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Film Festivals

"The Strange Little Cat" Returns to FSLC

The Film Society of Lincoln Center will be running Ramon Zürcher's quizzical The Strange Little Cat, from Germany, for a one-week exclusive engagement beginning on August 1st, 2014. The film had its local premiere earlier this year at the New Directors, New Films Festival.

The events of The Strange Little Cat take place over the course of a single day and evening, culminating in a family dinner party — almost all the action occurs within the confines of this single, urban apartment but there is hardly any narrative at all in conventional terms — a glass breaks, the youngest daughter cuts her finger picking it up, a rat is seen scurrying outside, a ball gets thrown through the window, an old woman dozes off, etc. There are a few brief sequences outside the apartment as well as a handful of almost dreamlike cutaways to scenes recalled by characters — these inserts introduce a novel, defamiliarizing texture into the experience of the film. The Strange Little Cat is remarkable for the degree to which it risks being purely inconsequential by merely observing the quotidian details of one ordinary family's day but it also manifests a notable singularity of focus and sensitivity to the peculiar qualities of generally overlooked minutiae.

Zürcher's eccentric and abstract realism generates a minimal, almost antiseptic, visual style, somewhat reminiscent of that of Michael Haneke but without the latter's relentlessness or sense of menace. (The subtle patterning of repetitions recalls the "parametric form" championed by David Bordwell and Kristin Thompson — comparisons to the films of Jacques Tati and Chantal Akerman are not inapposite.) Presented in DCP, the digital format here is uncompromised by the usual problems with the range of contrast consequent upon shooting in bright light, although the austerity of Zürcher's approach might have yielded even richer rewards if he had had access to the more sensual qualities of 35mm (the film seems like it may be in an unusual ratio — at the press screening, the right and left sides of the frame were, regrettably, unmasked — I hope this can be corrected for the opening).

The Strange Little Cat is an unusual but strikingly accomplished work and one looks forward to future films by Zürcher, who is well-served here by his excellent, if unfamiliar, ensemble cast. I applaud the Film Society for taking a chance on such a seemingly uncommercial prospect.

The Strange Little Cat
August 1st, 2014

Walter Reade Theater
165 West 65th Street
New York, NY 10023

For more information, go to: www.filmlinc.com and follow @filmlinc on Twitter.

 

 

Joanna Hogg on 'Exhibition' at Lincoln Center

On June 20th, the Film Society of Lincoln Center will open Joanna Hogg's impressive film, Exhibition — which had its local premiere at last year's New York Film Festival in its Emerging Artists sidebar and which I previously reviewed here — for a two-week exclusive run. In conjunction with the release of Exhibition, beginning on June 27th the Film Society will also be screening Hogg's two previous features, Unrelated and Archipelagofor a one-week exclusive run. 

Unrelated is centered upon a middle-aged London woman who goes on holiday in Italy, staying at a villa with an old friend and her family, developing a crush on her friend's son, played by Hogg's remarkable discovery, a very young Tom Hiddleston, who went on to appear in her other two features. For those that have seen Exhibition, one can recognize the distinctive cinematic vision of that film in the very first shots of the earlier one. Hogg's films are precisely observed, confidently combining a non-classical visual detachment with oblique storytelling, her sensuous minimalism evincing an unexpected emotional plangency. The director's documentary realism attains a dialectical force in being embedded within a rigorous formalism that is reminiscent at times of the work of Peter Greenaway.

Hogg attains uniformly convincing, naturalistic performances from the rest of her unfamiliar cast, including what appear to be several non-professional actors, while Hiddleston's good looks and charisma stand out, explaining his current Hollywood fame for playing Loki in the Thor and Avengers movies. (He had a delightful star turn in Jim Jarmusch's latest feature, Only Lovers Left Alive, which also had its local premiere at last year's New York Film Festival and recently concluded a run at the Film Society.)

The cool interiors of Exhibition were better suited to the digital format than the sunlit exteriors of Italy are in Unrelated — the latter film's not inconsiderable visual power would have been significantly enhanced had Hogg been able to shoot it in 35-millimeter, whatever other economic or practical advantages that digital may have afforded her. Despite this deficiency, Unrelated is a very engaging, memorable work, well worth a look.

Walter Reade Theater
165 West 65th Street
New York, NY 10023

For more information, go to: www.filmlinc.com and follow @filmlinc on Twitter.

 

Lincoln Center Presents "Norte, The End of History"

The 1980s inaugurated a series of cinematic New Waves that continues into the present — Taiwan, Iran, Korea, Thailand, and Romania, for example, have all arisen as major sources of outstanding films and now several younger directors from the Philippines have brought that country to the attention of festivals and enthusiasts. To judge by his latest feature, the momentous Norte, the End of History, one might reasonably conclude that Lav Diaz —who is being honored by the Film Society of Lincoln Center with the most complete retrospective of his work to date — will endure as the leading figure amongst these filmmakers.

Norte, the End of History is something of an adaptation of Fyodor Dostoevsky’s classic novel, Crime and Punishmentset in the contemporary Philippines. The book has been the basis for several distinguished films — one might cite, for example: Joseph von Sternberg’s 1935 version, mainly notable for the extraordinary performance of Peter Lorre; Aki Kaurismäki’s Bressonian first feature, the 1983 Crime and Punishmentand Francisco Lombardi’s 1994 Sin Compasiónset in Peru. Robert Bresson’s 1959 Pickpocket is surely the greatest of these adaptations, and it in turn inspired Paul Schrader in several screenplays, such as those for Taxi Driver, American Gigoloand Light SleeperIf one sometimes detects the influence of Bresson in Diaz’s film, it seems to be more for his final, nihilistic feature, L’Argentthan the redemptive Pickpocket.

In Norte, Diaz eschews melodrama for a slow-moving, meditative style. The director shoots in long-takes, forgoing cutting within scenes, and favors the long-shot to the point of exclusivity. His treatment of extreme brutality is unflinching but not without a measure of detachment, recalling the work of Michael Haneke. The offhand mention of the Anglophone, analytic meta-ethicist, Derek Parfit, is indicative of the peculiar intellectual texture that animates this film. Over the course of more than four hours, Norte accumulates an incredible emotional force and is never less than engaging. The work is handsomely shot in widescreen in the HD format, although the bright sunlight of the Philippines proves to be something of liability in many outdoor scenes — one can imagine how much more remarkable the film might have been if it had been shot in 35-millimeter.

Norte will have an exclusive, one-week engagement at the Elinor Bunin Munroe Film Center (144 W 65th St, New York, NY 10023), running from June 20th to the 26th. The retrospective will launch on June 22nd with a screening of the seven-and-a-half-hour Melancholia from 2008 and will continue with one screening per month between August 2014 and February 2015. 

For more information, go to: www.filmlinc.com and follow @filmlinc on Twitter.

Norte, The End of History
June 20 - 26, 2014

Elinor Bunin Munroe Film Center
144 W 65th St, New York, NY 10023

 

 

Long-Running German Film Festival KINO! Reboots This June in New York

West

After 35 years of bringing the latest in German cinema to New York audiences at the Museum of Modern Art, KINO! reboots at two new locations this year: The Museum of The Moving Image (36-01 35th Ave, New York, NY 11106) and The Quad Cinema (34 W 13th St # B, New York, NY 10011). This long-running fest presents 10 films — four of them North American premieres — to screen daily at the Quad from June 13-19, 2014.

west-dirProgrammed by an independent jury of New York industry pros — Denise Kassell, Ian Stimler and Karl Rozemeyer — and organized by Munich-based German Films Service + Marketing GmbH, the national information and advisory center for the promotion of German films worldwide. It was established in 1954 under the name Export-Union of German Cinema as the umbrella association for the Association of German Feature Film Producers, the Association of New German Feature Film Producers and the Association of German Film Exporters.

KINO! kicks off with the June 12 opening night gala screening of West by the critically acclaimed director Christian Schwochow at the Queens Museum of Moving Image. Director Christian Schwochow will be present at the screenings.

Having won the FIPRESCI award and the Best Actress award at the Montreal World Film Festival, West has been picked up for theatrical distribution by Main Street Films and will be released later this year.

KINO! introduces new elements to the fest such as a last minute surprise film and a theatrical run of Nan Goldin – I Remember Your Face, a documentary by Sabine Lidl about the New York photographer, which will have daily screenings in Manhattan’s Quad Cinema.

Other films at the festival include:

  • Anywhere Else, by Ester Amrami
  • A Pact, by Denis Dercourt
  • Art War, by Marco Wilms (Director Marco Wilms will be present at the screenings.)
  • Banklady, by Christian Alvart
  • Finsterworld, by Frauke Finsterwald (Director Frauke Finsterwald and author Christian Kracht will be present at screenings. )
  • Hanna’s Journey, by Julia von Heinz (Director Julia von Heinz will be present at the screenings.)
  • Whispers Behind The Wall, by Grzegorz Muskala
  • The Woman Who Dares, by Marc Rensing

For more information, go to: www.kinofestivalnyc.com , @kinofestivalnyc

KINO! Festival of German Films in New York
June 13 - 19, 2014

The Museum of The Moving Image
36-01 35th Ave
New York, NY 11106

The Quad Cinema
34 W 13th St # B
New York, NY 10011

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