Bande A Part (1964): A Godard Syndrome

...is a Godard-for-all...

Nouvelle Vague, is it?

I miss film. I have two more days to end my semester. After finishing two main requirements for my Chemical Engineering Elective, ChE 198, I had another one of those 'Godard' moments. I could not recall the exact feeling, but I could characterize it as a robust cinephiliac desire of wanting more film experiences.

It is evident that most of my recent film viewings are a recollection of my old desire from mainstream classics when, from a quick observation of a close friend, he said: "Wala ka na bang bagong classics?" (Do you have any new classics?) By 'classics', I mean from Classical Hollywood Cinema.


With Godard syndrome running in my head, I recorded about three instances of re-watching Bande a Part (1964) for past the few weeks, a high incidence of cinephilia. Equally relevant is Frank Capra's A Wondeful Life (1946) which merited two viewings this month. Also, a rare occurence is my attempt to rewatch David Lynch's Inland Empire (2004) three times but at the strike of the first two hours, i retaliated by watching The Royal Tenenbaums (2001) for three times also! Lynch is, what can I say, prodigious is his surreal mantra? A question of form, indeed!

Kurosawa's Seven Samurai (1954) consumed 12 hours of my life last month, and for the love of God and his children, I have to keep it inside my closet to give way for other works for if not, i would spend the next month rewatching it until my eyes turned black.

Gladly, after the first half of my hell week, I am still alive. Two more days, and I am off to Wonderland.

Ciao guys!
***

TOP 10 Priority List for CINEMANILA 2009

... back from the dead...

[here]
[here]
[here]
[here]
[here] [here]
[here]
[here]
[here] [here]


Tokyo Story (1954) is indeed the best film of all time.


This week is hell week in UP. I thought I was dead and gone Monday night after my exam in Engineering Science. But Alas! I am still here salivating on Cinemanila for the nth time. I have so many films on hold, so many Nouvelle Vague and Murnau to watch, and a lot of Kurosawas and Renoir to deconstruct. Yet, in all this semi-quasi film history digging, and of climaxing at Ozu's Tokyo Story (1954) a few days ago (I cried relentlessly twenty minutes before the ending), I am willing to risk anything just to watch these films:


TOP 10 Priority list for Cinemanila:


(1) Inglourious Basterds (Tarantino)



October 16 (FRIDAY) | 8 - 10:33 PM | MARKET! MARKET! CINEMA 7.

(2) Mammoth (Moodyson)


PHILIPPINE PREMIERE:
OCTOBER 17 (SATURDAY) | 7:00 – 9:05 PM | MARKET! MARKET! CINEMA 5
OCTOBER 18 (SUNDAY) | 1:30 – 3:35 PM | MARKET! MARKET! CINEMA 4


(3) Hunger (Steve McQueen)



OCTOBER 23 (FRIDAY) | 3:00 – 4:30 PM | MARKET! MARKET! CINEMA 5
OCTOBER 23 (FRIDAY) | 7:30 – 9:10 PM | MARKET! MARKET! CINEMA 7


(4) Ricky (Francois Ozon)



OCTOBER 19 (MONDAY) | 9:30 – 11:00 PM | MARKET! MARKET! CINEMA 5
OCTOBER 20 (TUESDAY) | 1:00 – 2:30 PM | MARKET! MARKET! CINEMA 7


(5) Tulpan (Dvortsevoy)


OCTOBER 20 (TUESDAY) | 7:20 – 9:00 PM | MARKET! MARKET! CINEMA 5
OCTOBER 21 (WEDNESDAY) | 3:30 – 5:15 PM | MARKET! MARKET! CINEMA 5


(6) Pandora's Box (Ustaoglu)


OCTOBER 22 (THURSDAY) | 6:30 – 8:30 PM | MARKET! MARKET! CINEMA 7
OCTOBER 24 (SATURDAY) | 4:15 – 6:00 PM | MARKET! MARKET! CINEMA 4


(7) Samson and Delilah (Thorton)

OCTOBER 17 (SATURDAY) | 9:30 PM – 11:10 PM | MARKET! MARKET! CINEMA 4
OCTOBER 18 (SUNDAY) | 3:45 – 5:25 PM | MARKET! MARKET! CINEMA 5


(8) Independencia (Martin)

OCTOBER 21 (WEDNESDAY) | 5:45 – 6:30 PM | MARKET! MARKET! CINEMA 5

(9) Biyaheng Lupa (Lao)

from (here)

October 19 (Monday) | 08:00PM | Cinema 6
October 23 (Friday) | 04:30PM | Cinema 6

(10) Engkwentro (Diokno)

OCTOBER 21 (WEDNESDAY) | 7:00 – 8:00 PM | MARKET! MARKET! CINEMA 6
OCTOBER 23 (FRIDAY) | 2:45 – 4:00 PM | MARKET! MARKET! CINEMA 6


See ya!



---------

ROSENBAUM On French Cinephilia
Mizoguchi rocks hard

the love of sumako, the actress Pictures, Images and Photos

I quote from Rosenbaum's Paris Journal, Spring 1972 (Paris moviegoing, MODERN TIMES)" [Film Comment, Spring 1972; slightly tweaked, September 2009] (18 Sept 2009) that Harry posted a few days ago:

"...At a recent Cinémathèque screening of THE LOVE OF SUMAKO, THE ACTRESS (Mizoguchi, 1947), nearly all of the seats were filled. Although the print was in Japanese, without subtitles, and no plot synopsis or accompanying information of any kind was handed out, all but about ten of the spectators remained for the film’s duration, without complaint..."
This is France in the '70s.

Paris, as Rosenbaum mentioned, is the center of cinephilia in the world!

-----
Ciao!
----
BYE for now!

I will be in Aklan from October 22 - 30, 2009 for CSIW, Children's Science Interactive Workshop. The next formal update for this blog will be on the first week of November, but i will still try to update it via scheduling posts (hopefully). Brr... it's cold out here.

----

FACETS!

... or I love Facets!


Apart from Criterion Collection, another best source of essential films in DVD format is, of course, Facets Multimedia. If you are looking for rare independent films, save your souls because Facets have a mesmerizing line-up of films from the other world of cinema. If you are looking for films from Pluto, well, Facets can satisfy your cinephiliac desire.



What I found is a string of Filipino films including rare classics by Geraldo de Leon. I am so satisfied to find de Leon's The Blood Drinkers (Kulay Dugo ang Gabi, 1966), a vampire flick with heavy visual quotations from Nosferatu (Murnau, 1922), from their list.



Driven to satisfy the lust of... The Blood Drinkers.


JUST A THING...

...Have you heard of our dear old Roman Polanski being arrested at Germany? How is he doing?

...I am planing on a grand study on Edward Yang. I will be completing his oeuvre by next year if possible. Do you know any sources of his works?

...I am about to begin my YEAR 2009 countdown of the best films i have watched this year. I will be picking up the Yummy 20 by December together with 10 notable films. I will discuss each in a formal essay form, well again, for fun.


Ciao then!

AM I A GOOD FILM CRITIC?

...or, more importantly, am I a film critic?



Tell me, myself, am I a film critic?
from Orpheus (Cocteau, 1950)

I cannot process the word film critic quite clearly in my mind.

As Arbogast continues his annual 31 Screams for October (for this is Arbogast's best), and as Senses of Cinema tear their previous design for their new Issue 52, I resorted to revisiting Harry's Critical Falacy Series,well, for fun. It is Friday night, October the 2nd, there is a superstorm coming and i have nothing to do but wait (with flashlights, food supplies, and a ton of coffee). I re-watched some good old classics from the 1930 - 1950s France, some Italians, a bit of 1970s Scorsese's, and a ton full of Bertolucci and Kurosawa, well again, for fun.

The classes in Metro Manila were suspended last Sunday afternoon until Saturday by CHED (Commision on Higher Education) and DepEd (Department of Education). Plague by boredom and desolation, I stayed awake to write this post. Half of the dormitory was empty, most of my friends hoarded a ton full of DVDs from my shelf for the preservation of their own souls. One of them borrowed all Coppolas and the other one dared to re-watched the extended version a.k.a. Director's cut of Peter Jackson's The Lord of the Rings Trilogy (2006 - 2007) in one full blow, good luck for the 11 1/2 hours of his life.

As for me, I found a blog post from Harry's archives entitled: Consensual Criteria of a good critic. Harry, noting from La Critique de cinéma by René Prédal, 2004, identifies a film critic as the one who"...talk[s] about films and ponder over the nature of cinema. " Harry notes the following criteria expounding this thesis, and i quote from him:
"The critic is meant to ignore the public reception and speculate on the film's meaning in art history (its value in duration and immanence).

4 main criteria :

  1. Love of Cinema : passion + curiosity (for discoveries and novelties). Watching a lot of movies.
  2. Culture : expert of cinema history (1000 or 2000 essential films to know to be able to relativize the creativity/skill of new movies against past production) + deep general culture (arts and real world, which is the source of cinema inspiration)
  3. Cinema technique knowledge
  4. Writing Quality : style, communicative enthousiasm, readable, clarity, pedagogy.

And also :

  • 5) Sensibility : emotion. To develop affectivity even for disliked movies.
  • 6) Stance without prejudice : Judgement rooted in critical theory trends without rigid ideology.
  • 7) Objectivity : no influence by the majority of opinions, nor by personal mood/instinct.
  • 8) Sense of hierarchy (values) : Being able to make pertinent comparisons. Freedom and independance of thinking, against the editorial line, other critics and social fads)"


A SELF-EVALUATION


Tell me, myself, am I only a cinephile?
from Orpheus (Cocteau, 1950)

I have been watching a lot of films for about a year and a half now, and I consider myself as a starting film critic, more like a cinephile.

In Criteria number 1, it notes that a good film critic must love cinema. Do I love cinema? If not with cinema, what am I doing here watching every Renoir that i find and salivating on every Kurosawa and Hitchcock? Or what makes a 500php ($10) weekly budget for DVDs if not for the love of cinema? Or my monthly trip to the audio-visual section of the main library to watch unwatchable, rare films by Tarkovsky and Eisenstein. How i endured 120 Days of Sodom and Caligula if not for the love of cinema and the full expression of it. How i sacrifice the banalities of life just to arrive two hours in advance for the screening of Michael Haneke's The Piano Teacher (2002) during the French Film Festival last June. How i love cinema and how I owe to it!

In Criteria number 2, it says that a good film critic must be expert in cinema history. I am actually at this phase right now. I am attempting to collect all pertinent films from the different cinematic traditions from the primitive era to the recent New Waves, if there no substitute word for it, of different national cinemas. I am specifically interested on French cinema (Poetic Realism to French New Wave and on), Japanese Cinema (Mizoguchi to late Kurosawa), Primitive Era, German Expressionism and Soviet Montage. What had influenced greatly to my own self-expression and, more importantly, to my beliefs, is the Contemporary Contemplative Cinema whose version of the world is much life my version, long takes and deep-staged mise-en-scene. I am at the research phase for the whole year. I hope to see more of my own cinema next year as I refocused my interest to it.

In Criteria number 3, it argues that a good film critic must be expert or at least must know the knowledge of cinema technique, or as Bordwell wants it, the stylisitics of cinema. Because i love Bordwell a lot, i keep tons of notes on this area of film studies. I have read and reread his book on film aesthetics, Film Art, which have increased greatly my knowledge on even the simple difference from a establishing/reestablishing shot to a shot/reverse shot. I am dedicating my time to the elucidation of the ever mysterious technique of contemplative cinema artists in deploying narrative cues and mise-en-scene. I would love to do a big research on mise-en-scene and cinematography for these films because i feel that the cosmic effect of many contemplative films are greatly affected by the crude manipulation of these elements. moving on...



In Criteria number 4, it mentions that a good film critic must have a good writing quality. There lies a question on grammar. Ever since I started writing, before i gave birth to this blog, i have never been grammar conscious. I consider grammar my least priority putting diction and sentence structure on top of my list. I never read Elements of Style by White and Strunk because it is another self-help book for writers. Personally, I hate self-help books, no offense to Mark if you're reading this right now. Grammar is less important than composition, i think. It is restrictive, traditional and commonplace. I know you would say that is fundamental English and that i must be followed in all kinds of writing, but, forgive me if i came or have been influenced by modernist writers like Joyce and Woolf for their ungrammatical, highly truncated syntax. Both of them have influence my syntax: Joyce, influencing my inter-sentence construction parallel to his style in Ulysses (1921) being sometimes disjointed, and Woolf, influencing my intra-sentence construction, the long winding, comma-infested (i used to love semi-colons before) writing. I love both their styles. Ulysses, if you have read it, is a big example of an ungrammatically-explosive piece of writing.

And a note to all, i don't usually edit or review my blog posts. The coarser a post's syntax is, the more genuine its message. My writing may appear more formal if given that I am not writing in a blog and that I am writing a formal analysis of a film. There are different levels of writing, and one should know that we write at different formalities. I sort of treat my film blog as a breakaway from all conventions of writing.

SO, AM I A FILM CRITIC?

Your movie sucks! - Ebert.


Film criticism is, in a way, integrated to my system right now but not primarily central to my discourse. I consider myself more of a cinephile/film researcher and less a film critic because, first of all, i do not offer pure criticisms on my blog. Evaluations are hard to construct because, personally, I am more of a scientific person than an impressionistic one. I treasure the technicalities of films, how they are constructed, how the director manipulates a certain angle to achieve a certain effect. I consider each film as a systematic arrangement of pictures and sound temporally arrange to execute a non-narrative/narrative expression. Second, I wanted to follow the footsteps of Bordwell in his Historical Poetics stance. Bordwell has influenced me from day one because of his scientific approach to films, which i am totally in line with. So i guess, my answer is no, I am not a film critic.


RANDOM RANT:
On Kurosawa's Seven Samurai


Chris Fujiwara calls it a 'male cinema'. (here)

I am very curious about this. After watching Seven Samurai (1954) for the second time with a close friend of mine, he noted that almost every plot element of the film is somehow reminiscent of 13th Warrior (1999, John McTiernan) starring Antonio Banderas. Well, maybe what my friend was reffering to was what Seven Samurai is original about. It is one of the first films who started the plot concept of gathering heroes to form a team to battle evil forces. We can connect tons of films and comic stories with this plot concept, i know you can think of one right now (I am thinking of X-Men or Heroes). Well, we have George Lucas with his Star Wars concept heavily referenced to Seven Samurai. No wonder why the 13th Warrior is highly connected with Seven Samurai because, as my friend observed, it involves a gathering of heroes to form a team for the sole purpose of battling evil Vikings per se.

Anyway, enough of this.

More discussions on pertinent films this coming October.

Ciao!

****