watching...
Vivre se vie - great film by Jean-Luc Godard. Here's the orginal trailer:
I roam the whole universe from here. - Han-shan
Vivre se vie - great film by Jean-Luc Godard. Here's the orginal trailer:
Posted by sam of the ten thousand things @ 12:38 PM 10 comments
Labels: film, film diary, films to live by
An important film I've been watching - more than one view is needed to approach this work:
L'eclisse (1962)
Michelangelo Antonioni, Dir.
*
Antonioni is such a singular artist, a master.
Posted by sam of the ten thousand things @ 8:23 AM 6 comments
Labels: film, films to live by
Wings of Desire (1987)
Wim Wenders, Dir.
*
Coming in October - 2-disc set - from Criterion Collection...
Posted by sam of the ten thousand things @ 11:16 AM 6 comments
Labels: film, films to live by
A: Who are you?
X: You know.
A: What's your name?
X: It doesn't matter.
Empty salons. Corridors. Salons. Doors. Doors. Salons. Empty chairs, deep armchairs, thick carpets. Heavy hangings. Stairs, steps. Steps, one after the other. Glass objects, objects still intact, empty glasses. A glass that falls, three, two, one, zero. Glass partition, letters.
Posted by sam of the ten thousand things @ 9:15 AM 2 comments
Labels: film, film diary, films to live by, video
My poem “Chamber Music” – acutally a three-piece suite based on Ingmar Bergman’s film trilogy – will be included in the Best of the Web 2009 anthology from Dzanc Books. The book’s publication date is later this year. The work originally appeared at Boxcar Poetry Review.
From the exquisite and murky world of David Lynch, another poem, “A Fable,” will appear in the Blue Velvet anthology from The Private Press. I’m very pleased to be a part of this marvelous series of anthologies edited by Ivy Alvarez. The release date is in the autumn.
Posted by sam of the ten thousand things @ 4:39 PM 5 comments
Labels: film, films to live by, published
film diary
9 April 09
Krotki Film O Milosci (1988)
(A Short Film about Love)
Krzysztof Kieslowski, Dir.
[This film is an expanded theatrical release version of Dekalog, part VI.]
*
Kieslowski’s film gets at the heart of voyeurism as a natural human phenomenon or condition. It’s found in many of his works, in fact, underscoring the filmmaker’s personal approach to his art. Call it curiosity, call it desire, call it force – but it is pervasive and rich territory for storytelling.
Posted by sam of the ten thousand things @ 10:09 AM 2 comments
Labels: film, film diary, films to live by
film diary
23 March 09
Die Bitteren Tränen der Petra von Kant (1972)
R. W. Fassbinder, Dir.
Karin: It’s all so complicated.
Petra: No… Nothing is simple. Nothing at all. You have to understand what humility is.
Karin: Humility?
Petra: You see… everyone has his own theory of the world. I believe you have to have humility to be able to bear what you know. I have humility in my work or in respect of the money I can earn or the many things that are stronger than myself.
Karin: I think ‘humility’ is a strange word. It reminds me of kneeling and praying.
Posted by sam of the ten thousand things @ 2:21 PM 0 comments
Labels: film, film diary, films to live by
Upcoming releases from Criterion Collection...
The Seventh Seal (1957)
Ingmar Bergman, Dir.
an updated release - with added features
2 Discs
June 2009
Wise Blood (1979)
John Huston, Dir.
1 Disc
May 2009
My Dinner with André (1981)
Louis Malle, Dir.
1 Disc
June 2009
Last Year at Marienbad (1962)
Alain Resnais, Dir.
2 Discs
June 2009
Posted by sam of the ten thousand things @ 1:34 PM 5 comments
Labels: film, films to live by
film diary
5 March 09
The Perfect Human (1967)
[a version]
Jørgen Leth, Dir.
At times, the best way to find any understanding of life is through the mundane. Repetition becomes maniacal becomes truth. For me, that is what Danish filmmaker Jørgen Leth sets out to show in his brief, hypnotic, experimental work Det Perfekte menneske (The Perfect Human, 1967). The human being – the perfect man, the perfect woman – as landscape.
Again today I experienced something I hope to understand in a day or two.
Posted by sam of the ten thousand things @ 11:54 PM 1 comments
Labels: film, film diary, films to live by, video
I will have spent my life trying to understand the function of remembering, which is not the opposite of forgetting, but rather its lining.
We do not remember. We rewrite memory much as history is rewritten.
How can one remember thirst?
Posted by sam of the ten thousand things @ 12:02 PM 0 comments
Labels: film, films to live by
film diary
16 February 09
The Exterminating Angel (1962)
Luis Buñuel, Dir.
... films to live by ...
Greatness can never be explained - only witnessed. Greatness can never be explained... Wait. Didn't I just say that?
Posted by sam of the ten thousand things @ 10:19 PM 3 comments
Labels: film, film diary, films to live by
film diary
8 February 09
La Belle Noiseuse (1991)
Jacques Rivette, Dir.
... a film to live by ...
~
In Rivette’s film, an artist, Frenhofer, visits his studio – he had given up painting ten years earlier.
Frenhofer: I don’t want to stay here. It was difficult even to come. When I see a recent painting… the suffering here is unbearable.
Nicolas: At least it’s cool here. There’s silence.
Frenhofer: Silence? Can’t you hear the forest? The sound, the murmuring, all the time. It’s like the sea. Just like the sea. It’s the fossil sound of the universe. It’s the sound of the origins. The forest and the sea mixed together. That’s what painting is. Don’t you think?
Nicolas: No, I don’t For me it’s not that. For me painting is the stroke. A colour that stands out. A cadmium yellow, a flashing red. Something sharp, finished.
Frenhofer: Really? Every time I felt I’d finished a painting, completed it… I always said to myself I should have gone further, try a bit harder. Take the risk.
I’ll get to know what’s inside… under your thin surface…
I want the invisible. No, it’s not that! I want…
It’s not me who wants…
It’s the line…
the stroke…
Nobody knows what a stroke is.
And I’m after it.
Posted by sam of the ten thousand things @ 9:01 PM 1 comments
Labels: film, film diary, films to live by
film diary
1 February 09
Magnificent Obsession (1954)
Douglas Sirk, Dir.
2 February 09
Viridiana (1961)
Luis Buñuel, Dir.
*
Great film sources for worlds in conflict - flesh & spirit, sight & unseen, guilt & ideals, reason & the absurd, cause, fetish, fate, choice, the vile, the beautiful...
Posted by sam of the ten thousand things @ 4:59 PM 0 comments
Labels: film, film diary, films to live by
I see it as the clearest evidence of genius when an artist follows his conception, his idea, his principle, so unswervingly that he has this truth of his constantly in his control, never letting go of it even for the sake of his own enjoyment of his work.
*
… [Robert] Bresson is perhaps the only man in the cinema to have achieved the perfect fusion of the finished work with a concept theoretically formulated beforehand. I know of no other artist as consistent as he is in this respect. His guiding principle was the elimination of what is known as ‘expressiveness’, in the sense that he wanted to do away with the frontier between the image and actual life; that is, to render life itself graphic and expressive. No special feeding in of material, nothing laboured, nothing that smacks of deliberate generalisation. Paul Valéry could have been thinking of Bresson when he wrote: ‘Perfection is achieved only by avoiding everything that might make for conscious exaggeration.’
Diary of a Country Priest
Bresson, Dir. / 1951
*
The artist cannot make a specific aim of being understandable— it would be quite as absurd as its opposite: trying to be incomprehensible.
*
When I say I cannot influence an audience’s attitude to myself, I’m attempting to formulate my own professional task. It’s clearly very simple: to do what one has to, giving of one’s utmost, and judging oneself by the most rigorous standards. How can there then be any question of thinking about ‘pleasing the audience’, or worry about ‘giving the public an example to emulate’? What audience? The anonymous masses? Robots?
*
In a word, the image [in film] is not a certain meaning, expressed by the director, but an entire world reflected as in a drop of water.
*
The function of the image, as [Nikolai] Gogol said, is to express life itself, not ideas or arguments about life. It does not signify life or symbolise it, but embodies it, expressing its uniqueness.
*
A book read by a thousand different people is a thousand different books.
*
Through a Glass Dakrly
Bergman, Dir. / 1961
I have a horror of tags and labels. I don’t understand, for instance, how people can talk about [Ingmar] Bergman’s ‘symbolism’. Far from being symbolic, he seems to me, through an almost biological naturalism, to arrive at the spiritual truth about human life that is important to him.
*
All creative work strives for simplicity, for perfectly simple expression; and this means reaching down into the furthest depths of the recreation of life. But that is the most painful part of creative work; finding the shortest path between what you want to say or express and its ultimate reproduction in the finished image. The struggle for simplicity is the painful search for a form adequate to the truth you have grasped.
Posted by sam of the ten thousand things @ 12:08 PM 0 comments
Labels: art, film, films to live by, notes on writing
A Matter of Life and Death (1946)
Written, Directed, and Produced by
Michael Powell & Emeric Pressburger
... films to live by ...
[Released on DVD (Sony Pictures / Region 1 / 2009) as The Films of Michael Powell – a two-disc set, including A Matter of Life and Death and Age of Consent]
Watching the films of Michael Powell and Emeric Pressburger, also known as The Archers, is like slicing off a part of the universe and holding it in your hand. A close view of everything that is possible. The films have many layers and are never clearly defined by any one central character or action. Their works are among the most personal artistic views that can be presented in cinema. The stories are always emotional but avoid sentimentality. Each film creates a new world.
Characters in an Archers’ production do tend to represent ideas and ideals but never lose their own characterization. Allegories with real people, with real situations – even in the midst of outlandish settings. The landscapes found in their stories are necessary parts of the auteur’s vision. In fact, the role of landscape – consider films such as I Know Where I’m Going, The Small Back Room, Black Narcissus – is what separates these filmmakers from all others.
A Matter of Life and Death, a remarkable piece of cinema, is part psychological, emotional, ideological, and even metaphysical – though not religious. The story itself, a familiar one, is given so many twists that it stays fresh. By the end of the film, notions of real and unreal cannot be separated. For me that is one of the film’s strengths.
The principle actors – David Niven, Kim Hunter, Roger Livesey – give strong performances. The look of the film is stunning - filled with visual and aural rhymes –: stars, lights, flickers of red and yellow, black and white, sky to land, heaven to earth, circles & rectangles, time, games of chess, music, alarms, blinds, brick and stairs. A film experience, not to be missed, worth many viewings.
Can a starving man prove he’s hungry except by eating?
Posted by sam of the ten thousand things @ 2:16 PM 2 comments
Labels: film, films to live by
film diary
Three by Alfred Hitchcock...
12 October 08
Rear Window (1954)
17 September 08
Posted by sam of the ten thousand things @ 2:38 PM 10 comments
Labels: film, film diary, films to live by
film diary
25 September 08
The Earrings of Madame de... (1953)
Max Ophuls, Dir.
27 September 08
Three Colors: White (1994)
Krzysztof Kieslowski, Dir.
29 September 08
Le Mépris (1963)
Jean-Luc Godard, Dir.
*
Following the theme of obsession and betrayal ... The three directors are meticulous in their attention to the smallest detail. The camera movement in these films – while differing in terms of technique – is effective and absolutely essential to the narrative structure of their separate stories.
Posted by sam of the ten thousand things @ 12:08 PM 2 comments
Labels: film, film diary, films to live by
Posted by sam of the ten thousand things @ 8:41 AM 4 comments
Labels: film, films to live by
film diary
10 August 08
Three Colors: Blue (1993)
Krzysztof Kieslowski, Dir.
11 August 08
The Red Shoes (1948)
Written and Directed by
Michael Powell & Emeric Pressburger
*
Two films – stunning in their presentations – that focus on what frees us, what binds us ... two views of obsession, the nature of art, betrayal, and loss.
Posted by sam of the ten thousand things @ 12:05 PM 3 comments
Labels: film diary, films to live by
film diary
1 August 08
Vampyr (1932)
Carl Theodor Dreyer, Dir.
3 August 08
The Double Life of Veronique (1991)
Krzysztof Kieslowski, Dir.
*
Two extraordinary films that question the nature of reality and our perception of it, demonstrating, without explanation, alternate versions of reality.
Posted by sam of the ten thousand things @ 2:22 PM 11 comments
Labels: film diary, films to live by
We make a harvest of loneliness and desiring in the blank wasteland of the cosmos. - Jack Gilbert