BFI's TOKYO STORY (1953) Trailer

...gave me goosebumps...


With subtitles.

I've been meaning to watch this, but haven't got a chance. The BFI made it even greater. Enjoy!

Ciao!
***
I have it! got it for $5.91 on a booksale last night.

***
David Thomson said:
"The two things said about Setsuko Hara are that she was Ozu's favorite actress, and Garbo of Japan. Certainly she was Ozu's favorite --- she appeared in six films for him between 1949 and 1961, and they were close offscreen as well. And, like Garbo, she retired at the height of here popularity: in 1962, she announced that she had never enjoyed making films and secluded herself in an elegant suburb of Tokyo. She is still there, spending time with family and school friends and remaining an object of curiosity and affection of the public. Like Garbo, hara came to represent an ideal of womanliness, nobility and generosity."

--- from A Biographical Dictionary of Film, 3rd Ed. p 312

Setsuko Hara, immortalized in a celluloid by Ozu.

***
Ciao!



I love David Lynch!

...his full-mouthed "bullshit" illustrates the totality of human experience...



Got it from Craig at Cinemasparagus

Okay! Just kidding! I love him for this! The AFI Interview is a total LOL, i wonder how the interviewer felt. Watch the next video!


His response to the questions re: "bullshit!"

Have a nice day!

Ciao!
***


SUNDANCE 2010 | Twitter Activated

...Jan 21 - 31, 2010, at Park City, Utah

Catch 'em now or never, Sundance will close this Sunday.


Sooo many films to watch...

Go!

Ciao!
***
Add me on Twitter guys! I hope i can use their mobile thingy here in the Philippines!
It seems unavailable. here.


Ciao!
***

Beau Travail (1999 or 2000)

... a certain amount of incredible flexibility

Sentain.

I have to admit, the driving force of Claire Denis' Beau Travail (1999) comes from somewhere else. Has there been a collision with nature? What form is she trying to suggest? What are her materials for building such a film with grace and poetry?


Let it be for Galoup!
Ciao!
***

Nationalism and AUDITOIRE

What is AUDITOIRE?


AUDITOIRE BEFORE, BEFORE (September 2008 - March 2009)

A blog dedicated to a serious exploration of the metaphysical and aesthetic realm of Cinema via the elucidation of the visual semiotic relationships present on the films, primarily focusing on the role of film spectator to the absolute visual value of a film. ---- In essence, I TREASURE CONTEMPLATIVE NON-HOLLYWOOD FILMS, a cinema which rejects conventional narration via minimalistic usage of shots and mise-en-scene in order to create a strong connection with the audience.



AUDITOIRE BEFORE (April 2009 - March 2010)


A blog made in an attempt to capture the beauty of films by engaging on tedious "systematic research consist of posing questions [about it], reflecting on the historical factors that lead to the questions' becoming salient, broaching alternative answers, and weighing them in the light of the evidence." I am also dedicated to presenting "arguments that seek to demonstrate that some answer are better than others." This quotations, from film theorist David Brodwell, are primarily concerned with Poetics, specifically Neoformalist Poetics, which is, "while concentrating in historical context, narrative form, and cinematic style, does not exclude thematic interpretations. It absorbs them into a dynamic system --- here, one that reveals why discrete meanings can be the bait at which critics will snap, and how a clever filmmaker has set a trap for them."

Though this approach may call for general films (of different genre) i will still focus entirely on CONTEMPLATIVE CINEMA.

March to September 2010 marks the transition period. :-)

AUDITOIRE NOW (September 2010 - present)

A blog made in an attempt to capture the beauty of films as it is. And to regain the long lost history of Philippine Cinema.


...

Bontoc Eulogy (Fuentes, 1995)


A singular argument brought over a macchiato venti coffee at Razon's (i did not ate their specialty --- pancit luglug) unplugged me from my deep-seated consciousness. Two of my friends with nationalist ideals, Mike and Louise, have argued about the dead-end conditions of my intense devotion to foreign films. The sound of the word 'foreign' seems to imply an argument over the depth of dichotomy between the local and the foreign, or more appropriately, the local and the global. In film studies per se, at least in historical poetics, this dichotomy is not highly universalized or generally used as a means for discussion. However, on lower level of discourse e.g. taste preferences and interpretative modes of criticisms, the choice between foreign and local is highly important.


Central to Auditoire


Auditoire, as it continuously separate itself from me, has always been struggling with the conception of poetics-toned film criticisms. The central idea, after writing my updated blog description last April 2009:
A blog made in an attempt to capture the beauty of films by engaging on tedious "systematic research consist of posing questions [about it], reflecting on the historical factors that lead to the questions' becoming salient, broaching alternative answers, and weighing them in the light of the evidence." I am also dedicated to presenting "arguments that seek to demonstrate that some answer are better than others." This quotations, from film theorist David Brodwell, are primarily concerned with Poetics, specifically Neoformalist Poetics, which is, "while concentrating in historical context, narrative form, and cinematic style, does not exclude thematic interpretations. It absorbs them into a dynamic system --- here, one that reveals why discrete meanings can be the bait at which critics will snap, and how a clever filmmaker has set a trap for them.

Though this may call for general films (of different genere)..." (see above)
The whole idea of my blog, as I thought about it, is to produce criticisms of films stemming from the new discourse on film analysis, Poetics of Cinema (subdivided into analytical poetics and historical poetics) proposed by film theorist David Bordwell. Bordwell's idea, that all films are crafted by an individual, an institution, a society and a history, has greatly influenced me on both personal and ideological level.

My initial quest is to understand the theoretical discourse of cinema poetics, in the pursuit of the its applications to film analysis. My blog is somehow the output of all of this, a conglomeration of scattered thoughts on films, its underlying theoretical frameworks and its functional relationship to my life. I have to admit, film has achieved an immortalized position in my life.

Godard, for I love French Cinema.


Towards Nationalistic Goals

The consequence of focusing my viewing list to Filipino films have good and bad endings. One good ending is the birth of another Filipino-themed film blog. We have, i think, four major film blogs that fit into this category: Chard's Lilok Pelikula, Oggs' Lessons From School of Inattention, Noel's Critic After Dark, and, on a larger scope, the late Alexis Tioseco's Criticine. True, Philippine cinema desperately needs a distinct and established representation on the global arena. It deserves a high degree of critical engagement similar to the studies of foreign film. True enough, Filipino films lacks polemical discussions on web and much lesser on print. The Philippine society desperately needs a monthly film journal as much as it needs a considerable amount of rational and able-minded film enthusiast who will write about and recognize films not mainly because of their taste preferences but because of its importance to the national discourse.

In a January 3 post of Noel's Critic After Dark, I have left an insignia of my desperation to the establishment of a national cinema. I said:
"...What we need now is to institutionalize a NEW NATIONAL CINEMA, the past two ones happened during the 70s (about forty years ago) and, allegedly, during the silent era (most of the film prints were destroyed by the war).

I hope there is a step by step guide or a "INSTITUTIONALIZE A NATIONAL CINEMA" for dummies somewhere, but as weird as it is, most of the step-by-step guides for this are found somewhere in the 'revolutionary consciousness' of our art filmmakers and local film enthusiasts. Medoza, Diaz, Martin, Martinez, Red, Red, Red, and many more.

WE NEED THIS NOEL, gosh, i miss Alexis... ;-("
On the contrary, confining myself to Filipino films alone promotes 'claustrophobic encapsulation' of ideas, rendering them static, underdeveloped. This risky environment for criticism will ultimately lead to dogmatic reasoning and racist-inclined preferences.

Promoting Eclecticism

I highly value eclecticism especially in the level of the playing field that I consider salient to my blog. Eclecticism promotes exposure to alternatives, therefore increasing ones knowledge on a specific object at different approaches. My intense devotion to foreign films is mainly the result of my study of Bordwell's texts. Much of his examples came from different parts of the world, from different cultural backgrounds, hence eclecticism offers a freer space for the expansion of discourses on films.

What I have always dreamt is to apply historical poetics to the study of contemporary Philippine cinema, a feat no one has ever done. The evaluation of Philippine cinema under Bordwell lens, as what he did in his book Classical Hollywood Cinema, is perhaps the greatest project a Filipino film theorist or film critic can achieve. No one has ever done it.

Ciao!

****



BLACKSOUP | Performance Poetry Party

...poems for January the twentieth...

One word: William Friedkin stuff.

"Inny mini mini moe."

The menu for pasta says "You Won't be Single for Long"

"...As I say, tomorrow is a new beginning."

Damn! It's a cold Friday morning out here at Manila. The wind freakin' slices you into half.

But anyway, two days ago, a Wednesday of all days, amidst org meetings and invitations for John Torres's film Todo Todo Terros (2006) at the UPFI, I went to a Performance Poetry party with a friend of mine. So I went there, rode a trike to 154 Maginhawa St., Sikatuna Village. Stopped in front of a restaurant complex, saw people building up at Blacksoup + Artspace.

Entered, and stood like a lamb.

The restaurant was itself unforgettable in a decorative sense. The clock hanged on the wall was reminiscent of postmodernism. See below:

The clock that I love.

The concept blends with the nature of people performing, and sometimes, as it was for Hilda who performed a rather staggering poem, people disappeared into thin air. A phenomenological occurrence, with meta-narratives here and there, performance poetry is highly dependent on subject positioning: oneself as media of art, much like acting. It allows the poet to become the poem, and poem to become the poet. The immediacy of the act is totally confined in a space and time, 'theatery' but not like theater. An individual act of freedom.

Maam Ginny Mata with her friend --- organizers.

Great, great stuff!

***

AVATAR (2009) at SM North EDSA

... waiting for the 9PM viewing sked with my friend Paul at Coffee Bean and Tea Leaf...


We have just made a masterpiece?


Ciao!
****
UPDATE as of Jan. 20, '10, an hour and a few minutes ago after Avatar (Cameron, 2009) --- A 100% fresh for me but I have encountered some problems on form (its themes and 'stereotypes') and style (3D filmmaking). I will talk about it maybe this week...

Some interesting links:

France24 - The Avatar Revolution [a video debate]
(Dr. David Sorfa of Film-Philosophy talks about it)

Stephanie Zacharek's intriguing critique
(cleared my headache from the eyestrain actually)

Martin Anderson's Avoid getting a 3D headache while watching Avatar

Jim Emerson's similar take on Headaches on watching Avatar


Ciao again!
****

Bordwell and Hong Kong Action Movies

...me, as a quote-whore...


My father and I used watch Kung-fu movies when I was a kid

"...But the author's [author of Sex and Zen and a Bullet in the Head] introduction warns that "film school polemics," dosed with "pointy-headed, white wine-and-baked-brie philosophizing," cannot adequately describe the "scalding propulsion" of these movies. [Hong Kong action movies, that is]

These barbs strikes me like a furry of the ninja throwing stars. I'm old enough to be the father of the young fans, and I've long loved kung fu movies. Worse, I'm a film studies professor. I don't drink white wine, and I get baked brie only at faculty parties, but I do spend time trying to figure out what makes movies work. So, in my pointy-headed way I want to ask other questions. Why do Hong Kong action movies trigger such unbridled passion? How are they put together? How do they exploit the film medium? What is the craft behind them? After you walk out of the best Hong Kong action movies, you are charged up. You feel that you can do anything. How can mere movies create such feelings?..."

------ David Bordwell,
Aesthetics in Action: Kung Fu, Gunplay, and Cinematic Expression
published at
Poetics of Cinema (Routledge, 2008)


I have been reading it for quite a while and I have been enjoying it in every bit.

Ciao!

***

ERIC ROHMER (1920 - 2010) at The Auteurs Daily | Moby-Dick by Herman Melville

...click the link here...
here and here...

Rohmer (1920 - 2010)

The medium for him is a continuous flow of images, of thoughts bathe in light, the whole of it from the grandeur of literature.


****

M
elville's
Dick


Eventually, after furnishing my old room at the province, I faced a number of books that have died literally in my closet. Of course, there were Saul Bellows who just laid on my closet untouched and some other Hemingways hanged from the roof of our house, and the infinite list of Dickens and his insurmountable books from the Victorian London whose bookface i could not recognized. I hate to admit that most of my Austens have just died in neglect of those full nine years that i have left it lodged somewhere under my bed. My room is, itself, a loom of destruction for literature. Rainy days brought not only water but flood. I'm sorry books... I'm very sorry...

But Melville's Dick is all that I have left.

Ciao!
***

DUALISM IN A.I.: Benjamin Sampson's Visual Essay | Eric Rohmer passed away

...something from Catherine that I really felt important...



Part 1


Part 2

Can't wait until every mood subsides. I have been under a 'coma' for days now. The future is unclear but I'll keep you posted. Just saw multiple films of Lav Diaz, i need time to reprocess everything. Have just read important essays on two philosophers: Jean-Paul Sartre and Paul Ricoeur. Phenomenology. Hermeneutics. Bad bad bad faith. Liberation from the past. Masturbation and homosexuality, for Sartre, that is. Purchased three Jia Zhangke: Xiao Wu (or The Pickpocket, 1997), Platform (2000), and Unknown Pleasures (2002). Also acquired two of Rohmer's 'six Moral Tales'. He died four days ago, last Monday, eleventh of January. He was a good man, literary figure who became a filmmaker.


He was a master...

Ciao Eric!

****

"My Hero Film": Make your own film for the world

...laugh or be sad forevaaa...



A customized HD Film!


Dan, a friend of mine, urged me to watched a video over the internet, a beautiful short film he said. So I did with critical expectations. At the start of the film, I observed a unique style of rapid editing, mise-en-scene elements were reminiscent of an Alejandro Gonzalez Inarritu film, global in scope and, of course, its language is Swedish. Sweden, for me, is Ingmar Bergman and Tomas Alfredson, two filmmakers who have made Sweden a central point for Slavic cinema studies. A contemporary short film from Sweden is a fresh venture, exciting and inviting. However, when the hero was revealed, all these expectations collapsed into a pulp and I started to laugh from its candidness. As happy as I was, I was thinking, hmmm... awesome! Quite unexpected! Though these embedding technique have been around for quite a while over the net, it has always been applied on picture forms but not usually on video.

It has been circulating on Facebook for a while now, Dan said over the phone after I called. After a few minutes of researching, I finally found the source of the video: FWA (Favorite Website Awards) (http://www.thefwa.com). It is an advertising site producing high quality flash and shockwave videos. Fascinating testimonials from the website (here) includes:
from Yahoo, "Favorite Website Awards - when it comes to flash style they have the newest in the new.";

from HOW DESIGN MAGAZINE, "Meet some designers who are doing it right at this site. You'll find links to the cream of the crop in Flash Design, interviews with the designers and the opportunity to submit yout own site for consideration.";

from Project Cool, "if you can find new Flash ideas here, you're a true expert."

Their videos uses contemporary techniques on professional filmmaking. Most of the videos assimilates the conditions of spectacle by infusing certain cinematographic techniques such as frontal close-up positioning (see video here) and asymetric framing with some mid-level computer generated images. All of their videos as shot using High definition camera.

Haha! Anyways, I enjoyed the video immensely... Great stuff!


Ciao!
***


LAV DIAZ goes to UP Film Institute this January

...and I am thinking I'm gonna quit school and camp inside the theater... for two days, that is.
[UPDATED!]

Hermias


Ebolusyon


Yes, two of Lav Diaz's magnum opus, Hermias (I don't know if its Book 1 or 2, but who cares?) which runs at around 9 hours, and Ebolusyong ng Isang Pamilyang Pilipino (1993-2005) 11 hours, will be shown at U.P. CineAdarna tomorrow, Wednesday, January 6 and on Thursday, January 7. The two New Year premiers of Lav's features will start at 1:00 PM and end around around I don't know. I have a class tomorrow until around 3 PM, and on Thursday until 4 PM but i would still go there. I WOULD REALLY STILL GO THERE! I WOULD! Yes, and I should.

Well, I think it's okay if i miss a little 3 hours of the two films. I don't think these films would be possible to make forty to sixty years ago without the economy of the digital revolution most of our 'contemplative' filmmakers enjoy today. When Hitchcock made Rope (1948), he was constrained by the 10-minute maximum shot length (940-ft of film stock). However, today, filmmakers can actually film to infinite time as with Sukoruv's one-shot film, A Russian Ark (2002), shot it a plan sequence using a digital camera.

---------------------------

From the persistence of vision, the schedule for LAV DIAZ Retrospective is:

Heremias (Unang Aklat: Ang Alamat Ng Prinsesang Bayawak)
January 6 at 1 pm
January 9 at 1 pm
Ebolusyon Ng Isang Pamilyang Pilipino
January 7 at 1 pm
January 11 at 1 pm

Walang Alaala Ang Mga Paru-paro (Butterflies Have No Memories)
January 13 at 4/7 pm

All screenings at Cine Adarna, Magsaysay and OsmeƱa Avenues, UP Diliman, Quezon City
Tel: 9818500 (UP Trunkline) local 4286, 4289; 9262722 (Telefax); 9263640; 9250286

Haha! Just put it my schedule for the Saturday (Jan 9) and Monday (Jan 11) screenings! Be there guys!

---------------------------


I suddenly found myself laughing at Nathan's post a few days ago, I quote from his:

"A mssg received from my friend 'txt critic' today.
Lincoln Plaza is the WORST! Half of my audience was literally snoring through "The White Ribbon" -- in unison! -- and one half-deaf woman bellowed an hour in, 'I THOUGHT THIS HAD TO DO WITH THE HOLOCAUST.'

I swear UWS seniors ruin more movies than anyone.
I wasn't there but I can attest to this phenomenon. You will always get a perturbed earful when you see a Haneke picture on the Upper West Side... "
------------------------------

Anyway, have you enjoyed you New Year's Day?

Ciao! See you at the cinemas tomorrow! Pakilala kayo ha!

****