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Thursday, May 24, 2012

Tarr Béla's film company closes down


Bela Tarr to shutter production company. Helmer laments 'crisis' in art cinema (John Nadler; Variety; 24 May 2012)
BUDAPEST -- Hungarian auteur Bela Tarr has decided to shutter his production house T.T. Filmmuhely at the end of this month.
According to Tarr, the demise of the shingle, which produced pics like Tarr's "The Man from London" and "The Turin Horse," reflects the crisis besetting art cinema in Hungary and Central and Eastern Europe.
"We have no choice but to acknowledge that despite our efforts our situation has become untenable," Tarr and partner Gabor Teni said in a joint statement.
Tarr has been a critic of reforms to Hungary's film-funding system, which he says discourages art film production in favor of mainstream entertainment pics. In February, Tarr helped organize a film festival to protest against Hungary's new film funding system.
But proponents of the new system, devised by Hungarian-born Hollywood producer Andrew Vajna, state it is trying to strike a balance between art and storytelling in a bid to make the local industry more viable.
In their statement, Tarr and Teni called T.T. Filmmuhely a cinematic voice for society's downtrodden. "We have always stood by the side of humiliated and crippled people, and we have defended them by using our own means."
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Sunday, May 20, 2012

Cristian Mungiu (Cannes 2012)



Cristian Mungiu on his view of cinema (about his film DUPÃ DEALURI / BEYOND THE HILLS)  :
"My choice to not use music and not abuse editing was made before 4 Months, 3 Weeks, 2 Days. Simply because the kind of cinema I'm trying to make tries as much as possible to make the filmmaker's presence invisible. And the two choices that are the most visible for a film are music (which is very external for me) and editing (which shows you what's more important than something else). This is why we all made this effort to make all the film in plan-séquence. It is very complicated to find that specific point in space, geometrically speaking, from where you can shoot a scene (which is tri-dimensional) and still don't lose much. And respect this great idea of theatre, that if you want the things happen in front of you and you [the spectator] will decide what's more important. It's finally a matter of respect for my spectators. I don't think they have to be told when to be emotional or not. And this is why the only part in my film where I use music is the final credit. But I'm very happy for me that the intervention of the Dardenne brothers was a different perspective. They were among the first people who read the screenplay. They didn't say much, but they agreed to be partners. And it was a very good sign for me. [..]

I just want to say one thing to conclude. It's best for this film if people will manage to see it, and journalists will manage to appreciate it as an autonomous film without comparing it to anything else, especially my previous films. That will be good for the film and for its understanding. Thank you."
Cannes International Film Festival, press conference, 19 May 2012 (video 51'38")

Saturday, May 19, 2012

Long takes (Mark Le Fanu)

"[..] Those bravura passages of meditation that mark the high point of a certain kind of art cinema: are they not exactly the thing that no longer exist in film today? In the epoch of MTV and of the 'quick thrilss' associated with the 'event movie', we no longer, it could be claimed, have the patience to look - that is, to linger, to explore, to risk boredom in the search of epiphany - that not so long ago was part and parcel of teh serious cinema-going experience. [..]

Virtuosity itself, though an aspect of art, needs to be treated with caution: one can be impressed with the sort of sequences I am referring to without maintaining that they sum up the totality of film art. For there is, and there has always been, another kind of long take which is based on the contrary on simplicity. Here it is not the skill or the technical dexterity of the artist that is at issue, but the integrity and patient intensity of his gaze. And of course that goes back once again into the origins of silent cinema: to the wonderful moment when it discovered it could achieve its effects quietly, without recourse to the histrionics of traditional stage acting. [..]

Indeed, to ask whether such a style exists any longer is to venture into one of the most contentious areas of contemporary cinema aesthetics. At the heart of the matter lies the discernible disdain that has attached itself in some quarters to art cinema itself, and the supposed arrogance of its "elitist" pretentions. Such a cinema - no modern critic can ignore the fact - is in danger of being culturally marginalised. The reasons for this are sociologically complex and not finally within the scope of this essay, though the renewed cultural and economic power of Hollywood - combined with the staggering effectiveness of its distribution outlets - is plainly one important factor among many. We don't see - most of us - as many nonmainstream (alternatively put: foreign, sub-titled) films as we did, or were allowed to do, twenty years ago. Whether this is because they are not being made, or whether it is because the films that are being made in this tradition are simply not as vital - as living, as relevant - as they were in the days of Dreyer and Mizoguchi, is of course the very matter at issue: the culmination of our enquiry which returns us to our Bazinian starting point. Who are the heirs of Mizoguchi, and where in world cinema do we locate them? [..]

So in general, I think it is important in the definition of the long take to go for the spirit of the thing, not the letter.
Thus, in the case of Abbas Kiarostami mentioned above, it is not so much the actual length of the take that is crucial (as though it were measured by a stop-watch) but the fact that his cinematic style - which does of course utilise long takes - is geared towards contemplative engagement. I hope I have managed to make clear my feeling that the long take is only interesting if it is understood dialectically. Editing and sequence shot are the two basic poles of film-making, and virtuosity in one implies a complementary virtuosity in the other; or at the very least, a recognition of the other's existence. About the great masters of the long take who have not been mentioned in this essay - Angelopoulos, Greenaway, Victor Erice, Jacques Rivette, Miklos Jancsó are some of the names that spring to mind (to which list one might add, from the shores of the avant-garde, video artists like Bill Viola and Douglas Gordon) - the suspicion may sometimes be harboured that their mastery of concentration and the sweep of their camera are in the end no substitute for the wit and legerdemain of the editor's art: that their camera style is abstract and ponderous. For reasons I have given in this essay, I do not go along with that judgement. It will always remain true however that what for one critic represents the pure essence of the art form is, for another critic, mere arid formalism. So where we are, and where we are going, is genuinely complicated. One thing is certain: it is as clear as can be that in the next 50 years totally new rhythms will be discovered arising out of the possibilities of the new digital technologies: new ways of imbricating, metamorphosing and doctoring images for our delectation. Still I hope and I trust that the simplicity of the classic long take will survive in some artists' hearts as the emblem both of what cinema has been, and of what it may powerfully aspire to."

(Mark Le Fanu; POV; #4; Dec 1997) 
Then he lists a few example of contemporary (in 1997) filmmakers who favour time rather than virtuosity :
  • Days of Eclipse (1988/Sokurov/Soviet Union)
  • Freeze Die Come To Life (1989/Vitali Kanevsky/Soviet Union)
  • Belovy (1993/Victor Kossakovsky/Russia)
  • The time to love and the time to die (1985/HHH/Taiwan)
  • The River (1996/Tsai Ming-liang/Taiwan)
  • Through the Olive Trees (1994/Kiarostami/Iran)
  • Salaam Cinema (1995/Moshen Makmalbaf/Iran)
  • The White Balloon (1995/Jafar Panahi/Iran)
However these are not CCC (except The River), but his point is to note the use of "long takes" in recent films, and in this case, the "paced long takes" versus the "jittery long takes". And we know that there are many types of filmmaking aesthetics comprised within the umbrella technique of "paced long takes". A slow long take only becomes "contemplative" when the entire structure of the film is developped in the spirit of CCC, which means without resorting to dialogue-driven story, to plot-driven mise en scène, to classical staging, to musical illustration, to overt forefront drama.
Le Fanu only mentions Russia (or Ex-Soviet Union), Taiwan and Iran... Even in 1997, there were other parts of the world interested in a patient pacing outside of the commercial formula. We could add : Tarr Béla, Sharuna Bartas, Wong Kar Wai, Alain Cavalier, Claire Denis, Eli Suleiman, Kore-eda, Jim Jarmusch, Chantal Akerman, Manuel de Oliveira, Omirbayev, Aki Kaurismaki, James Benning, Parajanov, Joe Stelling, Govindan Aravindan, Wim Wenders... who were no minor contributors.







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Wednesday, May 16, 2012

VCinema podcast

VCinema says :
The VCinema Show (aka “The VCinema Podcast”) is our flagship podcast, and much like the VCinema blog, coverage is dedicated to Asian film from all countries, genres, and eras.

Selected CCC-friendly podcast titles :
  • Episode 42 – Goodbye, Dragon Inn (Taiwan; 2003) and lament about distracted attendance and small screens (Episode Listing)  2h10' [MP3
  • Episode 30 – Taiwanese New Wave Cinema Special. Cafe Lumiere (Taiwan, 2003) review with guest host Marc Saint-Cyr of the Toronto JFilm Pow-wow (Episode Listing) 2h16' [MP3
  • Episode 29 – The Scent of Green Papaya (Thailand, 1993) review (Episode Listing) 1h55' [MP3
  • Episode 26 – Taiwanese New Wave Cinema Special. Yi Yi (Taiwan, 2000) review with guest host Marc Saint-Cyr from The Toronto JFilm Pow-Wow (Download|Episode Listing)
  • Episode 9 – Oasis (2002) (Download|Episode Listing)

Friday, May 04, 2012

Le droit à la paresse (Jorda)

«Le droit à la paresse», à relire d’urgence

Dans la nuit du 25 au 26 novembre 1911, Paul et Laura Lafargue mettaient fin à leurs jours, considérant qu’il était temps d’en finir avant d’être une charge pour les autres. Le premier s’était rendu célèbre pour son Droit à la paresse, la seconde était la fille et la traductrice de Karl Marx. A leur manière, ils n’ont pas voulu voler le bien le plus précieux de tout être capable de sentir et de penser, le temps.

Le combat de Paul Lafargue pour la réduction du temps de travail vient de ce jugement qu’il fera dernier : chacun a le droit d’employer librement le temps plutôt que d’en être l’esclave. En faisant croire aux ouvriers, à l’aide de l’Eglise, que la vie est travail, les capitalistes passent leur temps à voler celui des travailleurs. Ces derniers ne devraient pas réclamer le droit au travail - c’est une erreur masochiste selon Paul Lafargue -, mais le droit à la paresse. Car c’est la possibilité d’employer son temps à ne pas travailler qui est la plus injustement distribuée : les propriétaires peuvent s’y adonner de bien des manières quand les ouvriers triment en servant des machines. C’est l’«amour du travail» qui a causé les plus grandes misères à ceux qui n’ont rien. Ils sont devenus entièrement dépendants du travail qui corrompt l’intelligence et les organismes, qui tue «toutes les plus belles facultés», écrit Paul Lafargue en 1880. Selon lui, la finalité du socialisme sera de répartir le travail et la paresse sans distinction sociale. A chacun d’employer son temps selon ses besoins.

En un siècle, les congés payés, les huit heures par jour, les quarante, puis les trente-neuf et les trente-cinq heures par semaine, la retraite à 60 ans ont divisé le temps de travail par deux. A rebours de cette histoire, une rupture est en train de se produire : le temps que nous consacrons au travail s’allonge sous l’effet des réformes et s’intensifie avec les réorganisations. Alors que le progrès social visait précisément à réduire la durée du travail et à favoriser l’autonomie des travailleurs, ces derniers doivent désormais travailler plus longtemps la tête dans le guidon. Adieu paresse.

Au temps où les marchés triomphent de la démocratie, les Grecs ont été traités de paresseux, accusés d’avoir fait bombance pendant que d’autres travaillaient. Tragédie de l’histoire pour ce pays où sont nées la philosophie et la démocratie, où être libre, au temps de Platon, c’était ne pas travailler, c’était se consacrer aux affaires de la Cité, à l’art et à la pensée. Cette sagesse antique a inspiré Paul Lafargue, pour qui les machines remettront le monde à l’endroit quand elles seront au service des travailleurs : une journée de trois heures de travail suffira pour satisfaire leurs besoins matériels. Une fois désintoxiqués du travail, ils pourront employer leur temps à se régénérer, physiquement et intellectuellement. Alors, dans ce régime paresseux, «pour tuer le temps qui nous tue seconde par seconde, il y aura des spectacles et des représentations théâtrales toujours et toujours».

Accepter aujourd’hui l’idée que nous devrons travailler davantage demain, c’est accepter d’être des esclaves plus compétents et plus endurants. La «religion du travail», comme dit Paul Lafargue, connaît peu de résistance à son emprise ; ses croyants sont de plus en plus nombreux dans un monde où règne l’agitation névrotique des marchés. La philosophie et la démocratie sont balayées par le temps de l’économie. Le temps est de l’argent, et les gains se calculent désormais à la nanoseconde, voire à la picoseconde.

La messe semble dite, la paresse est un temps inutile, un temps qui ne vaut rien. Il est bon de relire le Droit à la paresse. Il nous rappelle que la liberté d’employer le temps est une liberté fondamentale. Arrêter le temps, comme le firent Paul et Laura Lafargue, en est l’expression ultime.

Henri Jorda (Libération; 28 novembre 2011) 


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