When Irwin Young, longtime chairman of DuArt Film Laboratories, died earlier this year at the age of 94, there was an outpouring of tributes, remembrances and praise for a businessman and technical innovator who was “foundational to the indie film movement,” as David Leitner wrote on our website. “Irwin not only simplified and streamlined postproduction, he stepped to the plate to help ‘impecunious’ (his word) indie filmmakers too many times to count, cutting deals, OK’ing delayed payments, sometimes even investing in the films themselves. As a consequence, iconic filmmakers working today—too many to list here—got a leg up when they […]
Perhaps the simplest way to describe Laura Poitras’s All the Beauty and the Bloodshed is as a conversation between two artists who are committed to the truth potential of lens-based mediums. The film, which won the top prize at the Venice Film Festival and will be released in theaters this fall by NEON, is Poitras’s portrait of Nan Goldin, one of the most celebrated photographers of her generation. What may be less known is that Goldin is also an organizer of campaigns for social justice to which she brings as much fiercely dedicated energy as she does to her photography. […]
Back in the fall of 2021, still in the midst of the COVID-19 pandemic, I had come to terms with the apparent fate of my film, The Automat, about the Horn & Hardart automats that operated in the United States from the late nineteenth to late twentieth centuries. The Automat had been accepted to the 2020 edition of the Telluride Film Festival—which was, of course, canceled. But I was alive, and none of my friends and family had perished of COVID. And, while a couple of other festivals I had been invited to chose to not program the film in […]
Click here to read this year’s edition of the 25 New Faces of Film.
From working in the camera department, I can still picture vividly some of the worn-down bodies I observed between takes: DPs, camera operators, ACs, grips and electricians standing at slightly odd angles, gripping their lower backs with one hand like a scissor jack propping up their spines. Whenever a fellow assistant or operator passed me a rig I didn’t have enough strength to hold properly, I would feel my lower back compensating in a way I knew it shouldn’t, and it wasn’t hard for me to understand that that strain might stick around if I kept it up. I heard […]
U know what I hate? Financiers who ghost u after expressing lots of interest, asking for this that & the other thing, mtg w/yr team. I understand financiers who are too busy to reply in 1st place. But what's up w/ones who suddenly go cold after being so hot? DO NOT GHOST ME.❌👻 — Mynette Louie (@mynette) March 3, 2022 On March 2, 2022, Mynette Louie, producer of award-winning films like The Tale and I Carry You with Me, tweeted out the above complaint, railing against what anecdotally appears to be a lamentable industrywide trend of financier ghosting. Filmmakers and […]
Armageddon Time returns the American writer and director James Gray to his childhood—or at least to a version of it. While its treatment of grade-school-age protagonist Paul Graff (Michael Banks Repeta) and his dealings with the world of grown-ups in and around his home in 1980s Queens, New York, might not be, strictly speaking, autobiographical (Gray has been careful to distinguish between personal and autobiographical filmmaking), Armageddon Time draws upon the filmmaker’s childhood to fashion a story of a boy’s moral and aesthetic education that seems at once thoroughly lived-in and unsentimental. For nearly two hours, we watch as young […]
In “an effort to maintain a little bit of my sanity,” Sam Max wrote six shorts during the pandemic. “I had been screenwriting, but most of my work prior to the shutdowns was in performance,” they say. “This time, I was writing by thinking of myself as a director [and] writing in service of a directorial vision.” The first five shorts will never be shot—“They were interesting exercises,” Max says—but the sixth, Chaperone, became their impressively controlled, profoundly disquieting directorial debut. The story of a teenage boy (Russell Kahn) meeting up with an older man (a black-leather-gloved Zachary Quinto) at […]
Chenliang Zhu grew up in Beijing and was “very good at mathematics.” Because, he says, “education in China encourages you to do what you’re good at, not what you really love,” he ended up studying statistics—completing his undergraduate degree in China, then an MFA at Johns Hopkins—“without knowing what I really wanted to do. After I graduated, I was in a depressed state of mind because I wanted to pursue filmmaking but didn’t have the courage. After finishing my first master’s degree, I took a trip to Amsterdam with my best friends and took mushrooms for the first time. We […]
In 2010, after living in Boston and San Francisco, Princeton, New Jersey-born Elizabeth Nichols moved to New York’s Lower East Side and immediately felt a sense of liberation. “There was this feeling of being anonymous while also being proximate to so many different human beings,” she says. “I could just watch people all day and hide behind my camera.” Two years later, a notorious New York landlord bought her building and tried to evict her. “It was a poor attempt,” she laughs, “but a very threatening experience.” With her camera, Nichols began attending the meetings of a group of activists, […]