SIFF 2015: Virtuosity (Christopher Wilkinson, 2014)

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

virtuosity clapboard

Every four years the best young pianists in the world descend upon Fort Worth, Texas for the Cliburn Competition, the World Series of people playing impossibly complex classical music. The eventual winner is bestowed with an instant career of studio recordings and global performances. The losers get by, biding their time before entering their name again 48 months later. Christopher Wilkinson’s serviceable if occasionally busy documentary tracks roughly a half dozen contestants at the 2013 competition.

Documentaries that shine a light on a specialized subset of society have become so commonplace that it feels as though every two-bit convention and cult oddity has already been unearthed and overexposed. With this saturation comes a familiarity with the narrative’s conventions. To Virtuosity‘s detriment, we can tell just by the camera’s focus who is going to make the finals, long before the names are announced. On the other hand, the film has a natural villain hanging out on the margins and it chooses to let him recede, sidestepping an easy angle. (It would have been a fun bit of schadenfreude to see this confident man fail, however, had he been given more opportunities to hang himself.)

Screen Shot 2015-05-10 at 10.55.03 PM

While the film is mostly focused on the performances and the personalities of the pianists (“artists” doesn’t feel like the right word for these technically impressive but creatively quiet individuals) the narrative does find time to wander down a few side avenues. The most interesting thread highlights two different critical analyses of the same performer that basically exposes the whole notion of competition at this expert level as a sham, dependent upon the fickle whims of an older generation the world has already passed by.

Speaking of getting passed by, the most tantalizing story here is the one left untold. What happens to these talented individuals once the competition ends? What paths do these kids follow once they’re considered simply the the sixth best pianist in the world? One character alludes to being dropped back on the street. That is a sequel worth paying to see. Call it Reality.

(Virtuosity plays 5/20 at SIFF Cinema Uptown, 5/21 at the Harvard Exit, 5/24 at Lincoln Square.) 

SIFF 2015: Seoul Searching (Benson Lee, 2015)

This is part of our coverage of the 2015 Seattle International Film Festival.seoul searching ladies

Seoul Searching is set in 1986 at a summer camp created for foreign-born Korean teens to get reacquainted with the culture of their ancestors. Kids from all over the world are flown in to learn of Korean traditions and history. The opening voiceover explains that the program, which was indeed an actual project undertaken by the government, was ultimately abandoned because the unruly youth were too much to handle. Their counselors and teachers could not keep the kids in check. There’s a lot of potential here for comedy in the cultural clash and drama in the generational divide. Unfortunately, Seoul Searching chooses to rely on tired tropes instead of showing us something–frankly, anything–new. Continue reading “SIFF 2015: Seoul Searching (Benson Lee, 2015)”

SIFF 2015: Temporary Family (Cheuk Wan-chi, 2014)

This is part of our coverage of the 2015 Seattle International Film Festival.19912102

Reading the description for this comedy about people in the Hong Kong forced to share a luxury flat while they try to flip it in an over-competitive bubble market, I was hoping for a Hong Kong version of The More the Merrier, the 1943 George Stevens movie in which Jean Arthur and Joel McRea are forced to share an apartment in wartime Washington DC and are maneuvered into love by their third roommate, the portly, angelic goofball Charles Coburn. And my hopes were more or less fulfilled. Like the Stevens film, it’s a screwball but with a slower pace and deeper heart that its immediate generic predecessors (for the earlier film, the verbal anarchy of Howard Hawks and Preston Sturges; for the new one, the tangled webs of Wai Ka-fai and Johnnie To’s consumerist rom-coms like The Shopaholics or the Don’t Go Breaking My Heart movies). Both movies have thin premises stretched almost farther than they can go, a delicate balance of cynical humor and dopey romanticism with a liberal amount of schmaltz.

Continue reading “SIFF 2015: Temporary Family (Cheuk Wan-chi, 2014)”

SIFF 2015 Preview: Week One

Screen Shot 2015-05-10 at 11.11.58 PM

The 2015 edition of the Seattle International Film festival kicks off this Thursday, May 14th and we here at Seattle Screen Scene are planning some extensive coverage. We’ll be watching and reviewing as many festival films as we can over the next several weeks, and highlighting some you may want to check out. As a preview, here’s a list of some of our most-anticipated films from the festival’s first week. We’ll add links to the titles as we review them.

Week of May 15 – May 21:

The Look of SilenceThe much-buzzed about sequel to The Act of Killing focuses on the families of those lost in Indonesian genocide.

Results – The latest from Andrew Bujalski, the director of Computer Chess, is a romantic comedy with Guy Pearce, Cobie Smulders and Kevin Corrigan. The first of two movies starring Cobie Smulders at this year’s festival.

Seoul Searching – A comedy about diasporic Korean teens at a summer camp from Korean-American director Benson Lee.

When Marnie Was There – Possibly the last ever feature from Studio Ghibli, a gothic ghost story/coming of age tale from director Hiromasa Yonebayashi (The Secret of Arietty) that recalls some of the best films of Val Lewton.

The Red Shoes – A new restoration of Michael Powell & Emeric Pressburger’s 1948 film about the incompatibility of music, ballet and life that is simply one of the best movies ever made.

The Coffin in the Mountain – Three stories linked by the discovery of a mysterious corpse in a remote Chinese village. Directed by Xin Yukun.

Snow on the Blades – Director Setsuro Wakamatsu’s film about a samurai’s 13 year quest for vengeance in the 1860s, during the waning days of the Tokugawa shogunate as Japan begins rapidly modernizing.

Beyond Zero 1914-1918 – Director Bill Morrison’s excavation of never-before-seen World War I footage combined with a new score commissioned by the Kronos Quartet.

natural history – Experimental filmmaker James Benning’s exploration of the Museum of Natural History in Vienna.

Little Forest: Summer/Autumn – First two parts of a four-part movie about a woman who moves to the country and finds meaning in the growing and cooking of food. Like a Food Network version of Only Yesterday or No Regrets for Our Youth.

Little Forest: Winter/Spring – The other two parts. Directed by Junichi Mori.

Haemoo – First feature from director Shim Sungbo, who co-wrote Bong Joonho’s acclaimed Memories of Murder. A thriller about a fisherman’s disastrous attempt to smuggle Chinese immigrants into Korea.

A Hard Day – Another Korean thriller, this one about a cop who accidentally kills someone and tries to cover it up, like a black comic variation on Where the Sidewalk Ends.

Virtuosity – A documentary about a quadrennial piano competition held in Ft. Worth, Texas, where the young and elite compete for a chance at classical music stardom.

Temporary Family – Hong Kong screwball comedy about a man who has one year to buy an apartment so his girlfriend will marry him. So he invests in a luxury apartment with three other people in the hope of flipping it. I’m imagining a HK version of The More the Merrier. Starring Sammi Cheng, Nick Cheung and Angelababy and directed by Cheuk Wan-chi.

The Color of Pomegranates – Restored version of Sergei Parajonov’s 1968 film about Armenian poet Sayat Nova that is surely one of the most oblique, and weirdly beautiful biopics ever made.

Friday May 8 – Thursday May 14

Featured Film:

The Triplets of Belleville at the Central Cinema

Sylvain Chomet’s 2003 animated classic about cycling, jazz and questionable eating habits comes to the Central Cinema as part of an unlikely pair of films about bicycles. It’s an art nouveau Finding Nemo as designed by Jacques Tati. Our Preview.
Sign up for our newsletter and get the best of Seattle arthouse and repertory programming in your Inbox every Friday morning.

Playing This Week:

Admiral Theater:

What We Do in the Shadows (Jemaine Clement & Taika Waititi) Fri-Thurs Our Preview

Ark Lodge Cinemas:

White God (Kornél Mundruczó) Fri-Thurs

Central Cinema:

The Triplets of Belleville (Sylvain Chomet, 2003) Fri-Tues
Rad (Hal Needham, 1986) Fri-Weds

Century Federal Way:

Steel Magnolias (Herbert Ross, 1989) Sun Only

SIFF Cinema Egyptian:

Iris (Albert Maysles) Fri-Weds
The Rocky Horror Picture Show (Jim Sharman, 1975) Sat Midnight Only

Grand Cinema:

Clouds of Sils Maria (Olivier Assayas) Fri-Thurs Our Preview
Timbuktu (Abderrahmane Sissako) Tues Only

Grand Illusion Cinema:

Seattle Transmedia & Independent Film Festival Program Details
Roar (Noel Marshall) Sun, Weds and Thurs Only
Hallucinatory Maps (Georg Koszulinski) Tues Only Video & 16mm
Out of Print (Julia Marchese) Weds Only 35mm Director in attendance
Grindhouse Releasing presents Trailer Apocalypse Thurs Only 35mm

Cinemark Lincoln Square Cinemas:

Steel Magnolias (Herbert Ross, 1989) Sun Only

AMC Pacific Place:

Maggie (Henry Hobson) Fri-Thurs
Left Ear (Alec Su) Fri-Thurs

Scarecrow Video Screening Lounge:

Mother’s Day (Charles Kaufman, 1980) Fri Only
The Guy from Harlem (Rene Martinez Jr, 1977) Sat Only
Mildred Pierce (Michael Curtiz, 1945) Sun Only
Trigger, Jr (William Witney, 1950) Mon Only
Baffled (Philip Leacock, 1973) Tues Only
True Stories (David Byrne, 1986) Weds Only
Exterminators of the Year 3000 (Giuliano Carnimeo, 1983) Thurs Only

Seattle Art Museum:

Black Box 2.0: Landscapes, Revisited Fri Only
One Deadly Summer (Jean Becker, 1983) Thurs Only 35mm

Landmark Seven Gables:

Clouds of Sils Maria (Olivier Assayas) Fri-Thurs Our Preview

SIFF Film Center:

What We Do in the Shadows (Jemaine Clement & Taika Waititi) Fri-Sun Our Preview 

Sundance Cinemas Seattle:

Iris (Albert Maysles) Fri-Thurs
5 Flights Up (Richard Loncraine) Fri-Thurs
Lambert & Stamp (James D. Cooper) Fri-Thurs

SIFF Cinema Uptown:

Tangerines (Zaza Urushadze) Fri-Weds

Varsity Theatre:

Adult Beginners (Ross Katz) Fri-Thurs

The Triplets of Belleville (Sylvain Chomet, 2003)

triplets-of-belleville

We at Seattle Screen Scene find ourselves deep in preparation for the Seattle International Film Festival (we’re planning extensive coverage, look for our preview sometime early next week), but before we start rolling that out, here’s our Featured Film of the week, Sylvain Chomet’s 2003 Oscar nominee for Best Animated Film, The Triplets of Belleville. Like that year’s Oscar winner, Finding Nemo, the movie is about a parent searching for their lost child, questing through a strange and wondrous world, having adventures and finding help along the way. But otherwise the two films couldn’t be more different, Bellville abandoning the impressive photo-realism of Pixar’s crisp computer images for a highly stylized reality, bodies and shapes distended and distorted in extreme art nouveau parodies of pale yellows, browns and greens, earthy and bilious, daring you to call it ugly.

It opens, as all great films do, with a cartoon. A black and white parody of the 1930s Warner Bros animated shorts that featured celebrity caricatures, with a Django Reinhardt (who looks weirdly like William Powell), a Josephine Baker (the men in the audience, transformed by the eroticism of her dance, turn into psychotic monkeys who rush the stage and steal all the bananas off her skirt) and Fred Astaire who tap dances right out of his shoes, which then grow mouths and devour him like carnivorous Cronenbergian beasts. Right away you know you’re in for something special.

triplets-of-belleville-french-waiter-youtube

The quest plot follows a woman’s search for her grandson. He’s kidnapped while cycling in the Tour de France and she (along with his faithful dog Bruno) follow his abductors to the city of Belleville, a version of New York City. She’s aided in the search by the eponymous trio, elderly jazz musicians (they sang in the opening cartoon, in their youth) who find rhythm in unlikely household objects and have questionable dietary practices. Food is actually pretty disgusting throughout the film, a part of Chomet’s twin critiques of French and American culture: America is fat and disgusting, the source of overcrowded and soulless modernity; France is pretty gross too, but at least has an appreciation for the finer things in life like wine, jazz and bicycling.

Almost entirely lacking in dialogue (what there is it isn’t necessary to translate), the film is nevertheless resolutely aural, every effect a calculated addition to the symphonic whole, following in the tradition of Jacques Tati (even if you didn’t know Chomet would go on to adapt Tati’s The Illusionist, the reference is obvious: Belleville prominently features a M. Hulot’s Holiday poster, a weather vane in the shape of Tati from Jour de fête and even an actual clip from that same film (in which Tati plays a bicycle-riding mailman)). Similarly, while severely distorted, the bodies in the film follow a ruthlessly inviolable logic: giant mobsters with huge upper bodes and tiny legs dwarf the cars they ride in, as they stand through the sun-roofs of those cars in the final chase sequence, the balance of the vehicle is thrown off and sharp turns cause them to flip over, the villains doomed by their own enormity; a maitre’d so literally spineless in his obsequity that he literally leans over backwards, his head flopping back-to-front and side-to-side. What appears to be simple chaotic weirdness is in fact carefully constructed and calculated to achieve a specific effect, which I guess is a reasonably good definition of jazz.

A wickedly funny, strangely poignant and wildly inventive film, The Triplets of Belleville plays Friday through Tuesday this week at the Central Cinema, whose clever programmers have paired it with another classic about bicycling, the 1986 Hal Needham BMX film, Rad, with Lori Laughlin.

Friday May 1 – Thursday May 7

Featured Film:

Clouds of Sils Maria at the Seven Gables

Juliette Binoche and Kristen Stewart headline the latest from director Olivier Assayas, opening this week at the Seven Gables. Binoche plays a middle-aged actress reluctantly taking on the role of the older half of a poisonous relationship in a play she performed the younger role in in her own youth. Stewart is her steadfast assistant as the two discuss the play, acting in general and internet gossip in the Swiss Alps. Our Preview.
Sign up for our newsletter and get the best of Seattle arthouse and repertory programming in your Inbox every Friday morning.

Playing This Week:

Admiral Theater:

What We Do in the Shadows (Jemaine Clement & Taika Waititi) Fri-Thurs Our Preview

Central Cinema:

My Neighbor Totoro (Hayao Miyazaki, 1988) Fri-Weds
Serenity (Joss Whedon, 2005) Fri-Weds
2001: A Space Odyssey (Stanley Kubrick, 1969) Thurs Only

Century Federal Way:

Big Trouble in Little China (John Carpenter, 1986) Sun Only

SIFF Cinema Egyptian:

Kurt Cobain: Montage of Heck (Brett Morgen) Fri-Sun Only
Gimme Shelter (Albert & David Maysles & Charlotte Zwerin, 1970) Mon-Weds Only
The Rolling Stones: Crossfire Hurricane (Brett Morgen, 2012) Mon-Weds Only

Grand Cinema:

Ballet 422 (Jody Lee Lipes) Fri-Mon, Weds-Thurs Our Preview
1971 (Johanna Hamilton) Fri-Thurs
Backcountry (Adam MacDonald) Fri-Thurs
An Honest Liar (Justin Weinstein, 1979) Fri-Sun, Tues-Thurs
Seymour: An Introduction (Ethan Hawke) Fri-Thurs
The Wrecking Crew (Denny Tedesco, 2008) Fri-Thurs
Merchants of Doubt (Robert Kenner) Fri-Thurs
The Hunting Ground (Kirby Dick) Sat-Thurs
Return of the River (John Gussman & Jessica Plumb) Tues Only
Endless Abilities (Tripp Clemens & Harvey Burrell) Weds Only

Grand Illusion Cinema:

Seattle Transmedia & Independent Film Festival Program Details

Landmark Guild 45th:

The Salt of the Earth (Wim Wenders & Juliano Ribeiro Salgado) Fri-Thurs

Cinemark Lincoln Square Cinemas:

Big Trouble in Little China (John Carpenter, 1986) Sun Only

Majestic Bay Theatre:

What We Do in the Shadows (Jemaine Clement & Taika Waititi) Fri-Thurs Our Preview

Northwest Film Forum:

Man from Reno (Dave Boyle) Fri-Mon
BFE: DVD Release Party! (Shawn Telford) Sat Only
Gringo Trails (Pegi Vail) Sun Only
Balikbayan #1 (Kidlat Tahimik) Tues Only

AMC Pacific Place:

Kung Fu Killer (Teddy Chan) Fri-Thurs Our Preview

Regal Parkway Plaza:

You’re My Boss (Antoinette Jadaone) Fri-Thurs

Scarecrow Video Screening Lounge:

The Big Combo (Joseph H. Lewis, 1955) Fri Only
Malatesta’s Carnival of Blood (Christopher Speeth, 1973) Sat Only
Freaky Friday (Gary Nelson, 1976) Sun Only
Daisies (Vera Chytilová, 1966) Sun Only
Randy Rides Alone (Harry L. Fraser, 1934) Mon Only
Spellbound (Alfred Hitchcock, 1945) Tues Only
A Gnome Named Gnorm (Stan Winston, 1990) Weds Only
Ladies and Gentlemen, The Fabulous Stains (Lou Adler, 1982) Thurs Only

Seattle Art Museum:

Black Box 2.0 Opening Night Program Details
Le cercle rouge (Jean-Pierre Melville, 1970) Thurs Only 35mm

Landmark Seven Gables:

Clouds of Sils Maria (Olivier Assayas) Fri-Thurs Our Preview

SIFF Film Center:

What We Do in the Shadows (Jemaine Clement & Taika Waititi) Fri-Sat Our Preview 
Song of the Sea (Tomm Moore) Mon Only
In Country (Mike Attie & Meghan O’Hara) Fri-Sun Only

Sundance Cinemas Seattle:

Felix and Meira (Maxime Giroux) Fri-Thurs
Misery Loves Comedy (Kevin Pollack) Fri-Thurs
Wild Tales (Damián Szifrón) Fri-Thurs Our Preview
What We Do in the Shadows (Jemaine Clement & Taika Waititi) Fri-Thurs Our Preview

SIFF Cinema Uptown:

What We Do in the Shadows (Jemaine Clement & Taika Waititi) Sun-Weds Our Preview
Adult Beginners (Ross Katz) Fri-Thurs
Best of HUMP! Tour 2015 Fri-Sat Only
Frozen (Jennifer Lee, 2013) Sat Only Sing-along
Song of the Sea (Tomm Moore) Sat-Sun Only

Varsity Theatre:

Adult Beginners (Ross Katz) Fri-Weds

Clouds of Sils Maria (Olivier Assayas, 2014)

sils-maria02

The latest from French director Olivier Assayas finally makes its way to Seattle screens this week, opening at Landmark’s Seven Gables Theatre. It stars Juliette Binoche as a very Binochian actress, highly accomplished in both the commercial and artier realms of her trade, as she reluctantly takes on a role in a play by the writer who gave her her big break at age 18. The play is about the toxic relationship between an older businesswoman and her ambitious young intern, and Binoche, having played the young half 20 years earlier, is now asked to take on the older part, a character whose weakness she despises. Kristen Stewart plays Binoche’s assistant, young and plugged into the world, who encourages Binoche to see the play and its characters in a new light. The bulk of the film follows their discussions as they practice lines in the picturesque Swiss Alps, and their relationship draws some expected parallels and unexpected divergences from the play itself.

Continue reading Clouds of Sils Maria (Olivier Assayas, 2014)”

Kung Fu Jungle (Teddy Chan, 2014)

kfj-pics-1The latest acclaimed Hong Kong film to sneak onto Seattle Screens at the AMC Pacific Place (following Johnnie To’s Don’t Go Breaking My Heart 2 and Tsui Hark’s The Taking of Tiger Mountain, among other recent hits) is a new collaboration between director Teddy Chan and star/choreographer Donnie Yen. The two were previously paired in Chan’s 2009 period adventure film about Sun Yat-sen, Bodyguards and Assassins, but this new film is more in line with Yen’s present-day cop films SPL and Flash Point, both made with director Wilson Yip. Yen plays a kung fu expert serving a prison sentence for accidentally killing a man in a duel. Three years into his term, the cops are on the hunt for a serial killer, one who appears to be targeting kung fu experts. Donnie volunteers his services to track down the killer, but of course he knows more than he’s letting on. As with the Yip films, the action is brutally physical, aided in no small measure by CGI special effects, the impact of which is still working its way uneasily through the language of Hong Kong action cinema.

Continue reading Kung Fu Jungle (Teddy Chan, 2014)”

Oklahoma! (Fred Zinnemann, 1955)

7bcd91571fc1119e87d81e1054255e73_567x210

The Cinerama’s Saturday Classics series concludes this weekend with the laser projection of 1955’s smash hit musical Oklahoma!. The following is the review I wrote of the film last year, after finally bringing myself to watch it all the way through.

Richard Rodgers and Oscar Hammerstein II are generally credited with ushering in a Golden Age of musical theatre, this 1943 play marking the first truly integrated show, with music, lyrics and story seamlessly interwoven. Of course it wasn’t the first (Show Boat did much the same thing 15 years earlier, to say nothing of the operettas from the 19th century onward that did as well, but whatever), but it was a huge hit, inspiring many imitators, some of which are actually good. Similarly, the 1955 film adaptation was followed by a new form of musical film: more or less direct translations of stage musicals, often excruciatingly long, presented as roadshow extravaganzas (more expensive tickets, super widescreen formats, elaborate sets and locations). These films, increasingly bloated and dull, eventually killed the musical as a viable American film genre and played no small role in bankrupting the studio system that had been in place in Hollywood since the 1920s.

Continue reading Oklahoma! (Fred Zinnemann, 1955)”