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3501


From: hotlove666
Date: Fri Oct 31, 2003 10:21pm
Subject: Re: Cahiers Films of the Decade
 
Kael really comes off as a horror in Denby's piece -one hundred
percent about power.

She did champion Demme (Citizen's Band, Melvin and Howard)
and Kaplan (Heart Like a Wheel). I have said - in print - that if you
just took her articles about those 70s directors and put them
together under the title The American New Wave by Pauline Kael
it would be a book I'd be happy to have on my shelf. It's just the
rest of what she wrote...
3502


From: hotlove666
Date: Fri Oct 31, 2003 10:28pm
Subject: Halloween III
 
Since Mystery Mike mentioned it - has anyone seen it? It has a
nifty script by Nigel Kneale, and it's very well done. Carpenter and
Hill were going to spin off multi-digited Halloweens with the
continuity being the holiday, not Michael, but people wanted
Michael.
3503


From: David Ehrenstein
Date: Fri Oct 31, 2003 11:33pm
Subject: Re: Re: Cahiers: The Outstanding Films of the Decade (1970-1980)
 
"Denby is is usual drearily pompous and
self-reverential self in this
article, but what come across most lucidly in this
portrait of
Pauline Kael and her boys is how nasty and obnoxious a
woman she
seemed to be. Her bullying, apparently, wasn't
confined to her
hectoring writing style, but was part-and-parcel of
her life,
certainly of her inter-action with others, even (or
perhaps
especially) those to whom she was supposedly a
mentor."

Not untypical of women obsessed with turning gay men
straight. She got a daughter out of it. Broughton came
out.

As I wasn't a Paulette, but know a great many of them
personally, I was out of the line of fire. My dealings
with her were all quite pleasant. Of course I never
heard from her again after my review of "For Keeps" in
the L.A. Times where I took her to task on a number of
issues.

I haven't read Denby's piece as yet. Which issue is it
in?

Does he have anything to say about her time at
Paramount, when Warren Beatty (that rascal!) got her a
job as a reader in the late 70's? The only thing she
said she managed to do at that time was say that is
was good idea for Lynch to direct "The Elephant Man."


--- Damien Bona wrote:


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3504


From: Michael Brooke
Date: Fri Oct 31, 2003 11:34pm
Subject: Re: Halloween III
 
--- In a_film_by@yahoogroups.com, "hotlove666" wrote:
> Since Mystery Mike mentioned it - has anyone seen it? It has a
> nifty script by Nigel Kneale, and it's very well done. Carpenter and
> Hill were going to spin off multi-digited Halloweens with the
> continuity being the holiday, not Michael, but people wanted
> Michael.

I completely agree - I saw it when it came out, fortunately primed in advance by some
excellent reviews that emphasised Kneale's contribution and the film's divergence
from its predecessors, thus minimising any potential disappointment. It's a real
shame that they called it 'Halloween III', as I thought it was more than strong enough
to stand up on its own without that particular baggage.

Incidentally, I had at least a nodding acquaintance with the REAL Michael Myers a
decade or so ago - he was the British distributor who turned 'Assault on Precinct 13'
into a fairly substantial critical and cult hit on my side of the Atlantic, and in gratitude
Carpenter named the psycho in his next film after him. Sadly, he passed away a few
years ago, but I think his son Martin is still in the business.

Michael
3505


From: Henrik Sylow
Date: Fri Oct 31, 2003 11:44pm
Subject: Re: Halloween III
 
--- In a_film_by@yahoogroups.com, "hotlove666"
wrote:
> Since Mystery Mike mentioned it - has anyone seen it? It has a
> nifty script by Nigel Kneale, and it's very well done. Carpenter and
> Hill were going to spin off multi-digited Halloweens with the
> continuity being the holiday, not Michael, but people wanted
> Michael.

I saw it when it first came and I still know the stupid Silver
Shamrock commercial song lol (its only been twenty years).

I have avoided it like the plague to be honest. I found it quiet bad,
bordering on boring and a quicky trying to cash in on the name
"Halloween".

Henrik "Re-Animator" Sylow :)
3506


From: Gabe Klinger
Date: Fri Oct 31, 2003 11:58pm
Subject: 3 filmmakers you may have heard of
 
Paul wrote:

> Here's a 1980 poll from Cahiers du Cinéma. It's an alternative to the
> view of the 1970's centered on the "New Hollywood." Many of
> these films are rarely shown. I can't find any information on a few
> ("Pinocchio," "Video 50").

I had never seen these lists but I see some notable omissions such as
LA CECILIA, A GRIN WITHOUT A CAT, THE GREEN ROOM, HISTOIRES D'A (anyone
ever see this?), I, PIERRE RIVIERE, L'ASSASSIN MUSICIEN... Also where
are the XALAs and the other obscure third world films? Or how about
CHINATOWN and BARRY LYNDON? Did the Cahiers ever get a chance to see
Joris Ivens' HOW YUKONG MOVED THE MOUNTAINS, or films by Werner
Schroeter? And it seems to say a lot about the radical changes of the
period that TWO LANE BLACKTOP gets all the votes while the other '70s
Hellmans are never mentioned.

Until he was recently mentioned on the list, Paul Vecchiali had
completely escaped my radar. When I see "shopping lists" (the kind
Adrian Martin once referred to), whether on web sites or in old
magazines, there's almost always one film or director I have never
heard of. For me this is the ultimate function of lists: to be able to
discover new filmmakers. Jean-Marie Straub has a "shopping list" of his
three favorite European directors, directors I have never heard of.

Frans van de Staak
Jean-Claude Rousseau
Peter Nestler

Who has seen films by these directors?

Gabe
3507


From: Frederick M. Veith
Date: Sat Nov 1, 2003 0:55am
Subject: David Denby [was: Cahiers: The Outstanding Films of the Decade (1970-1980)]
 
On Fri, 31 Oct 2003, David Ehrenstein wrote:

> I haven't read Denby's piece as yet. Which issue is it
> in?

Oct. 20, 2003

F.
3508


From: David Ehrenstein
Date: Sat Nov 1, 2003 0:56am
Subject: Re: David Denby [was: Cahiers: The Outstanding Films of the Decade (1970-1980)]
 
Thanks!

--- "Frederick M. Veith"
wrote:
> On Fri, 31 Oct 2003, David Ehrenstein wrote:
>
> > I haven't read Denby's piece as yet. Which issue
> is it
> > in?
>
> Oct. 20, 2003
>
> F.
>
>
>


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3509


From:
Date: Fri Oct 31, 2003 8:24pm
Subject: 21 Film Classics from the 1970's
 
The Andersonville Trial (George C. Scott, 1970)
The Clowns (Federico Fellini, 1970)
How Awful About Allan (Curtis Harrington, 1970)
The Spider's Stratagem (Bernardo Bertolucci, 1970)
Trafic (Jacques Tati, 1970)
Two Lane Blacktop (Monte Hellman, 1971)
WR: Mysteries of the Organism (Dusan Makavejev, 1971)
The Boy Friend (Ken Russell, 1971)
Savage Messiah (Ken Russell, 1972)
What's Up, Doc? (Peter Bogdanovich, 1971)
The Nine Tailors (Raymond Menmuir, 1974)
The Questor Tapes (Richard A. Colla, 1974)
A Woman Under the Influence (John Cassavetes, 1974)
Picnic at Hanging Rock (Peter Weir, 1975)
The Stepford Wives (Bryan Forbes, 1975)
Man of Marble (Andrzej Wajda, 1976)
Providence (Alain Resnais, 1977)
Star Wars (George Lucas, 1977)
Ishi, the Last of His Tribe (Robert Ellis Miller, 1978)
The Tree of Wooden Clogs (Ermanno Olmi, 1978)
Why Didn't They Ask Evans? (Tony Wharmby, 1979)

I too am very skeptical of the "Young Hollywood Turks" theory of the 1970's.
There were lots of other interesting films in this decade!

Mike Grost
3510


From: David Ehrenstein
Date: Sat Nov 1, 2003 1:31am
Subject: Re: 21 Film Classics from the 1970's
 
You skipped the most important of all Ken Russell
films --"The Devils."

--- MG4273@a... wrote:
> The Andersonville Trial (George C. Scott, 1970)
> The Clowns (Federico Fellini, 1970)
> How Awful About Allan (Curtis Harrington, 1970)
> The Spider's Stratagem (Bernardo Bertolucci, 1970)
> Trafic (Jacques Tati, 1970)
> Two Lane Blacktop (Monte Hellman, 1971)
> WR: Mysteries of the Organism (Dusan Makavejev,
> 1971)
> The Boy Friend (Ken Russell, 1971)
> Savage Messiah (Ken Russell, 1972)
> What's Up, Doc? (Peter Bogdanovich, 1971)
> The Nine Tailors (Raymond Menmuir, 1974)
> The Questor Tapes (Richard A. Colla, 1974)
> A Woman Under the Influence (John Cassavetes, 1974)
> Picnic at Hanging Rock (Peter Weir, 1975)
> The Stepford Wives (Bryan Forbes, 1975)
> Man of Marble (Andrzej Wajda, 1976)
> Providence (Alain Resnais, 1977)
> Star Wars (George Lucas, 1977)
> Ishi, the Last of His Tribe (Robert Ellis Miller,
> 1978)
> The Tree of Wooden Clogs (Ermanno Olmi, 1978)
> Why Didn't They Ask Evans? (Tony Wharmby, 1979)
>
> I too am very skeptical of the "Young Hollywood
> Turks" theory of the 1970's.
> There were lots of other interesting films in this
> decade!
>
> Mike Grost
>


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3511


From: Gabe Klinger
Date: Sat Nov 1, 2003 1:44am
Subject: Netiquette
 
On Friday, October 31, 2003, at 06:56 PM, David Ehrenstein wrote:

> Thanks!

On Saturday, October 18, 2003, at 06:19 PM, David Ehrenstein wrote:

> Merci, Henrik!


On Saturday, October 18, 2003, at 07:20 PM, David Ehrenstein wrote:

> We RULE!


On Sunday, October 26, 2003, at 11:32 PM, David Ehrenstein wrote:

> Merci, jp!

On Wednesday, October 29, 2003, at 11:48 PM, David Ehrenstein wrote:

> Merci!


How to best put this (and how not to sound like a complete lame-o who's
home on Halloween): David, I think we would all appreciate the
bandwidth being saved if you didn't reply with one-word emails --
"thank you" emails in particular. Instead you could reply to the
author's email account which the web interface allows (if that's your
route). Sorry to sound so anal, but come on, brotha'. Some of us find
it really tiring to sort through all the posts...

Wasting more bandwidth,
Gabe
3512


From:
Date: Fri Oct 31, 2003 8:45pm
Subject: Re: 21 Film Classics from the 1970's
 
David Ehrenstein writes:
>You skipped the most important of all Ken Russell films --"The Devils."

Ken Russell is really rich! His "Clouds of Glory" is also terrific -although
I've only seen part 1, which is about Coleridge (Part 2 is about Wordsworth).
There are great moments of invention in "Lisztomania", too.
At least the list includes "The Nine Tailors" (Menmuir) and "What About
Evans?" (Wharmby), two of the best mystery movies ever made. Both were serials made
for British TV, and are very long and richly detailed - "The Nine Tailors" is
nearly four hours.
I've been thoroughly enjoying Michael Brooke's web site on British Film and
TV. My impression is that British TV is extraordinarily vast and fascinating.
"The Magic of Dance" (Patricia Foy) and "Flickers" are two other British TV
masterpieces.

Mike Grost
3513


From:
Date: Fri Oct 31, 2003 9:43pm
Subject: Re: Halloween III
 
I really appreciate the tips on "Halloween III"! I love Carpenter's original
and, out of auteurist deference to him and it, have somehow managed to skip
all of the sequels (and, yes, I realize that "III" doesn't really qualify as a
sequel.)

Tourneur's "I Walk With a Zombie" would receive my vote as the perfect
Halloween film. It's perfect any time, of course, and so are these, some of my
other favorite horror films:

- "Amityville 3-D" (Richard Fleischer)
I saw this on the recommendation of Dan Sallitt, who also wrote a nice
capsule piece on it back in the day. In a nifty parallel with "Halloween III,"
"Amityville 3-D" is only ostensibly a sequel to the two films which precede it; it
doesn't have any of the same characters and is not based upon purported 'real
life' events. Instead, it feels almost like an exercise for Fleischer to
flex his visual skills within the confines of the Amityville house; I imagine the
"house of horrors" aspect to this picture would only be intensified by
actually seeing it in 3-D, but what can you do. I'd nominate it as Fleischer's best
film in the years following "Mandingo," although there are a few I haven't
seen yet.

- "Creepshow" (George A. Romero) and "Dead of Night" (Various)
'Episode' movies are almost by definition spotty, though the two above are
certainly two of the most consistent quality-wise. (Maybe the most inconsistent
I've ever seen is the "Twilight Zone" feature, which starts off pretty bad
[Landis, Spielberg] and then becomes great with Dante and Miller's episodes.)
But there are fluctuations even in "Creepshow" (with "Something to Tide You
Over" and "The Crate" standing among the great Romero films; the rest are just
very good) and "Dead of Night" (with Cavalcanti's ventriloquist's dummy episode
kind of eclipsing everything else, though it's all enjoyable.)

- "Silent Night, Deadly Night 3" (Monte Hellman)
I just posted about this terrific film; watch it on Halloween - or Christmas!
Which leads me to...

- "Black Christmas" (Bob Clark)
A great and arguably very, very influential film in its use of
point-of-view-of-the-killer camerawork. I've only just started to explore Clark's work, but
this is by far the best of what I've seen so far. I do hear his later
"Deathdream" is equally good.

- "The Old Dark House" (James Whale)
This is, I think, my favorite Whale; wonderfully atmospheric (that shot of
Karloff looking through the door!) and also quite witty.

- Anything by Larry Cohen or Curtis Harrington - and most anything by Roger
Corman.

I believe our own Eric Henderson is the biggest horror film buff around here,
so perhaps he'd like to chip in with some of his favorites.

Peter
3514


From: Tristan
Date: Sat Nov 1, 2003 3:38am
Subject: Re: Halloween III
 
--- In a_film_by@yahoogroups.com, ptonguette@a... wrote:
> Tourneur's "I Walk With a Zombie" would receive my vote as the
perfect
> Halloween film. It's perfect any time, of course, and so are
these, some of my
> other favorite horror films:

Interesting, I'm watching this and Cat People tonight. A few of my
recommendations can be found on my screening log:
http://www.neotokyonews.com/screeninglog.shtml . I've been watching
horror all month, and I'm a little sick of it.
 
3515


From: Damien Bona
Date: Sat Nov 1, 2003 4:26am
Subject: Re: Halloween III
 
--- In a_film_by@yahoogroups.com, "Tristan" wrote:
> --- In a_film_by@yahoogroups.com, ptonguette@a... wrote:

> Interesting, I'm watching this and Cat People tonight. A few of my
> recommendations can be found on my screening log:
> http://www.neotokyonews.com/screeninglog.shtml . I've been watching
> horror all month, and I'm a little sick of it.

I've been concentrating on horror films as well, in my case Universal
films from the late 30s and early 40s. While none of them is without
interest -- and Rowland V. Lee's Son of Frankenstein is quite good --
I'm ready to move on (especially to get away from the phlegmatic Lon
Chaney, Jr.)

By the way, Tristan, I love you log entry for a true horror:
"
October 7 - California Recall Election - Zero Stars
Fuck you Arnold. Fuck you, you Nazi asshole."

 


3516


From: Elizabeth Nolan
Date: Sat Nov 1, 2003 4:50am
Subject: HUMAN STAIN: a whole lot of dancing going on...
 
There sure seemed to be a lot of dancing going on in HUMAN STAIN: cheek
to cheek on the porch, girl friend strip tease for young Coleman,
Kidman show...and I don't think the scenes contributed much to the
story or film. Add the pugilistic action ... sometimes people confuse
activity with dramatic action.
I have not read the book but the story seemed to have a lot more
potential than what was presented. When you add up all that activity,
an already relatively short film time story doesn't have much left to
develop the characters, but how much do you have to develop when people
drop dead pretty quickly. It seemed that emphasis was misplaced, the
dinner with mom and ride home scenes were the girl friend's story and
then she left the program; he marries someone we haven't met or else I
blinked my eyes.


POSSIBLE SPOILER follows:


The car event that occurs on a snow covered road...is it accidental or
intentional...could be either when seen at the start of the film.
3517


From: Robert Keser
Date: Sat Nov 1, 2003 5:03am
Subject: Re: Cahiers 1963: Best American Sound Films
 
.
Does no one else find the following surprising?

Dec. 1963 Cahiers:
>
> The top films, by my count:
>
>12. The Quiet American (Mankewiecz)

>
> The top directors (I'm not sure my count is correct):

> 7. Mankiewicz (11)
>
> Pierre-Richard Bré:

> 8. Suddenly Last Summer (Mankiewicz)
>
> Jean-Louis Comolli

> 8. The Quiet American (Mankiewicz)

> Jean Douchet:

> 8. Suddenly Last Summer (Mankiewicz)
>
> Bernard Eisenschitz

> The Late George Apley (Mankiewicz)
>
> Jean-Claude Fieschi:

> 10. The Quiet American (Mankewiecz)
>
> > Jacques Goirnard:

> 7. The Quiet American (Mankiewicz)
>
> Michel Mardore:

> The Barefoot Contessa (Mankiewicz)
>
> Jean Narboni:

> 7. The Quiet American (Mankiewicz)

> Dominique Rabourdin:

> 3. The Ghost and Mrs. Muir (Mankiewicz)
> >
> Francois Weyergans:

> The Barefoot Contessa (Mankiewicz)

Actually, finding that Mankiewicz was held in such high regard
seems amazing to me. (I'm not sure what it means, but none of the
directors--not Godard or Chabrol, not Rivette or Tavernier or
Truffaut-- chose a Mankiewicz film). Of course this poll was
taken just around the time that Cleopatra was released. Does
anyone recall whether the enthusiasm for Mankiewicz survived
Cleopatra?

On the other hand, The Quiet American has always struck me as
quite different from Mankiewicz's other movies in summoning up
the atmosphere of erotic obsession. Even if he DID twist the
story to defang Greene's political point, the Mankiewicz film
still benefited from Robert Krasker's striking b/w photography
in Cambodia (and Rome) and a wonderfully sweaty performance by
Michael Redgrave. The Phillip Noyce version got the ending right,
but to me some of the mystery evaporated, despite its other good
qualities.

--Robert Keser
3518


From: Joseph Kaufman
Date: Sat Nov 1, 2003 5:10am
Subject: Re: Halloween III
 
>Incidentally, I had at least a nodding acquaintance with the REAL
>Michael Myers a decade or so ago - he was the British distributor
>who turned 'Assault on Precinct 13' into a fairly substantial
>critical and cult hit on my side of the Atlantic, and in gratitude
>Carpenter named the psycho in his next film after him. Sadly, he
>passed away a few years ago, but I think his son Martin is still in
>the business.
>
>Michael

The "real" Michael Myers struck me as being a gentleman, in contrast
to so many in this business.
--

- Joe Kaufman
3519


From: Elizabeth Nolan
Date: Sat Nov 1, 2003 5:11am
Subject: Films I watched this HALLOWEEN week
 
Some of the films I watched this HALLOWEEN week on tv or DVD:

WILD RIVER (with its own sense of another time and place)

THE NIGHT OF THE HUNTER (certainly of no time and no place but
everlasting)

HALLOWEEN and THE THING (Carpenter)
I watched these and was sensing a 'personality' in these films and was
gratified when I listened to the DVD and heard Carpenter talk about the
personality of the film. Interesting comments made by all variety of
crew working on the film really suggest that the individual artist's
personality does emerge.

FREAKS was on TCM
I saw FREAKS first when I was a youngster. The chicken woman was more
than remarkable to me, especially as one neighbor had a chicken coop
with white feather chickens and another neighbor resembled the woman!
The Johnny Eck person was very real to me but I wonder if seeing him
today in the digital world would be less powerful.

I TiVo'd the Lon Chaney stuff on TCM

REPULSION and THE HAUNTING (WISE) was the double bill at MOPA today and
a nice Halloween treat.
More on REPULSION later.

THE HAUNTING demonstrates the power of less shown / more unknown.
Scary minds are more frightening to watch than scary looking people.

(Someday I'll share my story about the supermarket visit one night
during the PALM SPRINGS INTERNATIONAL FILM FESTIVAL.)
3520


From: David Ehrenstein
Date: Sat Nov 1, 2003 5:29am
Subject: Re: Re: Cahiers 1963: Best American Sound Films
 
Mankiewicz was enormously important to Godard. His
very first critical review was of "House of
Strangers," and he wrote eloquently of "The Quiet
American." In fact Georgia Moll was cast in "Contempt"
because of the key role she played in "The Quiet
American." And "Contempt" is shot in the Mankiewicz
style -- most remindful of "The Barefoot Contessa."
Godard's hommages to Mankiewicz continue even unto
"Nouvelle Vague" whose leading female character is
surnamed Torlatta-Favrini, after Rossanno Brazzi's
character in "The Barefoot Contessa."
--- Robert Keser wrote:


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3521


From: Frederick M. Veith
Date: Sat Nov 1, 2003 6:29am
Subject: Mankiewicz (was: Cahiers 1963: Best American Sound Films)
 
Not surprising only in the sense that I was already at least
generally aware of it. But I've long wondered if this is still the case. I
know that Fred Camper, for instance, places him on his 'Favorite
Filmmakers' list. I don't think there's anyone else on his list that I'm
even 1/10th as dubious about. I have a rather low (to put it mildly)
opinion of Guys and Dolls which has only been confirmed on repeat viewing
(is this film well regarded?). I console myself with Rivette's extremely
entertaining comment on Dragonwyck:

"I knew his name would come up sooner or later. So, I'm going to speak my
peace at the risk of shocking a lot of people I respect, and maybe even
pissing a lot of them off for good. His great films, like All About Eve
(1950) or The Barefoot Contessa (1954), were very striking within the
parameters of contemporary American cinema at the time they were made, but
now I have no desire whatsoever to see them again. I was astonished when
Juliet Berto and I saw All About Eve again 25 years ago at the
Cinémathèque. I wanted her to see it for a project we were going to do
together before Céline and Julie Go Boating (1974). Except for Marily
Monroe, she hated every minute of it, and I had to admit that she was
right: every intention was underlined in red, and it struck me as a film
without a director! Mankiewicz was a great producer, a good scenarist and
a masterful writer of dialogue, but for me he was never a director. His
films are cut together any which way, the actors are always pushed towards
caricature and they resist with only varying degrees of success. Here's a
good definition of mise en scene--it's what's lacking in the films of
Joseph L. Mankiewicz. Whereas Preminger is a pure director. In his work,
everything but the direction often disappears. It's a shame that
Dragonwyck wasn't directed by Jacques Tourneur."

But I have to admit that I have a lingering curiousity as to what sort of
case can be made and on which films to base it. I've been willfully
ignorant to date, preferring to spend my time on Borzage or Oliveira
or... well, almost anyone else. David, would you be willing to elaborate
on how Contempt is 'in the Mankiewicz style'?

Fred.

On Sat, 1 Nov 2003, Robert Keser wrote:

> Does no one else find the following surprising?
3522


From: Tag Gallagher
Date: Sat Nov 1, 2003 6:47am
Subject: Re: Mankiewicz (was: Cahiers 1963: Best American Sound Films)
 
Here's what I wrote about him ten years ago:

Mankiewicz may be the filmmaker most influenced by Citizen Kane, in the
pejorative sense that his films are more interested in talking about
their characters than in giving us the actual persons. The Barefoot
Contessa (1956) has three characters narrating voice-off about their
experience of Ava Gardner, but, as in Kane, we get exactly the same
portrait of Ava Gardner in each segment. The result in both films is
abstraction rather than intrigue. Both filmmakers are so much in love
with their craft that they love it more than their characters. In
Mankiewicz's case, he is in love with words, for their own sake but also
because they are a means to talk about what he is talking about. His
scripts are a series of solos, duets and trios for characters to emote
their personal poetry; as in so many films of the period (Kazan, Ray,
Logan, Minnelli) there is great emphasis on reaching out. Scenes play on
forever, wandering through interminable excavations of motives and
sensations.not one of which has not already been gloriously conveyed by
Mankiewicz's beautiful people and mise en scène. And heaped on top, in
film after film, is interminable voice-off commentary, giving the
characters' further verbose ruminations on what we're seeing. Yet
Mankiewicz was a great filmmaker; he didn't just talk about it, he did
it too. In each of his films there is a movie lurking between the words
-- The Late George Apley (1947), Letter to Three Wives (1949), All about
Eve (1950), People Will Talk (1951), Suddenly Last Summer (1959) and for
the scenes between Rex Harrison and Elizabeth Taylor, Cleopatra (1963).
If only he had not directed his own scripts!
3523


From: David Ehrenstein
Date: Sat Nov 1, 2003 7:02am
Subject: Re: Mankiewicz (was: Cahiers 1963: Best American Sound Films)
 
Mankiewicz is a genuine blind spot for Rivette, who as
you know I admire more than any other director of the
new wave. But then I can't comprehend the high regard
for which he holds Paul Verhoven.

"Contempt" is super-Mankiewiczian in that it's
entirely about a "voice over narration" -- cleverly
supplied by Georgia Moll in that she's forced to
translate Jack Palance's english for everyone except
Fritz Lang. Many of its set-ups (medium long shot) and
camera movements (following Bardot especially) are
pure Mankiewicz. The biggesttiff between palance and
lang is a re-working of Edmund O'Brien's fight with
Marius Goering in "The Barefoot Contessa."

Having seen the original stage production of "Guys and
Dolls" I take exception to anyone's taking exception
to Mankiewicz's rendition. It's sublime.


--- "Frederick M. Veith"

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3524


From: Dan Sallitt
Date: Sat Nov 1, 2003 7:10am
Subject: Re: Halloween III
 
> Since Mystery Mike mentioned it - has anyone seen it?

I can't remember it at all, but I didn't care for it at the time. - Dan
3525


From: Dan Sallitt
Date: Sat Nov 1, 2003 7:12am
Subject: Bob Clark
 
> - "Black Christmas" (Bob Clark)
> A great and arguably very, very influential film in its use of
> point-of-view-of-the-killer camerawork. I've only just started to explore Clark's work, but
> this is by far the best of what I've seen so far. I do hear his later
> "Deathdream" is equally good.

I've never seen BLACK CHRISTMAS, but DEATHDREAM is quite bold and rather
good. Clark always showed talent, even in unworkable projects. - Dan
3526


From: Dan Sallitt
Date: Sat Nov 1, 2003 7:19am
Subject: Mankiewicz
 
> Actually, finding that Mankiewicz was held in such high regard
> seems amazing to me. (I'm not sure what it means, but none of the
> directors--not Godard or Chabrol, not Rivette or Tavernier or
> Truffaut-- chose a Mankiewicz film).

As David pointed out, Godard was a fan: he ranked THE QUIET AMERICAN the
#1 film of 1958. (Not an off year for cinema, either.)

I guess I'm currently a Mankiewicz detractor, though I have fond
memories of THE GHOST AND MRS. MUIR that I suspect won't evaporate
completely if I see it again.

A few years ago I went to MOMA for a double bill of Mankiewicz's HOUSE
OF STRANGERS and Fregonese's BLACK TUESDAY. That day it seemed to me
that every shot in the Mankiewicz was just some kind of visual shorthand
for a thematic idea that Mankiewicz wanted to convey - it made the film
seem both heavy-handed and inexpressive. And then there was Fregonese
as an antidote: the kind of filmmaker that loves space for its own sake,
so that every shot in the film had an integrity and reality of its own.
- Dan
3527


From: filipefurtado
Date: Sat Nov 1, 2003 7:29am
Subject: Re: Mankiewicz
 
I'm in the anti-Mankiewicz crowd, but I do think Guys and
Dolls is great and Barefoot Contessa is pretty good, on the
other hand All About Eve is atrocious, Suddenly Last Sumer
virtually worthless, Sleuth a bad filmed play and so on...

Filipe


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3528


From: Dan Sallitt
Date: Sat Nov 1, 2003 7:42am
Subject: Re: Re: Cahiers: The Outstanding Films of the Decade (1970-1980)
 
> In his recent article in The New Yorker, "My Life As A Paulette,"
> David Denby all-too-predictably, continues to perpetuates the 70s
> myth, saying "I see nothing so terrible about a group of critics
> speaking as a single voice at a breakout time in the arts," and he
> proudly writes of Kael and her acolytes, that they "were not the only
> ones pushing Scorsese, Coppola, Altman, Spielberg, and the rest, but
> we did it early, and we helped a group of directors make their way."
> (I don't seem to recall them pushing Altman's Countdown.)
>
> The problem with the former statement is that the 70s were less of a
> breakout time than the mid-to-late 60s

I dunno, the American 70s look pretty good to me these days too. The
interesting thing about that decade was that it wasn't just getting by
on the late periods of great old directors: a new style had formed in
the 60s that was no longer an Old Hollywood style, and by the 70s
cinematographers and editors as well as directors were learning how to
control the new forms, so that even minor talents had the support to
make interesting films.

And the rest of the world was going great guns in the 70s - world-wide,
I don't think any decade produced as many good films.

Personally, I don't care for Spielberg or Coppola, and have only limited
interest in Scorsese and up-and-down interest in Altman. But the decade
spawned a new movie culture in America, so that different film buffs can
foreground different directors and still come up with a picture of a
lively era.

My list of the best American directors who emerged in or around the 70s
would include Ashby, Malick, Armitage, Alan Rudolph, Mazursky, Pakula
(decline set in in the last two cases, but I still think they started
well), Friedkin, Joan Micklin Silver, Jim McBride, Mike Nichols (decline
set in most severely, so much so that I'm not sure I should include
him), Romero, and Larry Cohen - not to mention the TV contingent of
Lamont Johnson, Daniel Petrie, John Korty, Joseph Sargent, and John Badham.

- Dan
3529


From: filipefurtado
Date: Sat Nov 1, 2003 7:40am
Subject: Re: Re: Cahiers: The Outstanding Films of the Decade (1970-1980)
 
and he
> proudly writes of Kael and her acolytes, that they "were not
the only
> ones pushing Scorsese, Coppola, Altman, Spielberg, and the r
est, but
> we did it early, and we helped a group of directors make the
ir way."
> (I don't seem to recall them pushing Altman's Countdown.)

On the other hand, they didn't help at all many veterans who
were doing some of their best work at time (not to mention
there lack of interest in people like Hellman or Cassavetes).
I once start an article on Robert Aldrich's 70's work, but
drop it when it start to become more an attack on the
official 70's canon.

> As Denby points out, she ignored Fassbinder.
>

Actually she ignored a lot of people (from Monte Hellman to
Straub).

Filipe


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3530


From:
Date: Sat Nov 1, 2003 3:25am
Subject: Re: Mankiewicz
 
Mankiewicz's best film is "Julius Caesar": his theatrical style is perfectly
suited to supporting a Shakespeare production with top actors.
Dragonwyck: every time I see an oleander plant I think of Vincent Price
trying to poison Gene Tierney with one in this film. Oleanders are the standard
highway side tree in California: there are over half a million along the LA
freeways. They really are poisonous, and no fooling - do NOT get close to one! They
should have planted "Russian Olives" instead, like we do in Michigan.
Somewhere in the Night: I'd like to see this thriller again. It starts out
fascinatingly, with John Hodiak having that perfect film noir gambit, amnesia.
But then it gets duller and duller...
All About Eve: another skillful application of Mankiewicz's theatricality.
Fun, with lots of good performances.
Suddenly, Last Summer. Montgomery Clift is very good here, but the film seems
overblown. Have also seen Richard Eyre's one-set, 1993 "filmed stage play"
version of the Tennesse Williams Southern Gothic shocker, which is very well
acted (Maggie Smith as Violet Venable, Richard E. Grant, etc). Both films seem
more grotesque than meaningful, but they stick in the memory, too.
Guys and Dolls: Have never been able to sit down and watch this all the way
through. The opening stylized city sets and "Fugue for Tinhorns" number is
terrific. (I've got the horse right here / his name is Paul Revere... Can do, can
do!) But Frank Sinatra and Marlon Brando just do not equal my cup of tea, if
you should understand what I'm getting at, as Damon Runyon would put it. Brando
was terrific as Marc Antony in "Julius Caesar".
A Letter to Three Wives, People Will Talk: dull.
Sleuth: the absolute pits. I suffered through both the original Broadway
stage show, and the movie. Both are diatribes against the traditional classical
detective novel, which I love.

Mike Grost
3531


From: Michael Brooke
Date: Sat Nov 1, 2003 8:56am
Subject: Re: 21 Film Classics from the 1970's
 
--- In a_film_by@yahoogroups.com, MG4273@a... wrote:

>
> Ken Russell is really rich! His "Clouds of Glory" is also terrific -although
> I've only seen part 1, which is about Coleridge (Part 2 is about Wordsworth).
> There are great moments of invention in "Lisztomania", too.

I'm acutely conscious that Ken Russell is a major (and unforgivable) omission from
Screenonline - believe me, we're working flat out to remedy this. The biggest
problem is that in the 1970s he tended to work either for major studios or now-
defunct independent companies, so clearing the rights to his films has been
something of a challenge - and although Warner Bros have now cleared 'The Devils',
we're now trying to source a decent print, as the one in the National Film Archive was
in terrible condition.

But only yesterday I did the EDLs for clips from 'Elgar' and 'Song of Summer', arguably
his two finest 1960s TV pieces, so those should be up very soon.

> I've been thoroughly enjoying Michael Brooke's web site on British Film and
> TV. My impression is that British TV is extraordinarily vast and fascinating.
> "The Magic of Dance" (Patricia Foy) and "Flickers" are two other British TV
> masterpieces.

We've only just scratched the surface of British TV, and I entirely agree with you: there
have been some really fascinating pieces of work that were screened just once (twice,
if the filmmakers were unusually lucky) and then forgotten about - or, in a terrifyingly
large number of cases, simply erased.

It's one thing to bewail the loss of much of our silent heritage, but the fact that
systematic destruction of a huge chunk of British culture actually occurred in my
lifetime (in the early 1970s, the BBC junked a lot of its black-and-white material, on
the assumption that in the brave new era of colour television it would have no further
value) truly beggars belief.

The policies they applied were just as shortsighted - they kept everything to do with
royalty (I believe they still have every record of the annual Trooping the Colour
parade, even though the changes from year to year were negligible), but were
particularly harsh on comedy, with the result that early work by Peter Cook and Alan
Bennett has been lost forever. True, Bennett's first TV series (a sketch comedy show
called 'On the Margin') doesn't sound like much, and I can see why the BBC thought it
probably wasn't worth keeping (given that videotape was scarce and expensive back
then) but since he went on to become arguably Britain's most important television
writer alongside Dennis Potter, its loss is truly painful.

The upside to this, though, is that the NFTVA (National Film and Television Archive)
was charged by law in the 1970s to preserve a significant proportion of the output of
not just the BBC but all the other network TV channels, so at least this situation will
never happen again. In fact, the BBC can probably be trusted now to do it properly,
since the invention of the domestic video recorder (and, latterly, the DVD player) has
given them a vast new market for material that they previously thought worthless.
Notoriously, they once staged a 'Dr Who Amnesty', whereby they issued a worldwide
call for surviving materials (especially from the 1960s), promising not to prosecute
people who were hoarding them - they should have given them a medal instead for
doing what the BBC so lamentably failed to do!

Sorry for launching into a rant like that - that was entirely unplanned! But many
thanks for your comments: rest assured the TV section of the site will be expanding
rapidly over the next few months.

Michael
3532


From: Paul Gallagher
Date: Sat Nov 1, 2003 11:11am
Subject: Re: Cahiers 1963: Best American Sound Films
 
--- In a_film_by@yahoogroups.com, "Patrick Ciccone" wrote:
> --- In a_film_by@yahoogroups.com, "Paul Gallagher" wrote:
> > Another poll, from the Dec. 1963 Cahiers. There are some
>
> > Moonfleet (Lang)
>
> Is there any film with a greater divide between its French and
> American reputations? Not that it's disliked or even seen here--I
> like the film a lot myself.
>
> Patrick

Stewart Granger said, "I'd seldom, if ever, made a film I have
really liked or been proud of," but he stars in three films on
the list: not only "Moonfleet," but "Scaramouche" and "The Prisoner
of Zenda." (And he was in "Bhowani Junction" too.)

Paul
3533


From: hotlove666
Date: Sat Nov 1, 2003 1:22pm
Subject: Re: British TV (was: 21 Film Classics from the 70s)
 
I would love to resee two BBC productions that were shown here in my
youth: Jonathan Miller's Alice and Wonderland and a documentary about
different actors' interpretations of Hamlet narrated by John Gielgud.
The former was a concept production: Miller set the adventures of a
visibly neurasthenic Alice in a grimly Victorian world populated by
characters representing different forms of brain disease. Gielgud's
rendition of "Won't You Join the Dance" was the high point of that,
and all I really remember of the Hamlet documentary is his concluding
rendition of Hamlet's last speech over a fluid montage of dying
Hamlets (from the silent era to the then-present) which remains for
me the definitive performance of the play, although it's only one
speech, because it shows Hamlet as a poetic creation who exceeds the
possibilities of any single performance. I hope the presence of
Gielgud in those two caused them to be preserved.

The idea of royalty being preserved instead of comedy reminds me of a
Ruiz film I've only read about. The INA, which I guess was the French
equivalent of BBC, produced tons of crappy historical dramas, and
Ruiz looked at all of them and made a montage that tells the history
of France as seen by the INA, not worrying about having several
actors playing Louis XIV, for example, including Rossellini's La
prise de pouvoir par Louis XIV. He told Serge Daney in a wonderful
interview about the film (CdC Numero special: Television, Autumn
1981) that he discovered a treasure trove of stereotypes strongly
recalling the stereotypes of Latin American history, which he
realized was a parody of the French. All the dramas had the
same "Stalinist" story: "The person who had power (which might not
even be legitimate or democratically exercised) was obliged to
exercise it to preserve national unity." At the same time he said
that "Everything in the way of experimentation in film thse last few
years, including Straub and even Duras, I found on television, except
that it was very inept, generally speaking, very bad - but it was
there!"

Maybe someone should lock Peter Greenway in a screening room with the
televised history of Queen Elizabeth I and only let him out when he
has made a film of it. It might be a good one, for a change.
3534


From: Michael Brooke
Date: Sat Nov 1, 2003 1:44pm
Subject: Re: British TV (was: 21 Film Classics from the 70s)
 
--- In a_film_by@yahoogroups.com, "hotlove666" wrote:
> I would love to resee two BBC productions that were shown here in my
> youth: Jonathan Miller's Alice and Wonderland and a documentary about
> different actors' interpretations of Hamlet narrated by John Gielgud.
>

Not only has 'Alice' been preserved, it's even available on DVD as part of the BFI's
Archive Television series, complete with extras including a commentary by Miller and
a copy of Percy Stow 1903 version of 'Alice', the earliest known adaptation.

The bad (albeit unsurprising) news is that it's Region 2 PAL, but I would hope that
anyone seriously interested in British television will be able to get round that, as the
number of formerly ultra-rare programmes that have been getting a DVD makeover is
turning from a trickle to a veritable gush.

I don't know about the Gielgud, but I'll do a bit of digging when I'm back at work on
Monday.

Michael
3535


From: hotlove666
Date: Sat Nov 1, 2003 1:50pm
Subject: Re: Mankiewicz, Cornel Wilde
 
Luc Moullet wrote an excellent defense of the last four Mankiewicz
films. I'd enjoy seeing Honey Pot again. Mike, I like Sleuth, but I
don't see it as an attack on classical mysteries, which I believe JM
loved - it IS a classical mystery. And I was blown away by The Quiet
American - Godard's 1958 reviews (which also include the more famous
ones on Bitter Victory, Montparnasse 19 and Monika), when he was
gearing up to do Breathless, are quite interesting.

Daney told me that Fred Jung, an archivist from Germany or the
Netherlands, always said the same thing to him whenever they would
bump into each other, no matter what flamboyant transformation the
magazine was going through at the moment, structuralist, avant-
gardist, Maoist, death-of-cinema-ist... "Mais, aimez-vous
encore...Mankiewicz?"*

Louis Skorecki did a sort of book for Liberation called "Why Do You
Film?" where the same questionnaire went out to filmmakers ranging
from Hollywood to Third World to art-house to porn, and asked me to
collect a few for him in the US. (I suggested Lasse Braun, my
favorite 70s porn director, which is how I got to meet him, as
described in an earlier post.) Each director's answers were published
next to a stamp-sized photo of the director or a shot from a film if
no head-shot was available. So I called Mankiewicz in Connecticut and
got his wife - never spoke to him. He wanted to know (through her)
who else was participating. Was Mike Nichols participating? Etc. I
told this to Skorecki, and even though Mankiewicz finally came
through for us, Loulou saw to it that his answers were printed just
before a "head shot" representing a French porn auteur: a wide-angle
image of a woman with a gigantic curved penis in her mouth.

I also had the privilege on that assignment of briefly speaking to
and corresponding with Cornel Wilde, whose work as a director I
really like. His replies to the questions - which I reproduced in
their entirety for my eulogy in CdC when he died - were the most
beautiful and touching in Skorecki's book. I thought the article
about Wilde in Film Comment was long overdue, but terribly
condescending and wise-ass (the house style, I guess - hope it wasn't
anyone from a_film_by!).

*"But, do you still love...Mankiewicz?"
3536


From:
Date: Sat Nov 1, 2003 9:09am
Subject: Re: British TV
 
Ken Russell's "Song of Summer" is terrific! Unfortunately, it is in black and
white - and Russell really benefits from color. Still, it is a fascinating
work. It is about Delius, and Percy Grainger shows up too. Have never had a
chance to see what Andrew Sarris thought was Russell's TV high point: "Isadora
Duncan, the Biggest Dancer in the World". (Everytime I wear a long scarf in the
winter, I think twice.) Or "Richard Strauss: Dance of the Seven Veils". This
film was censored by the BBC after complaints from the Strauss family. Russell
dared to criticise Strauss' Nazi connections, and unbelievably, the world moved
to protect this Nazi, and not Russell!!!! As Gomer Pyle used to say, "Shame!
Shame! Shame!"
I too vaguely recall the Jonathan Miller "Alice in Wonderland". It was
treated as an Event when it was shown on US public television.
"Flickers" and "Pictures" were two miniseries (6 hours and 5 hours
respectively), that did fictionalized versions of the early film industry in Britain.
They were written by Roy Clarke (probably NOT the American country musician).
"Flickers" (directed by Cyril Coke, 1980) has magnificent performances by Bob
Hoskins and Frances de la Tour.
I hope everything John Gielgud ever did on British TV was saved for
posterity. His John of Gaunt in "Richard II" was superb.

Mike Grost
3537


From: Robert Keser
Date: Sat Nov 1, 2003 2:28pm
Subject: Re: Mankiewicz (was: Cahiers 1963: Best American Sound Films)
 
All About Eve strikes me as Mankiewicz's one perfect film, if
not a film that everyone will be sympathetic towards, in the
sense that Asquith's Importance of Being Earnest is a perfect
realization of the material. I think Rivette's comment that
everything is underlined in red is irrelevant because the
entire project is about its own surfaces. The characters are
all living at a brilliantly stylized level, their behavior
(and words!)are pushed to the forefront while Mankiewicz lines
his actors up like ducks in a row (think of Holm, Davis, and
Hugh Marlowe sitting in the car facing the camera). No other
director could have conveyed the almost abstract theatricality
of the script so well: even likely substitutes like Cukor,
Leisen, or Wilder would have brought too much realism to it.

Julius Caesar seems to exist at a similar heightened level
(and has very thoughtful and attractive performances from
the entire cast), but for all the rest I agree with Tag's
comment that "there's a movie lurking between the words"
(though The Quiet American comes close to that movie).

To me, the crucial failure is The Honey Pot, a project
Mankiewicz had nurtured for a long time. Surely something
of interest must exist in the combination of a classic play
(Volpone) and the cinematographer of 8-1/2 and imaginative
casting (Rex Harrison, Susan Hayward, Capucine), all with
witty Mankiewicz dialogue. During its first run, I paid to
see it three times on the big screen, each time thinking
I must be missing something, and each time walking out,
repulsed by the uncontrolled strident tone and quite ugly
visuals (although Fox's DeLuxe Color has to share much of
the blame).

I'll also agree with Mike that Somewhere In the Night is
stupefyingly dull. I've never seen There Was a Crooked Man,
though, and no one ever seems to talk about it. Is it
Mankiewicz's Private Life of Sherlock Holmes, or is it his
Satan Never Sleeps?

--Robert Keser




--- In a_film_by@yahoogroups.com, "Frederick M. Veith"
wrote:
>
> But I have to admit that I have a lingering curiousity as to what
sort of
> case can be made and on which films to base it.
3538


From: jerome_gerber
Date: Sat Nov 1, 2003 2:48pm
Subject: Continuing Sarris' American Cinema
 
Reading the posts here have given me enormous pleasure...and
it got me to wonder why--especially when reading the current
thread on 70's directors-- that nobody has continued Sarris
volume of THE AMERICAN CINEMA into the ensuing decades.

He left off 35 years ago...would some cataloguing especially
from a group like A_film_by be appropriate? Is the question a
niave one or would consensus be impossible? Is it only
possible as the work of one critic rather that dozens?

What would be the problems with such a work today?

Jerry
3539


From: David Ehrenstein
Date: Sat Nov 1, 2003 2:49pm
Subject: Re: Re: Mankiewicz (was: Cahiers 1963: Best American Sound Films)
 
The great Gianni Di Venanzo died halfway thorugh
shooting "The Honey Pot" -- which dopubtless affected
the production in all sorts of ways. It's an
interesting "late period" film. Maggie Smith is great
in it and the use of the other actresses is
interesting. A French-Canadian critic in "Take One"
whose name I can't recall at the moment was most
extravagant in his praise of "The Honey Pot,"
comparing it to John Coltrane and Eric Dolphy --
particularly the latter's rendition of "You Don't Know
What Love Is."

"There Was a Crooked Man" isn't bad, but rather
uncharacteristic for Mankiewicz. It's closer to the
spirit of its scriptwriters Benton and Newman.

--- Robert Keser wrote:


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3540


From: David Ehrenstein
Date: Sat Nov 1, 2003 3:14pm
Subject: Re: Continuing Sarris' American Cinema
 
"What would be the problems with such a work today?"

The American Cinema was a pioneering work in that it
dealt with huge numbers of films and film directors
whose work had been largely uncommented on. it arrived
in the twilight of the Old Hollywood. The directors
that have come slong since then have merged from quite
a different system -- as all the blather about the
alleged wonders of the 70's (Jeez but I'm getting fed
up with that tired meme!) have nothing in common with
directors like Raoul Walsh or Don Weis. Moreover many
of us have come to regard the work of the director
rather differently. Some of us have even gone so far
as to express interest in that most despised figure --
the writer. (Writers are hosts to which the auteur
ataches himself like the face-hugger form of the
creature in "Alien" -- who eventually bursts forth
from said host's chest with a "masterpiece" presumed
to be entirely of his own creation.)


--- jerome_gerber wrote:


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3541


From: Richard Modiano
Date: Sat Nov 1, 2003 3:55pm
Subject: Re: Re: Mankiewicz (was: Cahiers 1963: Best American Sound Films)
 
My experience of THE HONEY POT was exactly the opposite. It was precisely the garish visuals functioning as the correlative of the overheated theatrics that hooked me. Having said that, I should add that I haven't seen the movie since its theatrical opening and I was a teenager at the time. But it was an eye-opening movie for me then. My recollection was that it was greeted with great hostility at the time of its release by US critics.

Richard

Robert Keser wrote:
To me, the crucial failure is The Honey Pot, a project
Mankiewicz had nurtured for a long time. Surely something
of interest must exist in the combination of a classic play
(Volpone) and the cinematographer of 8-1/2 and imaginative
casting (Rex Harrison, Susan Hayward, Capucine), all with
witty Mankiewicz dialogue. During its first run, I paid to
see it three times on the big screen, each time thinking
I must be missing something, and each time walking out,
repulsed by the uncontrolled strident tone and quite ugly
visuals (although Fox's DeLuxe Color has to share much of
the blame).

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3542


From: Dan Sallitt
Date: Sat Nov 1, 2003 4:09pm
Subject: Re: Continuing Sarris' American Cinema
 
> Reading the posts here have given me enormous pleasure...and
> it got me to wonder why--especially when reading the current
> thread on 70's directors-- that nobody has continued Sarris
> volume of THE AMERICAN CINEMA into the ensuing decades.
>
> He left off 35 years ago...would some cataloguing especially
> from a group like A_film_by be appropriate? Is the question a
> niave one or would consensus be impossible?

I think that's one problem: that consensus would be impossible. The
cinema changed a lot during the 60s, and the politique seemed to work
betten in an era where directors were expected to get the job done
instead of to wow people.

There is a place where I think some kind of politique would be
appropriate today: in the heart of Hollywood commercial film, if anyone
has the stamina to do it. There's not much profit in trying to form a
consensus around whether Haynes or Van Sant are important directors, but
if you see a zillion bad Hollywood comedies, you're going to notice
directorial talent when it rears its head, even if the talent is
ultimately defeated by the project. When I was seeing a whole lot of
new American films (in 1973-1985), I was constantly spotting interesting
directors struggling with stultifying material. But, as I got older and
cut down from 600 films a year to 200, the mainstream cinema was the
first to go. I know that if I watched this stuff, I'd still find
interesting glimmers of directorial personality - but it's punishing
work, and usually these directors never get a chance to do anything that
you could actually praise without lots of equivocation. - Dan
3543


From: Elizabeth Nolan
Date: Sat Nov 1, 2003 4:18pm
Subject: Re: Continuing Sarris' -- Giannetti, Baudy & Dickstein
 
I found the SARRIS book and others (Giannetti's MASTERS OF AMERICAN
CINEMA and Braudy & Dickstein's GREAT FILM DIRECTORS) helpful in
getting a handle on the differences between directors but these books
are old. A more recent book I use is CONTEMPORY NORTH AMERICAN FILM
DIRECTORS - A WALLFLOWER CRITICAL GUIDE by Yoram Allon, Del Cullen,
and Hannah Patterson. Does anyone have recommendations?
3544


From: David Ehrenstein
Date: Sat Nov 1, 2003 4:28pm
Subject: Re: Continuing Sarris' American Cinema
 
"There's not much profit in trying to form a
consensus around whether Haynes or Van Sant are
important directors"

Gus and Todd are important directors whether anyone
here likes it or not.

--- Dan Sallitt wrote:


__________________________________
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3545


From: Tag Gallagher
Date: Sat Nov 1, 2003 4:51pm
Subject: Steamboat round the Bend
 
An alert:

Ford's Steamboat round the Bend is showing Nov. 4 and three more times
this November on the Fox Movie Channel. I think this may be the first
time the movie has been on tv. Don't miss it.

Tag
3546


From: filipefurtado
Date: Sat Nov 1, 2003 4:54pm
Subject: Re: Continuing Sarris' American Cinema
 
> it got me to wonder why--
especially when reading the current
> thread on 70's directors-- that nobody has continued Sarris
> volume of THE AMERICAN CINEMA into the ensuing decades.

I once did a Sarris' like rank as a joke. I guess I still
have it somewhere.

Filipe

>
> He left off 35 years ago...would some cataloguing especially

> from a group like A_film_by be appropriate? Is the question
a
> niave one or would consensus be impossible? Is it only
> possible as the work of one critic rather that dozens?
>
> What would be the problems with such a work today?
>
> Jerry
>
>
>
>
>
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3547


From: filipefurtado
Date: Sat Nov 1, 2003 5:06pm
Subject: SP film festival report
 
After 14 days, 47 films (plus going to class in the morning
and writing reviews when coming homeat midnight), I finally
have some time to breathe.

My favorites
1 - The Story of Marie and Julien (Rivette)
2 - Come and Go (Monteiro)
3 - A Talking Picture (Oliveira) -- Which make me thinkabout
Bill since Oliveira let John Malkovich do everything Bill
hates.
4 - Goodbye, Dragon Inn (Tsai)
5 - The Sign of Chaos (Sganzerla)
6 - demonlover (Assayas)
7 - The Return of the Prodigal Son (Straub/Hulliet)
8 - Lost in Translation (Coppola)
9 - Raja (Doillon)
10 - Strayed (Techiné)
Also liked Crimson Gold, All the Real Girls and Mansion by
the Lake a lot.

the worst:
1 - Father and Son (Sokurov)
2 - Dirty Pretty Things (Frears)
3 - The barbarian Invasions (Arcand)
4 - In this World (Winerbottom)
5 - It's All About Love (Vintenberg)
6 - Time of theWolf (Haneke)
7 - The Woman who Believed to be the President of USA
(Botelho)
8 - The Return (Zvyagintsev)


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3548


From: hotlove666
Date: Sat Nov 1, 2003 5:17pm
Subject: Re: Continuing Sarris - The Wallflower Guide to North American Directors
 
It's a very good idea to pick that book up if you're interested in
current American film - I got it for $6.98 remaindered at Book Soup.
It's a compilation of short articles on working directors by many
hands, and it is chock full of directors you may not have heard of,
information on them I didn't know and mostly favorable takes on their
work - the critique of beauties, as opposed to the one-man's-canon
approach of The American Cinema, which has been getting such mixed
reviews now that Bordwell's latest edition is out. There are several
directors who get rated too highly, a few who are trashed because
they got handed to bad critics, and a few egregious omissions, like
Larry Fessenden. The level of the criticism varies from contributor
to contributor, but I was heartened to see so many names of young
critics I didn't know who are at least trying to do the job Dan has
rightly described as "punishing." In this case, I fear that the
results outshine the recent dictionary of new American directors
attempted by my Cahiers colleagues. It's a book you feel like arguing
with, rather than throwing at the cat.
3549


From: madlyangelicgirl
Date: Sat Nov 1, 2003 5:22pm
Subject: metaphoric and metonymic
 
Some advice needed...

I think Luhrman is a metaphoric auteur. Everything is very
transparent in his films and meaning is easily signified. Now, am I
wrong, or does anyone agree with me?

Can anyone explain the paradigmatic and syntagmatic axis in laymans
terms?!

Finally, could anyone recommend some good women's films by one
director? I'm thinking of writing a piece on gender
representation.

Regards,
Rebecca
3550


From: Greg Dunlap
Date: Sat Nov 1, 2003 5:23pm
Subject: Re: SP film festival report
 
> the worst:
> 6 - Time of theWolf (Haneke)

I'm interested in what you found so egregiously bad about this film. I
don't think it works all the way through, but I found the first 30-40
minutes to be positively stunning, particularly the piece in the
darkened woods. I was thinking of Tarkovsky's Stalker a lot while
watching the first couple reels, and not just because of the somewhat
similar setting.

=====
--------------------
Greg Dunlap
heyrocker@y...

__________________________________
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3551


From: David Ehrenstein
Date: Sat Nov 1, 2003 5:29pm
Subject: Re: SP film festival report
 
How is Chereau in it?

--- Greg Dunlap wrote:
> > the worst:
> > 6 - Time of theWolf (Haneke)
>
> I'm interested in what you found so egregiously bad
> about this film. I
> don't think it works all the way through, but I
> found the first 30-40
> minutes to be positively stunning, particularly the
> piece in the
> darkened woods. I was thinking of Tarkovsky's
> Stalker a lot while
> watching the first couple reels, and not just
> because of the somewhat
> similar setting.
>
> =====
> --------------------
> Greg Dunlap
> heyrocker@y...
>
> __________________________________
> Do you Yahoo!?
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> http://launch.yahoo.com/promos/britneyspears/
>


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3552


From: Zach Campbell
Date: Sat Nov 1, 2003 5:45pm
Subject: Re: metaphoric and metonymic
 
Rebecca wrote:
> I think Luhrman is a metaphoric auteur. Everything is very
> transparent in his films and meaning is easily signified. Now, am I
> wrong, or does anyone agree with me?

It's not exactly clear what you mean by 'metaphoric auteur.' And on
what basis are you saying that his films are 'transparent'
and 'meaning is easily signified'? (I'm guessing you haven't gotten
to Stuart Hall or Roland Barthes yet?

> Can anyone explain the paradigmatic and syntagmatic axis in laymans
> terms?!

Write a sentence - e.g., 'The cat rested on the rug.' Now imagine it
as a slot machine, where each word in the sentence is like one of
those symbols (cherries, bananas, etc.).

Paradigmatic analysis looks at a given word vertically, that is, why
is it a "cat" on the rug instead of a "dog," why "rested" instead
of "jumped," why "rug" instead of "windowsill." (Why those cherries
instead of the bananas?) The word to keep in mind here
is 'substitution.'

Syntagmatic analysis looks at how meaning is created vertically, a
line of words: think grammar and syntax.

> Finally, could anyone recommend some good women's films by one
> director? I'm thinking of writing a piece on gender
> representation.

'Women's films' as in Douglas Sirk's melodramas? Or films by a woman
about women (maybe even for women)? Check out Senses of Cinema's
Women Directors Issue --
http://www.sensesofcinema.com/contents/02/22/contents.html

--Zach
3553


From: hotlove666
Date: Sat Nov 1, 2003 5:45pm
Subject: Metaphor and Metonymy
 
In linguistics, the paradigmatic and syntagmatic axes are the axis of
selection and and the axis of combination. Selection means all the
possible choices that can go into a particular slot; combination
means the order in which the elements are arranged. The great
linguist Roman Jakobson wrote a widely reprinted article which first
appeared in his Essays on Poetics where he proposed that a poet
projects the axis of selection onto the axis of combination, so that
several "p" words, for example (all belonging to the same paradigm:
words beginning with "p") appear in the same line of a poem -
alliteration.

These linguistic categories were then assimilated by other literary
theorists (Gerard Genette being a particularly clear one) to the
ancient rhetorical categories of metaphor (substituting one member of
a paradigm for another belonging to the same paradigm - say the
word "wind" for the word "spirit") and metonymy (substituting for one
word another word associated with it - "The White House" for "the
President"). Structuralists and post-structuralists led a "back to
metonymy" movement in the 70s, demonstrating that "metaphor is based
on metonymy." Again, Genette's Figures III, which is out in English,
has the clearest exposition of this idea, using examples from Proust.
Example: If I compare a girl to a flower that happens to be growing
outside her window, that's a metaphor based on metonymy.

Concurrently (and perhaps inspiring the previously cited work)
Jacques Lacan, the French psychoanalyst who believed that "the
unconscious is structured like a language," proposed a mechanism for
language itself and all its derivatives based on metaphor and
metonymy...which I have never fully understood. It was applied
brilliantly to film (I guess) by Cahiers critic Jean-Pierre Oudart,
who subsequently went a little mad. Scores of academics here and
elsewhere have come up with their own parodies/interpretations of
this. Chrisitian metz tried to do something along these lines in The
Imaginary Signifier, but didn't get very far, as was his habit.

Yes, just off the top of my head I'd say Luhrman is metaphorical -
the green fairy as a symbol of absinthe would be a metaphor. (If she
appeared on the label of a popular brand of absinthe, she'd be a
metaphor based on a metonymy.)

I'll let these other geniuses recommend good women's directors. They
were tearing each others' throats about that topic just a few days
ago.
3554


From: Chris Fujiwara
Date: Sat Nov 1, 2003 6:26pm
Subject: Re: Mankiewicz (was: Cahiers 1963: Best American Sound Films)
 
What interests me the most in Mankiewicz, a director whose work I
only recently started to take seriously, American-auteurist snob as I
was, is the sense that everything might be different and that things
do become different, that decisions are being made, even as we watch,
but without being registered on the surface of the film; and these
decisions change the course of the characters' lives and the course
of the film we're watching.

So Mankiewicz's films are, like Godard's, films about their own
process, films about the cinema; because in Mankiewicz the film is
the narrative, and the narrative is defined and viewed as always in
process, as one of a number of possible narratives. (I'm influenced
here by Deleuze who, as I recall, saw "The Garden of Forking Paths"
as an emblem for Mankiewicz's work.)

The preponderance of talking in his films is justified because it's
through talking that people are persuaded, that decisions are made:
cf. the conspirators courting Brutus in Julius Caesar; the American
courting Phuong in The Quiet American; later in the same film, the
Communist courting Fowler.

The sense that everything might be different also has to do with a
certain analysis of one's own life that the characters - who are, the
best of them, very self-aware, very rich, very interesting people -
undertake in film after film. Above or behind the actual life of the
characters (those in House of Strangers, Letter to Three Wives, All
about Eve, The Barefoot Contessa, for example) is something else: a
possible life, a missed life, a dreamed life. And this sense of the
doubling of life rhymes with the possibility that one person could
take the place of another, as is threatened or realized in Letter and
Eve. In Letter, each heroine fears that her life has already changed
and suspects that this change may mean that her past existence was
something other than she thought it was.

David's perception of Le mépris as a Mankiewiczian film is very far-
reaching; everybody knows that the Giorgia Moll character is related
to her character in The Quiet American, but to extend this by seeing
the conception of human relationships in Le mépris as related to that
in Mankiewicz's films is very interesting and apt. The hero's sense
that his wife has made a decision, without his knowing when or why,
is a Mankiewiczian intuition. Mankiewicz is probably as important to
Godard as Fuller, Ray, and Tashlin.
3555


From: filipefurtado
Date: Sat Nov 1, 2003 7:00pm
Subject: Re: SP film festival report
 
> > the worst:
> > 6 - Time of theWolf (Haneke)
>
> I'm interested in what you found so egregiously bad about th
is film. I
> don't think it works all the way through, but I found the fi
rst 30-40
> minutes to be positively stunning, particularly the piece in
the
> darkened woods.

I'm certainly not a Haneke fan, but what surprise me here was
how inert the whole thing is. I would never suggest that
Haneke didn't have full control of his material, but here he
seems to be in complete autopilot, the film is anemic. The
first two reels (before it turns into the arthouse version of
28 Days Later) still has some moments, but then everything
goes downhill.

David, I don't know who Chereau is, but the cast is uniformly
wasted. No one has much to do (even Huppert gives one of her
last interesting performances).

Filipe


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3556


From: Paul Gallagher
Date: Sat Nov 1, 2003 8:20pm
Subject: Re: Cahiers 1963: Best American Sound Films
 
--- In a_film_by@yahoogroups.com, "Robert Keser" wrote:

>
> Actually, finding that Mankiewicz was held in such high regard
> seems amazing to me. (I'm not sure what it means, but none of the
> directors--not Godard or Chabrol, not Rivette or Tavernier or
> Truffaut-- chose a Mankiewicz film). Of course this poll was
> taken just around the time that Cleopatra was released. Does
> anyone recall whether the enthusiasm for Mankiewicz survived
> Cleopatra?

I haven't seen Cahiers' review of Cleopatra. I should go to the
library to read it.

I do have the Feb. 1964 issue, and I was surprised to find
Cleopatra on several "best of 1963" lists. 41 critics and
directors submitted lists, and Cleopatra was selected by
Michel Aubriant, Pierre-Richard Bre, Jean-Louis Comolli,
Jacques Demy, Jean Douchet, Michel Mardore, Barbet
Schroeder, and Bertrand Tavernier. It ended up placing 19th on
Cahiers' best of 1963 list. It placed 18th on its readers' list.

Comolli wrote a lengthly defense of Cleoptra in the March 1964
issue, stating that its detractors missed the intimate, tragic
film beneath its "aberrant surface." There was a 1966 interview
with Mankiewicz in Cahiers, but Mankiewicz never mentions
Cleopatra. The interviewer says Mankiewicz considered that part
of his career "a grave error," and had cancelled a planned interview
2 years before, apparently to avoid discussing Cleopatra.

I noticed that another super-production from the same time,
Mann's The Fall of the Roman Empire -- which I liked -- didn't
even receive a review. On the "Conseil du dix," Rivette gave it
one star, Douchet indicated "don't bother," and Comolli and
Delahye apparently didn't bother to see it.

Paul
3557


From: Paul Fileri
Date: Sat Nov 1, 2003 8:24pm
Subject: Re: Metaphor and Metonymy and more linguistics
 
Bill and others,

I'm certain others here have a better handle on and more extensive knowledge of
these matters, but I was under the impression that much of Saussurean linguistics and
the sort of ruminations that derive from Jakobson's two-axis system are hopelessly
outmoded and inadequate when it comes to linguistics and how we actually use and
understand language. (For example, see: http://www.clas.ufl.edu/users/nnh/
lacan.htm). They seem to only survive in a lot of lit theory, some philosophy, film
studies, visual art theory, etc. Am I wrong?

- Paul
3558


From: David Ehrenstein
Date: Sat Nov 1, 2003 8:40pm
Subject: Re: SP film festival report
 
Here's

href="http://ehrensteinland.com/htmls/bride/g001/b_patricechereau.shtml"
target="_blank">Patrice Chereau


--- filipefurtado wrote:

>
> David, I don't know who Chereau is, but the cast is
> uniformly
> wasted. No one has much to do (even Huppert gives
> one of her
> last interesting performances).
>
> Filipe
>



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3559


From: Michael Brooke
Date: Sat Nov 1, 2003 8:42pm
Subject: Re: metaphoric and metonymic
 
--- In a_film_by@yahoogroups.com, "madlyangelicgirl"
wrote:
> Some advice needed...

>
> Finally, could anyone recommend some good women's films by one
> director? I'm thinking of writing a piece on gender
> representation.

If you want a left-field suggestion, how about the British director Frank Launder? I've
been watching a lot of his films over the past few months, and it seems to me that if a
single thread runs through an enormously varied body of work (he did everything
from straight drama to farcical comedy), it's an overwhelming fondness for strong,
independent female characters, whether we're talking the factory workers of 'Millions
Like Us' (1943), the feisty inhabitants of an internment camp in 'Two Thousand
Women' (1944), Deborah Kerr's spirited Irish patriot in 'I See A Dark Stranger' (1946),
Margaret Rutherford's indomitable headmistress in 'The Happiest Days of Your Life'
and the entire female cast (plus Alastair Sim in drag) of 'The Belles of St Trinian's'
(1954) and its sequels.

More info (including a biography and detailed notes on all the above films and more)
here: http://www.screenonline.org.uk/people/id/460455/index.html

Michael
3560


From: David Ehrenstein
Date: Sat Nov 1, 2003 8:43pm
Subject: Re: Metaphor and Metonymy
 
"It was applied
brilliantly to film (I guess) by Cahiers critic
Jean-Pierre Oudart,
who subsequently went a little mad."

He did? I always wondered what happened to him. I
loved his work on Eisenstein and Lang. Is he still
around?

--- hotlove666 wrote:


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3561


From: Zach Campbell
Date: Sat Nov 1, 2003 8:47pm
Subject: Re: Metaphor and Metonymy and more linguistics
 
Paul wrote:
> I was under the impression that much of Saussurean linguistics and
> the sort of ruminations that derive from Jakobson's two-axis system
are hopelessly
> outmoded and inadequate when it comes to linguistics and how we
actually use and
> understand language.

You're right as far as I know--they teach it in film theory courses
though, because like Mulvey's visual pleasure treatise, Bazin's
ontology, and Eisenstein's montage, they're major ideas in the
history of film theory (for better or for worse), even if
contemporary thought has rejected or passed them.

Semiotics is actually not that hot a field right now anyway. But it
can be fun and illuminating to talk about signs in certain films ...

--Zach
3562


From: filipefurtado
Date: Sat Nov 1, 2003 8:58pm
Subject: Re: SP film festival report
 
> Here's
>
> > href="http://ehrensteinland.com/htmls/bride/g001/b_patricech
ereau.shtml"
> target="_blank">Patrice Chereau
>

David, he didn't have much to do, but is one of the film's
best performances, actually.

Filipe

>
> --- filipefurtado wrote:
>
> >
> > David, I don't know who Chereau is, but the cast is
> > uniformly
> > wasted. No one has much to do (even Huppert gives
> > one of her
> > last interesting performances).
> >
> > Filipe
> >
>
>
>
> __________________________________
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3563


From: Paul Gallagher
Date: Sat Nov 1, 2003 10:00pm
Subject: Re: Metaphor and Metonymy and more linguistics
 
--- In a_film_by@yahoogroups.com, "Paul Fileri" wrote:
> Bill and others,
>
> I'm certain others here have a better handle on and more extensive
knowledge of
> these matters, but I was under the impression that much of
Saussurean linguistics and
> the sort of ruminations that derive from Jakobson's two-axis system
are hopelessly
> outmoded and inadequate when it comes to linguistics and how we
actually use and
> understand language.

That's my impression as well. I'm not familiar with these topics,
but my impression is that modern linguistics derives from Chomsky's
work and that Saussurean linguistics is out-of-date. In addition
many modern academic film theorists (Bordwell, Carroll, etc.) have
rejected semiotics.

I found this excerpt from Warren Buckland's The Cognitive Semiotics
of Film, which argues for the continued relevance of semiotics.
David Bordwell has noted the absence of references to the work
of Chomsky in film theory: ``It is surprising that theorists who
assign language a key role in determining subjectivity have almost
completely ignored the two most important contemporary developments
in linguistic theory: Chomsky's Transformational Generative
Grammar and his Principles-and-Parameters theory.'' He
adds that ``no film theorist has mounted an argument for why the
comparatively informal theories of Saussure, Émile Benveniste, or
Bakhtin are superior to the Chomskyan paradigm. For over two
decades film theorists have made pronouncements about language
without engaging with the major theoretical rival to their
position.'' The truth of the matter is that over the last
two decades a number of film theorists have been engaging with
Chomskyan linguistics and, furthermore, have deemed it to be
superior to structural linguistics. Throughout this book I
attempt to emphasize that Chomskyan linguistics, particularly
in its study of competence, has defined the central doctrines of
cognitive film semiotics. Here I shall briefly chart the
relation between early film semiotics and cognitive film
semiotics.

During the seventies, Metz's film semiotics was modified and
transformed. Its fundamental problems, as we have already seen,
lay in its total reliance upon structural linguistics. One major
transformation came from post-structural film theory, which
based itself primarily upon the Marxism of Louis Althusser
and the psychoanalysis of Jacques Lacan. Post-structuralists
criticize structuralism because they regard it to be the
last vestige of Enlightenment reason and rationality.
Christopher Norris clearly sums up this poststructural
position:
Structuralism renounces the Kantian `transcendental subject',
only to replace it with a kind of linguistic a priori,
a regulative concept of `structure' which seeks to place
firm juridical limits on the play of signification. Such,
at least, is the critique brought to bear upon structuralist
thinking by those – like Lacan and Derrida – who read in
it the last, lingering signs of a rationalist tradition
forced up against its own (unconscious) limits.
Ultimately, structuralism replaces the transcendental
Kantian subject with a transcendental signified.

For most Anglo-American film scholars, film semiotics takes
only one form – namely, Metz's early film semiotics, ranging from
his 1964 paper ``Le cinéma: langue ou langage?'' leading to
his remarkable paper on the grande syntagmatique of the image
track, and finally to his monumental book Langage et cinéma,
published in 1971 and translated into English in 1974. But as
Metz himself acknowledged in the opening chapter of this book,
``By its very nature, the semiotic enterprise must expand
or disappear.'' Although Langage et cinéma marks the logical
conclusion to Metz's structural linguistic–based film semiotics,
it does not mark the end of film semiotics per se. In his
subsequent work (particularly his essay ``The Imaginary
Signifier''), Metz adopted a psychoanalytical
framework, which aided the formation of post-structural film
theory. However, many of his students and colleagues continued to
work within a semiotic framework, which they combined with cognitive
science. Research in film semiotics continued unabated in the
seventies, eighties, and nineties, especially in France, Italy, and
the Netherlands. Far from disappearing, film semiotics has
expanded into a new framework, one that overcomes the
problems of structural linguistic–based film semiotics by
embracing three new theories: (1) a renewed interest in enunciation
theory in both film and television (particularly in the work
of Francesco Casetti and Metz of L'Énonciation impersonnelle
ou le site du film), (2) pragmatics (in the work of Roger Odin),
and (3) transformational generative grammar and cognitive
science generally (in the work of Michel Colin and Dominique
Chateau).

One defining characteristic of cognitive film semiotics is that it
aims to model the actual mental activities (intuitive knowledge)
involved in the making and understanding of filmic texts, rather
than study filmic texts themselves. Ultimately, the theories of
Francesco Casetti, Roger Odin, Michel Colin, and Dominique
Chateau are models of filmic competence. Each theorist models
this competence from a slightly different perspective:
Casetti employs the deictic theory of enunciation, Odin employs
pragmatics, and Colin and Chateau employ generative grammar and
cognitive science.

http://assets.cambridge.org/0521780055/sample/0521780055WSN01.pdf
3564


From: jpcoursodon
Date: Sat Nov 1, 2003 10:47pm
Subject: Re: Mankiewicz (was: Cahiers 1963: Best American Sound Films)
 
My response to "The Honey Pot" when I saw it at least 20 years ago
was very much like Robert's and unlike Richard's. However it has been
and still is very much admired by many film buffs in France (not just
Cahiers critics and followers). Most of the Positif core group revere
it, almost as much as "The Barefoot Contessa" (the mag has published
no less than five articles on Honey Pot over the years -- the most
recent in September 2003). It's one of those films I should watch
again but have little desire to do.
JPC


--- In a_film_by@yahoogroups.com, Richard Modiano
wrote:
> My experience of THE HONEY POT was exactly the opposite. It was
precisely the garish visuals functioning as the correlative of the
overheated theatrics that hooked me. Having said that, I should add
that I haven't seen the movie since its theatrical opening and I was
a teenager at the time. But it was an eye-opening movie for me then.
My recollection was that it was greeted with great hostility at the
time of its release by US critics.
>
> Richard
>
> Robert Keser wrote:
> To me, the crucial failure is The Honey Pot, a project
> Mankiewicz had nurtured for a long time. Surely something
> of interest must exist in the combination of a classic play
> (Volpone) and the cinematographer of 8-1/2 and imaginative
> casting (Rex Harrison, Susan Hayward, Capucine), all with
> witty Mankiewicz dialogue. During its first run, I paid to
> see it three times on the big screen, each time thinking
> I must be missing something, and each time walking out,
> repulsed by the uncontrolled strident tone and quite ugly
> visuals (although Fox's DeLuxe Color has to share much of
> the blame).
>
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3565


From: Fred Camper
Date: Sun Nov 2, 2003 0:44am
Subject: Re: Kubelka
 
Sorry, I'm getting overwhelmed by the posts here. I still have a huge
amount of work, and it doesn't seem likely to let up.

I've only ever seen "Arnulf Rainer" with the sound, and of course the
sound is tremendously important. What I love about it is, in part, its
unpredictability; that is, the relationship between sound and image changes.

I have heard second hand that Kubelka said of "Arnulf Rainer," that he
wanted to make" a film that would have the power of thunder and
lighting, and would bring the audience to its feet." That it hasn't
"worked" that way on "the audience" doesn't mean it hasn't worked that
way on me, or on some others. Indeed, the varying asyncrhonicities
between lighting and its thunder (because of varying distances) is a
connection I like very much in terms of this film.

The only other thing I can say right now is that the best texts on him
are his own: the old interview with Mekas in FILM CULTURE (I think it's
in the Film Culture Reader), and the transcripts of his talks in a class
at NYU in Sitney's "The Avant-Garde Film: A Reader of Theory and Criticism."

I was in that class, which was the first time, I believe, that he ever
lectured that extensively on his work.

- Fred
3566


From: David Ehrenstein
Date: Sun Nov 2, 2003 1:12am
Subject: The Honey Pot
 
I've found that review. It's by Patrick Straram and is
from the June 1967 issue of "Take One," Volume 1,
Number 5:

It begins --

Si l'on me demandait quels sont les films que j'ai
prefere durant les cinq premiers mois de 1967, je
n'hesiterais pas une seconde. Au 5eme rang il y aurait
"Terre des Anges" (Gyorgi Revesz) et "Les Amours d'une
Blonde"(Milos Forman), au 4eme rang "Fahrenheit 451"
(Francois Truffaut), au 3eme rang "A Countess From
Hong Kong" (Charles Chaplin), au 2eme rang "Le Grand
Escroc" (Jean-Luc Godard). Le meilleur film: "Honey
Pot."

It concludes--

Apres "All About Eve" et "The Barefoot Contessa,"
"Honey Pot" est la preuve superbe et bouleversante
d'un art entirement accompli puisqu'il conjure
modernite et classicisme.

Je ne peux voir "Deux ou Trois Xhose Que Je sais
D'elle" ou "Honey Pot" sans "revivre" "You don't know
what love is"par Eric Dolphy ou "A Love Supreme" par
John Coltrane. . Il n'ya d'art qu'amour. . .Mankiewicz
est l'un des rares auteurs de films qui mettent en
situation le devenir de cinema dans ce sens de
l'amour,la condition humaine redecouverte dans sa
specificite faite de la dialectique nature-culture. .
.

I cannot but salute its deliriousness.







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3567              Top


From: Fred Camper
Date: Sun Nov 2, 2003 1:29am
Subject: Re: Re: Mankiewicz (was: Cahiers 1963: Best American Sound Films)
 
Well, I still love Mankiewicz, just as I have since the late 1960s.

It is true that most American auteurists, or many, do not hold him in
very high regard.

Reading through the posts, taken together they reminded me that in my
view there really can be no reasons for disliking a film, except that
you don't think it's a good film. Or something like that. As far as I'm
concerned, a great film can condescend toward its characters, it can
ignore its characters, it can be overly theatrical (or underly
theatrical), whatever. And these can be some of the things that make a
great film great, just as they can be the things that make a bad film bad.

Thanks for Chris for a fascinating defense of Mankiewicz, which I think
is on target, and will have to think about. But what I like about him is
different, and perhaps I can use our informal group to be a little bit
associative and poetic without having to back it up the way I might in a
published article. I also have the problem of not having seen any
Mankiewicz films in a very long time, though including things seen only
on TV I think I have seen all of them.

To my eyes, Mankiewicz does in fact have a distinctive and expressive
visual style. What happens to me during his films is that the details of
his frames, not just a character but a background object or a doorway,
the overall architecture of the spaces, all become invested with the
suggestiveness of words. This happens because of the way his generally
excellent, and complex, scripts work in relationship to the images. So
in fact I think it is crucial that he directs them. He creates a world
in which everything seems full of potential verbal associations,
meanings beneath the surface, all of which rhyme with the character
transformations or revelations that his scripts are studded with. Things
aren't what they seem because everything can have multiple meanings,
just as characters aren't what they seem at first either. The twist that
ends "Dragonwyck" is a relatively stark example of things he did much
more subtly later.

The potential associations I'm thinking of aren't "semiotic" ones in
that I don't mean you can look at a chair in a Mankiewicz film and come
up with possible specific connections. That's not something that ever
happens to me in a film I like anyway, in my experience, or hardly ever.
(An in-joke only of use to those who have seen this film: There is only
one film in film history that can be called a "system of signs": Hollis
Frampton's "Zorns Lemma.")

So what I see in Mankiewicz, anyway, are images that are crackling with
suggestive, almost literary, associations, that create a feeling of
allusiveness without specific allusions. This feeling even works for
ghosts, as in "The Ghost and Mrs. Muir." But this "feeling" has to do
with, and is what leads up to, all the key character
transformations/revelations that inform his films.

I like every one of the Mankiewicz films mentioned here. "All About Eve"
is great, "The Barefoot Contessa" is great, "Suddenly Last Summer" is
great, "The Quiet American" is great, "A Letter to Three Wives" is
great, "The Ghost and Mrs. Muir" is great (and really moving, too, at
its end). I like "Sleuth" very much. "There Was a Crooked Man" is kind
of strange in that you wouldn't think Mankiewicz aesthetic would work in
the western , but it does.

"Cleopatra" suffered at the time for being the subject of enormous press
coverage. I can't compare it to films made before I was born, but I
think it was the most hyped film of my lifetime. (And one of my favorite
Warhol paintings is one of his paintings of newspaper front pages, this
one of a New York tabloid with the headline, "EDDIE FISHER BREAKS DOWN,"
and the sub head "In Hospital Here / Liz in Rome." If I remember right,
Fisher was married to Taylor and "broke down" when he learned she was
having an affair with Burton during the shooting of the film in Rome,
publicity that the studio played up even to the extent that some cynics
suggested that the affair was part of the hype.)

But, in fact, "Cleopatra" is great too, and it's curious how much it's
just a pure Mankiewicz film, and how much he just incorporates the
spectacle elements into his style.

If I understood Robert's post right, he has not, in my opinion, actually
seen "The Honey Pot." I don't think you can say you've seen a film
unless you see it to the end, and the last-half hour of "The Honey Pot,"
with its multiple twists, is the best part.

Like Richard, I haven't seen it since it came out. Still, I have little
doubt that it's a masterpiece, his greatest film, and his greatest film
in the specific sense of a late "testament" film. It's his "Anatahan,"
it's his "Lola Montez," it's his "Seven Women," it's his "Play Dirty."
Let me add that I don't think it's as great as any of those. If I had to
chop my favorite filmmakers list in half, Mankiewicz would probably be
in the bottom half. But that's not to diminish his greatness. Because
his films are like no others, they have expanded the possibility of what
cinema can be.

Oh, and by the way, to my friends, it's OK to hate a director or two
whose work I love. Just be careful that it's not more than three!

- Fred

Top

3568


From:
Date: Sat Nov 1, 2003 8:36pm
Subject: Re: Steamboat round the Bend
 
This is phenomenal news. Somehow (probably due to the fact that, like Tag, I
have no recollection of it ever airing on television before) this is one
major Ford I've managed to miss.

For those who are interested, some other auteur films of interest airing on
television this month:

"Stella Dallas" (Vidor)
11/3 TCM

"Some Came Running" (Minnelli) (LBX)
11/5 TCM

"Drums Along the Mohawk" (Ford)
11/9 Fox Movie Channel

"The Lineup" (Siegel)
11/13 Encore Mystery

"Cruising" (Friedkin)
11/16 Encore

"Angel Face" (Preminger)
11/20 TCM

"Home from the Hill" (Minnelli) (LBX)
11/20 TCM

"Violent Saturday" (Fleischer)
11/22 Fox Movie Channel

Of these, I've only seen two before ("Some Came Running" and "Drums Along the
Mohawk"), so this should be a pretty exciting month of film-watching.

Peter
3569


From: David Ehrenstein
Date: Sun Nov 2, 2003 1:48am
Subject: Re: Steamboat round the Bend
 
"Angel Face" is quite wonderful, despite all the
problems surrounding it. Hughes insitgated the whole
thing (Preminger was given it as a contractural
assignment), and for awhile it was just called "Murder
Story." In the documnetary on RKO that was made a
number of years back Jean Simmons and Robert Mitchum
both spoke of scene where he slaps her and Preminger
kept asking for re-takes -- insisting that Mitchum
REALLY slap Simmons. Mitchum told Preminger off in no
uncertain terms -- that if anyone was going to get hit
it would be him. Preminger went dead quite and the
shoot continued without incident.

Rivette loved "Angel Face" and a lot of its atmosphere
can be found in certain two-character dialogue scenes
in "Paris Belongs to Us" and "Merry Go Round."

--- ptonguette@a... wrote:


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3570


From:
Date: Sat Nov 1, 2003 9:00pm
Subject: Space for its own sake
 
Dan writes:

> And then there was Fregonese
> as an antidote: the kind of filmmaker that loves space for its own sake,
> so that every shot in the film had an integrity and reality of its own.
>

This is something I've wrestled with a lot lately.  Can (or should) we enjoy
a filmmaker's space for its own sake, divorced from a film's ostensible
subject matter or theme?  Is this a valid way to look at narrative films?  My
inclination right now is to answer a resounding "yes" simply because it seems to me
that the primary achievement of almost any great director (even ones who love
dialogue like Cukor) is a visual one and, thus, the films can be richly
experienced on that level alone. I must admit that this is an approach (dedicating
my focus of watching a film to the rhythms and moods created by its images)
that's unlocked a lot of auteurs who I previously had some problems with.
Fleischer, who Dan has written about as a guy who likes to "float in space," is one
of them. I guess I'm broaching the never-ending form vs. content debate
again, but that's not really what I'm talking about here so much.

(As to Mankiewicz: I saw "The Ghost and Mrs. Muir" a long, long time ago and
don't remember it well enough to comment. Suffice it to say that I'm
interested enough in having another look that I've printed out Fred's post to take
with me to the video store next time I'm out.)

Peter


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
3571


From: David Ehrenstein
Date: Sun Nov 2, 2003 2:28am
Subject: Re: Space for its own sake
 
"Elephant" is ENTIRELY about "space for its own
sake."

Losey is also space-centric: "The Damned," "Eve,"
Servant," "Modesty Blaise," "Boom!" "Secret Ceremony,"
and "Don Giovanni" in particular.

And then there's the all-time "Space Cadet," Michael
Snow.

--- ptonguette@a... wrote:


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3572


From: Peter Tonguette
Date: Sun Nov 2, 2003 2:32am
Subject: Re: Cahiers: The Outstanding Films of the Decade (1970-1980)
 
This is hardly a new observation, but my comment on The Young Turks
who changed American cinema in the '70s is that they frequently did
their best and richest work in the '80s and '90s and beyond. I love
no '70s Bogdanovich film like I love '81's "They All Laughed" (well
maybe "Daisy Miller"...) The one Coppola film which I embrace
wholeheartedly is "Tucker: The Man and His Dream" (88); it's the REAL
American classic he was accused of having made several times over in
the '70s. My two favorite Romeros were made in the '80s: "Day of the
Dead" and "Monkey Shines." And I won't deny the extraordinary range
and greatness of Altman's output during the '70s, but for me his
(largely unacknowledged) peak is still "Short Cuts" (93).
Friedkin: "The Exorcist" and "Sorcerer" are great, but so are "To
Live and Die in L.A." and "The Hunted." I don't know what reason I
would give for this "trend" beyond the fact that the commercial
marginalization of these directors seemed to bring out something in
them that hadn't been apparent (or AS apparent) in the earlier
stuff. Kent Jones wrote a really lucid piece on the post-70s work of
the young '70s auteurs in Film Comment a few years back.

On the flip side, a really interesting case study for me is Richard
Lester. His list of great '60s and '70s films is daunting: "The
Knack"; "Petulia"; "The Three Musketeers"; "The Four
Musketeers"; "Juggernaut"; "The Ritz"; "Cuba"; "Butch and Sundance."
And then we have one more great one made in 1980 - "Superman II" -
followed by virtual silence. Why was he unable to re-adjust to the
changing times as some of these other guys had? It wasn't for a lack
of trying; the list of unmade Lester films from this period is
staggering.

I can relate to Filipe's comment about the temptation to underrate
The Young Turks in an effort to draw attention to the great things
guys like Cukor, Aldrich, Preminger, Siegel, et al. And I don't know
that I have a problem with this per se. It's a polemical thing and
when the day comes that "Travels With My Aunt" is as canonized
as "The Godfather," I'll shut-up.

Peter
3573


From:
Date: Sat Nov 1, 2003 9:39pm
Subject: Re: Space for its own sake
 
David E. writes:

> Losey is also space-centric: "The Damned," "Eve,"
> Servant," "Modesty Blaise," "Boom!" "Secret Ceremony,"
> and "Don Giovanni" in particular.

I agree with you on Losey (the ones I've seen anyway.) But I guess my other
point was that I think it might be profitable to look at ALL great movies this
way - even ones which aren't explicitly space-centric. For example, I'm
possibly the last Woody Allen auteurist on earth and in my upcoming review of
"Anything Else," I talk a lot about the simple pleasures of him working with
'Scope compositions again. There's a real positive buzz I get from simply LOOKING
at this film and yet I wouldn't categorize Allen as being overtly into space
for its own sake.

Peter


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
3574


From: jaketwilson
Date: Sun Nov 2, 2003 4:32am
Subject: Re: Space for its own sake
 
Peter Tonguette wrote:

> This is something I've wrestled with a lot lately.  Can (or should) we en=
joy a filmmaker's space for its own sake, divorced from a film's ostensible=
subject matter or theme?  Is this a valid way to look at >narrative films? =
My inclination right now is to answer a resounding "yes" simply because it=
seems to me that the primary achievement of almost any great director (eve=
n ones who love dialogue like Cukor) is a >visual one and, thus, the films c=
an be richly experienced on that level alone.

I've no wish to open the form/content can of worms either, but maybe
there are other ways forward. I think we'd agree that movies aren't
just about space, but about actions performed in space -- even when, as
I gather happens sometimes in Snow, the only real actor is the camera.
But since ALL actions occur in space and time anyway, is there any real
difference between thinking about these actions and thinking about the
world in general?

Obviously, the way space gets presented in narrative film tends to
involve continually shifting relations between onscreen space and
offscreen space, what we can hear but not see, what we can see but the
characters can't, etc. So following what's going on in a movie from
shot to shot, never mind scene to scene, is an act of interpretation
that involves seeking out "significance" beyond the immediate sensory
data available to us at a given moment; if we fail to do this, we have
no hope of appreciating a movie's "form", much less its content.

I was pondering this in connection with Kiarostami's TEN, where in one
sense the "space" is extremely limited -- almost every shot is taken
from one of two fixed positions inside a car. Yet the much larger space
of the city is present in the film throughout, not just as a backdrop
(ambient sound, the view out the window) but via the heroine's physical
actions as she stops and starts the car, responds to other drivers,
etc. So it's less about providing a visual representation of a given
space than about allowing us to share the experience of what it's like
to inhabit this space -- for the heroine, the streets of Tehran are
more an obstacle course to be navigated than a series of objects to be
contemplated. In other words, it's only by following a narrative, and
placing ourselves imaginatively in the character's shoes, that we can
get much sense of the "space" which exists onscreen.

JTW
3575


From: Damien Bona
Date: Sun Nov 2, 2003 5:35am
Subject: Re: Cahiers: The Outstanding Films of the Decade (1970-1980)
 
--- In a_film_by@yahoogroups.com, "Peter Tonguette"
wrote:
>It's a polemical thing and
> when the day comes that "Travels With My Aunt" is as canonized
> as "The Godfather," I'll shut-up.


Great comment, Peter. Travels WIth My Aunt is so much greater a
picture than The Godfather that the two shouldn't even be mentioned
together in the same sentece. And the same goes with such other
1972 releases as Mulligan's The Other, Hitchcock's Frenzy. But
don't hold your breath waiting for any of these three to surpass the
Coppola film on the Sight and Sound list.
3576


From: Damien Bona
Date: Sun Nov 2, 2003 5:35am
Subject: Re: Cahiers: The Outstanding Films of the Decade (1970-1980)
 
--- In a_film_by@yahoogroups.com, "Peter Tonguette"
wrote:
>It's a polemical thing and
> when the day comes that "Travels With My Aunt" is as canonized
> as "The Godfather," I'll shut-up.


Great comment, Peter. Travels WIth My Aunt is so much greater a
picture than The Godfather that the two shouldn't even be mentioned
together in the same sentece. And the same goes with such other
1972 releases as Mulligan's The Other, Hitchcock's Frenzy. But
don't hold your breath waiting for any of these three to surpass the
Coppola film on the Sight and Sound list.
3577


From: Tosh
Date: Sun Nov 2, 2003 5:39am
Subject: Saint-Germain-des-Pres films?
 
I think ONLY this list can help me out. I am looking for any films
that are shot in the Saint-Germain-des-Pres section of Paris.
Especially around the time of late 40's to early 50's. And if it has
Saint-Germain nightclub scenes -even better yet.

Right now I am researching Boris Vian during that time period - and I
want to put together a filmography of sorts that deal with either him
in it - or that particular location.

If any of you feel that this is a totally off-subject matter for this
list - feel free to contact me directly

Thanks!
--
Tosh Berman
TamTam Books
http://www.tamtambooks.com
3578


From: Zach Campbell
Date: Sun Nov 2, 2003 5:38am
Subject: Re: Space for its own sake
 
Peter wrote:
> Can (or should) we enjoy
> a filmmaker's space for its own sake, divorced from a film's
ostensible
> subject matter or theme?

Well, time and space are really what we're working with here: the
fundamental axes of the medium. The extent to which a filmmaker
addresses these aspects straight on varies, and the extent to which
an observer wants to interpet same varies as well.

That said, I think that it would be dissatisfying to say, "This
filmmaker is great because of his/her use of space." I guess that
I'm more interested in a filmmaker using space (doing) than a
filmmaker having a use of space (being), if that makes any sense?
The way Robert Mulligan constructs space in SUMMER OF '42, one of the
more overwhelming viewing experiences of my life (on video, no less),
is not ornamental: it's not as if the space is great in its own
compartmentalized, platonic way. Mulligan is a great filmmaker
partly because of his masterful control of space interacts with other
elements of the film, presenting a narrative (which is not say
he "merely" or "ultimately" just tells a story) that moves,
challenges, seduces, jilts, and wrestles with a viewer.

(Oh, and there's just no way that Mulligan's a mere parasite on
screenwriter Herman Raucher's 'genius' in SUMMER OF '42, either.
Hmph.)

--Zach
3579


From: David Ehrenstein
Date: Sun Nov 2, 2003 5:41am
Subject: Re: Saint-Germain-des-Pres films?
 
One of the episodes of "Paris vu Par" (aka "Six in
Paris") was devoted to St Germain des Pres.

And I believe a film was made of "L'Ecume des jours."

"Around the World with Orson Welles" which is just out
on DVD features several sections set in Paris.

And I believe Louis Malle's "Zazie dans le Metro" has
a lot about St. Germain des Pres in it. But it's years
since I last saw it.
--- Tosh wrote:


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3580


From: David Ehrenstein
Date: Sun Nov 2, 2003 5:44am
Subject: Re: Re: Space for its own sake
 
There are many truly dramatic spacial configurations
in Mulligan's film of Gavin Lambert's "Inside Daisy
Clover."

(Gavin's currently working on a bio of Natalie Wood,
BTW.)


--- Zach Campbell wrote:


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3581


From: hotlove666
Date: Sun Nov 2, 2003 5:44am
Subject: Metaphor and metonymy
 

I'm certain others here have a better handle on and more extensive
knowledge of
these matters, but I was under the impression that much of Saussurean
linguistics and
the sort of ruminations that derive from Jakobson's two-axis system
are
hopelessly
outmoded and inadequate when it comes to linguistics and how we
actually use and

understand language. (For example, see:
http://www.clas.ufl.edu/users/nnh/
lacan.htm). They seem to only survive in a lot of lit theory, some
philosophy,
film
studies, visual art theory, etc. Am I wrong?>

I believe so. Thanks for the Norman Holland site, but his criticism
and theories didn't float my boat when I first read him in 1967, and
they still don't, although I'd love to see what he came up with in
that reader-response porn study.

As for Chomsky, I used a transformational grammar text to teach
writing, found it very helpful, and when I tried to find it again
recently to coach my older stepson in English composition, it had
disappeared from the face of the Earth, along with all other texts
using that approach. So there's a lot of horse-switching going on in
education, and I would think in psychology and linguistics as well -
they are vast international fields, where generalizations are risky.

Chomsky gives us a precise way of writing a grammar of a language,
but his core axioms about the mind are gaga, and have had a bad
effect on his political writing. I once devised a Chomsky-based rule-
set for describing point of view structure in Paradise Lost and found
it to be a useful notation system, but if you put a gun to my head I
could probably come up with three more.

I recommend that anyone who has heard that Saussure and Jakobson are
passe read the Course in General Linguistics and Jakobson's Studies
in Poetics, then some Barthes and Genette (Figures III). I think
you'll find it more interesting than Metz, who never interested me.
The best applications of structuralist ideas to film are still
Bellour and the Cahiers group from '69 to '72. I use them every day.
But I can't speak for what happened to those ideas when they left
France and got sucked into the tenure-mills, where instant innovation
is the duty and prerogative of every first-year graduate student with
an essay to crank out: "Lacan asserts, wrongly..." You know the drill.
3582


From: Damien Bona
Date: Sun Nov 2, 2003 5:50am
Subject: Re: Space for its own sake
 
--- In a_film_by@yahoogroups.com, ptonguette@a... wrote:
> Dan writes:
>
> > And then there was Fregonese
> > as an antidote: the kind of filmmaker that loves space for its
own sake,
> > so that every shot in the film had an integrity and reality of
its own.
> >
>
> This is something I've wrestled with a lot lately.  Can (or should)
we enjoy
> a filmmaker's space for its own sake, divorced from a film's
ostensible
> subject matter or theme?  Is this a valid way to look at narrative
films?  My
> inclination right now is to answer a resounding "yes" simply
because it seems to me
> that the primary achievement of almost any great director (even
ones who love
> dialogue like Cukor) is a visual one and, thus, the films can be
richly
> experienced on that level alone.

I'm not quite sure what the concept of "space for its own sake" is.
But it sounds as if it what is being talked about is a visual
flamboyance, akin to elaborate camera movements that are there only
because it is possible to keep a camera in motion for minutes on end
(eg, John Farrow) and flashy editing that exists merely to call
attention to itself (such as in the films of Alan Parker)?

I've never seen a Hugo Fregonese picture, so I can't comment about
him specifically, but it seems that "space for its own sake" would
serve no particular purpose. On the other hand, Tashlin, Edwards,
Sirk, Kiarostami and Wes Anderson are among the filmmakers whose use
of space enhances and expands the narrative and thematic concerns of
their films.
3583


From: hotlove666
Date: Sun Nov 2, 2003 5:55am
Subject: St-Germain-des-Pres
 
Off the top of my head, I believe one of Welles' essay-films for the
BBC shows the quartier - it's available in the Around the World with
Orson Welles set.
3584


From: hotlove666
Date: Sun Nov 2, 2003 5:59am
Subject: Space for its own sake
 
I vote for space for the sake of something - as in Ozu.
3586


From: Peter Tonguette
Date: Sun Nov 2, 2003 6:28am
Subject: Re: Cahiers: The Outstanding Films of the Decade (1970-1980)
 
Damien writes:

> Great comment, Peter.

Thanks, Damien.

>And the same goes with such other
> 1972 releases as Mulligan's The Other

"The Other" is amazing! (And so is "Frenzy," though I think I'd vote
for "Family Plot" as the greatest of the post-"Marnie" Hitchcocks.)
But I'm continually astonished by Mulligan's body of work, with "The
Other" being one of my more recent discoveries. Offhand, I can't
think of a filmmaker who has more fully explored the possibilities of
subjective camera work.

Everyone should read Zach's essay on "Summer of '42" for his
discussion of these qualities in that film. It used to be up at his
personal web page; Zach?
3587


From: Jaime N. Christley
Date: Sun Nov 2, 2003 6:31am
Subject: Re: Space for its own sake
 
Isn't "space for it's own sake" for the sake of some "thing"?

Thanks for the Kubelka post, Fred, I look forward to the chance to
see those films again (except OUR TRIP TO AFRICA, I regret to say).

-Jaime

--- In a_film_by@yahoogroups.com, "hotlove666"
wrote:
> I vote for space for the sake of something - as in Ozu.
3588


From: Peter Tonguette
Date: Sun Nov 2, 2003 6:52am
Subject: Re: Space for its own sake
 
[My first attempt at posting this got cut off by the Yahoo!
interface,
but that's just as well since I had some additional thoughts.]

Damien writes:

> But it sounds as if it what is being talked about is a visual
> flamboyance, akin to elaborate camera movements that are there only
> because it is possible to keep a camera in motion for minutes on end
> (eg, John Farrow) and flashy editing that exists merely to call
> attention to itself (such as in the films of Alan Parker)?

I'll get back to Jake and Zach's thoughtful replies in time, but a
quick response to Damien here. See, I think what I'm talking about is
more a way of watching films than opposing visual subtlety to visual
flamboyance. My example of a director who creates spaces I simply
enjoy watching often regardless of his film's narrative or thematic
concerns was Richard Fleischer - and I don't consider him flamboyant
at all. This is a tricky idea I'm trying to express but here goes:
it's almost as if there are several wavelengths at work in any
narrative film. There's a level at which you become involved with the
story and characters and there's a level at which you're relating to
the film primarily as a series of images (spaces, patterns of light
and movement, etc.) and the way these things are able, on their own
and in tandem with a script, to generate an intensely emotional
experience within the viewer. As I type this, I realize that this
sounds like an either/or proposition, though I don't think it really
is. But I think there's something to be said for sometimes "zoning
out" (my very nonacademic term) on the plot of a narrative film and
just allowing the images to wash over you. I think I've commented
before that I know I'm in the presence of a truly GREAT film when I'm
tempted to do this; to enjoy the spaces for their own sake, even if
they weren't created for their own sake per se.

Maybe another point might be that it's easier to do this with some
directors than others. The spaces of a Bresson seem more tied to the
themes of his movies - and an overall vision of the world - than the
spaces of a Fleischer. Fred once told me that he felt that Walsh's
spaces didn't necessarily have much to do at all with his plots.

As usual, I'm probably more undecided on these issues than I might
sound, but it's interesting stuff that I'm just beginning to sort out
for myself.

Peter




---
3589


From: Jaime N. Christley
Date: Sun Nov 2, 2003 7:42am
Subject: Buster Keaton and space
 
I'm watching what looks to be a fairly decent, if rote, doc on Buster
Keaton - the one that comes with THE RAILRODDER on videotape, and in
it there's a remark that goes like this:

"He was free of the vaudevile stage. He had all of Southern
California to play with. He had all the props, and all the space, he
could use."

It's a fairly causal remark, I doubt the doc's maker (John Spotton)
thought about Keaton's use of space very thoroughly, but I made the
connection to our recent and hopefully ongoing discussion of
filmmakers and space.

I find Keaton's use of space delightful, while observing the
importance of space in nearly all of his large-scale gags, and many
of the rest as well. I think you could cut off the "pay-off" in a
gag (ruining the joke) and still delight in his use of the church in
SEVEN CHANCES, or the open country in THE GENERAL. Or the four-room
house in THE 'HIGH SIGN'. And many many many many more.

It would be great if someone took the time to study the development
of California and Los Angeles and its effect on Hollywood moviemaking
(with a secondary concern re: the increasing density of LA space and
its effects on artistic freedom on the part of the writers and
directors and producers, etc). Has anyone made that plunge?

-Jaime
3590


From: Jaime N. Christley
Date: Sun Nov 2, 2003 7:46am
Subject: Re: Buster Keaton and space [correction]
 
> fairly decent

I take that back.

-Jaime
3591


From: Damien Bona
Date: Sun Nov 2, 2003 8:47am
Subject: Re: Saint-Germain-des-Pres films?
 
--- In a_film_by@yahoogroups.com, Tosh wrote:
> I think ONLY this list can help me out. I am looking for any films
> that are shot in the Saint-Germain-des-Pres section of Paris.
> Especially around the time of late 40's to early 50's.

It's not from the 40s or 50s, but The Mother And The Whore contains
scenes shot at Les Deux Magots and Cafe Flores.

I haven't seen it -- Anthony Hopkins tends to make me cross the
street -- but possibly Surviving Picasso has St Germain locations.
Picasso hung out at the Magots and Flores, and there is his sculpture
in the courtyard of the church.
3592


From: Rebecca Shone
Date: Sun Nov 2, 2003 11:58am
Subject: Re: Re: Metaphor and Metonymy and more linguistics
 
Take a look at www.etheory.org.uk; this is my course web site. If you want to see what is being taught on film theory courses this is ideal. I really enjoy the semiotics aspect of the course, I love looking for signs! I find structuralism confusing. Its pretty straight forward on its own, it's applying it to films that I find hard. I think this is mainly because I’m currently being bombarded with so much film theory!


Zach Campbell wrote:Paul wrote:
> I was under the impression that much of Saussurean linguistics and
> the sort of ruminations that derive from Jakobson's two-axis system
are hopelessly
> outmoded and inadequate when it comes to linguistics and how we
actually use and
> understand language.

You're right as far as I know--they teach it in film theory courses
though, because like Mulvey's visual pleasure treatise, Bazin's
ontology, and Eisenstein's montage, they're major ideas in the
history of film theory (for better or for worse), even if
contemporary thought has rejected or passed them.

Semiotics is actually not that hot a field right now anyway. But it
can be fun and illuminating to talk about signs in certain films ...

--Zach


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3593


From: Henrik Sylow
Date: Sun Nov 2, 2003 0:21pm
Subject: Re: metaphoric and metonymic / Luhrman
 
--- In a_film_by@yahoogroups.com, "madlyangelicgirl"
wrote:
> Some advice needed...
>
> I think Luhrman is a metaphoric auteur. Everything is very
> transparent in his films and meaning is easily signified. Now, am I
> wrong, or does anyone agree with me?

I dont like the term metaphoric auteur, I prefer Auteur who employs
metaphores, but as he also employs metonymy, what is he then?

Coming back to the metaphor, Luhrman uses them and they are quiet
complex.

The curtain call (opening) when the orchestra plays the overture of
"Sound of Music" is clearly metaphoric, as we have a score designated
for one film used to designate another. But the metaphor is far more
complex.

To demonstrate how complex a metaphor it is, let us look at the
Montmartre introduction, which is a mere second in an elaborate
sequence. The word Montmartre can be split into Mont and Martre, which
in French mean Mount Martyr. But Martre can paradigmic be read as
Matre, meaning Mother, and by a simple paradigm we get Mount Mother
--> Mountain / Hill and Women. Second there is a priest warning us,
"turn away from this village of sin..." This evokes several
juxtapositions (Man / Woman, Patriarchal / Matriarchal, Celibacy /
Promiscuity). And finally the entry, the gate to Montmartre is in the
shape of a face with its jaws wide open, so you walk into its mouth,
much like the sacrificial alters of Moloch or Baal, which is
underlined by the priest's words "...for it is a veritable Sodom and
Gomorrah", evoking juxtaposition between the priest and the entry
(Christianity / Cultism, Celibacy / Sin). It is underlined by the
geometry of the shot, as it goes (priest, thru the gate, prostitute).

Thus "the hills are alive, with the sound of music" becomes a metaphor
for Montmartre (hills, women, full of life, sin) and Moulin Rouge
(music, women, a lot of sin). Yet again the true meaning the
Montmartre, the hill of martyr, premeditates Satine's death for love.

What Luhrman does is creating a new code. Equally as he placed "Romeo
and Juliet" in modern Miami, he uses contemporary pop to substitute
dialogue, from the subtle interjection by Madonna into "Diamonds are a
girls best friend", over Ziegler's "Like a Virgin", to the pure bliss
of Crawford's "One day I'll fly away", interjected by Sting. Yet the
clearest example of this new code is the love song medley, starting
out with Beatles, Kiss and U2, where song lines are blended with
dialogue lines, imitating metric, rhyme and rhythm, continuing to
present the greatest modern love songs ever written, finally meeting
eachother in Bowie's "Heroes" and escalating in Houston's "I will
always love you".

By creating a code understandable to us, Luhrman allows the use of
metaphors previous not understandable. I dont agree that Luhrman's
metaphores are transparent. While every trope is somewhat transparent,
since it automaticly evokes a relation, Luhrman plays with them and
thru the new code he creates attibutive metaphores and new
compositional metaphores.

An example are the girls of Moulin Rouge, who are prostitutes, but
high priced ones, so they are called "The Diamond Dogs", suggesting
both that they are "man's best friend" and their low social status and
societies contempt for them. Satine is "The Sparkling Diamond". Note
how she has broken free from "dog", note how she blinds "sparkling".
Luhrman continues to play, when he uses the song "Diamonds are a girls
best friend", suggesting a social symbiosis (Dogs are a man's best
friend, Diamonds are a girls best friend), but also, by her name,
suggesting that she is the one all "dogs" aspire to become.

I know Bill mentioned Jackobsen and Genette, but Genette also coined
another usefull idea "Transtextuality". Luhrman very much so replies
on transtextuality, especially quotation and allusion, especially
audial, to create his code.

Henrik
3594


From: Rebecca Shone
Date: Sun Nov 2, 2003 1:53pm
Subject: Re: Re: metaphoric and metonymic / Luhrman
 
Henrik,

Thank you!! I'm having difficulty getting through film theory jargon. It's a complex subject. I spotted the underworld typewriter which Christian writes his story on, would this be a sign or a metaphor? I think it is reminding the viewer of the Orpheos myth which the film is obviously based upon. I also think that Luhrman plays with Brecht's alienation device, as the viewer is constantly aware that they are watching a film.

Regards,
Rebecca
Henrik Sylow wrote:
--- In a_film_by@yahoogroups.com, "madlyangelicgirl"
wrote:
> Some advice needed...
>
> I think Luhrman is a metaphoric auteur. Everything is very
> transparent in his films and meaning is easily signified. Now, am I
> wrong, or does anyone agree with me?

I dont like the term metaphoric auteur, I prefer Auteur who employs
metaphores, but as he also employs metonymy, what is he then?

Coming back to the metaphor, Luhrman uses them and they are quiet
complex.

The curtain call (opening) when the orchestra plays the overture of
"Sound of Music" is clearly metaphoric, as we have a score designated
for one film used to designate another. But the metaphor is far more
complex.

To demonstrate how complex a metaphor it is, let us look at the
Montmartre introduction, which is a mere second in an elaborate
sequence. The word Montmartre can be split into Mont and Martre, which
in French mean Mount Martyr. But Martre can paradigmic be read as
Matre, meaning Mother, and by a simple paradigm we get Mount Mother
--> Mountain / Hill and Women. Second there is a priest warning us,
"turn away from this village of sin..." This evokes several
juxtapositions (Man / Woman, Patriarchal / Matriarchal, Celibacy /
Promiscuity). And finally the entry, the gate to Montmartre is in the
shape of a face with its jaws wide open, so you walk into its mouth,
much like the sacrificial alters of Moloch or Baal, which is
underlined by the priest's words "...for it is a veritable Sodom and
Gomorrah", evoking juxtaposition between the priest and the entry
(Christianity / Cultism, Celibacy / Sin). It is underlined by the
geometry of the shot, as it goes (priest, thru the gate, prostitute).

Thus "the hills are alive, with the sound of music" becomes a metaphor
for Montmartre (hills, women, full of life, sin) and Moulin Rouge
(music, women, a lot of sin). Yet again the true meaning the
Montmartre, the hill of martyr, premeditates Satine's death for love.

What Luhrman does is creating a new code. Equally as he placed "Romeo
and Juliet" in modern Miami, he uses contemporary pop to substitute
dialogue, from the subtle interjection by Madonna into "Diamonds are a
girls best friend", over Ziegler's "Like a Virgin", to the pure bliss
of Crawford's "One day I'll fly away", interjected by Sting. Yet the
clearest example of this new code is the love song medley, starting
out with Beatles, Kiss and U2, where song lines are blended with
dialogue lines, imitating metric, rhyme and rhythm, continuing to
present the greatest modern love songs ever written, finally meeting
eachother in Bowie's "Heroes" and escalating in Houston's "I will
always love you".

By creating a code understandable to us, Luhrman allows the use of
metaphors previous not understandable. I dont agree that Luhrman's
metaphores are transparent. While every trope is somewhat transparent,
since it automaticly evokes a relation, Luhrman plays with them and
thru the new code he creates attibutive metaphores and new
compositional metaphores.

An example are the girls of Moulin Rouge, who are prostitutes, but
high priced ones, so they are called "The Diamond Dogs", suggesting
both that they are "man's best friend" and their low social status and
societies contempt for them. Satine is "The Sparkling Diamond". Note
how she has broken free from "dog", note how she blinds "sparkling".
Luhrman continues to play, when he uses the song "Diamonds are a girls
best friend", suggesting a social symbiosis (Dogs are a man's best
friend, Diamonds are a girls best friend), but also, by her name,
suggesting that she is the one all "dogs" aspire to become.

I know Bill mentioned Jackobsen and Genette, but Genette also coined
another usefull idea "Transtextuality". Luhrman very much so replies
on transtextuality, especially quotation and allusion, especially
audial, to create his code.

Henrik



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[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
3595


From: Adrian Martin
Date: Sun Nov 2, 2003 3:00pm
Subject: Space, Mankiewicz, etc
 
The current discussion of space in cinema is a fascinating and vexing one.
Sometimes also just a little bit comic, too (I don't mean to offend anyone
here) - phrases like 'space for its own sake' are sure to make us all the
subject of a parody in VANITY FAIR, watch out!

It seems to me a very cinephile thing to wax lyrical about 'space for its
own sake'. On the one hand, I have trouble understanding just what this
might mean, even though I am a cinephile. If I want space for its own sake,
after all, I can walk out of my house and look at the sky for a few hours!!!
Well, of course, on the other hand, I know the kind of thing we have been
collectively evoking: expressive experiences of space, motion, etc.

Space is a mighty vague word!! Alain Masson, for instance, in his study of a
number in SINGIN' IN THE RAIN, differentiates helpfully between abstract
space, vast and total; the form of space that is defined by the set; and
finally spatialisation, which is the specific organisation of space defined
by the camera and mise en scene (which of course changes from shot to shot,
often radically).

Then there's what Ray Durgnat constantly explored: on the one hand, we are
talking about the filmic image as a phenomenological/imaginary
'apprehension' of a three dimensional space - what it's like to move through
a room, be trapped in a closet, etc etc - and on the other hand the filmic
image is a flat, 2D thing, a pictorial image. The tension between 2D and 3D
is what every filmmaker has to organise.

And here is just a tiny note on mise en scene criticism (a topic which has
long obsessed me). I think we sometimes fall into the cinephilic trap of
equating mise en scene with somebody like Max Ophuls: flowing camera
movements, lots of spatial apprehensions, everything moving, long takes,
etc. OK, that's great, sublime. But then we hit someone like Mankiewicz, or
Wilder, even Preston Sturges. That particular language of mise en scene is
hardly there - so many of us tend to reflexly denigrate them. Mankiewicz
especially has suffered terribly from being slagged off as theatrical,
talky, stagy, 'not visual', etc. But I recently had the pleasant assignment
of having to look back at and write on a few of his films: GUYS AND DOLLS (I
completely agree with David and Jonathan) is just wonderful, and the mise en
scene of bodily attraction and repulsion in the numbers is as great as
anything in cinema; THE BAREFOOT CONTESSA is a masterpiece, but not one you
can 'unlock' through the standard mise en scene code of appreciation.
Jacques Lourcelles' analysis cracked it for me: if you see Mankiewicz's
principal subject (in many of his films) as precisely 'theatre' - literally
in ALL ABOUT EVE, figuratively in BAREFOOT CONTESSA - then you see every
stylistic, performative, etc, aspect of his work being about presenting (and
criticising) the 'theatres' of social groupings, in which everyone poses,
watches, waits, has their moment 'on the stage', etc ... I have really
warmed to Manckiewicz lately. Wasn't what Godard liked in him precisely the
provocation of this style that 'entered' through the word, and created a
pristine dramaturgy and scenography around the words - as so many modernist
experimenters (Duras, Straub-Huillet, Oliveira, etc) have done?

Adrian
3596


From: Zach Campbell
Date: Sun Nov 2, 2003 2:11pm
Subject: Re: Cahiers: The Outstanding Films of the Decade (1970-1980)
 
Peter:
> Everyone should read Zach's essay on "Summer of '42" for his
> discussion of these qualities in that film. It used to be up at
his
> personal web page; Zach?

Thanks for the plug, Peter. The review is still there, just not
linked now: http://www.geocities.com/cinezach/summer42.html .
Although I'm embarrassed by my writing and cringe at every other
phrasing, I still think this was the best of the reviews I had on my
personal page, in terms of trying to get at the heart of a film and
explaining what Mulligan's visuals are doing. Hopefully anyone who
reads it will find it intriguing.

--Zach
3597


From: Robert Keser
Date: Sun Nov 2, 2003 2:26pm
Subject: Re: Saint-Germain-des-Pres films?
 
As I recall, Le Feu Follet has a number of scenes with people hanging
out at Saint-Germain-des-Pres cafés.

--Robert Keser

> --- In a_film_by@yahoogroups.com, Tosh wrote:
> > I think ONLY this list can help me out. I am looking for any
films
> > that are shot in the Saint-Germain-des-Pres section of Paris.
> > Especially around the time of late 40's to early 50's.
3598


From: Robert Keser
Date: Sun Nov 2, 2003 2:54pm
Subject: Re: Mankiewicz (was: Cahiers 1963)
 
Chris's interpretation of Mankiewicz is very provocative
(although damned slippery to keep a grasp on). Apart from
the examples given, the concept of doubling certainly works
well for the Mrs.Venable/Catherine rivalry in Suddenly, Last
Summer and for Sleuth (and maybe Five Fingers), but it seems
a stretch for No Way Out and Guys and Dolls and Cleopatra.
(Incidentally, in terms of verbalizing, Suddenly, Last Summer
seems very witty because it uses up great energy and half
its running time in Hepburn talking about ways to prevent
Taylor from talking until Taylor can no longer hold back and,
at last, spills all in a torrent of talk, which they can then
talk about).

Still, this doubling seems like a way to approach Mankiewicz
through theme, but (like Peter) I'm attuned to film as a visual
medium. I want the interplay of staging and use of space (okay,
spatialization) and camera movement (or stillness) that's
expressing meaning and I don't get the connection in Mankiewicz.
On some instinctual level (the same one as Fred), I feel that
All About Eve and The Quiet American look right, but that Guys
and Dolls, Cleopatra, and Sleuth emphatically look not at all
right. The visuals don't make sense to me the way that they do
in A Life of Her Own, River Of No Return, or The Naked and the
Dead (or Kiarostami's Ten, for that matter). Comolli's
comment about Cleopatra's "aberrant surface" sounds to me like
an attempt to account for that movie's banal visuals and muddled
battle scenes (all the more galling when the very beautiful and
ruminative Fall of the Roman Empire is ignored).

Anyway, this has been an eye-opening exchange for me, and
I thank people for their explanations, which are going to
send me back to the films with a new viewpoint. As for The
Honey Pot, can one say that I have actually seen it? Well,
having caught up with the ending on TV, I've now been exposed
to all its parts, but of course that doesn't add up to the
whole. But that's okay: I'm perfectly happy with Anatahan,
Lola Montes, Seven Women, Play Dirty (and Street of Shame),
so I'll leave The Honey Pot to the deliriously lovestruck
Patrick Straram ("A Love Supreme"). That's fine. People
should enjoy their films!

My favorite line to enjoy from The Barefoot Contessa:
"Whether you're born with it, or catch it from a public
drinking cup, Maria had it".

--Robert Keser

--- In a_film_by@yahoogroups.com, Fred Camper wrote:
> Well, I still love Mankiewicz, just as I have since the late 1960s.
>
> It is true that most American auteurists, or many, do not hold him
in
> very high regard.
>
3599


From: Tosh
Date: Sun Nov 2, 2003 3:16pm
Subject: Re: Buster Keaton and space
 
There is a wonderful book called 'Silent Echo' (I am hoping that I
have the correct title) published by Santa Monica Books that deals
with how Los Angeles had changed via Keaton's films. Also if one
gets the DVD box set of Keaton's work - the author presents a
program/slide show regarding how Keaton used actual locations as part
of his work. Fascinating book and DVD! It serves both as a critique
on Keaton's work as well as the history of Los Angeles.

There is something beautiful when Keaton actually becomes part of the
storm in Steamboat Jr. - he tries to fight it - but eventually he
sort of becomes carried away by it - or in The General when he
becomes part of the Train. He has this natural relationship with
machines, artchitecture, and the elements that I find moving.

Along with Lang and maybe Kubrick, Keaton really knew how to use
'space' to make it work for him and of course his films.




>I'm watching what looks to be a fairly decent, if rote, doc on Buster
>Keaton - the one that comes with THE RAILRODDER on videotape, and in
>it there's a remark that goes like this:
>
>"He was free of the vaudevile stage. He had all of Southern
>California to play with. He had all the props, and all the space, he
>could use."
>
>It's a fairly causal remark, I doubt the doc's maker (John Spotton)
>thought about Keaton's use of space very thoroughly, but I made the
>connection to our recent and hopefully ongoing discussion of
>filmmakers and space.
>
>I find Keaton's use of space delightful, while observing the
>importance of space in nearly all of his large-scale gags, and many
>of the rest as well. I think you could cut off the "pay-off" in a
>gag (ruining the joke) and still delight in his use of the church in
>SEVEN CHANCES, or the open country in THE GENERAL. Or the four-room
>house in THE 'HIGH SIGN'. And many many many many more.
>
>It would be great if someone took the time to study the development
>of California and Los Angeles and its effect on Hollywood moviemaking
>(with a secondary concern re: the increasing density of LA space and
>its effects on artistic freedom on the part of the writers and
>directors and producers, etc). Has anyone made that plunge?
>
>-Jaime
>
>
>
>To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to:
>a_film_by-unsubscribe@yahoogroups.com
>
>
>
>Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/


--
Tosh Berman
TamTam Books
http://www.tamtambooks.com
3600


From: Zach Campbell
Date: Sun Nov 2, 2003 4:05pm
Subject: Re: Space, Mankiewicz, etc
 
Adrian wrote:
> if you see Mankiewicz's
> principal subject (in many of his films) as
> precisely 'theatre'...then you see every
> stylistic, performative, etc, aspect of his work being about
> presenting (and criticising) the 'theatres' of social groupings, in
> which everyone poses, watches, waits, has their moment 'on the
> stage', etc ...

Isn't it more precise to say that 'performance' is more at the heart
of this style than 'theater'? Periodically I'll come across papers
that stress the 'theatricality' of a given social ritual, and I'll
wonder why they include all the baggage of theater (a specific place
& space and arguably even a specific cultural milieu, or set of
milieux) when what they're talking about is really performance, which
need not tie itself to the theater always and forever.

Or, if I'm wrong on this specific count, how does Mankiewicz present
a *theater* rather than simply performance in his films? How does he
delineate the characters' "moment 'on the stage'" in contrast to the
moments not on the proverbial stage? I'm interested to here more and
I'd like to check out some Mankiewicz now, though I've generally
avoided him for a few years.

--Zach


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