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Posts tagged “blu-ray

New Kubrick Perspectives

Yup, it’s Kubrick time again, however brief. Now that I have settled into my new yard and got most of the chores and arrangements completed, I have finally started to get stuck into this bruising book. It’s a series of academic level analysis of material culled from the Kubrick achieve to the London University Of Arts back in 2007. It’s taken a few years but researchers and analysts have started to put together a fascinating picture of a career which stretches back to the Greenwich Village bohemia of the late 1940’s to the sexy squalor of Soho’s Madame JoJo’s in the late 1990’s. I’m only about three essays in so far but I’ve picked up a few intriguing observations and thought strands – Kubrick was courting Joseph Heller to write Strangelove before Terry Southern or example – and then I found this;

the kubrick zoom from Connor Hinson on Vimeo.

Compounding is todays revelation on the best Kubrick Facebook Appreciation Society that somehow, someone is selling the rare import European Blu-Ray set for a mere 30 quid, which is quite a drop from the 150 quid it was trading for last year. Why? Because this is the only box set that features two newly commissioned documentaries which is not available on other media, and has been ruthless purged from YT and all the streaming sites. Only some kind mad fool would spend 30 English pounds on a boxed set containing films he already owns – well part from Strangelove which had been omitted from the widely available collection with all its controversial aspect ratios……..

Stanley Kubrick : A Life In Sounds / Candice Drouet from Really Dim on Vimeo.

In other news I did manage to see The Nice Guys last week and have started putting something together, and I’ve just booked tickets for a cool sounding Q&A at the weekend, with something a little more continental screening wise. I’ve been scouring the multiplexes for something to see to break up the week and what choices do we have? Alice Through The Looking Glass. X-Men: Apocalypse.Warcraft. Teenage Fucking Mutant Fucking Ninja Fucking Turtles Fucking Two. Worst summer season of the decade?


Werner Herzog Season – The Enigma Of Kaspar Hauser (1974)

kaspar1You certainly can’t accuse Herzog of being trapped in the same geographical or historical epoch in his movies as we move on to the next disk in the BFI box set, alighting from 16th century South America to the fatherland in the late 19th century, a rather quaint and rural environment seen through extraordinary eyes. Taking his inspiration from the true 1828 story of Kaspar Hauser Herzog finesses the mysterious yarn with some slight embellishments to serve his specific vision, and brought to screen one of the most unusual leading men of any period. Bruno Schleinstein was raised in poverty and was ruthlessly beaten as a child, enduring a brutal upbringing in a sequence of care homes and state shelters. Sensing a remarkable affinity Herzog cast him as the titular Hauser who appears in a quiet Nuremberg square after being released from a lifetime of captivity in a stable, having never seen the sky, or a tree, or absorbed other human contact other than a mute man draped in black who fed him throughout his bizarre upbringing. Consequently Kaspar has no concept of language or social conditioning that we all unconsciously digest, marking him as a remarkable vessel to observe the world and the structures we have erected around us, the veneer of polite civilization gnawing at the animal within.

hauser2Apart from a shuffle of intelligible grunts and snorts there isn’t a word spoken for the first fifteen minutes of this film, before Kapar’s mysterious jailor takes him into the wild green yonder, his purpose and motives a total mystery straight through to the film’s final reel. In intent if not quite in tone  Enigma is a clear precursor to Under The Skin, the narrative orbiting a surrogate vessel to observe with acute detachment the strange vagaries of the human condition, our rituals and customs, the polite protocols and economic iniquities, these strange affectations which a visitor from an alien background might find difficult to discern. One is reminded of Herzog’s story of his own childhood, in the destitute poverty stricken rural lands of immediate post-war Germany, where he distinctly recalls seeing his first orange which he hadn’t even seen a picture or a photo of, tactile in texture and taste an artifact as exotic as a Martian egg. With the insights of an innocent or an inquisitive child Kaspar queries the unspoken rules of the land, asking ‘why do only women cook and sew?’ and ‘I cannot see how God made everything, that is absurd’….well, from the mouths of babes and all that….

hauser3

The film opens with a hazy, almost sepia soaked images of landscapes and geographic features, fading like the withdrawing wisps in the  purlieus of a fading dream. It’s the past, a time of mysterious intent and understanding, foreshadowed with a telephoto aperture mounted on a wide angled eye lens, giving the interstitial imagery an alien effect as the wind gently caresses corn, as a clock tower strikes another hour lost. These are artefacts rendered from an almost interstellar origin, perhaps Herzog’s attempt to give us Kasper’s inquisitive POV, his conditioning and understanding as far a reach from his contemporaries as a 19th century soul viewing our chaotic 21st century proscenium. The mysterious interloper is treated humanely, as more a curiosity than any threat, given shelter, sustenance and warmth, not treated as a freak monstrosity by his fellow men even when he turns to desperate employment at a travelling circus to pay his way and earn his keep.  The film would have failed without Schleinstein’s otherworldly, naturalistic performance, if performance is even the appropriate word for his utterly convincingly aura of being from almost another dimension, like a bemused, clomping Bowie who fell to earth a century before this Nuremberg materialization. The clergy are bemused with Kaspar’s ideology and his oblique transmutations of all matters ecclesiastical, toward the end of the film he becomes a fashionable attendee at court for the chattering classes, an oddity politely subsumed into gilded society, before they tire of him in favour of the next unusual phenomenon or discovery. Through these story phases we see the lengthening of 19th century European enlightenment, scientific method and rigour weakening the Church’s rigorous grip on the reigns of universal truths and phenomenological plurality, Kaspar a metaphor of the epoch when new molecular and medical mysteries were supplanting the ancient warding of ritual and religion.

hauser4

There is a lovely moment on the commentary when Herzog explains how during the morning of Kaspar’s discovery he applied a rhythm to the pacing in order to present the city waking up, making the film ‘hold its breath’, and one of his anecdotes of how people with diminished physical statures view the world in a very different way is, well, it’s just ‘classic’ Herzog. Over an uncertain period Hauser becomes a gentleman of modest status and prestige, through time cuts which Herzog never signals through traditional methods (slow dissolves, inter-title cards etc.), discreetly drawing a lilting vale over the entire ethereal enterprise before Hauser is enveloped in history. In the real world Bruno Schleinstein became something of an Outsider Art scene posterboy before his passing only four years ago, although there is another entrancing performance of his in the Werner canon that we will turn to shortly. This oddly disembodied and dreamy film is dedicated to the great critic Lotte Eisner, one of Herzog’s early champions and inspirations, igniting within him a flame to bring to cinema a ‘ecstatic truth’, of our world seen through the eyes of a dreamer whose mysterious life and transcendent tragedy echoes through the mists of time;


Mid-Summer Menagerie Madness….

fwwrSometimes it’s nice to feel wanted, isn’t it? Having your current client frantically fighting to retain your services beyond July after you drop the bombshell that a South London authority have made me an offer I can’t refuse? That’s the enviable position I found myself in this month, I would quite happily remain at Bucks given that I’ve finally got the programme I was hired to establish built and secured a handsome £44 million from Whitehall to take the various projects forward, but the prospect of a twelve month contract with a reduced commute equals a period of relative financial security which has stolen my affections – plus some consultancy firms I’ve been commissioning for various work packages are also sniffing at my doorstep with the possibility of branching out internationally. It’s shame as I have enjoyed my time in Aylesbury with a solid crew and learnt a great deal, given that no-one else in the country has defrayed such funding and designed programmes through the LEP’s following  the Coalitions white paper this has been quite a notch on the CV, and I was looking forward to meeting the Head of Pinewood studios who sits on the local LEP board. All this I’m sure is absolutely fascinating for you general reader but fret note there is a method to my madness, as naturally I’ve celebrated my new found popularity by spunking a severe amount of money on the audio-visual entertainment level, so let’s take a look at what the menagerie will be indulging in over the coming weeks and months;

I’ve seen this before and enjoyed it thoroughly, I’ve been tempted to go back and econnaissance the LZ as I recently read the book adaption which I picked up cheap at a local charity shop – something light for my long, now previously defunct commute.

I was a big fan of the first season given Spacey’s slithering performance and the Machiavellian intricacies of Washington politics, I hear that the second series is a re-election of similarly vaunted quality.

I’ve been oscillating with when I’d finally take down True Detective which I’m fairly sure I’ll love – a dark Southern Gothic crime odyssey being hailed as the best eight-hour noir movie of the last ten years? – although I’ve been a little hesitant and waited for the £35 quid price to drop. Still, life’s too short so fuck it, plus I’m tired of avoiding spoilers for months now so I’m willing to punt out the cash for ‘the best TV series since The Wire‘. Well, we shall see, I think I’ll marathon the lot in a single, gorge bloated sitting…..

Whilst I’ve seen and loved The Walking Dead my viewing of the decomposing dread has been patchy, I missed episodes here and there when it aired on UK terrestrial TV, and with the fourth season imminent I thought a revisit may be in order – £30 for the first three seasons is another pretty good bargain in my book. Of the dead. I do expect to be requiring psychiatric help by the end after 35 hours of apocalyptic depression, or just a few months of staring of into the distance whilst quietly weeping may be in order…

We’ve been here before, and I doubt I’ll power through all the episodes for another few years yet (I mounted a re-watch a few years ago) but Fire Walk With Me in HD and the numerous extras are enough justification to drop £50 on this little box that’s wrapped in plastic, those 90 minutes of scenes could even be charitably construed as a new Lynch movie.

Cinema fanatics wept with the joy with the news of this, no less than eighteen of Herzog’s movies upgraded to HD for the first time, all collected with the requisite extras and documentaries by the exalted BFI. There’s a few early oddities in the list which I haven’t seen yet, but more importantly it will prompt me to go back through the great man’s catalogue and partially make amends for my poor attendance at the BFI season last year.

Oh, and yeah, I’ve invested in a PS4 to watch all this on – look, I was going to upgrade the Blu-Ray player and then I thought to myself hang-on….this also looks fucking epic so why the hell not? How else am I going to entertain myself until the LFF in October? I’m not kidding, but some of the effects and animation in those next generation games had my jaw on the floor in amazement – we’ve come a long way huh……


Twin Peaks – The Entire Mystery Announcement

If you thought Godzilla was the biggest thing to arrive this weekend then think again, as this news of the long awaited transfer of Twin Peaks to Blu-Ray and a stunning collection of extras has Lynch fans going all Log-Lady. I’ve got the 2007 Gold Box which has every episode and a few extras, but the promise of the inclusion of Fire Walk With Me (perhaps Lynch’s most underrated film) and a Black Lodge of extras from the film including at least 90 minutes of sacred unseen material  – well it’s enough to make a grown man cry. Here’s a reminder of what we’ve got to look forward to;

Delving further we are promised ‘an epilogue providing a fascinating glimpse beyond the cliff-hanger finale of the TV series.’ and Between Two Worlds, in which “Lynch himself interviews the Palmer family (Leland, Sarah and daughter Laura) about their current existence in this life and the next’ – damn fine coffee!!

Very, VERY excited about this, looks like it’s only available on pre-order for US region players, I was looking to celebrate my new assignment with a equipment upgrade so I guess going all-region Blu-Ray player shopping is in order.  In lieu of any new film announcements any Lynch is welcome round these parts, and just some cursory revision has led me to find this which is just fantastically cut together – don’t go having any nightmares about Bob now y’hear?;

35 Years of David Lynch (Film Tribute) from Michael Warren on Vimeo.


Rumble Fish (1983) Blu-Ray Release

With all the debate and discussions surrounding the recent Sight & Sound poll I was unsurprised at being asked for my top ten list of the greatest films ever made by my fellow colleagues amongst the internet film community. It’s a thankless, impossible task as you simply have to omit absolute, solid gold masterpieces and the work of core, unimpeachable all time favourite directors – including the likes of Tarkovsky, Leone, Malick, Bresson and Kurosawa for me – especially if you vote with your heart and not your head as I did. I have however constructed a mental picture of my top twenty which fixes some of these deeply tragic oversights, and was delighted to see that one of my later choices, Francis Ford Coppola’s Rumble Fish has an imminent Blu-Ray release and a fairly intriguing little write-up in todays Guardian;

I think even as a younger cineaste I just loved the photography, the European expressionist influences (not that I understood such a phrase back then of course) and Rourke’s super cool, doomed performance as the Motorcycle Boy, way back when before he got bloated and boxing. Stewart Copeland’s jaunty, prancing score was also a refreshing change from the orchestral string based aural stylings of the period, and eighties Dennis Hooper is always a treat as well.

Nice hair Nick. It’s only know that I can look back, a little older and wiser, and see from just a few youtube clips the influence that Bergman, Murnau and as always Welles had on Coppola. So yes, I’ve been coyly teasing you with the actual list but I have to wait until my Sound On Sight  colleagues publish the final results, I should be helping them out with some capsule reviews of the exalted winners as well. I’ve also just put my accreditation in for this years London Film Festival so it’s all go at the moment, with a couple of special Hitchcock events over the next three or four days. Finally I’m getting very excited by this which has been slowly gaining a real momentum as one of those slightly under the radar, possible films of the year, I’m hearing Malick being thrown about with abandon and it stormed Sundance, one of our Australian correspondents saw it at the Melbourne International Film festival so I’m waiting for him to report back…


Flotsam & Jetsam XVI

David Lean would be 100 this month if he were still alive and naturally the BFI are staging a major retrospective of his work and releasing new prints of some of the classics. As I’ve mentioned before, I’m not a huge Lean fan, I like his early Dickens adaptations and this much more than the later overblown epics but I did take the time to pop over to the NFT for this event which was good fun.

Here is a collection of tales from Rhodes Island’s most chilling author after which you may need cheering up.  I linked to an amusing ‘Downfall‘ mash-up on the Bu Ray/HD-DVD war a few months ago, some other funny examples have emerged although I guess you need to be a MMORGer to get much out of this one.

 

Shame to see that Sydney Pollack has gone. He will no doubt be remembered for ‘Tootsie’ but I think he was a great actor in ‘Michael Clayton’ and of course ‘Eyes Wide Shut’ and he did make some memorable, mainstream films – Here is a collection of links from his work that I’ve enjoyed, his recent documentary on Frank Gehry is also recomended.

  

Swings and roundabouts my friends as yours truly will find himself amongst the land of job seekers come late June as the funding for me at Tower Hamlets has expired. It’s time for a change, I’ve been thinking of myself as something like Superman’s little known adversary ‘ Mr. Mxyzptlk’ recently. Wait, what’s that? What do you mean you’ve never heard of him? Well, suffice to say he’s a para-dimensional being who after spending 2,000 years doing only good deeds got bored and decided to spend the next 2,000 causing evil and chaos. Not quite the same level granted but I spent the first five years of my career working for American multinationals & investment banks and then have spent the last five toiling away in the public sector, in my own minute way making contributions to the community and environment of our fair capital. I feel like being evil again, maybe going to work for Raytheon or Monsanto, BAE or Haliburton. In any case, I’m taking a few weeks off to enjoy the summer (plus this will be out) and then we’ll see….