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People will think what I tell them to think

Kane1
Kane2
Well, kids, it's once more into the breach for the cinetrix. She punches another bunch of students' cards this afternoon when she screens Citizen Kane for the umpteenth time. Any of you out there have bright ideas for keeping it fresh--for me--I'm all ears.

Somewhat related:

FILMS and VIDEO TO SEE
What this list is and what this list is not:
The faculty of Visual and Environmental Studies have drafted the following list of titles which concentrators with a primary interest in film or video should try to see during their undergraduate years. This is not a list of cinema;s* greatest hits or of the best movies and videos of all time.Rather, it reflects a variety of criteria. Some works we consider great, others important, others influential. Not every title on the list represents a unanimous choice. We plan to revise the list periodically and welcome your comments and suggestions.

*Hey, Harvard. Learn to proofread.

Soul power

Night_james_brown_saved_boston

Set yer TiVos, kids. VH1 [yeah, I know] is coming correct this Saturday, April 5th, with the Rock Doc The Night James Brown Saved Boston.

A little background:

On April 5, 1968, less than 24 hours after Martin Luther King's assassination, the city of Boston was in a state of turmoil. When James Brown arrived at the airport to play his already scheduled show he was warned that the mayor, fearing further unrest among the African American community, planned to cancel the show. Brown assured the mayor that the consequences would be much worse if the concert was called off. Not only did the show go on as planned, public television station WGBH broadcast the whole thing. It's an incredible historical document and a fantastic performance by James Brown, who dedicated the show to Dr. King’s memory and brought the raw emotions within himself and his community to a searing head. At one point the restless crowd swarms the stage and amidst the mayhem James Brown tells the cops to stay back and calmly talks the crowd back into their seats. "This isn't how black people should act."

[You can read the rest of this excellent synopsis of the backstage machinations originally recounted by J. Anthony Lucas in Common Ground here. Let's just say Brother James got paid.]

The poorly edited page on the VH1.com site promises

Finally, 40 years after that remarkable and historic moment, VH1 Rock Docs presents "The Night James Brown Saved Boston", a film from David Leaf Productions. It tells the story of that amazing night -- with rarely seen footage of the concert (until now, that concert has been buried in the archives). Through those amazing concert moments...and with the personal reminiscences of James Brown's band members, colleagues (including his long-time manager Charles Bobbit), awe-struck concert-goers (including Newsweek's David Gates), the Boston city government officials and the pointed commentary of several distinguished observers of African-American history (Dr. Cornel West, Dr. Andrew Young, Rev. Al Sharpton) -- the dramatic and emotionally-riveting story unfolds.

Ah, but Boston-dwellers can get a jump on the rest of the nation at the station that made it happen, WGBH,* this Monday, March 31. Duck out of work early and get yer asses over to Brighton, peeps.

The world premiere of The Night James Brown Saved Boston , from director David Leaf (The U.S. Vs. John Lennon; Beautiful Dreamer: Brian Wilson & The Story of SMiLE), will be held March 31 at 6:30pm at WGBH’s new Brighton studios. The event is free and open to the public; RSVP at www.wgbh.org/events.

The world premiere screening will be followed by a panel discussion and question and answer session featuring the documentary’s director, David Leaf; Russell Morash, longtime WGBH producer and director; Charles Bobbit, James Brown’s personal manager; and Northeastern University professor of African-American Studies Dr. Robert L. Hall.

Shout! Factory will be releasing it in August as part of DVD box set called I Got The Feelin': James Brown In The '60s.

*A little part of the cinetrix's soul dies every time she remembers that 'GBH's zip is no longer 02134.

The science of swede

Science_typewrtier Nothing profound to share. Just noticed that while the kids are busy sweding up everything in sight on the YouTubes, Anthropologie's latest catalog lifts its look whole cloth [sorry] from Gondry's previous film's hand-sewn aesthetic. See for yourself here.

[And, yes, part of me still covets that felt typewriter. The heart has its reasons....]

Brains with butter-flavored topping

American_zombie Angelenos, this one's for you. For now anyway.

The Movies by Women blog reminds us that Grace Lee and John Solomon's American Zombie opens in the City of Angels this weekend. [Tagline: We here. We're Dead. Get used to it!] You can even download a coupon that'll get you in for six dollars. That's a lot of brains for your buck. [Sorry.] And did I mention the Q&A with the directors... and the zombies?

So what the hell is American Zombie? The film's site is well worth a visit, offering not only the trailer but also Fun Zombie Facts* like "Zombies are pretty much critic proof" and Proust questionnaire-style profiles of the zombies.

For those pressed for time, here's the synopsis.

 

Filmmakers Grace Lee (”The Grace Lee Project”) and John Solomon (”Nonsense Man”) team up to shoot a documentary about high-functioning zombies living in Los Angeles and their struggles to gain acceptance in human society.

Despite their wildly different working styles, Grace and John manage to chronicle the hopes and dreams of four fascinating subjects: IVAN, a convenience-store clerk who longs for a career in publishing; LISA, a florist trying to recover her lost memories; JUDY, a hopeless romantic who learns to accept her true nature; and JOEL, a committed political activist striving for zombie rights. As Grace strives to get to know the zombies “on their own terms,” John is eager to uncover their darker side and rallies to get the crew permission to shoot at a three-day, zombies-only retreat called Live Dead where the documentary takes an unexpected – and dangerous – turn. What transpires there is beyond anything the filmmakers could imagine, as they are forced to re-evaluate their ideas about tolerance, identity politics and the future of the human race.

American Zombie premieres in Los Angeles March 28th:

Laemmle’s Sunset 5
8000 Sunset Blvd.
West Hollywood, CA 90046

Showtimes: 12:30, 2:50, 5:10, 7:30 & 10:00

Q&A with Grace Lee and the zombies: Friday (3/28) and Saturday (3/29) after the 7:30PM show.

*If you've read this far, you deserve another Fun Zombie Fact. Zombie actors dislike zombie movies; they reject selling out and acting "all zombie" for the Man. Zombies' favorite movie, according to a 1997 poll? "The Abyss."

Name that film

Another cinematic time suck for you folks: Name That Film. I'll let the Brainiac explain:

Everybody I know is playing "Name That Film" this week.

How does it work? Visit the NAME THAT FILM Pool at Flickr. The pool was started by Flickr user BarelyFitz, among others. Flickr users are invited to post unidentified movie stills to the pool; they're also invited to post their guesses about which movies other users' stills are from. When someone guesses correctly, the film's title is added to the photo as a tag.

As of this posting, the pool has over 1,300 members and over 9,000 images.

Friendly faces everwhere. Humble folks without temptation

Tom Cruise is not gonna like this:

After years of encouraging their fans to share "South Park," creators Trey Parker and Matt Stone have set up a viable alternative to the mass YouTube-based distribution of popular clips from the hit show: They're just going to give the whole thing away on SouthParkStudios.com.

"We got really sick of having to download our own show illegally all the time, so we gave ourselves a legal alternative," the duo quipped in a statement.

The site offers every "South Park" episode including the current one, which stays live for a week after its airdate and then goes dark for the rest of the month, at which point it is added to the site's back catalog. [via]

On Thursdays, it's a holiday

Forgive me for the silliness. But we're nearly there--Friday is in sight.

A Hong Kong flick without the Kung Fu

Ed Koch is back, and he brought HS with him. Hilarity ensues. And this time by "hilarity," I mean he describes a hand job as "wanking." You have been warned.

Ed Irina Palm
This offbeat film covers a lewd subject but is never salacious. It opens in a Liverpool, England, hospital room where a young boy, Olly (Corey Burke), lies dying of an unnamed disease. With him are his mother, Sarah (Siobhan Hewlett), his father, Tom (Kevin Bishop), and his grandmother, Maggie (Marianne Faithfull).

The family is told that an experimental treatment for Olly is available in Australia. The care itself would be free, but all other expenses, including travel, hotels, meals, etc., would have to be paid by the family. Their bank accounts and credit are exhausted, and they are unable to pay the expected cost of 6,000 pounds.

Maggie, who will do anything to help her grandson, decides to look for a job. She is ultimately hired by a London sex establishment operated by Miki (Miki Manojlovic) where she services men by wanking them. Known as Irina Palm with the soft hands, she becomes an expert and men line up to be serviced by her.

Maggie is ultimately found out by her son and friends, and their reactions to her situation heighten your interest in the film. The final resolution regarding her son's acceptance or rejection of the money she earned in the sex trade is not revealed until near the end of the movie. Along the way, Grandma Maggie finds romance.

Irina Palm is a fairytale, but it could happen. It's playing at The Quad Cinema on West 13th Street in Manhattan, which has a penchant for good, offbeat movies not found elsewhere.

Next up, Manohla leads Ed astray, and HS rattles on a la Abe Simpson while demonstrating an unnerving familiarity with SM, roofies, and... sweatshops?

Boarding Gate
I decided to see this film directed by Olivier Assayas after reading Manohla Dargis's interesting review in the New York Times and also because it was playing at one of my favorite theaters  –the Cinema Village on East 12th Street off Fifth Avenue in Manhattan. Dargis wrote that in the movie the director "racks up one eye-catching incident after another (involving sadomasochistic sex, pooling blood and smuggled drugs) that swirl on screen with little apparent connection."

I saw the show with two friends, and when it ended, none of us could come up with a coherent description of the story, nor did we understand much of what took place in the individual scenes. To be fair, there are riveting moments, one involving an escape scene in Hong Kong and another the sadomasochistic scene. Overall, however, the picture is so disjointed that it failed for me.

Let me try to put together some of the pieces. The movie opens in what appears to be Paris with what I believe to be a drug partnership involving an international businessman, Miles (Michael Madsen), who is getting out of the racket. His former lover, Sandra (Asia Argento), the central character, shows up and the two engage in an S&M tryst, which ends in handcuffs and near asphyxiation when a belt is used to heighten the sexual moment.

Ultimately Sandra is off to Hong Kong at the direction of Lester (Carl Ng) and his wife, Sue (Kelly Lin), her bosses in a factory where she is employed. Sandra later arrives in Hong Kong, as does Lester, where chase scenes take place and murders occur. By this time I gave up looking for a linear story. To me it turned into a Hong Kong flick without the Kung Fu.

Directors used to call on Abe Burrows to doctor a play with a failing storyline before it opened on Broadway. I'm thinking of offering my services to Hollywood to improve movie scripts before their films opens. Until they hire me, take my advice on what to see and what to avoid. Boarding Gate is one to avoid.

HS said: "This was one of the most incomprehensible films I have seen. Some films are difficult because they are works of art making an obscure point. This was a crime film, but you couldn't tell who was good and who was evil. It had a car chase, a robbery, murders both planned and casual, roofies (date-rape drugs), and bondage, but not much actual coupling. The only good part was the urban Chinese scenery, which included a sweatshop. The movie would have been a better travelogue without its lame plot.  Weighing the reaction to the film, it could have been called 'Boring Gate.' The title 'Waterboarding Gate' exaggerates the film's impact on the audience." [ed. Ewww...]

Picking your feet in Poughkeepsie

The cinetrix had no idea.

[Al] Copeland added more than a sprinkle of cayenne pepper and a few more secret Cajun-inspired hot spices, changed the name to Popeyes (he said he was too poor to afford an apostrophe) and by the end of the 1980s owned or franchised more than 800 of the restaurants.

The name Popeye did not come from the spinach-eating cartoon character but from the hard-nosed film detective Popeye Doyle in The French Connection.

Wait, so does that mean one of the secret spices is...? Nah. Couldn't be.

Reel men of genius

Oh, thank god. After being sickened by a virus viral clip, wise-cracking George Clooney has recovered enough to bite the hand that feeds. [Er, or waters, in this case.]

In ''Leatherheads,'' which opens April 4, Clooney plays an aging player on the Duluth Bulldogs in 1925, while Zellweger plays a feisty Chicago newspaper reporter.

Clooney said filmmakers wanted to call the team the Eskimos, but since there is drinking in the movie, the National Football League would not allow the name to be used.

''Oh, they don't drink in the NFL,'' the new voice of Budweiser commercials said. ''I was shocked to hear. I couldn't believe it. I was watching a Bud commercial at the time, I think.''

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