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Soul Stirring Indeed
Beautiful weather, busy as busy can be, with all kinds of projects, personal and professional. I’ve been in a Sam Cooke phase, this song in particular.
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Review: Sightseers
Sightseers, directed by Ben Wheatley, opens this Friday. A couple caravan through the Midlands area of England, killing people along the way. It’s hilarious. Loved it.
Ebert Fest 2013: Two Panels, Two Films, and the Glorious Tilda Swinton
The organ pipes in The Virginia Theatre, Urbana, Illinois. Photo by me at Ebert Fest.
All throughout Ebert Fest, there were amazing panels, held at the Pine Lounge in the gorgeous student union (which also had the hotel attached to it, where Mum and I stayed). The filmmakers were featured on the panels, as were some of the actors in attendance, and the VIP guests (critics and Roger’s Far-Flung Correspondents).
On Thursday morning, I went to a couple of panels while Mum did her Spanish homework up in the room. Mum and I got into a routine. It was like we had been in Urbana together for years. One panel was called “Creative Independence in the Digital Age”, moderated by Nate Kohn, Ebert Fest festival director. Many of the directors, whose films were represented in the festival, were on the panel. How does new technology affect their decisions in terms of what films to make, how to make it? What does shooting on digital provide? Now, not all of the new films in the festival were shot digitally. There were a couple dinosaurs who shot on film. But those questions are interesting to everyone – everyone who makes movies, everyone who loves movies. Conversations have an interesting way of taking swerves (that occurred during the panel I spoke on, which was about the “art of the video essay” and then became a conversation about copyright laws and fair use), and in the Digital panel, what started as a conversation about technology became a conversation about “the system”: working within the system, or staying outside of it. It was fascinating because so many countries were represented on that panel: The Netherlands, Norway, Spain, the United States. Working in each country has its challenges. So while, of course, the funding in Norway is so different than here in the US, it is also a “system”, and working outside of it can be nigh on impossible. Also, because of the state-funding that exists in other countries, often scripts are submitted to committees to “approve” of it, and suddenly everyone gets a chance to weigh in on your script. This is not a good thing. Especially if those weighing in are not artists, but representatives of special-interest groups, or people who want art to be some sort of societal corrective. For example, Joachim Trier, whose film Oslo, August 31st, was going to be playing that afternoon, said that at one point a “ruling” came down from on high that if you were going to show a cab driver onscreen, it had to be a female. Trier said, “Even though I’ve never seen a female cab driver in Oslo or anywhere else.” Trier conceded that these were important issues, gender equality and others, but to have a committee telling you to put that stuff into your script can sometimes reach absurd levels. The System can help you, and also complicate things. Filmmakers were asking one another questions about “how it worked” where they lived.
Randy Moore, whose audacious Escape From Tomorrow was also screening at the festival, talked about how he shot his entire film (at Disney World, in Florida, without permission) on the new Canon 5Ds. He looked around and saw everyone around him, tourists, holding the same camera he was shooting his film on. The possibilities are endless.
Pablo Berger, whose Blancanieves was also screening the following day, was one of my favorite presences at the film. I’ll get to him more, but he was on the panel as well. He’s from Spain, and talked about how after his first feature, Torremolinos 73 , he “felt like James Cameron”. It took him eight years to get Blancanieves made. It’s a silent film, in black and white. Nobody wanted to get behind it. But he got it made (and thank goodness he did! What a film!) He took off his hat to show his white hair, joking, “I was young when I started the film.”
Feike Santbergen, from the Netherlands, whose short To Music had screened the day before, is a young man, and said he wasn’t a part of “the system” yet. He said, “The system is like a big castle and I am trying to find my way in.”
Joachim Trier talked about Norway’s system, and how he had been in the right place at the right time, in terms of Norway’s acceptance of/promotion of a certain kind of cinema. Norway wanted to develop directors with a certain visual style and thematic resonance, and Trier happened to fit into that. He was quite honest about it. But he also said, “I’m not a strategic director. I’m not good enough. I can only do what I want to do.”
That was a common refrain, and it was so heartening to hear. Directors make the films they want to see, they make what they like. Pablo Berger, who was almost effusive in his enthusiasm (and always funny and entertaining), said openly, “I’m a romantic. I’m a storyteller. I make films I want to see.” The issues he had getting Blancavieves made may have given him prematurely grey hair, but there was no other way for him. He said, “Spain wants to repeat past formulas,” something I think every director, regardless of the country they hail from, could relate to. Nobody wants to take a chance. You need a little vision, a little faith.
Nate Kohn, who moderated the panel, said, “It’s an educational process to get people used to looking at something different.” It sure is.
One woman, an Urbana local, stood up during the Question period, and had a comment more than a question. The topic had turned to funding, and how things like Kickstarter have (potentially) changed the game. Perhaps one might not need “the system”, or rely on it as much as they might have in previous years. That remains to be seen. Distribution is still the key. But distribution models are changing as well. We’re in a new world and nobody knows yet how it will all play out. But I loved this woman. She was in a colorful outfit, with bright white hair, and she said, “I think in terms of funding, women are an un-tapped resource. A lot of us are retired, we have money we want to spend … we just need to know the projects that are out there. I would be totally interested in funding some of the projects we’ve discussed today, but the question is how do the film-makers or producers find someone like me, and how do I find them? Women are out here, and we can be quite powerful because we have money to spend.”
It was one of the many moments in the festival when I felt a lump come to my throat. I’ve been to quite a few festivals now, and often I only see stuff in the press screenings, so that’s typically an Insider type audience. It can be hermetically sealed in there, the atmosphere. Film-makers, of course, are making movies for critics, but more than that, they are trying to find an audience. Real people, in other words. I grew up in an environment of art-lovers and art-supporters. My parents went to local theatre companies, they were subscribers at Trinity, they would go to art openings at local galleries. They had wide interests, and they supported local venues. Writ large, you can see how such support can change the game for up-and-coming film-makers and producers. This woman also said that there was an art-house theatre in town, which, unfortunately, also played blockbusters, but for one week a month, or one night a month, would feature more independent films, foreign films, classic films. “We are out here, and we are hungry for more films like that,” said this woman.
It’s an important thing to remember. Ebert Fest was a great reminder of the capability of giant diverse audiences to, as Nate Kohn said, get used to “looking at something different”. Nobody in that audience had seen anything like In the Family before. It’s three hours long, it has long takes (some up to 10 minutes long), and it stars a Chinese-American with a Tennessee accent. And yet you could have heard a pin drop in the theatre during that film, and when the laughter came, it had the beautiful release of a classic catharsis, and, as I mentioned, in the final moment of the film, 1,500 people gasped as one. Extraordinary. A beautiful reminder of what an audience really is.
After that panel, Mum and I hung out in the room for a bit. There had been a bit of a sleet thing going on early that morning. We were both attending the first film of the day, which was Joachim Trier’s Oslo, August 31st.
I was really looking forward to it, especially after hearing him speak at the panel and saying Hello to him. I had read Roger Ebert’s review. He wrote:
“Oslo, August 31st” is quietly, profoundly, one of the most observant and sympathetic films I’ve seen. Director Joachim Trier and actor Anders Danielsen Lie, working together for the second time, understand something fundamental about their character. He believes the ship has sailed without him. He screwed up. He lost years in addiction and recovery. Life has moved on. His old friends like Thomas have stayed on board the ship, and Anders feels adrift. Even the much-loved city that surrounds him is an affront, a reminder of the days not lived, the experiences missed. How can he begin again? Above all, Anders is angry with himself and in despair, although he’s so inward as he tries to conceal that.
He used drugs again and again and again until there was nothing else left for him to do. Even today he could easily use drugs and feel whatever it was that he felt. But we sense he’s stranded. He can’t go back and he can’t go forward.
From the opening sequence in Oslo, August 31st, I was hooked. While we’ve certainly seen films about drugs before, and addicts trying to stay clean, Oslo deepens that conversation to be about a very specific place, a place that Joachim Trier obviously loves very much. It is a personal film. The opening is a collage of what looks like home movies, footage of Oslo seem from the perspective of a moving car, its quaintness, its leafy green avenues, and over the images we hear a collage of voices, telling us stories. Not just about Oslo, but about their own childhoods there. The voices pile on top of each other. “I remember Mum let me sleep over her house …” “I wasn’t sure if my father knew how I felt …” (These are not exact quotes, I can’t remember the exact quotes, but it was along these lines: emotional, memory-based, personal). All different voices. Remembering playing outside, problems with friends, what Oslo was like “back then”, all to the accompaniment of grainy 8 mm home movies, taking us through the town. It’s a gorgeous opening and, except for one other scene (when the lead character sits in a crowded sandwich shop), the device is only used in the opening. But it is a bold and poignant opening. From the first point we meet Anders (played beautifully by Anders Danielsen Lie), we are already primed to see him as part of a community, with a past, with memories, a childhood. The voices of Oslo have launched us into this very personal day-in-the-life story.
Anders has been in rehab, and is now clean and sober. He is let out on a day-pass to go to a job interview. The first scene in the film shows Anders filling up his pockets with rocks and walking into a river, a clumsy attempt at suicide. He can’t do it. He emerges spluttering from the water, and then goes off to catch his bus. But that first scene haunts the rest of the film. He’s not well. He is in his 30s. He had had a promising career as a writer, but his last job was 5 years ago. He feels that that gap will never be filled. He will not be forgiven, there will be no mercy shown him. His parents have sold their house, in order to pay for his treatment, and this fact weighs on him. He goes and visits an old friend, and the two men walk around Oslo, sit on benches, and talk. It’s a gorgeous scene, perceptively written, and beautifully acted. It’s also generous in length. The conversation is allowed to breathe, to take its natural twists and turns. It’s not easy for these men to open up, to say, “Hey, I love you”, but that’s what ends up happening. It’s intense. Anders then goes on to his job interview, and the editor interviewing him seems taken with Anders, who comes right out and gives a well-thought-out critique of the magazine in question, saying he thinks they may going in the wrong direction editorially. Perhaps not the best thing to say in an interview, but watch how the editor plays his reaction. He wanted the truth, and he got it. He is intrigued by Anders. But Anders ends the interview, gets up and walks out. That gap in his resume looms before him.
Anders is judging himself far more harshly than it seems other people are. As the day goes on, you start to worry. Or, I did. He seems so aimless, so quietly devastated. He ends up going to a party, with some old friends who knew him in his drug days. He starts drinking. Of course he does. He has encounters with people who knew him when, who have all kinds of awful stories about his behavior when he was an addict, and those stories are told for their comedic value: Anders set up as the fool. Anders laughs along with the others at the stories being told, but you can feel the pain and unease underneath. He probably burned a lot of bridges back then. There is buried hostility in his interactions. You want him to get the hell out of there. But of course he doesn’t. Oslo is his home town, it is also where he discovered drugs. If he would have any chance of staying clean, he would have to leave Oslo. It is a place too seeped in history, he cannot escape it.
There are some beautiful scenes, Anders riding bikes with a girl he met at a club, and a bunch of them going skinny-dipping at dawn in a public pool. Anders, throughout, remains distant and pained. He is looking for something: connection, closeness, softness, understanding. Drugs provided a cushion for him. Drugs were the gateway to feeling like he belonged. Without those things, he is lost.
The voices overlapping in the opening sequence shows up again, in another form, in a scene in a crowded sandwich shop, where Anders sits, and all around him people are talking to one another, and Trier zooms in on first this conversation, then that one. The scene goes on for what feels like a long time, and the cumulative effect is pretty devastating. First of all, it gives a sense of life being lived all around Anders, who is so haunted and troubled, and the impression given is that everyone is engaged with life on an intimate level except for him. Of course that is not true: if you listen closely to the conversations, what you hear are people working out their problems, discussing their love lives, what they want to do in the future, their dreams, their problems. Nobody is perfect. But Anders feels completely isolated. It was a gorgeous scene, my favorite one in the movie.
We’ve all seen movies about addicts before. We know the cliches. Joachim Trier dials down the melodrama, and keeps his camera on the face of his leading man, knowing that it is through him that we will come to understand: what it is like for him, what he sees, what he feels. The final sequence earns the right to be called tragic. My mother and I talked a lot about that final sequence afterwards.
The acting is fantastic. The film has a great and loving heart.
Every guest at the festival was presented with a “golden thumb”, an actual cast of Roger Ebert’s thumb. It was so sweet and funny.
Michael Phillips ran the QA with director Joachim Trier afterwards. I was fascinated to learn that Anders Danielsen Lie, who played Anders, is also a doctor. He’s a musician, an actor, and a doctor.
Trier said, “Yes. He is removing appendixes, as we speak.”
Amazing! Anders was in one of Trier’s other films, and he was so impressed with Anders’ accessibility and depth as an actor. It’s really true, it seems that all Trier needed to do in Oslo was keep his camera on Anders’ face, and he would get us where we needed to go, emotionally. He’s riveting, quiet, interior, with great reserves of kindness and pain. Emotions seem to come easily to him. Trier talked about his process with Anders (one of the questions being how he works with actors). Anders the actor is obviously a very accomplished and driven man. He has his shit together. But he was able to tap into the existential alone-ness of a drug addict that made you feel that this actor must have been through the same thing. Trier said that Anders treated the role almost clinically at first, and the two men would have long conversations about the character, “would he do this” “how would he feel about this”. And then when it came time to shoot, all of that talking, all of that analyzing, was in place in the background. The performance is so felt, the guy is a raw nerve, dealing with life as a sober person for the first time in over a decade. But all of that started with an intellectual and analytical process, a transformation I find fascinating. Trier hopes to work with Anders again.
I skipped the next movie, which I didn’t want to do, but I was feeling pretty ragged and needed a nap. Doctor’s orders: More sleep. This fiat came down the week before Ebert Fest, which was amusing and of course proves that there is no perfect time for anything. “Get 5 more hours of sleep a night – have a great time at Ebert Fest!” So I did have to make some choices at Ebert Fest. I skipped some panels, and didn’t go to two of the movies. As hard a choice as that was, I needed to keep the program going. I’ve got the fear of God put in me.
This was the day of torrential unbelievable 24-hour downpours. It was unbelievable. It never let up. When I woke up, this was what I saw out the window.
Things went downhill from there.
Mum and I made it to that evening’s screening of Julia, a 2008 film starring Tilda Swinton, directed by Erick Zonca. I hadn’t seen the film before, but I am very familiar with Gloria, the Cassavetes film which was a clear inspiration for Julia. Erick Zonca is a French director, and was interested in making a film about America. As Tilda Swinton said in her introductory remarks, the two of them were both interested in making a film about America, especially as “aliens” to the culture (her word).
Now begins what I would call the Tilda-Transformation of the Ebert Fest. Something happened through her presence there. We had already seen some great films, met some amazing film-makers, directors, editors. Ebert had just passed away, and Chaz’s presence on the stage, running things, had a visceral emotional component. Ebert haunted his own festival, in a good way for sure – everyone who came and spoke had something to share about him and his influence. Ebert had always been a fan of Tilda Swinton’s work, and she was one of those actresses he always had on his radar. Tilda was friends with both Roger and Chaz. When I learned, in the QA following Julia, that Tilda’s mother passed away just three months ago, it seemed even more important and emotional that she had made it her business to be there. Her presence became a symbol of insistent celebration of art and life in the face of almost unimaginable sorrow and loss. We all have our trials and tribulations. I have lost people, so have you. I have just come through five months of Hell. I am on the road to getting well, but it has taken doctors, family support, love of friends, and my own determination to be better to even make it TO that road. I almost didn’t go to Ebert Fest. I am dealing with a pretty heavy diagnosis at the moment. But Mum was there with me. I had a net. And the great fortune I feel, in being welcomed into the Ebert inner circle, by Ebert himself – all of which has happened simultaneously with this major event in my life, which is both disastrous and hopeful … is all a bit too symbolic, even for me, whose life has always taken the form of one “literary conceit” after another. It was important for me to be there, not just because it was a great opportunity and privilege (although it was that too), but it was a say to “Yes” to all of the GOOD things, insistently pushing in on me, blotting out the darkness, letting in the light. Those things have co-existed with the blackness, and it has been baffling and disorienting at times navigating all of it.
Ebert begins his review of Julia with these powerful words:
Tilda Swinton is fearless. She’ll take on any role without her ego, paycheck, vanity or career path playing a part. All that matters, apparently, is whether the movie interests her, and whether she thinks she can do something interesting with the role. She almost always can. She hasn’t often been more fascinating than in “Julia,” a nerve-wracking thriller with a twisty plot and startling realism.
When she came out onstage before the film, she and Chaz hugged, as the audience cheered for her, and then she walked out from behind the podium, clapping with us, out and up at all of us, a participant at the festival, more than an “honored guest”. The applause that filled the Virginia Theatre was so often for Roger: the whole week was like that, and Tilda Swinton was there to honor him, to be there for Chaz, and, as revealed later, for herself as well. Her presence was such a full one, emotionally. I’ve always enjoyed her acting, and like her odd-ness. I like her individuality. I like her bold choices in projects. She’s clearly not a careerist. Her career doesn’t seem “managed”. She seems to do what she wants. I like people like that. But after Ebert Fest? I LOVE this woman.
Tilda, in introducing the film, didn’t say much, besides, “Get ready for a roller-coaster ride.” Afterwards, in the QA, she said to Chaz, and Nate Kohn, that while the film is about an alcoholic woman, they weren’t interested in making a film “about an alcoholic woman”, they wanted to make “an alcoholic movie”. They certainly succeeded. There is no moralizing here, no recovery, the 12 steps are mocked, and Julia, in many respects, is irredeemable. She can’t quit drinking, first of all, she doesn’t see the point, and she is also heedless, ridiculous, selfish, monstrous, and desperate. Being in her presence for the entire film is exhausting. The plot is twisty (to say the very least), and the film ends with a long harrowing sequence that takes in place in Mexico, and I actually thought back to the first hour of the film and wondered, “How long ago was that? Was that actually in the same movie?” So much happens. Julia starts off as a drunk and ends as a drunk, and in the meantime, she gets fired, she alienates the one friend she has (her AA sponsor, it seems like), played by the wonderful Saul Rubinek, and befriends a clearly unbalanced woman (Kate del Castillo) who lives across the way. That unbalanced woman has inherited a lot of money, but it’s all bound up in Mexico: she has lost custody of her son (and, spending two seconds with this woman, it is obvious why: she is out of her mind), and she is determined to get her son back, take him to Mexico with her, and live in palatial grandeur. Julia is boundary-less enough to get involved with this cuckoo neighbor, and agrees to help her in her ridiculous plan to kidnap her son. Events unfold as chaotically as you would imagine, because everyone in charge of the plan is a lunatic. Julia, wearing a black plastic mask, waits in the car for her chance to kidnap the little boy, taking swigs from a flask, and visibly behaving like The Guiltiest Person Ever Born. Tilda Swinton obviously has tremendous fun with this role. I have never particularly “bought” her as an American. The accent doesn’t sound right, and it never has. I think the myth that English actors are “better at accents” is just that: a myth. Tilda’s naturally mellifluous voice somehow flattens out when she does an American accent. It’s like she can’t locate herself in it. In Julia it works, somehow, because she seems so otherworldly and unplace-able already, in her magnificent drunken shenanigans.
Julia behaves horribly to this little kidnapped boy, and for the majority of the film I felt an almost unbearable anxiety towards the safety of that child, who is thrown around, tied up, and manhandled abominably. Tilda assured us afterwards that the little boy got into it, and loved it, but that didn’t lessen my anxiety. Gloria, the Cassavetes film about a gun moll (Gena Rowlands) who drags a small boy around Manhattan with her, has a much kinder heart than Julia. It’s more of a screwball, and you never seriously worry for the little boy as you do the one in Julia. As always, I prefer Cassavetes’ ultimately kind outlook on life to pretty much anybody else’s, and there were times when I found Julia not only unbearable but frankly, too long. I wanted someone to shoot everyone (except the poor little boy) to put all and sundry out of their misery and to also release me from the film itself. I imagine that was part of the point. Julia is often hilarious, although it’s the sick hilarity of watching a woman completely out of control try to go for the brass ring. Julia, in Tilda’s hands, is not likable, is a compulsive liar (Tilda observed in the QA that Julia only tells the truth twice in the entirety of the film), and on the run from reality. She’ll never stop drinking. She’ll die in a ditch somewhere.
Filmed with spectacular beauty, showing the many different landscapes of America, the salt flats, the bleak mornings of Los Angeles, the desert, the mountains, the no-man’s-land border with Mexico, you can feel the relish of the director in all of these locations.
When the film ends, you exhale. Finally. Tilda Swinton captures the effervescent glitter of certain types of alcoholics, something that she and the director were very interested in going for. Tilda said afterwards, “A lot of the alcoholics I know are fantastic people, the life of the party, fun to be around. So many movies show alcoholics as sullen, dark, anti-social, and we wanted to show that other side.” They do. You can see the transformation go over Tilda Swinton’s face, as Julia, when she takes a sip of alcohol. You can watch her transform from harried/desperate to knowing who she is, up for fun and adventure. I’ve seen that “click” (to borrow Tennessee Williams’ chilling description of it) in my friends who are alcoholics. It can happen in a second, when the alcohol kicks in. Tilda nails that Jekyll-Hyde dynamic.
But it was who Tilda was, in the QA following, not to mention what happened the next day, that will stay with me forever. Chaz and Nate interviewed her, about her career (and how it all started, with the films with Derek Jarman), as well as her current projects. Someone asked, during the QA, what is next for her, and her answer was, a beautifully simple and yet powerful, “Well, my mother just died three months ago … so I am having … a year.” Boy do I understand that. She talked about the new film she did with Wes Anderson, about the David Bowie video, and about her sleeping performance-art piece at MoMA. She discussed the history of that project. She first did it back in the 80s, as a response to the AIDS epidemic, and how many of her friends had died, as a way of mourning with them, for them. I had no idea. People were all sort of making fun of it recently: “Jeez, Tilda’s sleeping in a box in MoMA”, but hearing her talk about it was incredible and eloquent.
She is not self-indulgent about it. She does not explain herself. The project is meaningful to her, and has been something with her for 20 years now. Again, I had no idea the history of it. She said, “I never talk about my experience of what it’s like to do it. It’s really up to the people who come to interpret it. I don’t want to get in the way of it.”
One of my favorite things that she said was: “I still don’t think of myself as an actress, really. If I had to put down my profession, on a passport or something, I think I would put Artist’s Model/Clown.”
How beautiful! How perfect! Artist’s Model-slash-Clown. She sees every role as an opportunity to play make believe, to put on another person’s clothes and see what it would be like to be them. That’s why her work is so unstudied, so unique. It’s not actor-y. It’s not technical. She is a mysterious figure. She looks so odd, so herself: it’s a great face, and yes, a face that an “artist” (i.e. a filmmaker) can imprint him/herself on. She is an interpreter.
Her roles are often quite serious, and her face – the structure of it, its angularity, its strangeness – gives an impression of severity. But in person, she was enthusiastic, warm, and almost girlie. She was jumping up and down in excitement to be there. She was warmly reminiscent of Roger, she paid tribute to him, and his support of her. She embraced Chaz, and held her hand the entire time Chaz was introducing her. Her sense of support and presence was so human, so emotional. I recognize that type of energy. When I was in mourning, there were those friends who stood right next to me, holding onto me, silent presences of support and love, there for me, hovering around me in protection.
Tilda Swinton also hosts a film festival, which has taken place in different venues around the world, Scotland and other places. Chaz asked her about it, and asked her in particular about one tradition Tilda started at her own festival: She blasts music and has the audience get up and dance. Tilda glowed as she talked about it, about the energy created in those various theatres, with an audience dancing like maniacs before settling down to see the next film.
It had been a long day, but ending it listening to Tilda talk, and watching her beautiful sense of listening when people asked questions (she was totally in the moment, not shy about herself, not shy about interacting with others), was beautiful. Mum and I met up afterwards to head back to our hotel. It was late. The rain had stopped and it was now freezing cold. We raced to my car, shivering and exclaiming outloud, “EEK!”
I had to get up early the next morning to be on the panel “The Art of the Video Essay”. Anxiety about my sleep was a common theme during the Ebert Fest, but, with the help of Melatonin, I was able to go to sleep pretty quickly. The next morning was freezing and grey, threatening snow. Mum and I went down to the Pine Lounge. Matt Seitz was on the panel, too, and Steven Boone, Kevin Lee, so there were friends there. And I met some new people, the eminent David Bordwell, which was a thrill, as well as Patrick Wang (whose In the Family blew everyone away). Grace Wang was on the panel as well, whose short film I Remember had screened on the first day, and Krishna Shenoi, whose farewell cartoon for Roger went viral, as well as his tribute video to Spielberg, which got him a response from the great director himself. Pablo Villaça was awesome. Omer Mozaffar did a wonderful job moderating. It was a great group. Kevin Lee served as Maestro, putting up the video essays on the screen behind us, for us to discuss.
Before the panel got going, I sat in my spot, and then heard someone from out in the audience hiss my name. I looked, and he said, “It’s Craig” and I jumped up to go meet him. Craig Simpson, whose blog is wonderful and I’ve been reading it for years. He and I have corresponded a bit, and while I had no idea what he looked like, nor he me, we kept trying to meet up. Thankfully, we saw each other at the theatre later and got to talk a bit in the lobby. He’s so nice. It’s one of the great things about the Internet: when you meet someone you’ve never met before, but you’ve been reading them for years, it’s like meeting an old friend. There is no shyness. It was lovely! Read Craig’s post about Ebert Fest to get his perspective. I was happy to hear he thought the Video Essay panel was good! My main goal, for my own participation, was to follow my father’s only real advice to his kids: “Don’t disgrace the family name.” I contributed to the discussion, I listened to others, it was fascinating and a lot of fun.
And here’s an amazing thing: at one point, I turned away from my fellow panelists and looked out at the audience. For the most part, I was focused totally on what was going on with us, up there, but for one second, I glanced out, smiled at Mum (I love her!), and my eye drifted across the audience. And there sat Tilda, leaning forward in her chair, chin rested on her folded hands, totally engrossed with listening.
It was 9 o’clock in the morning. She wasn’t just there to present her own film. She was there to participate in everything. She came to a panel at the freakin’ Student Union, and gave herself fully to listening. I fell in love with her even more because of that. I want to be like her when I grow up. I want to always be involved, interested, present. That’s who she is to me. She had slipped in to the panel unnoticed. Many people didn’t even know she was there. Of course she is quite striking, and tall, with bright yellow hair, but she was perfectly happy being in the position of Audience Member, and that speaks volumes about who she is as a person.
One more Tilda story. After the panel, we had only half an hour before we were due at the theatre for the next film. So it was a bit of a hustle. Mum and I hurried out to my car, remarking variously on the freezing nature of the weather, and how great the panel was, what an amazing job Kevin Lee had done with the video clips, and Tilda. Joining the VIP section at the theatre was like reuniting with old friends. We all got to know each other. I befriended a couple from Canada, whose free time is spent traveling around to film festivals. They were so awesome! By the end of the week, there was a lot of socializing going on in that VIP section, whereas at the beginning of the week, I thought: “I don’t know anyone here. I am shy. Please send help.” Shyness no more, three days later. Amazing!
The first film of the day was Pablo Berger’s Blancanieves, in the 11 a.m. slot. Before Pablo was brought out to introduce his film, Chaz and Tilda walked out onto the stage, and Tilda said we were all going to get up and dance. She had brought some Barry White for the occasion. No observers allowed, only participants. There were 1,500 people in that theatre, down below, and up in the balcony. Audience-participation things can either go very very well, or fail, due to shyness of the audience, or a lack-luster energy. I am not crazy about forced participation myself, but in this case, I thought: Hell, yeah. Barry White, Ebert Fest, Tilda Swinton telling me to get up and dance? Yes, ma’am.
Thankfully, a great video was made of the event, which, once it was posted, suddenly was shared everywhere. I haven’t watched the video because it was such an intense experience, and I don’t want the video to take the place of the actual memory of it. But I will never ever forget it. Dana Stevens (who I finally met at Ebert Fest, after years of reading her, chatting with her on Twitter, and also discussing National Velvet together), wrote beautifully about Tilda in one of her dispatches from the festival. I danced, you bet I danced, but was also in tears throughout. It was so intense. Dana, who was standing behind me with Matt Seitz, said, at one point, “Oh God, I’m crying.”
I was too.
An explosion of joy in the wake of sadness, loss, and grief. Life-affirming, truly. That was what it was.
Ebertfest 2013 Dance Along from Ebertfest on Vimeo.
Review What Maisie Knew
My latest for Roger Ebert: a review of What Maisie Knew, the modern-day telling of Henry James’ 1897 novel. It’s good. It’s upsetting.
Review: TFF 2013: Run & Jump
This review originally appeared on Capital New York.
Will Forte is well-known to American audiences from Saturday Night Live, 30 Rock and his appearances on “Conan,” makes his dramatic debut in Run & Jump, an Irish film about a 38-year-old stroke victim named Conor Casey (Edward MacLiam) who returns home to his wife and two kids with a completely altered personality.
Forte plays Ted Fielding, an American brain researcher writing a paper about Conor. Ted gets permission from the family to live in their home for a time, writing his book and observing Conor re-learning how to speak, interact and relate.
Directed by Steph Green (it is her first feature, although her short New Boy was nominated for an Oscar in 2007), Run & Jump has the potential for pitfalls, which Green (and screenwriter, Ailbhe Keogan) avoid. It could have been played for melodrama or sentimentality at every turn, but it isn’t. Instead, it is a sensitive and often quite funny look at what Conor’s re-entry does to his wife Vanetia (the wonderful red-headed Maxine Peake), and his two young children. Meanwhile, the interloper (Forte) in their midst follows Conor around with a cam-corder. Vanetia says, “I was worried about letting a hypothesis into the house.”
The family welcomes Conor back excitedly, and try to adjust to “New Dad.” He is sullen, argumentative, and does not interact. He was a successful furniture-maker, and he now spends all his time in his workshop making wooden spheres.
The family awkwardly adjusts to the American researcher living in the spare room, joining them at their family dinners, always observing. Ted tries to keep his distance, but fails. Vanetia, a survivor of a certain very Irish sensibility, confides in Ted, “I hate pity.” She is especially annoyed at a woman who works at the local market who overwhelms her with smothering concern. Vanetia sees her coming and murmurs to Ted, “Look out, here comes Sympathy Susan.”
With Conor absent emotionally, there is a vacuum in the home, and Vanetia and Ted are drawn to one another. At first, they discuss Conor’s case, and his recovery process. But slowly, over the course of Run & Jump, a closer bond develops. This situation is handled sensitively and subtly, so we understand what is happening. Grief and loss affect people in unforeseen ways, and although Vanetia is not a complainer, and has no thought of divorcing Conor or anything like that, she is lonely. She’s a fun-loving person, an involved mother. She misses her partner. She says to Ted at one point, “When Conor and I looked at something, we saw the same thing.” Ted, almost invisibly, starts to take that place in her life. Friends and family notice the bond, and try to speak to Vanetia about it, warning her off.
A less confident film would have driven the story into the familiar territory of a breathless sneak-around extramarital affair, pumped up for the fear factor of being caught. But Vanetia is made of stronger stuff than that, as is Ted. The scenes between the two of them, drinking beers and listening to music late at night in the quiet house, or taking bike rides in the rain, are lovely, and filled with the relief of letting off some steam as well as allowing space for poignant sadness.
The cause of Vanetia’s sadness is obvious. Her husband is no longer the man he was. Ted’s sadness is harder to name, mainly because he is such an uptight humorless guy at first. Sitting at the dinner table with this boisterous family loosens him up. He takes to it. He starts to love them all.
As Ted becomes more and more involved with not just Conor, but every member of the family, the film shows its hand. Perhaps Vanetia’s family is right to be concerned.
Will Forte is wonderful and unexpected in the role. Maxine Peake is terrific, bowled over by the tragedy that has befallen her, and yet unable to feel sorry for herself or to allow others into her own sadness. She sits in the car practicing something she read in a magazine called “Laughter Yoga,” and it is completely absurd and human. Watching Forte and Peake talk about things and listen to music and tentatively start to reach out to one another is one of the main pleasures of the film.
Filmed in gorgeous County Kerry (with, sadly, not a lot of exteriors), Run & Jump is a minor miracle in the way it avoids convention and formula. There are certain sequences — a family trip to the zoo, for example– where Run & Jump slows down, allows us to breathe, spend time with these characters. We visit the animals, sit at the picnic tables, witness the joy the family is trying to capture.
Run & Jump has great respect for all of its characters, and the script is smart enough to leaven the mood with jokes and humor. These people are, after all, Irish. Vanetia’s line about looking at something with her husband and knowing they saw the same thing is important. Run & Jump is about the powerful heady experience of what it is like to be seen.
Ebert Fest 2013: Bernie, with Richard Linklater and Jack Black
2012 was a heavy-hitting year. An embarrassment of riches. We had The Master, Moonrise Kingdom, Zero Dark Thirty, Django Unchained, Amour, Beyond the Hills, Argo, Lincoln. The majority of these were in my Top 10 list for 2012. But one movie slipped under the radar, and was strangely under-seen, despite the director/the stars/critical acclaim and that was Richard Linklater’s Bernie, starring Jack Black and Shirley MacLaine with a hilarious performance by Matthew McConaghey. It was one of my favorite movies of 2012, definitely in my Top 5. Linklater has always been a favorite of mine (and I can’t express how much I am looking forward to Before Midnight, the next installment in his Julie Delpy-Ethan Hawke series), and while his stamp on things is usually apparent, he is hugely versatile. He does what interests him. You can learn a lot about Richard Linklater himself by looking at the movies he has directed. This isn’t the case with some of our other directors, today, even some of the giant names in the business. School of Rock is a classic, and I mean that word quite literally. It’s what Old Hollywood used to do perfectly, and which happens all too rarely in our more independent age. So. But Bernie is a departure, for both Linklater and Black, although you can see the deep roots in the project, and you can understand why Linklater, a native Texan, would have been drawn to this true story, which went down in a town near to the one he grew up in, in East Texas.
Roger Ebert loved the film and wrote in his review:
In Richard Linklater’s droll comedy “Bernie,” Jack Black plays an east Texas funeral director named Bernie Tiede, and it is surely one of the performances of the year. I had to forget what I knew about Black. He creates this character out of thin air, it’s like nothing he’s done before, and it proves that an actor can be a miraculous thing in the right role.
Now, I’m not shocked at how great Jack Black is in this role. He is one of my favorite actors working today, and I think he can do anything. I’ve written about him before. He is tremendously gifted on an almost supernatural level, and of course comedy like that comes from a place of self-knowledge, self-awareness, and intelligence. Those same qualities, which help Jack Black be as funny as he is, are the very same qualities that would draw him to playing such a character as Bernie, which is unlike anything he has ever done before, yet completely in his wheelhouse. In one fell swoop, Jack Black expanded the audience’s understanding of his talent. Good for him. But again, I always knew he had it in him. Not everybody could helm a film like School of Rock and make that character so pathetic, so unlikable, so ridiculous, and yet so heartwarming, all at the same time. Jack Black does every role as though he was born to play it. He is not generic. And then, of course, there is this. And this.
I also have to say I love him as a leading man. It’s not always an easy fit, but then again, that’s real life. We are all leading men/women in our own lives, in our own love lives, despite the fact that most of us do not look the part. So I love him in those roles where he gets to be romantic, or a “suitor” (to be a Grandma about it). There’s still lots to be explored in that arena for Jack Black. The sky’s the limit with this guy.
Here, in Bernie, he plays a real guy, Bernie Tiede, currently serving a life sentence for shooting an old woman 4 times in the back. Seems an appropriate punishment for such a heinous crime. And yet the hook of the story (in real-life and in the film version) is that Bernie was such a nice guy, so well loved in his community, and she, the old lady, was so universally despised by everyone, that nobody thought he should do any time. Based on a Texas Monthly article by the great Skip Hollandsworth (you can read it here), (Hollandsworth also co-wrote the screenplay with Linklater), Bernie tells the story of Carthage, Texas, and the story of a well-loved assistant funeral director, Bernie, (Black) who befriends a mean old widow named Marjorie Nugent (MacLaine). The two become constant companions, baffling the town, all of whom despise her. Bernie and Marjorie travel together, go to piano concerts together, and have dinner at local restaurants. It is not believed that anything sexual went down between them, and it is thought that Bernie might be gay. He loved the old ladies in town, but didn’t seem that interested in women his own age. Bernie knows everyone, he takes care of everyone, he organizes community events, he helps out the needy and the sick, he sings in the choir, he is one of the best-liked people in the town.
Richard Linklater, director of “Bernie” (photo be me at Ebert Fest)
Richard Linklater, who hails from East Texas, read Hollandsworth’s article and his curiosity was spiked. He attended the trial of Bernie, and befriended the district attorney Danny Buck (played by Matthew McConaghey). He is still friends with Danny Buck. I love that. In the QA following the screening of Bernie, Linklater describes wanting to do the film for years, since the late-90s. He loved Jack Black and thought he would be perfect for Bernie, except that he was too young at the time. And he always had Shirley MacLaine in mind for the role of Mrs. Nugent. When he was finally ready to make the film, he called MacLaine’s agent to make the offer, prefacing it with the comment, “I really want her to do this, even though she’s really too young for the part …” MacLaine is almost 80 years old. She loved that comment. Wouldn’t you? Linklater’s no dummy.
Linklater uses what amounts to a Greek chorus, having the actual townspeople speak to the camera, give background, fill in gaps. In the special features of the DVD, they talk about the auditions they held. Many people who showed up actually knew Bernie, actually knew Mrs. Nugent. So the question then became: who can tell a good story, but also not freeze up in front of the camera? Who can keep their “essence” intact in a filming situation? The people Linklater found to be the “Greek chorus” are unbelievable. Their interviews make up so much of the film, and at times they are touching (the final woman in particular, who ends the film), but at other times, they are uproariously funny. One woman says (and this was apparently a line she improvised, and Linklater said he died laughing after he called “cut”): “Honey, there were people in this town who woulda’ killed her for five dollars.”
I did not see Bernie originally in the movie theatre. I watched it alone in my apartment. Seeing it in a packed movie theatre, again, made such a huge difference in what the film actually feels like. I mean, it was funny and sick to begin with, but it’s a whole other ballgame when those images are writ so large, and so many people are reacting. The laughter was thunderous, from that very first scene of Bernie giving a lecture on embalming. Bernie plays like a bat out of hell.
Ebert had long been a supporter of Linklater and his films. That support was so helpful and necessary during low times. Martin Scorsese, in his statement released following Ebert’s passing, touched on that. Tennessee Williams had long relationships with critics, especially Brooks Atkinson, who always gave a new Williams play his full attention, even when Williams’ star had fallen critically. It can help “stiffen the space between your shoulder blades” (to quote Clifford Odets) to know that someone out there is watching what you are doing, paying attention, taking you seriously.
Michael Barker, co-President and co-Founder of Sony Pictures Classic, interviewed Linklater following the film, and there was a great and lively QA session with the audience. (Hats off to the organizers: so often QAs are fiascos, because people can’t be heard, there is microphone confusion, but they really had it down to a science there at the Virginia Theatre.)
Best of all, Jack Black called in to the QA, and his voice was blasted out from the speakers on stage right. The sound was great, and he could hear us perfectly, so it did feel like he was in the room. It was so exciting, I love him! He talked about the responsibility he felt in playing a real-life person. Linklater and Black went to visit Bernie in prison (which took some doing). Footage of Black listening to Bernie talking plays over the credits at the end of the film, and I love it because Bernie is just talking, telling his story, interacting, and then the camera moves over to Black’s face, and he is listening, but more than that, you can see he is absorbing the man in front of him. Many of the questions had to do with how Black created the character, the specific walk, the tone of his voice, the hand gestures. Black said, “That was all from Bernie, the real guy.” Black said that if ever there was a moment during shooting where he felt lost, or not sure what to do or how to do it, he would think of the real guy and it worked every time. People, it’s that good a performance.
Ebert had Tweeted, during Oscar season, something along the lines of “If the world were fair, Jack Black would be a nominee this year for Best Actor.” I felt the same way after I saw the performance (although, as I’ve said, I’ve always thought he had a Best Actor prize in him.) Michael Barker read that quote during the QA, and you could hear Jack Black say over the speakers, almost to himself, “Wow.”
The whole thing is a “Wow”.
Oh, and one detail: One of the townspeople interviewed in the film (the one who said the line that made Linklater laugh so hard) actually used to cut Elvis’ hair in the 70s. Black said, “Yup, she cut The King’s hair.”
The questions were great, except for one idiot who stood up and said, “How do the people of Carthage feel about how you portrayed them? Surely there are SOME cosmopolitan people in that town?” In trying to show how enlightened he was, all he did was show how snobby he was and how he needs to get out of his liberal enclave more. I felt the same way about people who complained that Melissa Leo’s performance in The Fighter was “over the top”. Really? Go hang out in a sports bar in Southie, and you will be SURROUNDED by that character, you snobs.
Linklater handled the question great. He said something along the lines of, “Yeah, I thought it was pretty accurate. As I said, I grew up around there. This is what it’s like. Of course, since I’m from there, I’m allowed to make fun of them – but outsiders can’t!” I think anyone could relate to that sentiment. It’s how families act, too. A family bitches about certain family members, but let an outsider make the same observation, and watch the family fight that person to the death!
I was high from the entire day, which had been a great one. Mum and I headed back to the hotel, and despite the late hour, I was able to get to sleep. It was so good having Mum with me. She hadn’t seen Bernie before, so we had so much fun talking about it, and how nice and sweet both Linklater and Black were.
We have Ebert to thank for all of it.
Review: TFF 2013: Oxyana
This review originally appeared on Capital New York.
“Nothing here but Oxy and coal,” says one of the subjects of Sean Dunne’s mournful documentary Oxyana. The “here” is Oceana, a once-bustling mining town in West Virginia, now decimated by Oxycontin addiction to the point where the media have rebranded it “Oxyana.”
Addiction touches everyone’s lives. One guy interviewed says, “I’m 23. Half my graduating class is dead.” The destruction is almost unbelievable, although it is no secret that painkiller addiction, and Oxy in particular, is a huge problem in America. But Oxyana zooms in on one community, and the result is powerful, covering well-trodden ground, perhaps, but filmed in a way that feels elegiac. An elegy for a more innocent time when kids just drank beer and smoked a little pot, but also an elegy for a way of life, disappearing in the fog descending on the mountains around Oceana. Oxyana is devastating.
The statistics are overwhelming. West Virginia leads the country in prescription overdoses. A doctor at Raleigh General Hospital says that half of the babies in the nursery are on methadone. A recent book, Days of Destruction, Days of Revolt, by Chris Hedges and Joe Sacco, describes the situation in West Virginia: “A decade ago only about 5% of those seeking treatment in West Virginia needed help with opiate addiction. Today that number has ballooned to 26%. It recorded 91 overdose deaths in 2001. By 2008 that number had risen to 390.” The people interviewed in Dunne’s documentary, all participants in the epidemic (either as helpless bystanders or addicts themselves), are blindsided by how quickly Oxy took over. It’s not just the addicts, it’s the dealers who keep it going, and, as one interview subject observes, “Drugs created an economy in the town.”
In a matter of 15 years, a community where people felt safe raising their kids has become a town where it is common for teenage girls to prostitute themselves for money. Oceana was a place where you didn’t feel the need to lock your doors. Now, it is racked by violence. One of the most unforgettable people we meet in Oxyana is an Oxy dealer (and addict) who says bluntly, “It’s an epidemic around here.”
Dunne fills the screen with voices and faces. There is no voiceover to instruct our reaction. The people of the town tell their own story, an approach serving the topic well. Dunne talks to people in their living rooms, backyards, on their front porches. The addicts he talks to are not in denial. They are shocked by how quickly Oxy has ruined their lives. People are disoriented, shell-shocked. One person says, “It’s incredible and amazing and awful, all at the same time.”
A local dentist, wearing a Motörhead T-shirt, describes watching the epidemic unfold. His eyes well up with tears as he describes telling his two young daughters that there are other places in the world where things are not like this, they can get out of there and do whatever they want. He can’t leave, though, because, as he says emotionally, “I love it here.” He talks about a certain psychological mindset called “Appalachian fatalism,” which he thinks has a lot to do with how things went down. The people in that area of the United States have been exploited by outsiders for generations. They don’t trust people from “outside,” they have been “shafted” too many times. There is an Us against Them mentality, and their lack of trust is well-founded. Deliverance, by James Dickey (the book and the film) is a perfect expression of Appalachian mistrust, resentment towards big-city interlopers in their midst.
Sean Dunne gets behind that mistrust, and the people of Oceana open up to him. He interviews an unforgettable husband and wife, who sit on a small bed together, as the husband shoots up, describing his losing battle with brain cancer. He is rail-thin, with an almost debilitating stutter, and yet articulate about his addiction. He needs this stuff. The wife eventually speaks, and her pain is heart-rending. “I never had no self-esteem,” she says, “but he loved me for who I was.” She says this after he shoots her up.
The people interviewed are well aware of how they must seem to the “outside,” and also well aware of the prejudices facing them, not just because of their addiction but because of their accents, and the region of the country they come from. They perceive that city folk, who pride themselves on their tolerance, often do not extend that tolerance to “white trash” people who love NASCAR, work on pickup trucks in their front yards, who speak in thick accents. One person in Oxyana says, “Nobody’s gonna care — they think we’re inbred pieces of shit.”
Photographed with sensitivity by Hillary Spera, Oxyana revels in the beautiful landscape: the camera floats by long rows of houses with tree-covered slopes rising steeply behind, sometimes half-shrouded in fog. Viewing the horrors this town has faced, through Spera’s lens, contrasting the stark beauty and the harsh reality, is a work of mourning. You can understand why the dentist in the Motörhead T-shirt doesn’t want to leave. The horrors are real, but so is the beauty, and so is the fact that the rise of “Oxy” occurred in recent memory. Everyone can recall a simpler time. People are baffled at how different it was “back then,” only 15 years before.
The people of Oxyana speak for themselves; Dunne is listening. He is their message in a bottle.
But there is work for the audience here. I was thinking about Martin Bell’s groundbreaking 1984 film Streetwise while watching Oxyana. Bell’s film followed a bunch of kids around, homeless kids, street kids. Oxyana places the story strictly in the hands of those who are living it, as Bell’s did, and as the photography of Mary Ellen Mark, upon which Streetwise was based, did. It can be confrontational material, challenging for well-meaning audiences who think they have ready answers. But “answers” get in the way of the far richer experience films like Streetwise and Oxyana offer.
Dunne’s film does not provide answers but presents the problem. It is helpful to humanize an epidemic, the faces and the voices filling the screen act as emissaries from beyond the pale. A mother begs her son to go to rehab, and yet says, “You have to do the work yourself.” A drug dealer shows us pictures of his family, slaughtered by his own father for Oxy. A young pregnant woman, in tears, says she’s done things — “things a woman has to do” — to get drugs, and her pain is palpable. The voices pile up, the stories, the faces, a collage of pain and shock and helplessness. There is an urgency to Oxyana, despite its elegiac pace and calm, sad center. It says, essentially, “Don’t just watch the film. Try to see. And don’t just ‘listen’. Try to hear.”
Ebert Fest 2013: Patrick Wang’s In the Family
Roger Ebert ended his review of Patrick Wang’s In the Family with these words:
What a courageous first feature this is, a film that sidesteps shopworn stereotypes and tells a quiet, firm, deeply humanist story about doing the right thing. It is a film that avoids any message or statement and simply shows us, with infinite sympathy, how the life of a completely original character can help us lead our own.
When I participated in a panel discussion a couple of days later on the “art of the video essay”, Patrick Wang was on the panel, and Steven Boone, a friend of mine, was sitting next to me, and he said, “Here comes a grandiose statement. In the Family could solve all of America’s problems.” His comment got a huge laugh, as I believe it was meant to do, but on another level he was dead serious. And having seen the film, I know now what he means. Read again Roger Ebert’s words. And think about how the world could be made a better place if we all internalized the message of the film on a cultural or social level. And having listened to Patrick Wang speak, both on the panel and in the QA following the screening of his extraordinary first feature, I can see how deliberate and careful he had been in choosing the elements of his story. This is a guy who knows exactly what he is doing. He said in the QA at one point, “Well, I’m not 25 … so I think my age does make a difference.” He was responding to yet another, “But how … how on earth did you even DO this … and this is a first feature? Really?”
Believe the hype. In the Family really is that good.
To go totally corny, In the Family makes you want to be a good person. It’s not easy to be good, and there will always be obstacles in your way. But if you can meet someone, even an adversary, on a human level, if you attempt to break through the facade of needs/wants/resentments that sometimes color human interactions … great transformations in understanding can (and do) take place. Relationships can change in such moments, even old old relationships, like ones with family members, where it seems like the dynamic is set in stone. In the Family is a reminder that nothing is set in stone. We are all just making our way through this life, and we disagree, sometimes horribly, but nothing is a done deal, as long as we keep attempting to listen.
In the Family comes out on DVD and Blu-Ray (and my co-panelist and former editor at Fandor and new friend Kevin Lee has a video essay on the film that Patrick Wang loved so much he is including on the special features!) on June 25, and I beg you all to check it out.
Sometimes breathlessly positive commentary can be a turn-off. At least that is true for me. You know, “The Dark Knight is the best movie released in my lifetime” kind of commentary, which basically makes me think, “Well. That person just needs to see more movies.” But sometimes … sometimes … that commentary is so unanimous (as it has been with In the Family), and so insistently positive that my curiosity is piqued. Especially with a small independent film such as this, which was rejected by countless festivals, which had a nearly invisible distribution (it came and went, if you blinked you missed it) – then in this case it is the critic’s job, or mission even, to get the word out. In the Family must NOT disappear without a trace. People MUST see this extraordinary film. I am very grateful to the critics who have written on it – Ebert, Marilyn Ferdinand, and others – because that film was on my radar for months, even though I was unable to see it until last week. A related story: In December, 1944, a new play by Tennessee Williams called The Glass Menagerie opened in freezing Chicago. It was a bitter winter, and people were not going out to the theatre. The production starred Laurette Taylor, and the performance is now legendary and known as one of the greatest performances by an actress in the 20th century, but at first the production foundered. There were thoughts that it might even close in Chicago before even moving to New York. Williams had only had one play produced at that time, Battle of Angels, and it had closed during its tryout in Boston, amidst cries of obscenity and outrage. Glass Menagerie limped along, playing to half-empty houses, but two local Chicago theatre critics, Claudia Cassidy and Ashton Stevens, began championing the production. They wrote piece after piece, singing its praises, harassing Chicagoans with the refrain: “You must see this play, you must see this play”, until finally the tide began to turn. Not only did locals start to flock to see the play, but the reviews got the attention of New Yorkers and Los Angeles movie people, who began making stopovers in Chicago on their train/plane trips to either coast, in order to see this wondrous production. Those two brave loud-mouth critics had a huge part in keeping that struggling production open during the perilous first couple of weeks when so many shows close. And, of course, the play moved to Broadway in March of 1945, and the rest is history.
I felt that way, a little bit, reading the various pieces on In the Family. There was almost a pleading quality to the prose of the critics. They felt so deeply about In the Family, it actually pained them to think of it disappearing, to think of it not finding an audience. In this instance, the critics were key in keeping the conversation about that film alive, as it started to make its appearance at various festivals, or pop up for a week here, a week there, at small arthouse theatres across the country.
Kevin Lee, Patrick Wang, Trevor St. John, Michael Barker (photo by me at Ebert Fest)
Patrick Wang, Trevor St. John (photo by me at Ebert Fest)
In the QA following, run by Michael Barker, co-President and co-Founder of Sony Pictures Classic, and the aforementioned Kevin Lee, with Patrick Wang and Trevor St. John (who is in the film, and who arrived 20 minutes before the QA began due to the storm re-routing planes, trains and automobiles), we learned a little bit about Patrick Wang. Many of the questions were along the lines of, “Where did you come from??” It is startling, too, that he does not have a Tennessee accent like he has in the film. You would totally believe that he was that guy in In the Family. Patrick Wang went to M.I.T. and got degrees in economics and physics. While at M.I.T., he became interested in theatre, and formed a theatre company. He spent years directing theatre, and acting in plays. This experience shows in the film, which is one of the best Acting Movies I’ve seen in a long long time. Takes are very long, often scenes play out in one take, so it’s similar to watching a play, where you are seeing things unfold in real time, with no editing or cuts.
Patrick Wang wrote the script, acted in the lead role, and directed. It is a trifecta of awesomeness, putting him in rare company. Not for one second does it feel like a vanity project. It is a thoughtful and thought-provoking work, and it is about many things. It leaves great room for the audience to project their own experience onto the storyline.
The plot is not a simple one. The film is quite long, and yet it doesn’t feel long. It feels as long as it needs to be to effectively tell its story.
Wang plays Joey, a contractor, who lives with his partner Cody (Trevor St. John), and Cody’s young son Chip (the amazing Sebastian Banes). Cody’s wife died in childbirth. Joey had come into their lives as a contractor, and became a friend. In the wake of Cody’s wife’s death, a relationship develops between the two men, a friendship of sorts, but with a current running underneath it. (All of this is revealed in flashbacks.) Cody has never been in a relationship with a man before, and it is unclear whether or not Joey has either, but the two men fall in love. They live together for five years, raising Chip, who has developed into one of the most normal little boys I’ve seen onscreen in a long time. He is going through “a dragon phase”, as Joey says at one point, so every single thing in his life right now is about dragons. In the opening scene, we see the family getting ready to go to work and school, and Wang films it often with the three characters in the frame at the same time. Camera placement is key for Wang. By seeing these three individuals drink coffee, eat breakfast, talk about their day, do their activities, things we all do in our own households, we immediately know who they are, like them, are invested in them, whatever else you want to call it. It’s so real that I was amazed to learn that everything was said word-for-word from the script (even the child actor). You can’t believe that these were words on a page, once upon a time.
Then, Cody is killed in a car accident. In the scenes that follow, as Joey and Chip struggle to move on without Cody, you get the sense that all is not right. That something big is coming. And it does indeed come. Cody’s sister, Eileen (Kelly McAndrew) tells Joey that she has uncovered a will that Cody made out when his wife died, leaving control of his estate to her. “You don’t have to worry about Chip anymore,” she says, a terrible line, especially when said so gently and compassionately. Worry about him? He’s raising him. He’s his father. So events begin to wrench forward, awfully, inevitably, with the feeling of a Greek tragedy, and yet Patrick Wang never lets the film go off the rails tonally. It is not an “issue” film, as Ebert pointed out. It’s not a gay rights film, although there are certainly scenes that touch on the unfairness of the situation (when Cody is in the hospital, Joe is not allowed in the room because “he isn’t family”). It’s a human film. It’s about humans in the wake of a giant tragedy, the death of Cody. It is never questioned that Eileen is acting out of love for her brother: This is what he wanted, he said it in his will. On Thanksgiving, Joey drops Chip off at Eileen’s house, and then never sees him again. He is denied access to his son. He is cut off.
Joey calls lawyers, but no one will take his case. He and Cody never married. Of course they didn’t, they are two men living in a country where we are still battling out that issue. One lawyer tells him bluntly, “You do not have a child custody case.” The film never once takes a maudlin sentimental tone. Just as Joey is denied Chip, so are we. We have spent some time with this little boy. We have learned about his dragons. We have seen him blabbing to his fathers about his day at school. We miss his presence terribly. As established, Joey is a building contractor, and we have seen him at work, managing the renovation of a giant manor, bringing in glass-cutters and wallpaperers, and having tense meetings with the home’s owner, played by Susan Kellermann. Through this connection, he meets an elderly retired lawyer (played by the magnificent Irish actor Brian Murray). The lawyer owns a bunch of old books that are deteriorating, and Joey reveals that he knows a little something about bookbinding (we will figure out from where he got this knowledge later in the film). He offers to work on the books. The lawyer has heard a little bit about what Joey is going through, and offers to help. Even writing down those words does a disservice to how that scene plays out. It is a masterpiece, masterfully written by Wang, masterfully directed, with the camera flowing back and forth to the two faces, and masterfully acted by both actors.
Then follows a deposition scene, which, if the world were just, would enter into the canon of All-Time Greatest Scenes Ever Filmed.
Present are Joey, his lawyer, Cody’s sister and husband and their lawyer, and the court stenographer. After the film, at the QA, Michael Barker asked Wang, “How long is that deposition scene?” Wang answered, “35 minutes.” Much of it plays out in long unbroken takes. The tension is unbearable, and yet quiet and human. Nothing is pumped up artificially. People go through such things every day in this country (and others), and the stakes could not be higher. Human lives and human happiness are on the table. Both sides want something. Both, one must assume, are going after what they want with the best intentions. Cases like this go to trial because people stop listening to one another, people refuse to compromise, people are unwilling to give something up.
You see again why Steven Boone made the comment he did at the panel.
It is an unbelievably confident first feature, and while there are many issues that are present (gay rights, racism), they are never underlined or even spoken. I don’t think the word “gay” is ever used. The fact that Joey is a Chinese-American with a Tennessee accent is not commented upon, although you can see, in certain scenes, that he is treated with a baffled kindness, because people don’t know where to place him. In a very funny flashback, where Joey joins Cody’s family for Thanksgiving for the first time, Cody’s tippling mother (the awesome Park Overall), treats Patrick with kind-hearted and yet oblivious condescension. She obviously thinks he is just off the boat from China. She starts to explain the traditions of Thanksgiving, and Cody murmurs, “He knows what Thanksgiving is, Mom.” None of this is played as though Joey is living in a KKK hotbed. Nobody’s a villain. The touch is always light, almost invisible, and yet present.
Joey is born and raised American, he grew up in foster care, he learned carpentry skills from his foster father, and has a Tennessee accent. Without putting too fine a point on it, there has not been such a portrayal of an Asian character in American film, ever, and you can imagine the sorts of roles Wang would be up for, if he went a more traditional route, and a sort of macho take-care-of-it guy in work boots speaking with a drawl is not one of them. And yet such men exist. Of course they do.
Wang deals with some of these underlying themes in an interesting way, as a director. He often shoots himself from behind. Often the back of his head fills the screen, and we see others looking at him. In fact, that is the image for the poster.
Kevin Lee had some very interesting observations about this device, which he shared in the QA following, and is part of what he was addressing in the video-essay he did for the film. By denying us access to his face, Wang, in many ways, places us directly into the lead character Joey’s experience. We are seeing what he is seeing – literally. We are in his head, looking out.
To make the point even more deliberately: Think of the portrayal of Asian characters in American film, and think of how they are utilized, cast, and thought about. In other words: they aren’t, for the most part. There have, of course, been major inroads in this area in recent years, especially in the realm of television, but we still have a long way to go. By putting the back of his own head in the screen in so many scenes, Patrick Wang becomes us and vice versa. It’s radical and revolutionary.
And so in the final moment of In the Family, the very last second of the film (which I would not dream of revealing) … the audience, 1,500 of us, literally gasped. You could HEAR a gigantic collective gasp erupt in the theatre at that last shot. And then … a roaring weeping ovation that went on forever. Patrick Wang came out onto the stage, and 1,500 people rose to their feet and clapped and cheered and cried and roared “Bravo” for 10 minutes. It is one of the most emotional and important moments I have ever had in a movie theatre.
The American dream tells us that anyone who lives here has a shot at making it, whatever that might mean, if you work hard enough, if you stick to your guns, if you don’t give up. No one is stuck. Nothing is “set in stone” here. Yes, it is hard to make your dreams come true. But there are vast examples of those who persevere, despite humble beginnings (hello), who take the American dream at its word and climb that mountain, triumphantly. The American dream tells us that if you want something, you actually have a shot at achieving it (remember: we don’t have the “right to happiness”, we have the right to the “pursuit of happiness”). Patrick Wang’s film, which is about so much, grief, family, fear, belonging (and being outside the charmed circle of belonging), love, child-rearing, understanding, intimacy, misunderstanding, is also about the American dream. But, in that key scene I mentioned earlier with the elderly lawyer who gives Joey some guidance at how to begin navigating the shoals of legalese in these tough situations, it is made clear that the “American dream” (never named in the film) is not just about “going after what you want”. It is also about thinking, and deeply, about what you are willing to give up, to compromise on, in the pursuit of that dream.
It is the shining underbelly of the American dream, or perhaps the invisible halo shimmering around it, something never discussed, never named in our culture, barely perceived. But it is there. It exists in our checks and balances, in the vast messy compromises we have made politically, in our mis-steps, in our correctives. Patrick Wang doesn’t ask anything of us specifically. But his film is a reminder that we share this planet together. Go after what you want, for sure. But also acknowledge that other people exist on the planet too, and acknowledge that you may have to be prepared to give something up. And what would that be? Can’t we all just get along? asked Rodney King. Maybe, maybe not. But it is in those moments of stress and division, personally, socially, politically, when it is crucial to ask yourself not “what am I willing to DO to get what I want”, but “what am I willing to give UP”?
That is a whole different kind of conversation.
I repeat: I think Steven Boone is onto something.
Ebert Fest 2013: Day 2: To Music and Vincent
Day 2 was busy. Four films on the docket, one of which (Bernie) was one of my favorite films of last year. Definitely in my Top 5. I was thrilled to get a chance to see it on the big screen in a packed movie house. I have written before about my feelings about Jack Black as an actor, and I wrote that piece before his masterful turn in Bernie. He can do anything. He is one of my favorite actors working today. If he had been coming up in the 1970s, he would have had a couple of Oscar noms by now. But c’est la vie. At least he is here with us now, at least he continues to do what he wants to do: his instincts do not lead him astray. And Tenacious D’s new album is awesome, and the song “Low Hanging Fruit” has become an instant favorite of mine. He’s phenomenal.
I was also thrilled that I was finally going to get a chance to see Patrick Wang’s film In the Family. It was released in 2011, initially, but barely. It played at festivals, and it is rare to find a bad review of it. In fact, the reviews really re-define what a “positive review” means. I mean, people were referring to it as a “masterpiece”. It was out in New York briefly, and then disappeared. Then I read Marilyn Ferdinand’s review, and thought again: I MUST see this film, like, NOW, and Marilyn informed me in the comments that it would be having another brief run in New York. Hooray! Unfortunately, its short second run coincided with Hurricane Sandy and its catastrophic aftermath, where going into Manhattan was pretty much out of the question for a good 8 days. So I missed it again. But here it was, at Ebert Fest. I was very excited.
Tamás Vásáry, Roger Glanville-Hicks, Henriett Tunyogi, Paul Cox, “To Music”
But first up, was a short film called To Music, which led perfectly into the first feature of the day, Paul Cox’s 1987 film Vincent. I love the story behind the filming of To Music almost as much as I loved the film itself (and it was wonderful). Sophie Kohn and Feike Santbergen are the co-directors, two young filmmakers, who saw an opportunity and grabbed it. In the QA following the film, Sophie Kohn (daughter of Nate Kohn, Ebert Fest festival director), who has known Paul Cox all her life, described him as her “crazy uncle”. Paul Cox, in his introduction to To Music in the Festival program (he also appears in the film as a priest), writes:
We were in the South of France with Sophie Kohn and Feike Santbergen. Both are keen filmmakers. They came for a little holiday after the madness of the Cannes Film Festival. When they heard that maestro Tamás Vásáry, a world-renowned pianist, and his dancer wife Henriett Tunyogi were coming for the weekend, they could not sit idle any longer. “Talent must not be wasted,” a film must be made! A camera and lights came from Holland, a tripod from nearby Avignon and a dolly was constructed out of pipes, nuts and bolts, bought in a township nearby. Feike and Sophie frantically started to write their screenplay.
How marvelous. Both Sophie and Feike describe the experience as entirely spontaneous, a burst of creativity and madness, based on the fact that these extraordinary people were all in the same beautiful house at the same time. The screenplay they came up with is gorgeous, about the healing power of music. A woman (Henriett Tunyogi) takes care of an elderly man. A priest (Paul Cox) visits. A drunk man (Roger Glanville-Hicks) huddles in the attic. Isolated from one another, it is when a man (Tamás Vásáry) visits the woman, and sits down to play at the piano (Franz Schubert’s “To Music”) that connection is possible. The drunk man emerges from the attic and joins in with the piano player on the lute (Glanville-Hicks is a maestro on the lute). And the woman is seen in the final shots of the film, dancing by herself outdoors, with a beautiful deep sunset filling the sky behind her. Simple, funny at times, gorgeously shot, and clear in its motives and its passion, To Music was a profound contemplative piece on the power of music, and what music can provide. Very moving.
Nate Kohn, David Poland, Feike Santbergen, Sophie Kohn
Following To Music was Paul Cox’s Vincent, a documentary (although not a traditional one) about Vincent van Gogh. Van Gogh, of course, wrote hundreds of letters to his brother Theo, letters that are rightly famous. They certainly act as a corrective to the common image of Vincent van Gogh as some weird madman who would cut off his own ear, etc. etc. This was a deeply thoughtful man, obsessed with things like the color yellow, and colors in general, who wanted his paintings to be more than portraits. He wanted the paintings to say to the world and to future generations: This artist felt things deeply. He wanted to help us to see.
Roger Ebert loved the film (one of the Ebert Fests was dedicated to Paul Cox, as this past one was dedicated to Haskell Wexler), and wrote in his review:
What Paul Cox has done in “Vincent: The Life and Death of Vincent Van Gogh” – the best film about a painter I have ever seen – is to take his camera to some of the places Van Gogh painted and to re-create some of the others in his imagination. This is not, however, one of those idiotic “art appreciation” films in which we see the windmill and then we see the painting of the windmill; Cox knows too much about art to be that simplistic. Instead, he adopts the role of a disciple of the painter, a man who wants to stand in the same places and see the same things as a simple act of love toward Van Gogh’s work.
When Chaz introduced the film, she said that Vincent van Gogh’s letters had deep meaning for Roger Ebert, and that there were times when she would watch the film, listening to John Hurt’s voiceover (which is all taken from van Gogh’s letters to Theo), and she said that she felt like Roger was speaking to her. There are the same concerns with integrity and honesty in art, the same wish that people could be kind to one another, could try and see one another. Cox’s film is a meditation on the art of van Gogh. Paul Cox travels to the places van Gogh went, and scans the landscape. There are repeated shots of birds taking flight over the fields and trees. As van Gogh describes the richness of the soil between the trees in the forest, Cox films such a soil. We see the paintings, too, but often in gigantic closeup. We can see the glops of paint left by van Gogh’s brush, we see the details of the sunflowers, before drawing back to see the painting in its entirety. John Hurt’s voiceover is emotional and passionate, bringing those extraordinary letters to stark life. The letters are often quite funny, and sometimes tragically sad, but the majority of them are a workman’s letters. Van Gogh talks about his struggles to capture a certain kind of light, a certain shade of blue, he discusses the things he wants to do, he wants to capture the deep silver of the olive trees, and wonders if he can pull it off. He wants to capture peasant life. Miners, and potato farmers, and washing women. Cox utilizes re-enactments (a big no-no in the documentary world – well, unless you’re watching the Investigation Discovery channel), and in some cases the people in the re-enactments end up taking their places in what will eventually be Van Gogh’s painting of them.
Inclusion of Ebert’s favorite films (not necessarily current ones) is what makes Ebert Fest a true festival. Other festivals act as promotional opportunities and advertising opportunities for hot new films, but to show a contemplative film on Vincent van Gogh just because Ebert loved it is what makes this festival unique.
Also! To see the film not in a tiny arthouse with a small audience but in a 1,500-seat magnificent theatre, with not one empty seat, was quite an experience. That was true across the board. I had some pretty profound moments during the festival when I would suddenly, for a second, stop paying attention to the film, and become aware of my surroundings, the enormous theatre, the quiet massive crowd, sitting in the darkness. I was moved to tears, at times, by the sense all around me, of people, listening, thinking, watching, feeling.
Next up? In the Family and Bernie.