Film

Thursday, June 14, 2007

Don't Look Back (the '67 Dylan doc) @ Film Forum, Friday 6.15.07

DylanpennebakerI'll confess to never having seen this classic, even though I'm a Dylan fan, if a latecomer. And this is a golden opportunity to see the film on the big screen. Let's go tomorrow night! Or even better, now that it's summer, Monday flicks at FF are HALF-PRICE! That means only $4.25 to see a 12-foot-high Dylan head up on the big screen! Yipee! [I know, there are way too many exclaimation points in this post!]

JUNE 15 - 21, Fri - Thurs at 7 & 9:15 PM (plus Sat & Sun at 5 PM)
40th ANNIVERSARY SCREENING


DON'T LOOK BACK
Sponsored by Emerald City Guitars, KEXP, and Easy Street Records
(D.A. Pennebaker, USA, 1967, 35mm, 96 min)
D.A. Pennebaker's cinéma vérité account of Bob Dylan's 1965 tour of England has long been regarded as a landmark film. Pennebaker edited twenty hours of film down to the 90-minute final version. The result not only captured Dylan at a crucial moment in his career (he had just "gone electric") but also proved that the behind-the-scenes life of the rock star was as compelling as what he did on stage. The film is an intimate portrait of Dylan; we see him drunk in hotel rooms, wrangling with Joan Baez and berating the press. He tells one Time Magazine journalist, "I know more about what you do just by looking at you than you'll ever be able to know about me." DON'T LOOK BACK captures the twenty-three year-old Dylan, an enigmatic combination of talented performer and restless individual -- a man who refuses to acknowledge or accept the labels put on either himself or his music.

"Easily one of the best documentaries on any subject ever made, it is also one of the most cinematically influential." -Craig Marine, San Francisco Examiner

Wednesday, June 13, 2007

Short Film Night @ McLeod Residence Tonight!

Silentfilms I just got this Email from Buster who is going to be showing some short Super 8/16 mm films at McLeod's tonight! I can't make it, so you'll have to let me know how it went!

Quickly! Last minute notice of a new short film night at McLeod Residence that starts tonight! The McLeod Residence is proud to present short films (super 8/16mm) on the 2nd Wednesday of every month. Exciting! Free to members and guests! 8pm to 10:30ish Showing tonight: Gar-den by Wm. Weiss Day Fable by Darby McDevitt Sound Machine by Tyson Theroux Dead Baby by Tyson Theroux The Dead Love by Tyson Theroux Dr. Terrors House Of Pancakes by Tyson Theroux Ring Ring! by Arman Bohn Have You Seen Me? By Wm Weiss. We're also showing some surprise shorts by Maddin, Svankmejer, and more! Wanna bring snacks? OK! This is gonna be fun!

Thursday, May 31, 2007

Quarto Potere (Citizen Kane)- Typography Triumphs Again!

Orsonwellescitizenkaneitalianifc_2

Citizen Kane
(Orson Welles; 1941)

via if charlie parker was a...

Tuesday, May 01, 2007

Joy Division Biopic to Open Directors' Fortnight @ Cannes 07

Joyd02 'Control' is picked for festival's Directors' Fortnight

26.Apr.07 12:32pm

"The forthcoming Joy Division movie based on the life of late frontman Ian Curtis is to feature at this year's Cannes Film Festival.

The biopic, directed by Anton Corbijn, has been chosen to open the Directors' Fortnight section of the prestigious event next month.

Based on the book 'A Touching Distance', by Curtis' widow, 'Control' trails the final years of the Joy Division singer, who committed suicide in 1980.

Corbijn's film debut feature focuses on the singer's rise to fame, as well as his relationships and his struggle with epilepsy.

Leeds newcomer Sam Riley and German actress Alexandra Maria Lara will play the part of his lover Annik Honore. Curtis' widow is played by Oscar-nominated actress Samantha Morton."

Link: Joy Division film to be screened at Cannes | News | NME.COM.

via WIT

Sunday, April 22, 2007

Join the NY Media Elite - FREE!

Nyer070430_2
This is just so much dorky goodness that I have to post the full entry. From Kottke.com:

I might be shooting myself in the foot by posting this, but the table of contents for the newest issue of the New Yorker is usually available on Sunday on newyorker.com, the day before the issue hits the newsstands and arrives in subscriber mailboxes. All you need to do is hack the URL of the TOC from the previous Monday. Here's the URL for the April 23 TOC:

http://www.newyorker.com/magazine/toc/2007/04/23/toc_20070416

"2007/04/23" is the date of the issue and "toc_20070416" refers to the date of the posting. This then is the URL for the April 30 issue:

http://www.newyorker.com/magazine/toc/2007/04/30/toc_20070423

At right is the cover for tomorrow's issue, which includes Adam Gopnik's piece on the Virginia Tech shooting, a new piece by Atul Gawande, and Anthony Lane's review of Hot Fuzz. Monday's New Yorker on Sunday is usually only available to the select few of the Manhattan media elite who are sped their new issues hot off the presses. Now everyone can have a similar experience on the web.

Enjoy.


via kottke.org

Nam June Paik @ Andrewshire 4/2007

Njpaik0407a

Anyone working with film and/or video in the last fifty years likely owes much to Nam June Paik, and is also likely to know it. Who among us has not come face to face with "TV Cello" or "Global Groove" and been rendered speechless.

Don't miss the chance to see this new show of the late artist's work at Andrewshire Gallery, LA this month. From the press release:

"Nam June Paik died on January 29, 2006.  His presence lingers in the surprising array of ideas and artworks he left behind.  These works signal the contribution the artist made to contemporary art and culture.  Paik’s often whimsical compositions, video-objects and installations are studied portraits wherein the artist himself seems to look out across the distance from the work to a point inside each of us. These artworks, already held in preservation, are perpetually connected to us while appearing suspended in time due to their vintage look.  They serve as elucidations in which the artist and his countless viewers are portrayed and linked even as their mutual search for meaning is in flight.  In his absence, Paik somehow still lives out the revelations he experienced in the bounds of the work which endlessly reproduces his era and his vision."

Nam June Paik
Selected Works
April 21–May 12, 2007
Opening Reception: Saturday, April 21, 6–8:30PM


ANDREWSHIRE GALLERY
3850 Wilshire Blvd #107, Los Angeles, CA 90010
Director, John Souza
213-389-2601
E-mail,
souza@andrewshiregallery.com
Web site,
http://www.andrewshiregallery.com
Hours, Tuesday - Saturday, 11am - 6pm

Monday, April 16, 2007

C'était un Rendez-vous: Filmé par Claude Lelouch

Need a little adreanaline rush? Click here to get 9 minutes a unadulterated, uncut speed with this little cult classic http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lyabObFKp0s

Lelouch_mercedes_3   

A big thank you to the just discovered (to us) Studio 109. Plenty of good debate on the authenticity of speed here, here and here...

According to Studio 109

"This short film by seminal French director Claude Lelouch presents a unique experience of the urban environment. A nine minute tour of 1970's Paris from a moving vehicle. There are some pretty tense moments as the driver speeds through the cobblestone streets. There is a lot of controversy surrounding the nuts and bolts of the film. Who was driving? What type of car? Was it staged? Has it been altered to make the cars speed appear faster? But the overwhelming consensus is that Lelouch himself was driving, the roads were not block off, and he reached top speeds between 90-140 mph in a Ferrari 275 GTB before ending his voyage at the Basilica Sacre Coeur."

via Studio 109

Sunday, April 15, 2007

Solar Flare Anomoly Animation by liyongqiang (YouTube)

I've watched this 3 times so far and it gets better each time. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hQyp9y_9s10

"SOHO stands for Solar and Heliospheric Observatory. The SOHO Gallery has movies and animations on sunpots, solar flares, photon showers, and comets. This video of solar flares was made from SOHO’s images. Push Play or go to YouTube.

Link to SOHO. -via Ursi’s Blog. via Neatorama

Friday, April 13, 2007

Jonas Mekas Visual Arts Center

Jonas_mekas_center Now you have one more reason to visit Lithuania! As if you needed one...

"New York/April 12, 2007 - The City Council of Vilnius, Lithuania established the Jonas Mekas Visual Arts Center on February 19th. The new center will exhibit collections by Jonas Mekas, the internationally renowned avant-garde filmmaker, and George Maciunas (1931-1978), the impresario/creator of Fluxus, a key art movement of the second part of the 20th century.

          “New York City has always been home to the avant-garde and two of its most influential figures have been Lithuanian. The international resonance of the Fluxus world that they created will provide the impetus for Vilnius to become the world’s new center for the avant-garde,” said Mayor Arturas Zuokas.
         Mayor Zuokas noted that Vilnius has been declared a European Capital of Culture for 2009 and the founding of the Jonas Mekas Visual Arts Center is the first step in preparation for the City’s monumental role.

         Jonas Mekas, renowned filmmaker and inventor of the Diarist Cinema, continues to preserve a collective memoir where life and art are inseparable. Mekas came to New York City in 1949 and quickly became a prominent figure among the city’s art scene. He founded Anthology Film Archives, the Film-Makers’ Cooperative, Film Culture magazine, and wrote film reviews for the Village Voice from 1958 to 1978. Mekas’ expansions upon the qualities of intimacy, spontaneity, and supreme selectivity are crafted through his distinctive discourses of time as the ordinary. Films focus on friends and collaborators such as Hans Richter and Andy Warhol to reveal deeply intimate portraits. Mekas masterfully extracts from thousands of hours of film footage, giving rise to interpretations of life experienced and life remembered.

more here: http://www.mayastendhalgallery.com/

Tuesday, April 10, 2007

Golden Cage by The Whitest Boy Alive feat. Geoff McFetridge Animation on YouTube

Goldencagemcfetridge

AMAZING! Geoff McFetridge's video for The Whitest Boy Alive.

Click the URL here or watch below:  http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Y78FztTd414

via neverhappened

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  • My name is Daniel Flahiff and I'm the editor here at (incli)NATION a blog about art, architecture, music, technology and a few other things. Mostly Seattle, Los Angeles and NYC, but not exclusively. Artists, inventors, philosophers, engineers, conspiracy theorists, novelists, poets, and filmmakers. If you like what you read, subscribe!

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