More in today’s New York Times that’s worth noting: Alice Pfeiffer’s piece on how the art world is dealing with digital art creation and sales. Again, much of the most interesting thought about these issues is happening outside of the film world. An excerpt: The speed of change in electronic technology, the disconnect between data storage and display and the virtual nature of digital imagery raise difficult questions: how to tell genuine from fake or copy; how to create and protect uniqueness; and how to protect a work against technological obsolescence. Video art, for example, is typically sold as a […]
From today’s New York Times, a piece by Ben Ratliffe on Jim O’Rourke and his move to Japan, his turn towards improvisation and film scores, his new album The Visitor (pictured), and his attempt to control context. An excerpt: Mr. O’Rourke’s production style is precise and dry; he creates a sound picture in which tiny sonic details matter. But where his Drag City records are concerned, everything matters: the pacing, the length, the sound, the cover images. For this reason he won’t allow “The Visitor,” or any of his albums, to be sold as downloads, on iTunes or anywhere else. […]
The Further Adventures of Death Tripper, Ouroboros and What lies Beyond Jupiter Cannes, France. In a cinematic year filled with visions of extreme sex and violence, the enfant provocateur of French cinema Gaspar Noe illuminates a phosphorescent direction forward. In person Noe could be mistaken as the progeny of Aleister Crowley with sunken-in, charcoal-lined eyes and shaved head. But lurking behind this visage is a filmmaker who courts controversy with vivacity and confidence. The last time Noe was at Cannes was to premiere his film Irreversible; he ingratiated himself into the hearts and minds of audiences willing to be subjugated […]
From David Poland and The Hot Blog comes a new video feature, “State of the Union,” featuring “interviews with the people behind the scenes about the industry, past, present, and future…” First up, producer and former studio exec Bill Mechanic on the history of movie marketing, home video vs. theatrical marketing, and why day and date from an economic perspective “is a complete and total disaster.”
After Last Season director Mark Region emailed me to say that a DVD of the film will be available for order from its website on September 30. Head over to the site for a new trailer for the film, and check out my interview with Region here.
As “stay-cation” seems to be on everyone’s lips for this Labor Day weekend I thought I’d plan out your Monday for you… Sit in front of your computer and Tweet with Kevin Smith all day. To promote his upcoming book, Shootin’ The Sh*t with Kevin Smith, the foul-mouthed writer-director will be hosting a 24-hour Tweet Q&A with his followers on Monday at @ThatKevinSmith that he’s dubbing “Tweet-a-thon”. If you’ve ever been to a speaking engagement of Smith’s I don’t need to tell you how entertaining this will be. And it will be fun to see how witty Smith can be […]
Here’s the just-posted episode two of the Killer Films/Massify video production blog for their Loop Planes. For episode one and more on the project, click here. Massify + Killer Films Episode 2 from Massify on Vimeo.
For anyone who’s payed the ultimate tribute to the Coen Brothers‘ The Big Lebowski by attending the Lebowski Fest, this one’s for you. I first heard of the Achievers last September when I interviewed the creators of Lebowski Fest for FilmInFocus. This group of die hards for everything Lebowski span the globe and are not fans of the film but are obsessed over it. Some dress up as their favorite characters and attend Lebowski Fest, others yell out every F-bomb at midnight screenings and some practice the religion Dudeism. The Achievers are now the subject of a documentary, The Achievers: […]
In A Dog Year, the feature film directed by George LaVoo from Jon Katz’s memoir, Jeff Bridges plays Katz, a midlife crisis-stricken writer who, impulsively and in an act of near-deliberate emotional self-destruction, adopts a rambunctious and unsocialized border collie, flying him cross country to his family’s split-level home and their two other dogs. And while Lavoo’s movie has its share of Beethoven-esque moments as the collie sprints down suburban streets or mischievously jumps rides on passing automobiles, the film is less about canine hijinks and more about the complex and unexpected emotional roles that dogs play in our lives. […]
If you’re in New York I highly recommend you check out the final night of what has been a great series at the IFC Center: Movie Night with Jem Cohen. Tonight the program is Shorts, Rarities and Things to Come, and it’s described like this: Unseen films old and new, excerpts from recent collaborations and a glimpse at the methods behind the madness. The final evening in the IFC Center’s “Movie Nights With Jem Cohen” series offers rare films old and new, excerpts from recent collaborations and a glimpse at the methods behind the madness! To be shown: GLUE MAN, […]