Wednesday 30 April 2008

The last glass

Driving further into the forests of political incorrectness amid the hum of Monty Python’s ‘lumberjack song’, we chance upon the sunlit winter glade of contract killer comedy. Even the posters for the recent Clive Owen vehicle Shoot‘Em Up managed to find an unappreciative audience. Yet In Bruges is one of the best Brit films in a long time with playwright director/writer Martin McDonagh making his feature-length debut (Six Shooter won the 2006 Academy Award for Best Live-Action Short). It’s pre-Christmas season and Ray (Colin Farrell) and Ken (Brendan Gleeson) are hitmen ordered by their boss (reptilian Ralph Fiennes) to lay low in Belgium’s beautiful but winter-dull tourist spot Bruges. Ken takes to the Gothic city like a wolf to Red Riding Hood but Ray’s accidental child killing during a contract on a priest forever haunts him. The child’s death mawkishly recurs a lot in the film but doesn’t quite ring true in this context. A shame because 80% of the movie is utterly fantastic, seasoned with the kind of bawdy contemporary dialogue Shakespeare would have loved and a camera style that appropriately never seems to make up its mind. We need more Mike Leigh moments in this film but we also need more Martin McDonaghs in British cinema.

You Kill Me(DVD) is another tour de force criminale for Sir Ben Kingsley an American alcoholic (Frank) C-list hitman in the backwaters (Buffalo). “Sometimes I couldn’t go drinkin’ ‘cause I had to kill somebody. And sometimes I’d miss killing someone ‘cause I was out drinking.” It’s a very clever script from Christopher Markus and Stephen McFeely (dating from 1997 before the genre became all the rage) who alongside director John Dahl (of the sleeper turned video success The Last Seduction) give an audio commentary. The writers relate how they attended an AA meeting one day and began wondering what was the most shocking and outrageous ‘anonymous’ confession one could make. Hence Frank our hitman was born. What really anchors the film is the perceptive bond between Frank and Laurel (Téa Leoni – “all present-day Katherine Hepburn” enthuses Kingsley) a deceased’s spouse he meets in his mortuary day job. For aspirant lower budget filmmakers, there’s an inspiring extra on the computer effects used in the movie – CGI snow, gun fire for the finale, and the Golden Gate Bridge. American indie filmmaking at its very best. Much less involving is Revolver DVD’s Borstal Boy based on the life of Irish rebel and playwright Brendan Behan. Nothing bad about the film and if it prompts one to seek out the original autobiography that’s no bad thing.

Percepolis (YouTube) is the much admired back and white French animation of Marjane Satrapi (co-directed with Vincent Paronnaud) from her graphic novel memoir of childhood Tehran. This version is unsubtitled but keeps the voices of Chiara Mastroianni and Catherine Deneuve (mother and daughter in real life too). Using her own name, Marjane’s story spans from the pre-Revolutionary 1970’s and her Leftist parents, then the overthrow of the American backed Shah, Left-wing disillusion at the new Fundamentalists and the execution of Marjane’s beloved Communist Uncle Anoosh that sparks more rebellion in the child. Now in her late teens she’s packed off to Vienna for enlightenment only to find that the golden windows of the West aren’t much different to those she left and she returns to Tehran. For a 12A movie it packs quite a political punch for kids and always humorously. Marjane is a little like Lisa Simpson with her childhood hero Bruce Lee, penchant for bootleg Iron Maiden CD’s from dodgy street vendors and bopping to the theme of her teen hero Rocky. I kept wondering if Mike Leigh was to make an animation would it be something akin to Percepolis or more like Belleville Rendez-Vous (2003), the French animation of thwarted American dreams? One sort of expects animation to be somewhat magical reimagining the thoughts that those simple lines on a page evoke. I haven’t seen the graphic original so maybe the film succeeds for those who have. It’s certainly radically different to anything you’re ever likely to see in a multiplex for quite some time - backed by Spielberg’s producer Kathleen Kennedy: long may it reign.

Persepolis (Times article)
Palestine film festival
Nightwaves (Thurs 24 April) Rana Mitter interviews Raja Shehadeh, the winner of this year's most prestigious prize for political writing -The Orwell Prize. Which work of the past year has best achieved George Orwell's aim to "make political writing into an art"?
Palestinian Walks: Notes on a Vanishing Landscape by Raja Shehadeh is published by Profile.
Mourchidat - Morocco's female Muslim clerics
The World Is What It Is: The Authorized Biography of VS Naipaul
BBC Radio 3's Nightwaves fascinating whole programme on Salman Rushdie (too late to listen again, wish they’d leave them all online like The Film Programme, but admittedly the latter is only once a week not nightly).

London played host again to the eclecticism of Heiner Goebbels: Stifters Dinge (Stifter's Things) BBC Music Matters spot.

And try Marc-André Hamelin in a state of jazz
The amazing pianist/composer Friedrich Gulda
New Portishead album their first release in 10 years
The composer Thomas Adès and the video artist Tal Rosner have produced a spectacular retelling of the creation story
Private Passions with singer and songwriter PJ Harvey.
A revealing audience with Marianne Faithfull
Nigel Kennedy 's new album
Bryan Ferry: 'I don't want to be controversial'
And BBC's Music Matters Luigi Nono's opera Prometeo receives its UK premiere, and an interview with violinist Nigel Kennedy on the release of his recording of Beethoven's Violin Concerto.

And if you're tired of attending lectures sitting in uncomfortable chairs next to uncomfortable people TED.COM is a brilliant new site owned by The Sapling Foundation, a private nonprofit foundation:
Try Tod Machover & Dan Ellsey: Releasing the music in your head or photographer Alison Jackson (Hamiltons currently have a show)

But to end on the race for reality:
Grand Theft Auto receives acclaim
Grand Theft Auto IV embodies the future of entertainment
The first Grand Theft Auto, video of Dundee office back in 1996
And the live action film adaptation of the 1960s Japanese animated series
written and directed by The Wachowski Brothers Speed Racer is out in cinemas May 9. Or if you're a different kind of racing fanatic:
'Recipe book' holds the clue to Phar Lap's death

The glass slipper (2)

Mike Leigh was at pains in his interviews for Happy-Go-Lucky to stress that this was a ‘happy’ film relative to his more morose efforts:
Actress Sally Hawkins speaks about her role
Mike Leigh: 'Me? Miserable? Nonsense!'
BBC Radio 4's The Film Programme (unlike many radio progs, the whole archive is available to listen again)
Mike Leigh Film Collection (DVD)

Poppy (Sally Hawkins) is relentless in her thirty-something happiness and contemporary London primary school teacher heaven. The kind of loveable creature who not so much wears one down mentally but wears out your extant facial muscles left by the smile she has cratered under constant witty bombardment. Everyone except her driving instructor (Eddie Marsan) whose only Left/Right political solace lies in the centre line of the road’s bitumen. Poppy drives him absolutely balmy and he goes berserk on her when she takes the car keys after his mild road rage. And it’s the next couple of minutes of Poppy’s silent ‘screen being’ that proves (if ever needed) Mike Leigh’s status as a world-class director. It’s almost like the debate over the President Bush footage when he learnt of the 9/11 Twin Towers on that school visit. What was he thinking? We ask that of Poppy too. There’ll never be the answer but questions keep flooding our mind. For the only time in the film her smile disappears. She walks home through the high street after returning the keys to her calmed down instructor finding some quiet steps on which to sit. For Poppy, the glass is neither half full nor half empty. It’s just a glass. A glass that if dropped one too many times will disappear back into the grains of sand from whence it fired. But did it need to fall in the first place?

Is technology ruining children?
Much heralded in American indie circles, Colossal Youth has its only London screenings at the French Institute as part of the 1968 Festival.
Very lively Radio 4 debate 1968: The Year of Revolutions
Revolution now! The 1968 Festival of Philosophy

When Lidia (Jeanne Moreau) in Antonioni’s B/W La Notte DVD (1961) walks the streets of Milan and happens upon two young men fighting we, the spectator are again posing questions to the silences we witness on screen. In the excellent accompanying 40-page booklet to this pristine print, the director states: “It really wasn’t necessary to know the protagonist’s inner thoughts [referring to De Sica’s Bicycle Thieves], his personality, or the intimate relationship between him and his wife; all this could very well be ignored. The important thing was to establish his relationship with society...cinema today [1961] should be tied to truth rather than to logic. The rhythm of life is not made up of one steady beat.” Rarely seen, though much written about, La Notte was the centre of his trilogy with L’Avventura and L’Eclisse. It's is a wilfully perplexing film, on the surface observing post-WWII Italian well-to-do ennui. Compare this to his last film Beyond the Clouds and there’s very little difference in style. People’s viewing experience often resembles their daily street experience - one of acceptance, numbed curiosity and artificially stimulated excitement. Antonioni offers us another dimension but one that if given time proves to be all too familiar.

L’Avventura and Identification Of a Woman (1982) are released on mid-price DVD (UK first) by Mr. Bongo June 16.

The Italians weren’t the only ones into post-war ‘bling’. Rationing was still prevalent in Britain but as the Science Museum’s new show reveals so was a new vision:
How the 1950's hero Dan Dare helped shape history with Utopian visions
Guardian article
Nightwaves spot
Front Row(28 April)

“Isn’t there anything that MacroSpace hasn’t turned into a sterile retail opportunity?” asks old inter-planetary hero Captain Eager (James Vaughan) in Captain Eager and the Mark of Voth (final dates at the ICA). “Some people like shopping Ted,” replies his only believer and fan, the demure tweed-skirted Jenny (Tamsin Greig). The critics unanimously gave this film the thumbs down but it’s actually very cleverly conceived and executed. Director Simon DaVision (aka not revealed) films in ‘Card-o-Vision’ and the art department’s materials budget came to £1,438.64 through using toilet rolls and yoghurt cartons. Mr. DaVision has the mad imagination of Canadian director Guy Maddin (he of those highly stylised almost silent sepia pics) with an equally firm grasp on what style and rhythm he wants to achieve. It’s as if seasoned artistic pros are recreating a student sci-fi film. The only difference being it never shares that genre’s embarrassing faux pas (s). (No offence intended to the future George Lucas(s) And to successfully bring off this acting style requires real talent. If you’ve missed it at the ICA there’s another chance at the Sci-Fi Film Fest.

Before your very eyes: Films in 3D are back
American physicist John Wheeler best known for coining the term 'black hole' died.
BBC Nightwaves (no longer online) Astronomer Royal Sir Martin Rees remembers John Wheeler
Guilty Robots, Happy Dogs: The Question of Alien Minds by David McFarland
German schoolboy, 13, corrects NASA's asteroid figures
On the trail of crooked science
The fall of the machines
Mathematician Robert Hunt on Beyond Measure

“The future had no place for Captain Eager,” nor did Bresson’s conventional Catholic citizens for their new ailing young priest: “You have my sympathy, but I repeat, get out of here,” warns the anonymous letter sent to him in Robert Bresson’s Diary of a Country Priest (Journal d'un curé de campagne) (1950). Out on Optimum DVD, Bresson’s film set in provincial Northern France is a classic and like all his work embodies a sense of time and image radically different from most other cinema. Even if one doesn’t necessarily enjoy Bresson’s cinema, I defy any film buff not to be fascinated by his theories about film. Notes on the Cinematographer is as good a start as any. It’s a shame the full price Optimum disc doesn’t have an audio commentary like the Criterion US release. Artificial Eye adds a further three Bresson titles to their DVD list May 12:
A Man Escaped , Lancelot du Lac and The Devil, Probably. I’ve only just received these so more on Bresson in more days.
Pickpocket
The Trial Of Joan Of Arc (Procès de Jeanne d'Arc)
L'Argent

Andrei Tarkovsky Elements of Cinema

Land of Promise: the British Documentary Movement 1930-1950 (BFI DVD)
Culture chiefs plead for the art of giving

Mala Noche is Gus Van Sant’s amazing and beautiful first feature from 1985 shot on 16mm B/W (with two flashes and the final credits in colour) for a mere $25,000. Little seen since then in spite of Van Sant’s Hollywood success (Good Will Hunting, To Die For), Mala Noche had a revival at the Cannes 2006 Festival and Raindance Fest last year. It’s now available for the first time in a DVD release from Tartan Video concurrent with Van Sant’s most recent Paranoid Park (also on Blu-ray). For some, it may seem bizarre mentioning Mala Noche in the same breath as Bresson but the former’s austerity, use of luminosity and voice-over aren’t that far from Bresson’s aesthetic. Just as Bresson spent forever casting and coaching the actor for his priest, Van Sant spent ages drafting the 500 page storyboard from the diary novella Mala Noche about a guy working in a liquor store who becomes sexually obsessed with Johnny an illegal immigrant. This came long before Todd Haynes, Greg Araki and the new wave of New Queer Cinema in America. The cinematographer John Campbell was a news cameraman but his work here has all of the beauty of the highly experienced Christopher Doyle in Paranoid Park. In the must-have 30 min interview extra Van Sant admits to a longing for the low-budget reality of Mala Noche: “In the case of Drugstore Cowboy [1989] we had 80 people, trucks...there was so much going on it was no longer the real world. You were in the middle of your own circus, so you had to create whatever reality you could [but] disturbing the people the people that actually are there.”

A quick mention of Chris Kraus ‘s harrowing Four Minutes (Vier Minuten) having opened here last month (Peccadillo Pictures) has just hit New York in one of Autobahn’s (Senator Film’s art-house label) first US releases. Kraus is also directing his first opera with genius conductor Claudio Abbado in the summer.

The Doctor Who Hears Voices on Channel Four TV last week was another welcome challenge to the conventional wisdom of drug medication for schizophrenia. Part docu-drama, the patient Ruth played by an actress had been suspended from her job as a doctor for admitting mental illness and hearing voices. Dr. Rufus May (as himself) advocated talking to Ruth’s ‘voice’ and counselling ‘it’, for this was Ruth’s reality. Whether a world that can’t even tolerate a suggestive bare arm and back photo of Hannah Montana(the famed Annie Leibowitz), can tolerate Dr. May’s almost RD Laing approach to schizophrenia remains to be seen.
Observer review
Schizophrenia and Talk Therapy
Can films change the world?

Monday 28 April 2008

The glass slipper was always heard long after it was seen no more.

You kind of know things are getting bad when London prime time news show anchors appear to have hit rock bottom with what’s on their auto-cue and the only news item glimmering with any hope is a Florida woman rescued from the errant alligator in her kitchen. London mayoral elections are this Thursday, and you have to admit that Rory Bremner’s joke on the subject (or one of his ever clever writers) about the three ugly sisters in search of their prince was pretty funny. We could do with more of that Enchanted in London to stop those shoes slipping down ‘the underground gap’.

Mindless babble of the robots on the Tube
£115,000 down Tube as noise case is lost

Film stars dodged angry Tube drivers at the premiere of a film about suicides on the Underground.
Three and Out, an unfortunate title given last week’s critical response.

The first openly gay senior policeman Brian Paddick, aka the 'Cannabis Cop', here reveals that after the shooting of Jean Charles de Menezes, he suffered severe depression. Now the Lib Dem is in the final straight of the race to be Mayor of London.

And just in case you missed The Terminal 5 Song (the BA ad with Delibes’ Lakméseems such a distant memory). Or is lost irony?
BAA (not to be confused with BA) set to lose stranglehold on airports
Profits before service – what did you expect?
BAA forced to sell off Gatwick after competition watchdog accuses it of ripping off millions of passengers
You're fired: T5 fiasco proves terminal
Fasten your seatbelts for T5 summer of hell

Robert Wardle will go down in history for caving in to political pressure to drop the investigation of arms giant BAE (what’s an acronym’s capital between friends) over alleged bribes to Saudi Arabia.

And someone who’s had his fare share of acronymic stress Mohamed Al Fayed (Harrod’s owner and the Diana-Dodi inquest) gets a hearing in The Guardian with his lawyer Michael Mansfield.

London commuters left gagging as manure cloud drifts over Channel from France
Gives a new meaning to plus ça change, n’est pas?

BBC’s Newsnight debate over Prime Minister’s tax U-turn, or as Conservative leader David Cameron said on Sunday morning’s BBC: “singled out some of the poorest working people in Britain and thumped them”. It’s hard to be funny anymore when the jokes in the headlines write themselves.
The UK's biggest banks have lost a test case about overdraft charges and the 10p tax row.
Big four stores face third price-fix probe
UK construction firms of accused of price rigging
Banks pull the plug on buy-to-let landlords
Victory for consumers in bank charges

Soldier's mother criticises Government for £2 million compensation claim. How those British soldiers must feel on hearing this.

In his latest book, American Journeys, Don Watson travels around America by train and hire car, eavesdropping on conversations, relating various histories and writing about his impressions of a country both loved and loathed by many.

Sound Proof is a sound art exhibition focusing on the site of the 2012 London Olympic Games. Six artists have been invited to respond to the site in the Lower Lea Valley and to the wider issues and debates surrounding the Olympic project. No glass slippers there, but howsabout some Central Park trivia for New York readers. The Brits Birkenhead Park was designed by Sir Joseph Paxton. In 1850 F.L. Olmsted, later famous as the designer of Central Park, visited the park as part of a tour of Europe and nicked (sorry, was inspired by) the idea. So now you know.
The pioneer plant hunters
The Shirley Sherwood Gallery at Kew Gardens reveals the beauty of botany
Lasers used to make female flies act like males
Casanova: The Myth and The Man

But there’s always The Sunday Times annual Rich List to turn you back into the loving socialist you always were or the tax exile you always dreamed of becoming. Or what about
The 100 most powerful people in British culture, or The Independent on Sunday’s Happy List, happy in the knowledge that their devoted flock manage to keep their wool in the winter of our discontent. I forgot to mention that striking trade union pension anger shut down the North Sea pipeline (one third of Britain’s gas supplies), and the teachers went on strike their first in 21 years, and another tube strike today and tomorrow. Brings on a petit pace? Surely not. I have Amy Adams’ princess ringing in mine ears and polishing my doorknob. Ah sweet mystery of life...blugger, wrong key - I still live in social housing, a world where the artist struggles to dream let alone sleep soundly or write his blog.


Is anxiety about sleep keeping us all awake?


The nature of reality is most certainly mein leitmotif this week (you know you’ve only been in my prologue and Act.1, Scene 1 for the past 18 months and that Wagner was on the watchlist for being a Lefty radical after the 1848 revolutions, don’t you?) Photographer Gregory Crewdson is currently at the White Cube
What dark secrets does this picture hold?
BBC's Front Row (23 April)
Those who’ve never seen Crewdson may well be awed. But for me, the beautiful precision of his ‘film stills’ of everyday American life or rather gesamptkunstwerk stills (a whole movie within one still), always leave me rather cold and remote like his subjects almost an ice chamber in the surroundings of the White Cube. But that may well be the whole point.

At Annely Juda Fine Art is Japanese sculpture by Yoshishige Saito and Time Space Wood (his last show there was back in 1992). Like all great sculpture they appear suspended in time as if these black planks and blocks had been thrown in the air like childrens’ coloured ‘pick-up sticks’ and rescued before they had time to settle. They harbour both strength and the fragility of the moment.
Former editor of The Economist Bill Emmott’s new book
Rivals: How the Power Struggle Between China, India and Japan Will Shape Our Next Decade.
Nightwaves interview
Silent Ozu—Three Family Comedies


Back to urban reality and Blek le Rat: This is not a Banksy
Robert Fisk: Painters love martyrs and prophets
And the cry of Katie Paterson’s melting glaciers at Modern Art Oxford

Nightwaves on recent BAFTA winning documentary film maker Paul Watson about one of his new plays for radio, a satire of television called How Now TV. (Sorry, Nightwaves is only up for a week)
BAFTA judges snub TV inquiry to honour filmmaker
The press told me I was finished
Nightwaves
Lord of the fly-on-the-walls
Alzheimer's film-maker to face ITV lawyers
Watson hits out at Cowell

the rest’ll be ready tomorrow :(

Thursday 3 April 2008

Castles in the sand, ghosts in the shell

BBC Radio 3’s weekly Saturday Review has the ‘best’ discussion I’ve heard on Brenton’s new Royal National Theatre play, Michael Cockerell (political documentary maker who met Harold MacMillan). There’s also a review of Wolf Totem Jiang Rong’s massive best seller in China (over 2 million copies and an estimated 6 million more pirated versions).
China in London: Spotlight Beijing at the ICA.
New Zealand comedy horror Black Sheep is out on DVD with director’s commentary.
Renzo Piano’s Central St Giles
Consumer confidence falls to 15-year low
Get your skates on if you want to see Tate Modern's latest installation
Last weeks of the Royal Academy of Arts’ From Russia show.
Simon Calder: Terminal 5 is a breathtaking display of institutional hubris
And London's 22nd Lesbian and Gay Film Festival is now on.

In Daniele Luchetti’s Italian ‘68 student protest era film My Brother is an Only Child(Mio fratello è figlio unico ), the Communist sibling Manrico amends the perceived “Fascist” Ode to Joy ending of Beethoven’s 9th Symphony at a student concert to a ‘Communist manifesto’ of placards akin to the video of Bob Dylan’s song: art without ‘the people’ “is a huge two-fisted jerk-off” claims Manrico. In march his brother’s Fascist supporters to disrupt proceedings. It’s quite a wonderful love story and more than worthy of being dubbed a descendant of Visconti’s class struggle cinema given its fine acting, script, cinematography and direction.

All in all, it’s quite a disturbing, thought provoking week of film and DVD releases. In addition to which, I had my almost never utilised Facebook account suspended. Having sent roughly two messages in about a year, I thought I’d see if I had any potential friends by choosing what I thought to be a suitable and specific ‘network of friends’ and sending them a note and link to this website. This was deemed to be ‘spam’ and my account closed forever (so far). Yet isn’t this the raison d'être for Facebook’s existence? If you don’t say hello to the bunch of beautiful, weird and wacky strange girls and boys at the bar how do you know whether or not they’re interested? Do you sit in a corner by yourself with a sign on the table saying please talk to me I’m interesting? And one obviously haven’t gone to the ‘bikers from hell’ club in Deathville dressed in a three-piece suit and bowler hat or the bar at the local bingo hall brandishing a machete. One has chosen ‘a bar’ at which you think like-minded people might be congregating and you try to network. How could what I did be equated to coldly knocking at people’s doors and leafleting?

There was an interesting Facebook harassment case verdict last week in Birmingham; a story you needed to piece together from about six different newspapers. The chap had sent the girl a message, someone he’d previously had an 18-month relationship with, even though he was under a restraining order. But the judge ruled that the Facebook message hadn’t constituted ‘harassment’. Actress Samantha Morton complained of text messages in a separate case which she won. When does love become a dangerous obsession? Become stalking? And when do obsessions become destructive? More of that anon.

Funny Games is director Michael Haneke’s almost shot for shot American remake of his original 1997 Austrian film. It is totally repulsive and totally compelling. All the more so because there are no subtitles to distance the viewer from the image. All the more so because we know these faces up there on screen. There’s Naomi Watts and there’s Tim Roth. And into their leafy vacation suburbia stroll the two clean white faced, white clothed intruders who innocently ask to borrow eggs and end up terrorising the couple and child. It’s as if they’d read the ‘Talented Mr. Ripley Handbook’ (Patricia Highsmith’s charismatic charlatan) and become Bret Easton Ellis clones from his American Psycho novel. All the more repulsive because these idol belle rich boys have been desensitised not only to violence but even to sex. For them what they do seems no more than kids’ pulling off the legs of grasshoppers.

Michael Haneke Interview on Funny Games, Part 1, Part 2, 2008 trailer.
The Film Programme (BBC's Radio 4, 28/3) has a Naomi Watts interview along with other goodies.
Sunday Times article and Why Naomi Watts is a glutton for punishment


Oz film The Book of Revelation first aired here at last year's Raindance Festival. Directed by Ana Kokkinos and co-scripted by Kokkinos with Andrew Bovell (Lantana) from Rupert Thomson's novel, a dancer Daniel (Tom Long) is kidnapped by three hooded femmes and kept as a sex slave for almost a fortnight. When released he abandons his high profile career with choreographer Isabel (Greta Scacchi) - Oz Olympics Meryl Tankard’s choreography. It’s a shame this film doesn’t quite fulfil its strangeness because it’s one of Australian film’s most interesting and rarely invoked characteristics. Not Aboriginal dreamtime, exactly, but a sort of ancient shared consciousness of unresolved strangeness (cf Peter Weir’s The Last Wave (1977) or the more recent Look Both Ways on Tartan DVD).

The Book of Revelation interview (The Movie Show, Oz TV), Oz site, Oz distributor Palace Films trailer.
Narcissism
The Loss of Sadness, one psychiatrist claims that are we increasingly medicating for what was once viewed as normal sadness.

Son Of Rambow ,
Official Trailer, with its poster adorning many London buses, has been a festival fave throughout the world. And it’s easy to see why. A nifty idea: set in 1982 England, 10 year-old Lee (Will Poulter) wants to win the BBC Screentest Young Filmmaker’s Award by making his very own Rambo on video starring his tearaway schoolmates. Brought up by his mum (Jessica Hynes) and surrogate stepfather (Neil Dudgeon) in a strict ‘Plymouth Brethren’ family, the more demure Will (Bill Milner) is blackmailed by Lee into his project but quickly enjoys being the stuntman. It’s a film throwing up a lot of questions yet leaves them dangling on a tree. On the one hand, it’s an inspirational film for kids (12A certificate) showing that one needn’t be trapped by society and that self empowerment is closer than many want them to believe. On the other, it never really addresses the questions of violence it raises. The two kids forge their bond by literally cutting their palms and becoming blood brothers rather than letting the script thread this through emotional. The brethren “protect their way of life” by retreating from the world just as Stallone’s Rambo tries to forge a better one by utilising its inherent violence. Will’s mum finally throws off her head shawl in exasperation of Joshua’s strictures on her son and though Lee misses out on the BBC gig he does get a final delight. The fact that Streisand’s Yentl is playing at the cinema can’t be simply a cheap screenwriter’s twist (writer/director Garth Jennings). And the fact that it feels like half a script is all the more frustrating because of how fantastic the ‘existing half’ feels. The uncanny Stallone casting resemblance of Lee’s ‘old-man Rambo’ is one of the myriad script delights.

Britain's Mean Streets (Time Magazine, March 26)
Teenage knife crime 'is one of biggest threats to London

After offending many with his radical views in papers and periodicals Dutch writer Theo van Gogh gained independence by launching his own website De Gezonde Roker (The Healthy Smoker). He supported the Iraq invasion but offended both the Jews and the Muslims referring to the latter as “geitenneukers (‘goat-fuckers’)”. His friend and ally was conservative Dutch political leader Pim Fortuyn, assassinated in 2002, and the subject of Van Gogh’s film Sixth of May now out on that enterprising indie Bluebell DVD (no website). Van Gogh’s 10-minute film Submission, on the violence against women in Islamic societies broadcast on Dutch public TV, finally got him killed on November 2, 2004. Theo van Gogh was great-grandson of art dealer Theo van Gogh, brother of Vincent van Gogh, and Theo’s father a member of the Dutch secret service (AIVD, then called BVD). So he knew what he was talking about when making a conspiracy thriller. Pete Travis (who forged the harrowing docu-drama about the Irish Omagh bombing) recently received relatively dismissive reviews for his American studio US Presidential assassination conspiracy film Vantage Point. And I hate to say it but the film’s details rang a lot of truths for me while obviously remaining a fiction film. I think I wrote this many months back, but when novels talk of governments and companies bugging each other, nobody bats an eyelid. But when Brit MP Clare Short declared some years ago that Koffi Annan’s United Nations office was being bugged there by the Brits was uproar. And I felt the same about Van Gogh’ Sixth of May. It is well made, well acted, well editing, really nice father/daughter relationship but not particularly ground breaking in any other way. However, if you read up on Van Gogh and Pim Fortuyn, the script’s fictional conspiracy theory starts to niggle in your mind. One thinks of the Brit film Defence of the Realm (1985) and the BBC series Edge of Darkness (1985)(ah those were the days..) And there’s a lightness to Van Gogh’s script that is a little eerie - the almost comic ease with which conspiracy evolves. Great use too of Gabriel Rios - Broad Daylight.
London’s Mayorial elections
London transport crawl the worst in 40 years
The amazing and in many ways prophetically contemporary The Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford is now out DVD (my blog review).

Beaufort is directed by Joseph Cedar, US born but Israeli since a child, and adapted from a novel by Ron Leshem, who co-wrote the screenplay. A 12th century Crusader fortress in southern Lebanon, Beaufort (Beautiful Fort) has survived the bloody scars of centuries of war. When Israel invaded Lebanon in 1982 the Israeli army captured the fort from the PLO and Cedar himself spent time in Lebanon as an infantry soldier, paratrooper and medic. The film shows the lead up to the soldiers’ withdrawal from the fort under the Hezbollah shelling and their orders to destroy it. In reality this was done in May 2000 but the ancient castle remained unharmed. I was truly mesmerised by this film. Like Van Gogh’s film it does nothing particularly new or inventive cinematically. It is, however, shot in Cinemascope (Ofer Inov) and that’s what really compels the viewer into the soldiers’ world. The wide periphery of the screen is there to draw you into its centre, almost hypnotically like a crystal ball, in which the soldiers become Everyman – soldiers of every war, every country, and every epoch. I urge you to see this film whatever your creed. The slate of its distributor the new Trinity Filmed Entertainment is shaping up impressively. In the near future they’re also releasingHeartbeat Detector (New Yorker Films) that’s just opened in the States.

ICA Israeli season
Neglected poet and painter Isaac Rosenberg Ben Uri Gallery, Front Row Thurs 27 March, Nightwaves
Robert Fisk: Where is our man for all seasons?
His new book, The Age of the Warrior: Selected Writings from Fourth Estate. (Southbank talk Monday 7 April 2008)
Lebanon boycott underlines divisions ahead of Arab League summit
Rageh Omaar on Iraq: A nation in pieces

The haunting El Violin about Mexican civil war is now out on DVD (My blog review).

Under the Bombs (Sous les Bombs) filmed partly during the 2006 summer conflict between Hezbollah and Israel is directed by French-Lebanese Philippe Aractingi who combines actual footage with his story of a well heeled Shiite woman Zeina (Nada Abou Farhat) arriving in Beirut from Dubai and wanting to head south to see her son. Her only hope is the Lebanese Christian taxi driver Tony (Geroges Khabbaz). And off they go into the war-torn danger zone. Most of the cast are non-pro and some may well prefer this film’s tone to Beaufort. Though engaging and heartfelt, I wished for more of a Kiarostami quirkiness as we journeyed on.
Nick Broomfield’s Iraqi docu-drama Battle for Haditha (recently screened on Channel Four is now on Contender DVD)
Abbas Kiarostami’s meditative Five is out on BFI DVD with an extensive Making of extra.

British Silent Cinema Festival this week (the one and only!)
Ben-Hur (with Carl Davis’ score) screens Saturday 19 April.

On the Black Hill (1987) (DVD Region 0) hails from the Brit era when Channel Four television was at its new and most adventurous height as well as the BFI (Terence Davies’ 1988 Distant Voices, Still Lives ). Writer/director Andrew Grieve was told by the BFI, we have some money, make it now or you’ll never get another chance anywhere else. And it’s a really funny, beautiful and enduring surprise. The difficult adaptation of Bruce Chatwin’s novel spanning 80 years of ‘Vision’ farm’s family in the Welsh hills never feels pushed or abutted. With Thaddeus O’Sullivan’s (later turning director himself) widescreen anamorphic cinematography we glide though history and the twin brothers struggle to retain the farm. “In a world of constant and extraordinary change, how do you make a film about things that don’t change: the rhythm of the seasons and the circularity of time...no matter how far we travel we never really leave home,” writes Grieve in the DVD’s accompanying leaflet. “How do you imagine hell...and hellfire?” asks the German girl Lotte. “Something like London I expect, replies the twin Ben. There’s also a 10min short by Pinny Grylls Peter and Ben about Peter and his sheep Ben. A DVD that makes a great perennial parental gift.

Last Word has an interesting aural obituary for Welsh photojournalist Philip Jones Griffiths as well as Mikey Dread (honorary 5th The Clash member and well at the roots of Brit Dub and Reggae), Shusha Guppy and Nigel Acheson.

And last week’s In Our Time (BBC Radio 4):
The Dissolution of the Monasteries

Only one fleeting afternoon of Brit springtime so far this week but one of the glories of the spring DVD season blossoms from France and director Bertrand Tavernier who hails from the beautiful but drizzly Lyon. Optimum have five single releases each with the same 15 min intro interview with Tavernier speaking in English about his career and then a specific interview for each disc. Tavernier is a wonderful raconteur even in his second language and it’s well worth listening to the two audio commentaries. The first is on his debut 1974 feature L'Horloger de Saint Paul (The Watchmaker of St. Paul), the well connected ex film publicist Tavernier convincing Philippe Noiret to star. The star’s agent didn’t want him to do it and he and Tavernier kept getting ‘patronisingly’ rejected by every finance company even though it was based on a Georges Simenon novel. It’s a film that Tavernier would remake again and again in terms of its esprit de coeur. A quiet, working man and unerring cog in society’s wheel one day stops turning in the same direction as the others: only a tiny cog but enough to unbalance the motion. In this film Michel is literally a watchmaker whose son one day commits a murder. When Tavernier, wanting to dedicate the film to the great French poet and screenwriter Jacques Prévert, explained him the story Prévert said, “well it’s not the worst thing he will do in his life.” Tavernier denies being a ‘political filmmaker’ and its true that Tavernier’s most lingering films are those where an extraordinary man stops turning in an ordinary world. Or at least will never keep time in quite the same way ever again. In the Simeon novel, Michel is simply a lonely outsider but Tavernier wanted him to be lonely when to all intents and purposes he’s one of the friendly crowd. Tavernier also tells the lovely story of his little daughter (used in the ‘studio’ interior opening scene) seeing the cut to the moving train on screen and thinking for years that her Dad was a magician.

Le Juge et l'Assassin (The Judge and the Assassin) 1976, begins with a crime passionale set in 1893 with the killer Joseph (Michel Galabru), two bullets lodged in his brain and released as ‘cured’ from a mental asylum, going on a serial rapist rampage through rural France. The judge assigned to the case is Noiret again. Joseph is captured and argues his case against the society that originally released him, “I served justice. France is the offender.” Society’s response is “a madman who knows he’s mad is a cured madman.” The historical backdrop is the anti-Semitism of the time, and anti Émile Zola and the novelist’s support for Dreyfus.

This idea is furthered in Coup de Torchon (Clean Up) inspired by Jim Thompson’s novel Pop.1280 that Tavernier transplants to a French African colony in 1938, again with Noiret, this time as the corrupt, faded local police chief Cordier who eases into violence, “all crimes are collective”. If this wasn’t clear enough then L.627 bears out Tavernier’s view, again with engrossing audio commentary. The script was co-written with a working cop and shows Paris cop “Lulu” Marguet (Didier Bezace) beating his head between the corruption on the street and the corruption in the force, “Nothing has changed in the French police since the film was made,” says Tavernier wryly. For half the actors it’s their first film and Tavernier insists on doing the casting himself on all his films. Great score too from his regular collaborator Philippe Sarde.

Ca Commence Aujourd'hui (It All Starts Today) 1999, is set in deprived modern day Valenciennes in northern France, the same bleak area of Zola’s 1885 novel Germinal (Germen or seed, the name of the seventh spring month of the French Revolutionary Republican Calendar) in which a young migrant worker tries to scratch out a living as a coalminer. Daniel (Philippe Torreton) is schoolmaster of a kindergarten who struggles to keep the building and his kids afloat. “A year and a half after the film’s release, the left lost most of the cities in the election because they weren’t in synch with the [film’s] problems. I don’t want to be branded a ‘political filmmaker’ [though]. In all my films there is one desire [and that is] to learn,” says Tavernier quoting his English film mentor Michael Powell. If ever a Making of extra needed to be made it was certainly true for this film, and the 50 minutes footage of the incredible life changing effect of the film in unforgettable. “You gave me two years of courage,” said one mother to Tavernier.

new Mike Leigh DVD set
Sally Hawkins: life as Mike Leigh's muse
Mike Leigh on Mike Leigh

Koch Lorber has the Taviani Brothers films of ‘existence’ out on DVD in the States: Fiorile, Kaos, and The Night of the Shooting Stars

For a touch of comedy try ITV’s Teenage Kicks
Ade Edmondson plays a not so Young One in Teenage Kicks
And last night’s (Wednesday 2 April) Newsnight on BBC2 had a chat about comedy and religion.
Podcast of the Week: The story of a lost episode of Fawlty Towers

And for horror try the lost children’s voices of The Orphanage trailer , produced by Guillermo del Toro (Pan's Labyrinth) and a stunning thoughtful directorial debut for Juan Antonio Bayona. “What sparked the idea for The Orphanage was [an illustration] on the copy of Peter Pan that I read as a kid. It was [an illustration] of Wendy's mother sitting by the window, waiting for her children to come back. I thought it would be interesting to re-tell the story of Peter Pan from the point of view of the mother,” says screenwriter Sergio G. Sánchez in this interview. It’s released on Blu-ray and standard DVD by New Line in the States April 21. The ‘normal’ cinema audience watching with me shuddered every time.

Concluded tomorrow...
"If I do, I'll go crazy. I'll think about that tomorrow...after all... tomorrow is another day."