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:: Friday, MAR. 12 - Thursday, MAR. 18 ::

SPECIAL COVERAGE

13th ANNUAL EUROPEAN UNION FILM FESTIVAL
Gene Siskel Film Center - March 5 - April 1 
Week two has the E.U. festival in full swing, with Catherine Breillat's new film BLUEBEARD; Tilda Swinton in the critically-acclaimed Italian film I AM LOVE; KONT DIGA, the first indigenous film from Malta; and more. Check our blog for reviews of selected film for this week. 
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Cine-File will be providing greatly expanded coverage of the festival on our blog this year. Check there each Friday for reviews of many of that week's films. There may also be occasional additions throughout the week each week.


CRUCIAL VIEWING

Bela Tarr's THE MAN FROM LONDON (New International)
Facets Cinémathèque - Check venue website showtimes  
By the late 2000s, we finally found a place for Bela Tarr movies. But maybe not for new Bela Tarr movies. When Facets finally put SATANTANGO (1994) out on DVD in 2008, it was that release that was heralded while THE MAN FROM LONDON was ignored on the festival circuit. Many have complained that the film is "style for the sake of style," as though cinema consists of something other than style and that a tracking shot represents less substance than dialogue. At this point, Tarr's style can't be separated from what he means to express: he isn't trying to bend the world to fit a set of techniques, but using those techniques (slow zooms, long takes, black-and-white film stock, post-synced sound) as a launching point for the creation of a world; every movement of the dolly establishes a new geography. If you're gonna complain that the action of a Tarr is "unrealistically" slow, you might as well complain about the coincidences of a Hitchcock or the rapport police and thieves enjoy in a Mann. The film's soundtrack, which is as musique concrete as PLAYTIME's, combines Mihaly Vig's synth strings with Tarkovsky's (or are they Fassbinder's? or maybe even Welles'?) post-synced voices. Yeah, sure, even the current version of THE MAN FROM LONDON, re-dubbed following complaints about the voice-acting at Cannes, is as jarring in its mismatch of voices as an Americanized giallo. But that isn't a deficiency. There are no deficiencies in a movie where everything is intentional. THE MAN FROM LONDON's capriccio is a glum French port, populated with little lost men imported wholesale from the opening shot of WERCKMEISTER HARMONIES. Maloin (Miroslav Krobot), his jacket collar permanently turned up, operates a railroad switchyard by the docks. The half-hour opening sequence, a virtuoso example of Tarr's directing, has more than a little of De Palma's SNAKE EYES to it: the first visible cut occurs roughly 13 1/2 minutes in, and this dialogue-less series of dollies, zoom-ins, zoom-outs, and measured movements of the camera crane creates a tiny universe of half-noticed intrigues and sleepy tension, introducing every mystery the remainder of the film unpacks, if not solves. There's a suitcase, a ship (as menacing as that ferry in THE GHOST WRITER) and a few men who hide in the shadows. Whatever you may think of the slow movement of camera in THE MAN FROM LONDON, you can never be completely sure where that camera will go. THE MAN FROM LONDON restores mystery to mysteries. The wind, fog and rain, which always arrive on cue, may be fake, but the sense of wonder is genuine. (2007, 139 min, 35mm) IV
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More info at www.facets.org.


Shirley Clarke's THE CONNECTION (American Revival)
Film Studies Center (University of Chicago) - Friday, 7pm
Often when a play is adapted for the cinema there are complaints that that the resulting film is "too stagy," that it hasn't been "opened up for the movies." Those kinds of criticisms completely miss the point, for when it's done correctly, a faithful adaptation of a theatrical piece can be the most cinematic of all movies. Certainly, suspense films like WAIT UNTIL DARK and ROPE show exactly how restricting the action to a single set can ratchet up the tension, using a play's claustrophobia as its greatest asset. Clarke's shamefully underappreciated THE CONNECTION is also a study in claustrophobia. By trapping us in a dingy loft apartment with several junkies, and some documentary filmmakers, while they wait for their dealer to arrive, every tiny shift in mood and behavior becomes a change writ large. We're given the time and space to study every aspect of the loft, every curl of peeling paint and black scrape on the wall; to "live" there for two hours. That includes hanging out with legendary Blue Note jazz musicians like Freddie Redd and Jackie McLean. Their argot may be dated ("This cat is corroded!") but the opportunity to watch them jam is priceless. (1961, 110 min, archival 35mm print) RC
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More info at filmstudiescenter.uchicago.edu.


Fritz Lang's THE BIG HEAT (American Revival)
Music Box - Saturday and Sunday, 11:30am 
One of the most iconic of Fritz Lang's films and one of the most brutal American films of its time, with Lee Marvin playing his most memorable villain before Liberty Valance. In its sadism, THE BIG HEAT sets the stage for Don Siegel's late-50s work (THE LINE-UP, BABY FACE NELSON); its equally chilly dolly shots anticipate Preminger's films of the 1960s. The story itself is below par for Lang: The upstanding cop (Glenn Ford) breaking up a crime ring must have been old hat by 1953. But Lang's investigative, levelheaded approach makes it resonate with the force of allegory. For Lang, criminality was often the expression of mankind at its worst and organized crime was the institutionalization of bad faith. Marvin's gangster may be irredeemable, but Lang finds counterpoint in the character of his mistress, Debby Marsh. Debby is the prospect of villainy (Lang's filmmaking was too atheistic to suggest the word evil), a spoiled moll who comes to help the police. Lang may be underrated as a director of women: His three films with Joan Bennett remain exceptional in their three-dimensional in their exploration of the actress's intelligence, confidence and vulnerability, and he achieves similar feats with Gloria Grahame here. Notwithstanding her performance in IT'S A WONDERFUL LIFE, this may be Grahame's most iconic performance. Regardless, it's the beating heart of an often-despairing film. (1953, 89 min, 35mm) BS
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More info at www.musicboxtheatre.com.


ALSO RECOMMENDED

Videos by Lynne Sachs (Experimental Documentary/Narrative)
Chicago Filmmakers - Friday, 8pm
Film Studies Center - Saturday, 7pm
For twenty-five years Lynne Sachs has been making work that seek to explain the universal elements of human experience that emerge from documenting first person perspectives. History, or at least the knowledge of historical events, shapes how each of us views life, and it is this connection between past and present that remains central in her newest works. Her films acknowledge the limitations inherent in the documentary genre, and perhaps no more so than in her decade-long five-film series I AM NOT A WAR PHOTOGRAPHER. This weekend she will present the most recent installment in the series, LAST HAPPY DAYS (2009, 37 min, DVD), at Chicago Filmmakers and the Film Studies Center at University of Chicago. Sachs paints a picture of a distant relative whose life story encompasses both the best and worst qualities of life in the twentieth century. Originally a doctor in his native Hungary, Sandor Lenard fled the Nazis in 1938, first to Rome where he worked for the US Army reconstructing the bones of dead soldiers. Eventually he settled in the Brazilian Amazon and gained brief fame after translating Winnie the Pooh into Latin. Reflecting on our collective obsession with genealogy, Sachs approaches her portraiture as an essay on the horrors of war as well as the motivation behind artistic practice. To complete each evening, Chicago Filmmakers pairs this film with Sachs first narrative film, WIND IN OUR HAIR (2009, 42 min, DVD), inspired by the writings of Julio Cortazar, and the FSC pairs it with a new piece about Iraqi burial rituals translated into Latin, COSMETIC SURGERY FOR CORPSES (2010, 10 min, DVD). Lynne Sachs in person at both screenings. JH
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More info at www.chicagofilmmakers.org and filmstudiescenter.
uchicago.edu.


William Wellman's A STAR IS BORN (American Revival)
Gene Siskel Film Center - Tuesday, 6pm 
William Wellman was a personal, consistently engaging filmmaker and perhaps a great one. His quickly-produced films of the 1930s anticipate Samuel Fuller in their grittiness, cynicism, and front-page relevance; the closest equivalent among his contemporaries, Raoul Walsh, may have shared his feistiness but not his odd, quasi-art-movie flourishes. Wellman's formalism reached its peak with TRACK OF THE CAT (1954), a Technicolor Western designed in black-and-white, and there are similarly fascinating ideas throughout his prolific 30s work. Like NOTHING SACRED (also 1937), A STAR IS BORN is an early experiment in Technicolor played out in genre, as opposed to epic, storytelling. The film is a remake of George Cukor's WHAT PRICE HOLLYWOOD?, a behind-the-scenes story about a rising actress' affair with an older actor whose star is fading. Aside from the two-strip color photography, STAR is a curious item for the pairing of this brusque director with such melodramatic material. Wellman excelled in proletarian dramas: His tough-love approach to characterization, which made him an ideal storyteller for the Depression, typically denied the sympathy expected in love stories. The results, if not quite extraordinary, are certainly fascinating--the sort of great, instructive experiment that regularly emerged from studio assignations in this era. Lecture by Virginia Wright Wexman. (1937, 111 min, 35mm) BS
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More info at www.siskelfilmcenter.org.


Rian Johnson's BRICK (American Contemporary Revival)
Facets Cinémathèque - Saturday, Midnight
The logline for BRICK is that it's like one of those god-awful John Hughes movies played dead straight, a high school clique story conceived as terse neo-noir. It's been accused of being a calling card film (which it probably is), but it's one of the finest films to ever belong to that unfashionable category. There are the usual trappings of a calling card: the film school compositions, the endless fade-ins, an over-use of shallow depth-of-field, a high concept, vintage-store production design, resourceful use of a tiny budget (half-a-million dollars isn't much to shoot a 35mm feature on) in order to entice future financiers. It's a feature-length cinematography reel and a showcase for Rian Johnson's range as a screenwriter, director, and editor, for his cousin Nathan's abilities as a composer, and for the talents of its actors. In its mad rush to prove itself, in the low-budget insecurity that pushes it to immodestly use its modest means, and, above all, in its desire to impress us, BRICK takes routes a less ambitious movie never would. To show how serious he can be, Johnson treats his subject matter with more maturity than a mature filmmaker ever would; to show how exciting BRICK can be, he invests more kinetic energy into a pan of the camera than a better-funded filmmaker would put into his car chases. By making every role showy, the film gives its cast the depth of a classic studio production. It seems like Johnson aspired to nothing more than the chance to direct bigger and "better" films but, then again, that's what Polanski aspired to in making KNIFE IN THE WATER. Johnson's like a man who, while trying to impress a potential employer, blurts out something beautiful. Mercenary aspirations are often the first step to poetry. Showing in Facets' "Night School" series, with a talk by Lauren Whalen. (2005, 110 min, DVD projection) IV 
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More info at www.facets.org.


Andrea Arnold's FISH TANK (New International)
Block Cinema (Northwestern University) - Friday, 7pm
The sophomore feature from Andrea Arnold is a raw and unsettling portrait of 15 year-old Mia, a girl living in a dismal UK housing project with her dysfunctional mom and little sister. Katie Jarvis delivers a robust portrayal as her character confronts her developing sexuality and personal independence. Much like her first film, the BAFTA-sweeping RED ROAD (2006), Arnold doesn't pull any punches when it comes to the flaws of her female characters. Mia's teenage experience is disconcerting and made even dangerous at times by her surroundings. She is foul-mouthed and cagey, but to Arnold's credit we don't hesitate to identify with her. The scope of the movie is completely Mia's experience; the camera moves with her in almost every shot. When her mother gets an attractive new boyfriend, played by Michael Fassbender, things start to spiral downward fast. FISH TANK fits well in the British tradition of social realism movies, but banishes any sentimentality in exchange for allowing its characters to respond fully to their ever-worsening circumstances. Still, in all that goes wrong, Arnold provides Mia, and thereby the audience, small moments of rest, beauty, and limited transcendence. (2009, 122 min, 35mm) CL
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More info at www.blockmuseum.northwestern.edu.


MORE SCREENINGS AND EVENTS

Roots & Culture Gallery (1034 N. Milwaukee) presents New Acquisition from the Video Data Bank on Saturday at 7pm. The program highlights new work from the venerable Chicago-based video art distributor and includes Chicagoan Jesse McLean's terrific THE ETERNAL QUARTER INCH, former Chicagoans Sterling Ruby (TRIVIALITY) and Jim Finn (GREAT MAN AND CINEMA), and critic favorite Dani Levanthal (54 DAYS THIS WINTER 36 DAYS THIS SPRING FOR 18 MINUTES) and additional work Susan Youssef, Wynne Greenwood & K8 Hardy, Nicholas Provost, and a 1993 video interview with Pat Steir. 

The student-run Experimental Film Society at the School of the Art Institute screens a program of landscape films on Monday at 4:15pm (112 S. Michigan Ave., Rm. 1307). Showing are two masterpieces, Peter Kubelka's UNSERE AFRIKAREISE and Bruce Baillie's VALENTIN DE LAS SIERRAS; Bruce Conner's rarely shown LOOKING FOR MUSHROOMS; Chick Strand's ANSELMO AND THE WOMEN; Oskar Fischinger's MUNICH-BERLING WANDERUNG; and former SAIC student Robert Fulton's LESSER ANTILLES. 

Jacques Audiard's A PROPHET and Roman Polanski's THE GHOST WRITER continue at Landmark's Century Centre Cinema. Don Argot's documentary THE ART OF THE STEAL opens Friday. 
 
Bank of America Cinema screens the underrated Joseph M Mankiewicz's 1946 film DRAGONWYCK on Saturday at 8pm. 
 
Doc Films
(University of Chicago) concludes its winter schedule this weekend with Anne Fontaine's COCO BEFORE CHANEL (Friday night and Sunday afternoon) and Wes Anderson's FANTASTIC MR. FOX (Saturday night and Sunday afternoon). The spring schedule starts March 29.
 
Also at the Music Box this week: the three film RED RIDING TRILOGY opens; NORTH FACE and AJAMI both continue; Danny Perez's experimental music film with Animal Collective, ODDSAC, screens Wednesday at 7pm and 9pm (with Perez and members of AC in person); the second Saturday and Sunday matinee is NORTH FACE; and the Friday and Saturday midnight films are Walter Hill's THE WARRIORS and Terry Gilliam's THE IMAGINARIUM OF DOCTOR PARNASSUS
 
The Film Studies Center (University of Chicago) hosts a lunchtime lecture (Tuesday, 12:30pm) by Italian film teacher, novelist, and screenwriter Giaime Alonge titled "Hacks and Authors: Ben Hecht, the politique des auteurs and scriptwriting in classical Hollywood." 
 
Also at Chicago Filmmakers this week is the lesbian-detourned video mash-up BABES IN B-MOVIES, for which local editor Sharon Zurek has removed all the extraneous plot from three "classic" B films to find the hidden Sapphic core. Showing Saturday at 8pm (social hour at 7pm) as part of the Dyke Delicious monthly series. 

The Portage Theater presents "Monster Madness" on Sunday with screenings of ABBOTT & COSTELLO MEET DR. JEKYLL & MR. HYDE, the 1925 PHANTOM OF THE OPERA, THE BRIDE OF FRANKENSTEIN, and Don Knotts in THE GHOST AND MR. CHICKEN.

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CINE-LIST: March 12 - March 18, 2010

MANAGING EDITOR / Patrick Friel

CONTRIBUTORS / Rob Christopher, Jason Halprin, Christy LeMaster, Ben Sachs, Ignatius Vishnevetsky, Darnell Witt

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