiable anger in the filmmaking here, and that anger is what carries us through Peterloo’s uneven and rough patches, with the film gradually building a cumulative force. All roads lead inexorably to August 16th, 1819, with the build-up to the massacre taking up much of the film’s climactic hour. Leigh follows the massive crowds – families walking hand-in-hand, clad in their Sunday best – as they converge on St Peter's Field, developing a queasy tension and we anticipate their fate. As they gather below, the magistrates sit in their elevated vantage point, drinking wine and preparing to unleash the assembled military forces on the crowd. The ensuing carnage is shocking and brutal, shot in close quarters and cut with a visceral energy by Jon Gregory. The panic and fear is tangible, the atrocity indefensible. It’s by far the most ambitious and complex sequence Leigh has ever staged, and he carries it off with breathtaking assurance.
And then we have the calm after the storm, with the Prince Regent – reclining as he is fed sugared treats – praising the magistrates for restoring “tranquillity,” as a family stands huddled over a grave and a group of journalists surveying the scene of the bloodshed prepare to share what they have seen. The massacre at Peterloo has been spoken of as a defining moment in the history of the working class struggle for enfranchisement, but Leigh doesn’t place the film in its historical moment; there are no blocks of text at the end of the film to explain what happened next or why Peterloo matters. Leigh’s aim is to make this story feel immediate and current rather than demarcate it as a piece of ancient history, leaving it open for us to draw our own contemporary parallels with what we have seen. Peterloo isn’t consistently involving enough to rank among the very best Mike Leigh films, but the film’s aggressive, blunt power – alongside the typically immersive attention to period details and language – is enough to make this story come to vivid life right at the painful end.
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