VIFF 2015: The Assassin (Hou Hsiao-hsien, 2015)

the assassin

Hou Hsiao-hsien structures his new film, The Assassin, as a sort of once upon a time tale. It begins with narration, a mix of the historical and the mythic, and I am at once immersed in a dream-like tale that will, indeed, haunt my memory, just as history and myth so often do, becoming reference points in my present, even when I am not consciously aware of their influence.

It is ninth century China, and political struggle infects the kingdom. The royal court fears a strong, militarized outer province, Weibo; too much delegated power is a threat to the court’s own strength. Weibo, with a century of nearly complete self-governance, fears a reduction in its autonomy. It is a struggle that absorbs everyone.

And yet within this kingdom, there is a mother who tells another story, the story of a single bird. Caged and alone, the bird sits silent, a small stranger in the human world around it, unable to sing to those so unlike itself. Its human keepers feel compassion for it and give it a mirror. Recognizing something like itself, it sings a song of sadness. It dances, and then it dies.

Continue reading “VIFF 2015: The Assassin (Hou Hsiao-hsien, 2015)”

Friday October 16 – Thursday October 22

Featured Film:

The Forbidden Room at the Northwest Film Forum

One of the best films of the year opens this week at the Northwest Film Forum, Guy Maddin’s phantasmagoric ode to the weird and beautiful in cinema. A kaleidoscopic accordion of stories, about thirty different narratives, embedded within each other and branching across time, space, genre and logic, The Forbidden Room is without a doubt the most Guy Maddin film ever made, and probably his best too. We reported on it from Vancouver on The George Sanders Show, and Mike’s review is here.
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Playing This Week:

Central Cinema:

Ghostbusters (Ivan Reitman, 1984) Fri-Tues
The Evil Dead (Sam Raimi, 1982) Fri-Weds

SIFF Cinema Egyptian:

Victoria (Sebastian Schipper) Fri-Thurs Our Review

Century Federal Way:

The Throne (Lee Joon-ik) Fri-Thurs

Grand Cinema:

Coming Home (Zhang Yimou) Fri-Thurs
Peace Officer (Brad Barber & Scott Christopherson) Fri-Thurs
Run Free – The True Story of Caballo Blanco (Sterling Noren) Sun Only
Steve Jobs: The Man in the Machine (Alex Gibney) Tues Only
Young Frankenstein (Mel Brooks, 1974) Weds Only
Attack on Titan Part 2 (Shinji Higuchi) Weds & Thurs Only

Grand Illusion Cinema:

The American Genre Film Archive and Something Weird Video present Smut Without Smut: The Mad Love Life of a Hot Vampire & The Haunted P***y (Ray Dennis Steckler, 1976 & Doris Wishman, 1971) Fri Only
A Nightmare On Elm Street (Wes Craven, 1984) Sat & Mon Only 35mm
A Nightmare On Elm Street 2: Freddy’s Revenge (Jack Sholder, 1985) Sat & Tues Only 35mm
Rampaging Mutant 35mm Triple Feature Pizza Party Sun Only
Science Crazed (Ron Switzer, 1989) Weds Only
Valley of the Sasquatch and Creature from Black Lake (John Portanova, 2015 & Joy N. Houck Jr., 1976) Thurs Only Filmmaker in Attendance 35mm

Landmark Guild 45th:

Freeheld (Peter Sollett) Fri-Thurs

Cinemark Lincoln Square:

Freeheld (Peter Sollett) Fri-Thurs
Bruce Lee – The Fighter (Srinu Vaitla) Fri-Thurs
Pyaar Ka Punchnama 2 (Luv Ranjan) Fri-Thurs
Rudrama Devi (Gunasekhar) Fri-Thurs
Back to the Future Triple Feature (Robert Zemeckis) Weds Only

Regal Meridian:

Goodbye Mr. Loser (Yan Fei & Peng Damo) Fri-Thurs
Ladrones (Joe Menendez) Fri-Thurs

Northwest Film Forum:

The Forbidden Room (Guy Maddin) Fri-Thurs Our Review
Bring Me the Head of Tim Horton (Guy Maddin) Sat Afternoon Only
Ben Gibbard in Conversation with Lynn Shelton about scoring Laggies Sat Only
Urgh! A Music War (Derek Burbidge, 1981) Sat Only 35mm
Head (Bob Rafelson, 1968) Sun Only
The Seattle South Asian Film Festival Mon & Tues Full Program
The Seattle Process with Brett Hamil  Weds Only
Shredder Orpheus (Robert McGinley, 1989) Thurs Only

AMC Pacific Place:

Freeheld (Peter Sollett) Fri-Thurs

Regal Parkway Plaza:

Etiquette for Mistresses (Chito S. Roño) Fri-Thurs
Ladrones (Joe Menendez) Fri-Thurs

Scarecrow Video Screening Room:

Goodbye, Lenin! (Wolfgang Becker, 2003) Fri Only
The Invisible Man (James Whale, 1933) Sun Only
The Invisible Woman (A. Edward Sutherland & Joe May, 1940) Sun Only
Spaced Invaders (Patrick Read Johnson, 1990) Mon Only
Silence of the Lambs (Jonathan Demme, 1991) Tues Only
Night of the Demon (Jacques Tourneur, 1957) Weds Only
The 39 Steps (Alfred Hitchcock, 1935) Thurs Only

Seattle Art Museum:

Pitfall (André de Toth, 1948) Thurs Only 35mm

Landmark Seven Gables:

Beasts of No Nation (Cary Fukanaga) Fri-Thurs

SIFF Film Center:

The Seattle South Asian Film Festival Fri-Sun Full Program
Archie’s Betty (Gerald Peary) Weds Only
The Decline of Western Civilization Part One (Penelope Spheeris) Thurs Only Our Interview

Sundance Cinemas Seattle:

Mississippi Grind (Ryan Fleck & Anna Boden) Fri-Thurs
Meet the Patels (Ravi & Geeta Patel) Fri-Thurs

SIFF Cinema Uptown:

Goodnight Mommy (Ulrich Seidel) Fri-Thurs
My Fair Lady (George Cukor, 1964) Tues Only
French Cinema Now Festival 2015 Starts Thurs Full Program

Varsity Theatre:

Time Out of Mind (Oren Moverman) Fri-Thurs

VIFF 2015: Domestic Intimacies: Ixcanul (Jayro Bustamante, 2015) and 45 Years (Andrew Haigh, 2015)

Maria and MotherGeoff sitting with Kate

Preface:
Human, and faced with a sea of things, images, stories, characters, all bobbing this way and that, slipping and sliding away from me, I seek some rope to grasp, a line that might form for me a connection between the things. And if I can only pull that line taut, I might be able to stay above the waves and see a pattern in the flotsam.

It isn’t really flotsam, of course, that wave of films I found my fest-inexperienced self submerged beneath at this year’s Vancouver International Film Festival.  Each film in itself is a unique, individual thing, only forced, by necessity into a mass. And we should be used, in any case, to consuming art in the mass, collective form – in a museum, in an anthology – curated and then presented to us as somehow related objects.  Even if we pick our way through an anthology or skip rather guiltily past the 13th century wing of the museum and make straight for the Impressionists, we are still aware of all of these disparate things gathered together under an umbrella of a particular Thing, and, invited to do so, the pattern seeking mind all the more eagerly links themes, ideas, modes, shapes, colors.

Artists, of course, do not live in a vacuum, and their works may be, certainly, drawing from other works, even without conscious intent. Still, it would be difficult to say 8th century Chinese landscapes were drawing any influence from Byzantine frescoes. And yet, place such a set of landscapes next to a few frescoes, I’d surely spot a pattern. I can’t help it; I put them together, and the one will converse with the other.

And so, while yet understanding the potential folly of such conjunctions and conversations, I can’t help but make them and hope that such a convergence will illuminate the individual objects themselves.

Jayro Bustamante’s Guatemalan film, Ixcanul, has very little in common with Andrew Haigh’s thoroughly British film, 45 Years, and yet, as the VIFF programming gods would have it, I saw them back to back on a Saturday afternoon early this October, and they nestle comfortably together in my mind, chapter 1 and chapter 2 in a little anthology of Domestic Intimacies.   Continue reading “VIFF 2015: Domestic Intimacies: Ixcanul (Jayro Bustamante, 2015) and 45 Years (Andrew Haigh, 2015)”

VIFF 2015: Mountains May Depart (Jia Zhangke, 2015)

RGB tiff image by MetisIP

 Part of our coverage of the 2015 Vancouver International Film Festival. This review is by Vancouver-based critic Neil Bahadur.

The most ambitious film so far from the great director Jia Zhangke, working in a gorgeous, cyclical structure that it might make it too easy to disregard the film’s more provocative aspects. Jia has been obsessed with the globalization of China since day one, but what is different here is the syphoning of aspects of contemporary China into three broken segments, each of which purport to be a narrative-driven family melodrama. But what seems youthful naivete is rather the fading of a culture, what seems disillusionment of middle-age is the economic collapse of the world we live in today. . . so the earnestness of the film’s final third is the only response possible to the removal of culture entirely. Jia’s 2025 is a fairy-tale world, a complete fantasy wherein this (actually very conventional) three-act structure, surrealism is fully integrated into this narrative sense. And because of the disparity between this part and the first two, this approach disconcerts rather than shocks or provokes. The movie is a series of Brechtian devices which exhaust themselves, and so the only option left is to wear its heart on its sleeve.

Continue reading “VIFF 2015: Mountains May Depart (Jia Zhangke, 2015)”

Friday October 9 – Thursday October 15

Featured Film:

Cat People Double Feature at Scarecrow Video

As part of a series of excellent horror films featured this month on their Screening Room calendar, this Wednesday only Scarecrow Video presents a double feature of Val Lewton classics. The original 1942 Cat People, directed by Jacques Tourneur, is one of the great horror films of the studio era, while 1944’s sequel, The Curse of the Cat People, directed by Robert Wise, is something altogether singular, less a horror film than a meditation on the ways children cope with trauma and loss, a haunted fable and arguably the best film Wise ever made.
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Playing This Week:

Ark Lodge Cinemas:

Moose: The Movie (G. Logan Dellinger) Fri-Thurs

Central Cinema:

The Lost Boys (Joel Schumacher, 1987) Fri-Mon
Twilight (Catherine Hardwicke, 2008) Fri-Tues
Paper Tigers (James Redford) Tues Only

SIFF Cinema Egyptian:

Seattle Lesbian & Gay Film Festival Fri-Thurs Full Program

Grand Cinema:

Tacoma Film Festival Fri-Thurs Full Program

Grand Illusion Cinema:

The Creeping Garden (Tim Grabham & Jasper Sharp) Fri-Thurs
The Green Slime (Kinji Fukasaku, 1968) Fri & Sat Only 16mm

Landmark Guild 45th:

Freeheld (Peter Sollett) Fri-Thurs

Cinemark Lincoln Square:

Freeheld (Peter Sollett) Fri-Thurs
Talvar (Meghna Gulzar) Fri-Thurs
Rudrama Devi (Gunasekhar) Fri-Thurs
Monty Python & the Holy Grail (Terry Gilliam & Terry Jones, 1975) Sun & Weds Only Quote-Along

Northwest Film Forum:

Seattle Lesbian & Gay Film Festival Fri-Thurs Full Program

AMC Pacific Place:

Coming Home (Zhang Yimou) Fri-Thurs
Lost in Hong Kong (Xu Zheng) Fri-Thurs
Saving Mr. Wu (Ding Sheng) Fri-Thurs
Freeheld (Peter Sollett) Fri-Thurs

Regal Parkway Plaza:

Etiquette for Mistresses (Chito S. Roño) Fri-Thurs

Scarecrow Video Screening Room:

They Live (John Carpenter, 1988) Fri Only
Zeder (Pupi Avati, 1983) Sat Only
Kenny & Co. (Don Coscarelli, 1976) Sun Only
The Brood (David Cronenberg, 1979) Mon Only
Rosemary’s Baby (Roman Polanski, 1968) Tues Only
Cat People (Jacques Tourneur, 1942) Weds Only
Curse of the Cat People (Robert Wise, 1944) Weds Only
Gary Larson’s Tales from the Far Side (Marv Newland, 1994) Thurs Only

Landmark Seven Gables:

Meru (Jimmy Chin & Elizabeth Chai Vasarhelyi) Fri-Thurs

SIFF Film Center:

The Quay Brothers in 35mm (Stephen & Timothy Quay) Fri-Thurs 35mm
Final Girls (Todd Strauss-Schulson) Fri-Sun Only

Sundance Cinemas Seattle:

Yakuza Apocalypse (Takashi Miike) Fri-Thurs
Peace Officer (Brad Barber & Scott Christopherson) Fri-Thurs
Meet the Patels (Ravi & Geeta Patel) Fri-Thurs

SIFF Cinema Uptown:

Goodnight Mommy (Ulrich Seidel) Fri-Thurs
Seattle Polish Film Festival Fri-Thurs Full Program
Final Girls (Todd Strauss-Schulson) Mon-Thurs Only
A Brilliant Young Mind (Morgan Matthews) Fri-Thurs
The Heart of the Game (Ward Serrill) Tues Only
This Changes Everything (Avi Lewis) Weds Only Naomi Klein in person

Varsity Theatre:

Time Out of Mind (Oren Moverman) Fri-Thurs
Trash (Stephen Daldry & Christian Duurvoort) Fri-Thurs
Finders Keepers (Bryan Carberry & Clay Tweel) Fri-Thurs
Seattle Latino Film Festival Fri-Sun
The Hobbit: The Battle of Five Armies Extended Edition (Peter Jackson) Tues Only

Friday October 2 – Thursday October 8

Featured Film:

The Vancouver International Film Festival

We’re still in Vancouver for a few more days. It’s been a great festival so far, and we’ve managed to watch and write and podcast about a number of films that already have upcoming release dates on Seattle Screens, including Guy Maddin’s The Forbidden Room, Hou Hsiao-hsien’s The Assassin, and Rick Alverson’s Entertainment. We’ll have much more coming this week, including looks at new films from Jafar Panahi, Jia Zhangke and Sylvia Chang. Where to follow us.
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Playing This Week:

Central Cinema:

Harold and Maude (Hal Ashby, 1971) Fri-Sun
Life of Brian (Terry Jones, 1979) Fri-Tues

Crest Cinema Center:

Phoenix (Christian Petzold) Fri-Thurs Our Review

SIFF Cinema Egyptian:

Shanghai (Mikael Håfström) Fri-Weds  
A Nightmare on Elm Street (Wes Craven, 1984) Fri Midnight Only
The People Under the Stairs (Wes Craven, 1991) Sat Midnight Only

Grand Cinema:

Sleeping with Other People (Leslye Headland) Fri-Thurs
Learning to Drive (Isabel Coixet) Fri-Thurs
Pawn Sacrifice (Edward Zwick) Fri-Thurs
A Pigeon Sat on a Branch Reflecting Existence (Roy Andresson) Tues Only Our Review
Private Violence (Cynthia Hill) Weds Only
Attack on Titan Part One (Shinji Higuchi) Weds Only Our Review
When I Live My Life Over Again (Robert Edwards) Thurs Only

Grand Illusion Cinema:

Partisan (Ariel Kleiman) Fri-Thurs
Welcome To Leith (Michael Beach Nichols & Christopher K. Walker) Sat-Mon, Weds-Thurs
VHS Über Alles presents Hide and Go Shriek (Skip Schoolnik, 1988) Sat Only VHS
Iris Film Collective & EXcinema presents The End of the World Tues Only 16mm

Landmark Guild 45th:

Meru (Jimmy Chin & Elizabeth Chai Vasarhelyi) Fri-Thurs

Cinemark Lincoln Square:

Singh is Bling (Prabhu Deva) Fri-Thurs
Talvar (Meghna Gulzar) Fri-Thurs
The Princess Bride (Rob Reiner, 1987) Sun & Weds Only

Regal Meridian:

Sleeping with Other People (Leslye Headland) Fri-Thurs
Pawn Sacrifice (Edward Zwick) Fri-Thurs

Northwest Film Forum:

Local Sightings Closing Night: Puget Soundtrack: Ahamefule Oluo presents Police Beat  (Robinson Devor, 2005) Sat Only
Mala Mala (Antonio Santini & Dan Sickles) Thurs Only

AMC Loews Oak Tree:

Sleeping with Other People (Leslye Headland) Fri-Thurs

AMC Pacific Place:

Coming Home (Zhang Yimou) Fri-Thurs
Lost in Hong Kong (Xu Zheng) Fri-Thurs
Saving Mr. Wu (Ding Sheng) Fri-Thurs

Regal Parkway Plaza:

Sleeping with Other People (Leslye Headland) Fri-Thurs
Etiquette for Mistresses (Chito S. Roño) Fri-Thurs

Seattle Art Museum:

Ride the Pink Horse (Robert Montgomery, 1947) Thurs Only 35mm

Landmark Seven Gables:

The Second Mother (Anna Muylaert) Fri-Thurs

SIFF Film Center:

Gabo: The Creation of Gabriel García Márquez (Justin Webster) Fri-Thurs
Finding Vivian Maier (John Maloof & Charlie Siskel) Tues & Weds Only
The Salt of the Earth (Wim Wenders) Tues & Weds Only

AMC Southcenter:

Pawn Sacrifice (Edward Zwick) Fri-Thurs

Sundance Cinemas Seattle:

Coming Home (Zhang Yimou) Fri-Thurs
Going Clear (Alex Gibney) Fri-Thurs
Meet the Patels (Ravi & Geeta Patel) Fri-Thurs
Northern Soul (Elaine Constantine) Fri-Thurs

Regal Thornton Place:

Pawn Sacrifice (Edward Zwick) Fri-Thurs

SIFF Cinema Uptown:

Goodnight Mommy (Ulrich Seidel) Fri-Thurs
Racing Extinction (Louie Psihoyos) Fri-Thurs
Breathe (Mélanie Laurent) Fri-Thurs
Black Orpheus (Marcel Camus) Mon Only

Varsity Theatre:

Shanghai (Mikael Håfström) Fri-Thurs
Wildlike (Frank Hall Green) Fri-Thurs
Manhattan Short Film Festival Sat-Tues
Seattle Latino Film Festival Sat-Tues
The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey Extended Edition (Peter Jackson) Mon Only

VIFF 2015: The Forbidden Room (Guy Maddin & Evan Johnson, 2015)

This is part of our coverage of the 2015 Vancouver International Film Festival.

forbidden room faces

Guy Maddin made a music video for a Sparks song about asses starring a lobotomized Udo Kier and whip-wielding Geraldine Chaplin. He (along with co-writer/director Evan Johnson) also made a couple dozen more weird, wacky, wonderful films and smashed them together in the glorious, uproarious new feature, The Forbidden Room. It’s Maddin’s best feature to date and one of the essential cinema experiences of the year.

Continue reading “VIFF 2015: The Forbidden Room (Guy Maddin & Evan Johnson, 2015)”

VIFF Notes: Days 3 & 4

This is part of our coverage of the 2015 Vancouver International Film Festival.

Some brief thoughts on films I saw Sunday and Monday at the festival.

piper

The Piper (Kim Gwangtae, 2015): Full review

three cities

A Tale of Three Cities (Mabel Cheung, 2015): Sweeping historical romance that hearkens back to the grand gestures of classical Hollywood. The film charts the courtship of Jackie Chan’s parents, played by Tang Wei and Sean Lau, as they are kept apart under the duress of war and an evolving 20th century China. It’s better than Doctor Zhivago.

forbidden room

The Forbidden Room (Guy Maddin & Evan Johnson, 2015): A madcap descent into the outer territories of cinema. The Forbidden Room is an audacious and hilarious collection of absurd vignettes, all nested in one another, dreams within hallucinations. Everyone is game to follow Maddin and Johnson through the kaleidoscopic kino-hole, including such greats as Mathieu Almaric, Geraldine Chaplin, and Udo Kier. The undisputed highlight of the festival so far.

port of call

Port of Call (Philip Yung, 2015): An unflinching dual examination of a teenager’s short life and that of the detective who desperately needs closure for her gruesome death. The film contains some of the most graphic imagery ever put onscreen. Acts as both a window into the struggles of contemporary China and a portrait of the unique and universal sadness of teenage girls. Felt at times like a cross between Zodiac and Fire Walk With Me but scarier than both.

tomorrow

It’s Already Tomorrow in Hong Kong (Emily Ting, 2015): White guy living in Hong Kong meets an American woman of Chinese descent. The two hit it off but complications ensue when it is discovered they have other attachments. As a travelogue for the gorgeous city of Hong Kong, this works well enough, with depictions of the majestic skyline and bustling streets. As a romance or a comedy or a showcase for the art of acting, it is a failure.

RIGHT NOW, WRONG THEN_key still (3)

Right Now, Wrong Then (Hong Sangsoo, 2015): Full review

VIFF 2015: Right Now, Wrong Then (Hong Sangsoo, 2015)

This is part of our coverage of the 2015 Vancouver International Film Festival.

RIGHT NOW, WRONG THEN_key still (1)

The new Hong Sangsoo film, Right Now, Wrong Then, is very much concerned with the famed director’s usual themes. He is again at work with a story involving a hard-drinking filmmaker and the nature of casual encounters. But the movie is less about its surface than with an inquiry into its structural narrative. As always, it’s the differences from the works that came before it that excite. The nice thing about Right Now, Wrong Then is that it also affords the joys of differentiating it from itself.

Continue reading “VIFF 2015: Right Now, Wrong Then (Hong Sangsoo, 2015)”

Entertainment (Rick Alverson, 2015)

entertainment_0Part of our coverage of the 2015 Vancouver International Film Festival. This review is by Vancouver-based critic Neil Bahadur.

Rick Alverson’s new film Entertainment, isn’t perfect. At first, I didn’t know if I’d even call it great. If not for Neil Hamburger’s humor, the first hour of the film would feel endlessly repetitive and banal, situations reiterating themselves with seeming meaninglessness, mimicking The Comedian’s situation which repeats itself in a series of dive-bars, where he is only greeted with disappointment and indifference. Not for nothing is the only place where Hamburger elicits a response a prison. Self-defeat rules this comedian’s life, and so too the film; it seems humor itself is the only defense mechanism left before falling into the void of cynicism and despair. Alverson’s distance is disconcerting at first: as Phil Coldiron alluded to in his review, Alverson has an Antonioni-esque spacial awareness. But perhaps this is necessary to make distinct the difference between Hamburger the performer, and Turkington the actor. Yet both are very similar: Turkington attempts twice to connect to his daughter and fails, Hamburger attempts several times to connect to an audience and fails. Hamburger doesn’t use these life-disappointments as fodder for material, he rather vomits out mad, belligerent nonsense (admittedly for me, often quite amusing) But for all these lapses of humor, I was ready to give up on the film. “OH great, another movie about like, alienation or something and some shitty guy being an asshole.” There’s even an impossibly obvious shot where our comedian walks around in circles. But then Turkington/Hamburger has to face repercussions for his actions, and suddenly the film takes a sharp, unexpected turn into something far more abstract, forcing me to re-evaluate something I was about to write-off. It became clear that Hamburger/Turkington is on a sort of pilgrimage, a hellish progression from self-consciousness to self-awareness.

Continue reading Entertainment (Rick Alverson, 2015)”