Monday, April 4, 2016

Our Nixon (2013)



Our Nixon attempts to sell itself as the big reveal of previously locked-away archival 8mm footage from Nixon’s presidency, filmed by Nixon’s closest advisors and trusted friends themselves. But the reality of the film is less startling: it’s a mixture of said 8mm footage, news footage, talking-head interviews, and audio recordings that the film pulls together in order to create a neat, chronological-order narrative of Nixon’s presidency.

I don’t know much about Nixon, so I found the film informative. But this is faint praise for a documentary that has potential to reveal—in all of its mundane detail—a purely Nixonian aesthetic. While this is a boring prospect, I would suggest that allowing the audience to experience such boredom would reveal more about the inner workings of the Nixon administration (evil as part and parcel with bureaucratic pencil pushing) than the faux-scandalous “top-secret” Nixon conversations about his homophobia and hatred for protestors that feature prominently in the film.

These conversations play for us—the dialogue spelled out in large subtitles—over footage of baby birds and rainbow hedges that we only halfway see. As one character in the film protests (and the 8mm footage confirms), the lives of politicians are more than just politics. But another way to put this is that politics extend beyond the narrow definition of politics on offer from Oval Office announcements and CBS Nightly News—even to the dusting of snow on some distracted child’s fur coat in the bitter cold of an exhausting day.

Sunday, April 3, 2016

Two Drifters (2005)





It starts with an extreme close-up of two faces, enrapt and making out. The camera slowly pulls back to reveal that it’s two men, standing by the open window of a car, its radio the source of the music we’ve been hearing the whole time (Greg Brown’s “Banjo Moon”).

As I watched the beginning of this opening shot, I expected to see that the two characters were actually on a screen themselves, being watched on a cinema screen by a third figure—yet this did not occur. I’m wondering now why this was my expectation: Was it merely the slow, deliberate backwards movement of the camera (which in other movies results in a similar kind of disorienting mise-en-abyme)? Or was there something in the performance of the characters themselves, something put on, obviously artificial?

The same sort of camera movement concludes the film, moving back from the image of a fully clothed woman fucking (or appearing to fuck) a naked man from behind. But this time the backwards motion reveals a third character, watching the two characters in the strange throes of something like passion.

The two shots together affirm the sense of anticipation I felt while watching the first but at the same time disrupt this same anticipation. For what I understood as empty—the lips of living men—is revealed instead to be the source of fullness and the cause of fascination. That is, the emptiness exists on the other side of the image: me, dead, watching.

Thursday, March 31, 2016

Historic Centre (2012)





If there’s a reason for omnibus films to exist, it’s for their audiences to detect each film’s key concern and examine how the different directors involved approach that concern. Historic Centre (Centro Histórico)—consisting of Aki Kaurismäki’s “The Tavern Man” (“Guimarães”), Pedro Costa’s “Sweet Exorcism,” Victor Erice’s “Broken Windows: Tests for a Film in Portugal” (“Vidros Partidos”), and Manoel de Oliviera’s “The Conquered Conqueror” (“O Conquistador Conquistado”), in that order—more or less has this key concern in its title: an inquiry into modern-day Portugal that is centered around history.

“The Tavern Man” keeps this history strictly personal, focusing on a clueless barkeep waiting forlornly for a lost love (who presumably knew how to cook much better than he does). “The Conquered Conqueror” rather lazily pokes fun at picture-taking tourists and loosely critiques the transformation of history into tour-bus fodder (even while the statues don’t seem much to care). “Sweet Exorcism” carries over the character of Ventura from other Costa films, which allows for the intersection of personal with national history: Ventura converses with the ghost of a colonial army in which Ventura himself once fought—on an elevator of steel, endlessly ascending. But the strongest film here is “Broken Windows,” in which former workers at the Vizela River Textile Mill (1845-2002) reflect on their work and the lives of workers past. It’s a film haunted by history, in which every life—lost or disappearing—becomes the camera’s raison d'être: neither we nor they can look away.

Becket (1964)

To see Becket’s weaknesses most clearly, it’s useful to place it next to Derek Jarman’s Sebastiane, released a mere twelve years later. Both are British films about religious martyrdom; both are quite gay, wrapped up in the affection of men for one another. Sebastiane is more overtly gay, as it shows men—is there a single woman in the film?—in the throes of passion and glories quite unabashedly in their naked bodies. But Becket doesn’t shy away from Henry’s desire for Thomas, as is strikingly clear in the scene where Henry compares Thomas to his wife and his mother and finds that both fall short of the affection Thomas has given him.

Yet Becket places “gay” and “religious” on opposite ends of the spectrum: when Thomas becomes archbishop, he gives himself to God, an action that involves the sacrifice of all carnal pleasures—he goes straight. Sebastiane, on the other hand, demonstrates that religious devotion is in fact the gayest thing of all. When Sebastiane refuses Severus’ advances, it’s not because he’s chosen God over flesh; it’s because he’s already sexually devoted to another—no matter that this other is God Himself.

Becket is blind to the fact that religious devotion, at its strongest, manifests itself in great sexual energy and the fulfillment of flesh, not the denial of it. It’s a film with too comfortable an idea of a martyr, fighting for God and his persecuted people instead of giving himself over to some mysterious and holy pleasure.

Monday, March 7, 2016

French Blood (2015)

If there’s an argument to be made about the following shot being an essentially masculine device, French Blood is the film to support it. This is a film that glories in tour-de-force long takes from the back and shoulder muscles of our protagonist, Marco, as well as the violence these muscles threaten. The epitome of this tendency is the shot that sees Marco go into a club, up the stairs, and into the bathroom; wash off his bleeding head wound; get a beer; take in the music of a fascist rock band; and then go back down the stairs to fight off some punks with his friends, only to witness two of his closest friends get brutally and suddenly shot.


Part of the film’s brilliance is to allow such takes to peter out into suffocating stillness as Marco gets older and less obviously fascist. In other words, the shots transform as the film’s definition of Marco’s masculinity transforms from an active, violent one into something non-confrontational yet seething. The film doesn’t trust Marco’s shift to peaceful adulthood and neither should we: when he wields a knife in the film’s final moments, we’re not sure if he’s going to stab one of his former friends, slit an Arab’s throat, or just the dice the carrots sitting rather numbly on the cutting board before him. This is the unpredictability of the present tense in a world that seems so far to have only realized some shining heads and an inked-through patriarchal brutality.

Thursday, March 3, 2016

Nana (2011)

Saying that children are innocent is the same as saying that animals are innocent. It’s a generous assessment but ignores that, regardless of environmental influence, both animals and children exist—rightly—in their own blunt, half-formed reveries. Nana confirms this in a rather surprising way: a mother takes her young child out to a cabin in the woods under the pretense of starting a new life there but then promptly commits suicide. The mother is portrayed as unstable from the start (there’s something unsettling in the way she scrawls a note to her father in crayon), but her daughter has an existence that remains strangely separate from her mother’s actions. While most films would see this sort of existence merely as a consequence of her abandonment, Nana suggests that the intense and particular life of the daughter’s mind is not so simply explained away.

This suggestion is largely stylistic, for the film’s favored setup is to have an immobile camera unobtrusively watch the daughter from a distance while she is left to her own devices. Immersed fully in her environment, she seems entirely unaware of the camera’s presence, talking and playing as if the whole world were her self. So when she is left almost entirely alone by her mother’s death (for a time—days? weeks?), it comes not as a shock but as a rather comfortable confirmation that the profane voices in her head are much more real than the insubstantial bodies passing through her line of vision.

Monday, February 29, 2016

13 Tzameti (2005)

I’m guessing that for most people 13 Tzameti is “that movie with the Russian roulette circle of doom,” but Russian roulette is in fact its least interesting and clumsiest element. Perhaps less offensive than The Deer Hunter for not bringing a neocolonial war into the picture (yet lacking Christopher Walken), 13 Tzameti replaces the Vietnam metaphor with an emptier one: life is Russian roulette. The film could’ve made this more specific—immigrant life (our protagonist, Sébastien, has emigrated to France from Georgia) or life in contemporary capitalism (the money used to bet on the fates of the men involved seems to be American dollars)—but any hint of biting critique fades when we consider the fact that Sébastien chanced upon this illegal, deadly gambling ring that involves an indeterminate group of mixed races and classes anyways.


But really it’s the film’s low-key prelude that merits our attention. In this part of the film, Sébastien repairs the roof of a house by the Mediterranean Sea, both involved in the lives of the couple within and distant from it. Most of what he knows about them he gleans from listening through orifices in the architecture, a literal kind of eavesdropping that violates boundaries between public and private, interior and exterior. This violation a voyeurism via disrepair, it suggests that First-World infrastructure is merely crumbling façade and that the West’s repressed—the exploited populations of faraway and faceless strangers—can never be forever locked away, with flimsy walls or other forms of absurdity.