Thursday, February 21, 2019

ZEBRAS IN AMERICA EPISODE 84




We're back from a little hiatus

On this episode we discuss everything from new releases (Velvet Buzzsaw & Glass) to old/rediscovered gems (Cane River). 

Enjoy...

Monday, February 18, 2019

THE SCHOOL OF PERSONA PART FOUR

Here’s some more visuals from Begman's Persona that may (or may not) have rubbed off on modern cinema.

Enjoy...

Persona / Boy Meets Girls

Persona / The Departure

Persona / Swoon

Persona /
Carol

Persona / Inland Empire

Persona / The Neon Demon

Persona / The Color Purple

Persona / Black Swan

Persona / The Kiss

Persona / The Mirror

Persona / The Addiction

Persona / The Pornographer 

Monday, February 4, 2019

A FEW WORDS ON VELVET BUZZSAW


Velvet Buzzsaw is being compared to everything from Ghostbusters 2 to Nicolas Winding Refn’s Neon Demon. But the one film I don’t see anyone bringing up is Terry Zwigoff’s Art School Confidential. I guess that’s somewhat understandable. Time has not been good to Zwigoff’s last feature film (I love Terry’s work but Art School Confidential just wasn’t good). But good or not, influence is influence and I find it hard to believe that Dan Gilroy didn’t use Art School Confidential as a source of inspiration. Throughout Velvet Buzzsaw we see characters murdered by the haunted paintings of a deceased tortured serial killer/artist. One of the biggest subplots in Art School Confidential centers around a failed tortured artist murdering college students from his Alma mater. And as an added bonus, the murderer in Art School Confidential uses the actual blood & hair from his victims in his paintings. Sound familiar? In Velvet Buzzsaw, the deceased artist/murderer used actual blood (presumably from his victims) for the color red in his paintings.

And if none of that convinces you, both films feature John Malkovich playing an aging disgruntled modern artists…
Velvet Buzzsaw / Art School Confidential

If you can't see the blaring similarities between the two films then I don’t know what to tell you. You must be a contrarian to be the point of exhaustion where no one likes you and you have no friends.


The biggest difference between Art School & Buzzsaw is that Zwigoff not only pokes fun at the modern art world, but he also kind of parodies it. Zwigoff’s disdain for modern art is documented in most of his work. There’s a famous scene in Louie Bluie where Howard Armstrong dismisses the famous Picasso statue in downtown Chicago. There’s a few more jabs in his second feature; Crumb, and Illeana Douglas’ character in Ghost World is an amalgam of arthouse clichés. Zwigoff comes from the same ilk of old curmudgeons as Harvey Pekar & Robert Crumb so it shouldn’t come as a surprise…
Louie Bluie

Dan Gilroy certainly pokes fun at the modern art scene but he doesn’t parody it. There is a difference. It’s a sometimes fine line (with the occasional ven diagram crossover) but there is still a difference. Gilroy almost went the parody route but at the end of the day he managed to show some respect. This is evident in the art that’s showcased in the movie. The haunted paintings of the mysterious tortured artist in Velvet Buzzsaw are actually pretty good. It’s difficult to make good (new) art that’s to be featured in a film. It’s even more difficult to make art for a movie that’s supposed be taken seriously. Especially modern art. Anyone reading this knows how often & easy modern art is made fun of in cinema. As a fan of (good) modern art, I find that trope to be a little played out (although some artists make it easy to poke fun at their work). Dan Gilroy went the route of Junebug (another film that shares some of the same DNA as Velvet Buzzsaw) in that it shows the pretentious side of modern art but still showcases good paintings.




But this is still a comedy so there are art pieces that do serve as a form of comic relief…

A possible Metropolis reference? Metropolis / Velvet Buzzsaw

Criticism is also shown with respect. Jake Gyllenhaal’s character is a long-form art critic. Key phrase; long-form. In the era of twitter, facebook, Instagram, amazon & yelp reviews, everyone – literally everyone – is a (short-form) critic. The idea of a writing thousands of words on something is slowly dying. Not only that, but everyone thinks their opinion is super important. If you’re on twitter as much as I am these days then you’ve noticed the growing arrogance and sense of entitlement in a lot of twitter posts. People really think they’re “tastemakers”, “gatekeepers”, “critics” and/or “cultural critics” because they wrote two articles on Indiewire (and what's funny is that I’m willing to bet these articles were paid for in the form of “exposure” instead of actual money). And what's sad is some of these irrelevant & unimportant people do have small cult-like followings. I find myself scrolling twitter sometimes and going; “who are you?” or “what do you do?” that causes mobs of people to blindly & mindlessly “cancel” someone or change the opinions of thousands & millions of people simply with a vague, uninformed, unresearched, emotionally charged tweet? This idea is shown in Velvet Buzzsaw where Gyllenhaal’s character writes a bad review that causes an artist to kill himself. In a world of Armond White and Roger Moore (the “critic” not the actor), I’m slowly losing faith in the idea of modern day criticism. But seeing a filmmaker craft a character that is passionate about long-form writing/criticism is a breath of fresh air. It’s easy for a filmmaker to poke fun at critics. It takes a bit of talent to show critics some respect (especially when a lot of critics get off on being hurtful & mean).


Velvet Buzzsaw is a fun little film with a few imperfections (Jake Gyllenhaal’s weird ambiguous overly proper English/American hybrid accent comes to mind). If you take it too seriously then you're going to get yourself worked up for no reason. As long as you don’t expect a masterpiece and are willing accept a safe ending, then you wont be disappointed. There's also plenty to talk about once the credits roll. The film brings up issues concerning race, sexuality and integrity. You should also keep in mind that this is just one man’s opinion. The more I think about Velvet Buzzsaw the more I’ve come to terms with the ending even though it is a little cliché/typical for a movie set in the art world (*SPOILER* the movie ends with a homeless man selling priceless modern art on the street for $5 which kind of plays in to that stereotype that modern art can be done by anybody *SPOILER*).

Friday, February 1, 2019

THE SCHOOL OF TARKOVSKY: NURI BILGE CEYLAN PART 2


The Wild Pear Tree is very Nuri Bilge Ceylan. It's the story of a (want to be/soon to be) writer told in the same slow-ish methodical style as Winter Sleep, Once Upon A Time In Anatolia and other older Ceylan films. It's a fascinating film and there are plenty of traditional reviews on it to pick from (this has been doing the festival circuit since last year).
What I'd like to delve in to is the obvious influence that Andrei Tarkovsky had on the film...

Solaris / The Wild Pear Tree


It's already been reported numerous times how Ceylan wasn't always a Tarkovsky fan (he discovered Tarkovsky's work in film school and wasn't sold right away). But today there's no doubt that Ceylan is not only a fan of Tarkovsky' but he references him in his work quite a bit (see part one on the connection between Tarkovsky & Ceylan).
Stalker (left) appears in Nuri Bilge Ceylan's Uzak (right)

I know it's a little basic (and sometimes lazy) to compare slow foreign art films to The Mirror or Solaris, but in Ceylan's case I think it's ok...
Solaris / Uzak

Solaris / Winter Sleep

Clouds Of May / Andrei Rublev / The Sacrifice

Andrei Rublev / Winter Sleep


While The Wild Pear Tree doesn't have much in common with Tarkovsky's films in terms of basic plot, a lot of the imagery and overall ambiance is straight out of the school of Tarkovsky...
Solaris /
The Wild Pear Tree

Solaris /
The Wild Pear Tree

Andrei Rublev / The Wild Pear Tree

Ivan's Childhood / The Wild Pear Tree

Andrei Rublev / The Wild Pear Tree

Solaris / The Wild Pear Tree

The Wild Pear Tree /
Andrei Rublev

For Mom

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