High Museum of Art: Films


Goodbye Cruel World by Linda Dubler

As I wrote in an earlier post, landscape photographer Richard Misrach’s On the Beach, a show of exquisite, large scale pictures shot from an overhead vantage point in Hawaii after 9/11, is currently on view at the High. Some of the images are populated, some devoid of human presence, but all suggest both seaside paradise and doomsday unease. Earlier posts looked at the beachy aspect of the Misrach pictures, so now we’re turning to the apocalyptic and post-apocalyptic currents that run through the series.

What are your favorite movies from this genre?

I’m not a huge sci-fi and/or horror fan, so apocalyptic and post-apocalyptic movies aren’t my strong suit. Though I enjoy cinematic suspense, the surreal, and things blowing up real good as much as the next gal, I tend to avoid the gore and gross-outs that pop up in most sci-fi and horror. (I remember next to nothing about Soylent Green, which I saw when it first came out, but I still feel vaguely icky even thinking about it).

Johan Harper, a security officer and the High’s resident B-movie connoisseur, steered me to this brilliant post-apocalyptic cheat sheet, which rates a bunch of films based on such PA hallmarks as cannibalism, warlords, mutants and degraded culture. You’ll hear more from Johan when we run staff picks on Friday.

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Opening this Weekend by Linda Dubler

Review: Chéri by Stephen Frears
Opening June 26 at the Tara

The British director Stephen Frears makes entertainments for viewers who don’t assume that refinement and substance are mutually exclusive. He’s fascinated by the intrigues that accompany the exercise of power (think Dangerous Liasons and The Queen), and also by subcultures that exist parallel to the mainstream (like the con artists of The Grifters and the illegal immigrants of Dirty Pretty Things.) Both themes emerge in his latest work, Chéri, a gorgeous bauble of a movie that unfolds during the years before the First World War.

Michelle Pfeiffer, Kathy Bates

Michelle Pfeiffer, Kathy Bates

Based on a novel by Colette, it’s a love story set in the French demi-monde, where sophisticated beauties bestow sexual favors on titled gentlemen who pay (and pay and pay) for their attentions. When these ladies invest wisely, they end up like Charlotte (Kathy Bates) and Lea (Michelle Pfeiffer), women “of a certain age,” who have retired from active duty in the bedroom and now divide their time between their luxurious Parisian town houses and sprawling country estates. Charlotte is mother to the dissipated, charming and bored Fred, who was nicknamed Chéri by his godmother Lea.  At nineteen, Chéri (Rupert Friend) is debauched beyond his years, and his mother is fed up with his lassitude and lack of ambition. Her unlikely solution is to hand him over to Lea, childless and still ethereally lovely, who barely hestitates when Chéri signals his intentions by delivering a decidedly unfilial kiss.

In current parlance, I suppose you’d call Lea a cougar, but Chéri is the one who does the pursuing, and the languid, tender, and erotic bond between them seems utterly free of desperation. Chéri, the son of a prostitute, understands and embraces Lea, who like her peers is ostracized from polite society. His love helps her deny her fading beauty and allows her to hold on to the illusion that time is standing still. And time stands still for Chéri too;  swaddled in Lea’s motherly care, their quasi-incestuous relationship stalls his passage into manhood. Their idyll lasts six years, until Charlotte decides that her pampered boy needs to settle down, marry, and give her some grandchildren. Chéri complies, fulfilling Lea’s jaded view of him: “I can’t criticize his character because he doesn’t seem to have one.”

Michelle Pfeiffer, Rupert Friend

Michelle Pfeiffer, Rupert Friend

What makes Chéri fascinating is the way that Frears fleshes out a world in which Christian morality seems irrelevant, but the rules of the game — the machinations of propriety and convention, hold sway. It’s a world untouched by poverty or disease (venereal or otherwise), where the ugliest thing one encounters is Charlotte’s grotesque gold morning gown and matching bonnet. The art direction, with its sinuous Art Nouveau decors and elegantly draped costumes, is exquisite; Bates looks suitably toad-like in corseted, jet-beaded gowns while Pfeiffer is as slim and delicate as a dragonfly. Friend, with his jutting cheekbones and skin the blue-white of a calendar-art snow scene, is perfectly cast as the callow, ultimately tragic Chéri. But the film belongs to its female stars. Bates masks a scheming intelligence with simpering and pleasantries.  Pfeiffer combines both restraint and carnality, worldliness and vulnerabilty. Her Lea is a woman who is too proud to beg, and whose response to pity would be a withering glance.

Linda Dubler



Recent Releases: Hard Times in the Country by Linda Dubler
June 23, 2009, 11:29 am
Filed under: New DVD Release, Review | Tags: , , , , , , ,
Wendy and Lucy

Wendy and Lucy

Before the economy officially went belly-up, two American indie directors were already sending dispatches from the hardscrabble heartland. Frozen River and Wendy & Lucy, both recently released on DVD, are films by women directors who have a lot to say about invisibility, suffering, and resilience. Though very different in tone, both feature women who are on their own and down to their last dollar. No loveable, suddenly mature shlub (the current incarnation of Prince Charming) is waiting in the wings for these gals; rescue isn’t even part of the equation.

Frozen River, directed by Courtney Hunt, is the meatier of the two movies; it’s as emotionally satisfying as a melodrama but its realism tempers that genre’s tear-jerking conventions. (Watch the trailer.) Set in upstate New York, where the Mohawk reservation abuts the Canadian border, the film unfolds during the days leading up to Christmas. It centers on two single mothers, Ray (Melissa Leo), who’s got two boys and a big hole in her bank account left by her gambling husband; and Lila (Misty Upham), a tough young Mohawk mourning for the baby that her mother-in-law has stolen. Lila, reckless in her grief, is a smuggler who drives illegals across the frozen St. Lawrence River. She makes good money, and figures that for enough of a bribe, she’ll be able to get her baby back.  Ray, faced with the loss of her whole investment unless she can come up a substantial payment on a double wide, reluctantly asks Lila to cut her in on a couple of trips.

Frozen River

Frozen River

American movies love to celebrate the quasi-erotic abandon of outlaws behind the wheel — think Thelma and Louise or Bonnie and Clyde — but don’t count Ray and Lila among them. The dominant emotions in Frozen River are anxiety and desperation. This is a movie about being left in the cold, both literally and metaphorically. Ray, a smart woman trying to raise two kids on a part-time Dollar Store salary, is reduced to feeding her sons popcorn and Tang for breakfast (and no, it isn’t played for comedy). Like poor people all across the country, she’s frozen out, but at least she still knows what she feels. Lila is emotionally deadened by anger’s deep freeze, and it takes the movie’s version of a Christmas miracle to awaken her capacity to really believe in a future for herself and her child.

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Staff Picks: Summer Movies by Linda Dubler
June 19, 2009, 2:44 pm
Filed under: Staff Picks | Tags: , , , , , ,

Museum staff weigh in on their favorite summer beach movies.

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10

10

10  (1979)
Cinque Reeves, Security Officer

I’d have to go with 10 from Blake Edwards for the most memorable beach scenes. Just thinking about George trying to walk on the hot sand makes me laugh. It’s probably one of Dudley Moore’s best performances.

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Endless Summer

Endless Summer

The Endless Summer (1966)
Dana Haugaard, Coordinator of Facilities

My favorite summer beach movie is also the one of my favorites for the middle of winter: The 1966 documentary The Endless Summer by Bruce Brown. It is as carefree as every summer should be, and the soundtrack cannot be beat.

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One Crazy Summer

One Crazy Summer

One Crazy Summer (1986)
Emily Beard, Web Content Coordinator

This movie is basically exactly the same as Savage Steve’s other Cusack vehicle Better Off Dead, except instead of snow there’s sand, and in lieu of a French exchange student, you get Demi Moore with hippie braids. There’s the rich-boy bully, his hot 80s girlfriend, sidekicks Bobcat Goldthwait and a Murray brother, a vindictive 9-year-old, drive-ins and cartoons. Even when it tries to be serious it isn’t, and that’s what makes it an excellent beach movie.

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Shag

Shag

Shag (1989)
Berry Lowden, Curatorial Assistant, Decorative Arts and Design

1. Myrtle Beach in the 60s
2. Bouffant hair
3. Shag dancing
4. Making out in vintage 60’s cars
5. Racy Bridget Fonda routines with American flags (errr….)

It’s a keeper!

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Weekend at Bernie's

Weekend at Bernie's

Weekend at Bernies (1989)
Danielle Avram, Curatorial Assistant, Modern & Contemporary and Photography

It may be embarrassing to admit, but Weekend at Bernies is one of my all-time favorite guilty pleasures. We had a VHS copy when I was a kid and actually destroyed it from watching it so many times.



Summer Movies/YouTube, Part 3 by Linda Dubler
Endless Summer

Endless Summer

Summer bliss has been distilled for as long as moving images endure in Bruce Brown’s 1966 glorified home movie, the surfing classic Endless Summer. A daring example of a filmmaker taking on his own distribution, the film remains a cult favorite.

For the funhouse mirror version of the surfing life, see Doug Pray’s Surfwise. It’s a dysfunctional family doc that will leave you grateful for your own less-than-perfect upbringing. Surfwise focuses on the lives of Paskowitz family, dominated by dad Dorian “Doc” Paskowitz, a surfer, health nut, and self-appointed sex god. Doc (a one-time physician) and his Mexican-Indian wife Juliet had nine kids — eight sons and a daughter — who were raised to be natural creatures, not products of American middle-class conformity. Everyone lived together in a minivan and like the surfers in Endless Summer, chased the waves.

Paskowitz, who was 85 when the film was made in 2007, is Jewish, and the film explores how his devotion to fitness, strength, and self-sufficiency was a direct response to the widespread vision of Jews as helpless victims during the Holocaust. As one son wryly comments, “Doc wanted to repopulate the world with Jews.”

YouTube Diversions



Summer Movies/YouTube, Part 2 by Linda Dubler
June 17, 2009, 11:42 am
Filed under: Film Series: Online | Tags: , , , , , , , ,

As far as the art film crowd is concerned, the undisputed king of beach comedies is Jacques Tati’s Mr. Hulot’s Holiday, made in 1953. Ephraim Katz, author of the indispensible Film Encyclopedia, describes Tati’s alter-ego, the hapless Mr. Hulot as “a gangling, awkward character whose peculiar gait and odd misadventures set him apart from the gadget-obessessed world around him.” The film tells its barely-there story visually, with very little dialogue; some viewers may find it a tad slow going by contemporary standards.

As Rogert Ebert observes “the movie is constructed with the meticulous attention to detail of a Keaton or Chaplin. Sight gags are set up with such patience that they seem to expose hidden functions in the clockwork of the universe.” Give it a chance and you may find its innocent humor a refreshing antidote to all of the loud, overbearing product out there.

Rowan Atkinson remade the film as Mr. Bean’s Holiday. If Bean sets your teeth on edge I’d skip it; if not, it’s interesting to compare the master and then his less subtle acolyte.

-Linda Dubler

You Tube Diversions



Summer on YouTube by Linda Dubler

As part of the Summer Movies theme for this week, I’ll be scouring YouTube for clips. Enjoy!

YouTube Diversions

Esther Williams was discovered by an MGM scout in Billy Rose’s Aquacade and became a star with Bathing Beauty (1942). Here she is in all her spangled glory. Note the water lily sequence (and the green and pink color scheme), a nice tie to the Monet exhibition currently on view at the High.

Coney Island was America’s playground and was at its hot-dog-eating, sunbathing, boardwalk-strolling, rollercoaster-riding height in the 1930s and 40s. Before air conditioning, suburban sprawl, and urban blight took its toll it was an amazing scene.

Wacky Edwardians invent new ways to pass the long summer afternoons in this clip from the British Film Institute’s fab website.

Ecstatic romance…exotic dances…exciting music in the world’s lushest paradise of song!  Check out Elvis in a tight white shirt and trunks, surrounded by blazing tiki torches and gyrating guys ‘n gals in Norman Taurog’s Blue Hawaii (1961.)



Summer Movies, Part 1 by Linda Dubler

Landscape photographer Richard Misrach‘s works are on view at the High, so the next few posts will spin off from the exhibition On the Beach, a show of exquisite, large scale pictures shot from an overhead vantage point in Hawaii after 9/11. Some of the images are populated, some devoid of human presence, but all suggest both seaside paradise and doomsday unease. This duality is embodied in the exhibition’s title, a forthright statement of what to expect from the images, and also a reference to Nevil Shute’s book and Stanley Kramer’s  post-apocalyptic film of the same name about a bunch of Australians awaiting the appearance of a nuclear cloud that promises to annihilate them all.

Beach Blanket Bingo

Beach Blanket Bingo

OK, impending extinction may not be your idea of summer fun. So let’s consider beach blanket escapades, amusement parks, surfing, and all things sweaty and summery, with just a quick side trip into the apocalyptic.

To begin on an historic note, Blake Leland, a poet and longtime professor in the Science, Technology, and Culture program at Georgia Tech, points out that “many of the beach movies (Beach Blanket Bingo, Beach Party, Muscle Beach and the like) were released after the Cuban missile crisis (as close to actual apocalypse as we’ve come so far).” He continues, “I wonder if these atrocious movies aren’t part of a kind of pre-apocalyptic denial of the possibility of annihilation–at least for teens!”

Well, partying on the eve of destruction is a hallowed tradition, so in retrospect maybe the spunky teens were trying to tell us something. I suspect that all that American International Pictures saw when they produced the cycle of beach party movies made in the mid-1960s were dollar signs. The films starred Philadelphia teen idol Frankie Avalon and a curvy grown-up  Mouseketeer, Annette Funicello.

Funicello was still under contract with Disney when these films were shot, and AIP had to promise that she wouldn’t appear in a bikini since exposing too much flesh would tarnish her wholesome image. I must admit that during the time when Beach Blanket Bingo et al appeared in theaters, I was too busy being a junior high school existentialist to see them and I haven’t revisited them since. They did make lots of money, and they may still have some campy charm.

From Here to Eternity

From Here to Eternity

Before Annette and Frankie were kicking up sand and singing rock n’ roll,  some other Hollywood icons were grabbing Oscars for a World War II era saga, From Here to Eternity, which features an indelible image of  Deborah Kerr and Burt Lancaster locked in a wave-wetted embrace. The 1953 drama directed by Fred Zinneman, ends with the bombing of Pearl Harbor, which in a sense presages the looming atomic disaster of On the Beach. When From Here to Eternity was restored and re-released in 2003, J. Hoberman wrote in the Village Voice, “Contemporary audiences may not see why, even in its toned-down simplification of the novel, From Here to Eternity was the most daring movie of 1953, but it remains an acting bonanza”

Linda Dubler



Guilty Pleasures by Linda Dubler
Carmen Miranda

Carmen Miranda

Next week I’ll be writing about summer movies, but to start things off (and with Latin American cinema on my mind since I’m planning the upcoming 24th Latin American Film Festival) I want to share one of my guilty pleasures – Carmen Miranda in The Gang’s All Here .

Kids today (you know who you are) look to the Davids (Lynch and Cronenberg) when they need their surrealist fix, but for gloom-free other-worldliness there’s no one like Carmen Miranda. Known as the Brazilian Bombshell,  and the inspiration for Chiquita Banana, Miranda’s flame has been kept alive by generations of drag queens, but I sense that among post-Baby Boomers only the hard-core camp connoisseurs know her. On a recently re-aired episode of America’s Next Top Model, the contestants were challenged to channel Miranda’s spirit during a photo shoot in her old neighborhood; they smoldered away, but not one captured her over-caffeinated gleam. (See their sorry efforts here.)

Chiquita Banana

Chiquita Banana

Miranda, who was born in Portugal and raised in Brazil, was a huge star before she hit Hollywood. Her produce-aisle headgear, mangled English, and general air of hopped up zaniness, was a perfect fit for World War II era audiences eager for cinematic escape (and a tinsel-town emanation of the U.S.’s Good Neighbor Policy). She may have been one of the most highly paid women in show biz during the 40s, but from her on-screen performances it looks like she worked hard for the money.

Her supernova radiance reached its apotheosis in The Lady in the Tutti-Frutti Hat number from The Gang’s All Here. Busby Berkeley’s choreography has never been more Freudian — check out the undulating bananas and colossal berries — and a tanker truck of B12 couldn’t endow most of us mortals with Miranda’s energy.

It’s easy to watch just a YouTube clip but The Gang’s All Here has other allures, including a cast that includes some of Hollywood’s finest character actors and a gonzo finale called The Polka Dot Polka. Seek out the June 2008 re-release as part of 20th Century Fox’s “Carmen Miranda Collection,” which features a neon-bright color transfer.

-Linda Dubler



Welcome by Linda Dubler
June 11, 2009, 2:24 pm
Filed under: General | Tags: , , , ,

Welcome to the Films at the High blog. Regulars to the High’s film program have probably seen me hovering in the lobby before a show, or standing at the podium to introduce screenings.

But if you’re new to the High, I’m the Curator of Media Arts at the Museum, and my job is to run the screening series which takes place in the Woodruff Arts Center’s Rich Theatre.  I came to the High in 1985 from IMAGE Film and Video Center (now Atlanta Film Festival 365) back in the days when there were still a few revival houses in Atlanta and VHS was the new thing. Since then, movies that never would have gotten theatrical release in Atlanta are available on cable TV and DVD, and anyone, city dweller not, can still see esoteric foreign films any night of the week.

The impact of these changes is that more people are watching great films but less often in communal settings. Sadly,  we’ve also joined the ranks of cities that are losing vital film critics in the local press.  For me, something is lost when films are seen in a vacuum —  when we experience cinema apart from fellow film lovers and cut off from critical dialogue. I know that I laugh harder at a comedy when I’m in a crowd, and find that anticipating the conversation I’ll have with friends about a movie is a big part of the pleasure of watching the movie itself. I hope that people coming to see films at the High find these kinds of connections here, and that this blog will be another way that we can share our passions, discoveries and responses to today’s film culture.

I’ll be posting about what I’m watching, about movies that relate to exhibitions on view at the High Museum of Art and commercial releases and what’s new on DVD.  I’ll share YouTube gems and recommendations from fellow staff members at the High and guest bloggers. Your input, suggestions and feedback will be key to making this a lively, relevant resource for movie lovers in Atlanta and beyond.

-Linda Dubler