Now Playing: Rocket From The Tombs--"Amphetamine"
My almost complete ignorance of last year's Oscar-nominated films convinced me to return to the theatre. Whorishly enlisting in the Borders Rewards savings card program, I discovered that doing so also entitled me to a free ticket Tuesday evenings at the Michigan Theater (for a limited time, natch). I prised myself loose from my weekly routine and went to see Timur Bekmambetov's Night Watch (2004), the latest in the mass of neo-vampire flicks that show no sign of abating. Based on a series of novels by Sergei Lukyanenko, Night Watch tells of conflicts among "The Others," supernatural beings divided into "light" and "dark." It looks great and benefits (at least for this American viewer) from its setting in modern-day Moscow. The locations, the look, and some of the performances (especially lead Konstantin Khabensky as Anton, the mopey, sweater-vested clod who becomes a troubled vampire hunter) partially compensate for a rather derivative story--light against dark, prophecies, a "Chosen One", etc. It doesn't help that a Buffy clip is shown in one scene. The ending's pretty downbeat and limp, but if they're filming it as part of a trilogy... well, that's still not much of an excuse. For Russian cinema, I much preferred Sadko (1953), Aleksandr Ptushko's fantasy classic shown for Cinema Guild last week. It's a little more refreshing these days to watch a poor medieval Novgorod merchant-warrior search for the "Bird of Happiness" in gorgeous color shots and snappy musical numbers (in the process racing a seahorse, surfing--perhaps inadvertently--running afoul of city elders, a devious maharaja, and the King of the Sea, whose pet catfish and giant octopus looooove to dance). Good stuff, and great for nightmares!
Wednesday night I went to volunteer at Planned Parenthood, where I hung with Jess, Ingrid and Angela, and we all shared our indignation at the recent lunacy in South Dakota. There's always more to do, and things aren't getting any better. Tuesday I hope to plow through the rest of cataloging the WRAP library. I'm trying to keep active; Ann Arbor's pretty liberal on the surface, but it's very complacent, and some of the class implications of how society works escape many people (the modern-day difference, I think, between "liberalism" and "progressivism").
Saturday, I saw Annie and Actual Birds delvier an enjoyable little set at Crazy Wisdom. Dustin gave us "Crooked Smile" and some other songs, a couple of which, such as "Art and Commerce" hint at the political divide I mentioned earlier. There need to be more of these: songs that seek change through subtlety and understanding, not rote preaching. Annie gets better and better; "Jerk" is simply wonderful, and the melodies are gorgeous. We even got a couple of covers--one of Misty's and one of Tim Monger's--which was a nice bonus. Even with all that, though, I was a little depressed. It was probably my fault for watching Hearts of Darkness and Hotel Terminus the day and night before.
Hearts of Darkness: A Filmmaker's Apocalypse (1991) came out around the same time I first saw Francis Ford Coppola's Apocalypse Now (1979). It was an obvious thing to compare the two, a comparison the movie doesn't have to go far to shove down one's throat. Hearts revolves around the film diary kept by Eleanor Coppola, the director's wife, during filming in the Philippines during the late 1970s, which chronicled the ups and downs of the notoriously tortuous production. Just as Apocalypse Now allegedly "was" Vietnam, as Coppola put it in his Cannes interview, Hearts is similarly linked: the material overkill, the drugs, the delusions of grandeur, the increasing insanity. In the end, it's a weirdly inspiring story, vividly demonstrating the pitfalls of going too far for art. Coppola and Co. pulled back just before the brink, but not before getting a good long look into the darkness.
Hotel Terminus: The Life and Times of Klaus Barbie (1988) is a different kind of animal, but is also a study in extremism. Klaus Barbie (1913-91) was an SS officer and head of the Gestapo in Lyon, France, during the Second World War, eventually responsible for the deaths, torture, or deportation of almost 30,000 people. During the immediate postwar period, he was recruited as an intelligence asset by the US in the ruins of Germany, collecting information from his former comrades on the other side of the Iron Curtain. Eventually fleeing to Peru and Bolivia, he became involved in local politics and drug trafficking. Hunted by the French government and Nazi-hunters like Simon Wiesenthal and Beate Klarsfeld, he was returned to France in the 1980s and came to trial at the same time the film was made. In 1987, he was convicted to life imprisonment and died in 1991. There's some interesting information here about the trial, unavailable for the film. Even at four and a half hours long, it never flags. Filmmaker Marcel Ophuls interviews former soldiers, civilians, and spies from France, Germany, the US, Bolivia, and Peru, painting a mesmerizing picture of life during the war and after. The ending, when one of the French Jewish deportees almost accidentally confronts a ghost from her past, is a knockout. The great strength of the movie is how it emphasizes the conflicts between the allies during the war, (challenging the simplistic historical narrative of the Second World War that, though it still exists today, was a hell of a lot more powerful back in the 1980s), and demonstrating how the issues that brought about the war linger on into the present day. Interviews with 1960s luminaries like Daniel Cohn-Bendit, Regis Debray, and Gunter Grass bring the notion to the fore--the Nazis are gone, but the root causes that brought them to power still remain to resist. As Debray observes of Barbie's bizarre, sinister adventures in Bolivia during the 1960s and 1970s (providing the government with his services in state repression and mixing with right-wing German mercenaries), the fact that governments of the present would hire people like Barbie show that the root causes of the war continue. There's always more to do, and things aren't getting any better.
Posted by Charles J. Microphone
at 3:51 PM EST
Updated: 12 March 2006 3:59 PM EST
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Updated: 12 March 2006 3:59 PM EST
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