Sight & Sound: July 2011

Cover of Sight & Sound July 2011The latest Sight & Sound is out, complete with the following pieces by me:

  • Brothers in arms (p. 12) – my contribution to the ongoing ‘Lost & Found’ series, whose contributors are given a page to extol the virtues of a film that’s been neglected for far too long – I picked Paolo & Vittorio Taviani’s 1974 film Allonsanfàn, and the piece is also available online.
  • After the Apocalypse (p. 56) – review of Antony Butt’s sobering documentary about the social, cultural and biological aftermath of four decades of nuclear testing in Kazakhstan.
  • Yu-Gi-Oh! 3D – Bonds Beyond Time (p. 82) – loud, shouty and (for non-devotees) borderline incomprehensible Japanese sci-fi animation.
  • Apocalypse Now (p. 85) – review of Optimum’s amazing three-disc Blu-ray that combines both cuts of the main feature with the documentary Hearts of Darkness: A Filmmaker’s Apocalypse and much more besides;
  • Films by Ozu Yasujiro (p. 88) – namely, the new BFI dual-format editions of Late Autumn (1960) and An Autumn Afternoon (1962) plus the supporting features A Mother Should Be Loved (1934) and A Hen in the Wind (1948);
  • Taxi Driver (p. 90) – Sony’s outstanding new Blu-ray crams in pretty much everything you could conceivably want, including an onscreen trivia track for people like my mother-in-law who always needs to know what else someone has been in;
  • Avant-Garde to New Wave: Czechoslovak Cinema, Surrealism and the Sixties (p. 93) – review of Jonathan L. Owen’s excellent book about the relationship between the Czech and Slovak avant-garde and the New Wave filmmakers of the 1960s, revealed more often by common artistic preoccupations than close personal relationships.

Screenonline: Lost No More

Sean Connery and Dorothy Tutin in 'Colombe' (1960)Screenonline has just updated its homepage, the highlight being last year’s discovery of seventy previously missing BBC programmes at the Library of Congress (the picture is of Sean Connery and Dorothy Tutin in a 1960 production of Jean Anouilh’s Colombe). I contributed a piece about Much Ado About Nothing (1967), based on Franco Zeffirelli’s controversial 1965 National Theatre production with the soon-to-be-married Maggie Smith and Robert Stephens supported by Derek Jacobi and his Cornetto-salesman accent. I also wrote a short biography of Barry Ackroyd, Ken Loach’s regular cinematographer, recently Oscar-nominated for The Hurt Locker.

L’âge d’or

Cover of L'âge d'orToday sees the release of the BFI’s dual-format reissue of their 2004 DVD package containing both Luis Buñuel and Salvador Dalí film collaborations, Un chien andalou (1929) and L’âge d’or (1930), together with José Luis López-Linares and Javier Rioyo’s feature-length documentary A propósito de Buñuel (which is actually longer than the two main films put together). I contributed a short biography of Buñuel to the 2004 release, which has been reprinted in the booklet of the new one.

Here are the specs:

  • Presented in both High Definition and Standard Definition;
  • Selected scenes commentary for L’âge d’or by author and filmmaker Robert Short;
  • Un chien andalou (1929, 16 mins): the 1960 restoration of Buñuel and Dalí’s debut;
  • Alternative score for Un chien andalou by Mordant Music;
  • Commentary for Un chien andalou by Robert Short;
  • A propósito de Buñuel (2000, 99 mins, DVD only);
  • Filmed introduction by Robert Short (25 mins, DVD only);
  • 26-page illustrated booklet with essays, biographies and credits.

Originally, Un chien andalou was going to be the same standard-definition version as featured on the 2004 release, on the grounds that the BFI didn’t have anything better. Thankfully, and possibly as a result of discontented rumblings online (one person even pre-emptively gave the release a one-star Amazon review – since deleted – purely because of this), they were able to track down a duplicate 16mm negative of the 1960 restoration, which was the last one that Buñuel worked on directly. The result is a mixed bag – in many respects it’s a clear improvement on the older version, not least because there’s noticeably more detail visible, but the cropping is the same (impossible to ignore when it affects onscreen text) and the image clearly hasn’t undergone much if any proper restoration.

On the other hand, L’âge d’or looks magnificent. This needs a slight qualification, as a film of this age and lengthy history of suppression will never look pristine, as indeed this doesn’t. But simply reframing it at the correct 1.19:1 aspect ratio makes a significant difference over previous 1.33:1 versions (there’s much more visible headroom), meaning that even the DVD represents a marked advance over its predecessor. But the extra definition is where the upgrade really shines – clearly sourced not just from 35mm but from a cleaner print than anything I ever saw in cinemas (and I saw this film pretty regularly throughout the 1980s and 90s, as it would often get free screenings at places like the then Tate Gallery), it’s hard to imagine it coming across much more effectively.

Reviews

  • Cathode Ray Tube (Frank Collins);
  • The Digital Fix (Anthony Nield);
  • Mondo Digital (Nathaniel Thompson);
  • Rock! Shock! Pop! (Ian Jane).
  • Alice

    Cover of AliceThe BFI’s long-awaited dual-format edition of Jan Švankmajer’s Alice finally hits the streets today amid much anticipation and excitement: reviews so far have been mostly frothing raves. I’m credited as co-producer (though in truth my role was more of a consultant: Upekha Bandaranayake and technical supervisor James White deserve far more credit for the physical product) and also wrote several of the pieces in the booklet.

    The full specs:

    • Presented in both High Definition and Standard Definition;
    • Original Czech and alternative English-language audio;
    • Alice in Wonderland (1903, 9 mins): the first screen adaptation of Lewis Carroll’s classic;
    • Elsie and the Brown Bunny (1921, 8 mins, DVD only): early advertising film for Cadbury Bros. Ltd;
    • Alice in Label Land (1974, 12 mins): animated COI film explaining the 1973 food labelling laws;
    • Stille Nacht II: Are We Still Married? (1992, 3 mins): the Quay Brothers’ Alice-inspired music film;
    • Stille Nacht IV: Can’t Go Wrong Without You (1993, 4 mins): the white rabbit returns in the second of the Quay Brothers’ music films for His Name is Alive;
    • 34-page illustrated booklet with essays, film notes, biographies and credits.

    Although I’d been treated to glimpses of the new high-definition transfer during the production, it wasn’t until my own copy arrived a fortnight or so ago that I could appreciate the radical transformation. It’s not just the extra detail (though this makes a substantial difference in itself: Švankmajer has always been obsessed with texture and tactility) but the eye-poppingly punchy colours. Although it probably looked pretty similar back in 1988, when I first saw the film in 35mm, successive video editions have contrived to make it look as drab and battered as Švankmajer’s much-abused puppets. No longer.

    Being in the original Czech for what I think is the first time in an English-speaking country also makes a huge difference. Not so much for the language itself (both Czech and English soundtracks are pitched at children’s vocabulary level – my Czech is laughable, but I can follow much of it easily) as for the elimination of that jarring dislocation between the English soundtrack and the gigantic close-ups of Alice’s lip movements. In fact, since the girl in the closeups wasn’t even lead actress Krystyna Kohoutová (who lost a front tooth at a crucial moment), I can only assume that financial issues prevented splicing in clips of an English girl as an alternative, as that would have been far more aesthetically effective. Still, despite an obvious preference for the Czech, the BFI was absolutely right to retain the English soundtrack, and not just for nostalgia purposes – my six-year-old daughter loves the film, and there’s no way I’d have got her to sit through anything in subtitled Czech.

    My only real regret about such a superlative package is that it’s spoilt me to the extent that I now want to see Švankmajer’s entire output in Blu-ray in similarly peerless transfers sourced from the best possible 35mm materials (the BFI had access to the camera negative and original 35mm interpositive – in other words the mother lode). But I fear that this may take some considerable time, if it ever comes close to happening at all.

    Reviews

    Sight & Sound: June 2011

    Cover of Sight & Sound June 2011The latest Sight & Sound is out, complete with the following pieces by me:

    • Forgotten Pleasures of the Multiplex (p. 16 and online) – a celebration of neglected and/or forgotten mainstream gems from 1981-2011 by multiple authors. My contributions were Joseph B. Vasquez’s Hangin’ with the Homeboys (1991), a film several orders of magnitude more intelligent and indeed charming than its title suggests, and Craig Hamann’s Boogie Boy (1998).
    • Attack the Block (p. 57 and online) – review of Joe Cornish’s uproarious feature debut, an aliens-vs-hoodies monster movie set in a highly recognisable sarf London;
    • Bedevilled (p. 84) – review of Optimum’s DVD of Jang Chul-soo’s debut, distinctive enough to rise above initial impressions that this was yet another by-the-numbers Korean revenge flick;
    • Early Kurosawa (p. 86) – review of the BFI’s DVD collection of Akira Kurosawa’s first six features. “A mixed bag, and that’s putting it mildly”, I said – but the two terrible films are more than balanced by four good ones.
    • The Lighthouse (p. 88) – hugely impressive 2006 debut by Armenian director Maria Saakyan, given a belated British premiere release courtesy of a typically loving presentation from Second Run;
    • Apocalypse Now (p. 85) – review of Optimum’s amazing three-disc Blu-ray that combines both cuts of the main feature with the documentary Hearts of Darkness: A Filmmaker’s Apocalypse and much more besides;
    • Mamma Roma (p. 89) – review of Mr Bongo’s barebones but well-presented DVD of Pier Paolo Pasolini’s second feature, in which the relatively untried director manages to assert his own strong artistic personality even in the face of Anna Magnani’s torrential lead performance;
    • Minnie & Moskowitz (p. 89) – review of Mr Bongo’s excellent presentation of John Cassavetes’ 1971 screwball (ish) comedy (even more ish);
    • Il posto (p. 90) – review of Mr Bongo’s barebones but decent DVD of Ermanno Olmi’s lovely 1961 film about the fleeting pleasures and grinding tedium of both getting and keeping a job.

    Bicycle Thieves

    Cover of Arrow Academy's Bicycle ThievesThe inaugural entry in Arrow’s new Arrow Academy series of deluxe editions of high-profile arthouse classics has just been released (Amazon/MovieMail/Play), with the following specs:

    • Brand new restored, high definition transfer on Blu-ray (1080p) and DVD;
    • Newly translated and more complete optional English subtitles;
    • Feature length audio commentary by Italian Cinema expert Robert Gordon, author of BFI Modern Classics ‘Bicycle Thieves’;
    • ‘Cesare Zavattini’ a feature length documentary by director Carlo Lizzani on the great screenwriter, novelist, critic, long time De Sica collaborator and founder of Italian neorealism [Blu-ray only];
    • ‘Timeless Cinema’, a documentary portrait of director, actor and screenwriter Vittorio De Sica;
    • Trailer;
    • Comprehensive booklet featuring a brand new essay on the film by writer and film historian Michael Brooke as well as screenwriter Cesare Zavattini’s essay ‘Some Ideas on the Cinema’, illustrated with original stills and Lobby Cards;
    • Artwork presentation packaging including three original posters and a newly commissioned artwork cover.

    Aside from contributing the main booklet essay, I also dug up some contemporary reviews of the film, excerpts from which are featured towards the end.

    Reviews

    My next Arrow commission is the booklet for Andrzej Wajda’s Ashes and Diamonds, which should be out in the autumn.

    Sight & Sound: May 2011

    Cover of Sight & Sound May 2011The latest Sight & Sound is out, complete with the following pieces by me:

    • Limitless (p. 60) – review of Neil Burger’s slick but highly entertaining thriller about brain-enhancing drugs;
    • Tracker (p. 76) – review of the watchable but ultimately ho-hum New Zealand-set adventure film pitting fellow outsiders Ray Winstone and Temuera Morrison (one Boer, the other Maori) against each other;
    • ‘The art of Michelangelo’ (p. 84) – review of Masters of Cinema’s dual-format releases of the early Antonioni films La signora senza camelie and Le Amiche;
    • Blood Simple (p. 85) – review of Momentum’s DVD of Zhang Yimou’s eccentric but often compelling Chinese period remake of the Coen Brothers’ first feature;
    • Dark Star (p. 85) – review of Fabulous Films’ pretty fabulous DVD of John Carpenter’s much-loved low-budget sci-fi debut;
    • Larks on a String (p. 86) – review of Second Run’s director-approved edition of Jiří Menzel’s long-banned satire mocking the overweening absurdity of political dogma;
    • Slingshot (p. 89) – review of Peccadillo Pictures’ DVD of Brillante Mendoza’s virtuoso study of the lives of the inhabitants of a Manila slum.

    Sight & Sound: Andrzej and Janusz Kondratiuk

    Cover of Andrzej Kondratiuk DVD boxTo mark the release of a mostly English-friendly DVD box set (English subtitles on all films, including the shorts, but the booklet is exclusively in Polish) and a tribute retrospective at Kinoteka, here’s my short introduction to the early work of Andrzej and Janusz Kondratiuk, two of Polish cinema’s more eccentric talents. As with many foreign comedies, I’m sure some of their best jokes went way over my head, but I found more than enough for those dependent on subtitles to get their teeth into. My favourite was the one I’d already seen, Hydro-Riddle, a Polish superhero film that’s fully aware of just how absurd the notion of a Polish superhero is (especially in the early 1970s), but I also liked the Formanesque Marriageable Girls.

    Sight & Sound: The Dark House

    Poster for The Dark HouseMy review of Wojciech Smarzowski’s scabrous The Dark House, an ultra-black comedy set either side of the 1981 martial-law crackdown in Poland that more than confirms the promise of his debut The Wedding (easily my favourite of the clump of post-2000 Polish films given a UK cinema release in 2007-08), has just been published as a web exclusive. It’s getting its British premiere at Kinoteka on 31 March prior to a screening in Edinburgh on 4 April – but if you can’t make those screenings, the Polish Blu-ray is definitely English-subtitled, and the DVD claims to be too.