settima

Bales2023FilmChallenge

Ο Δράκος (1956)

Men in identical white shirts and dark slacks dancing in the club during after hours. Their upper bodies seem top-heavy, tending to lunge towards the ground. DP: Kostas Theodoridis.

Ο Δράκος (1956)

December 31: #NewYearsEve

O Δράκος [O Drakos / The Ogre of Athens aka The Ogre aka The Vampire] (Nikos Koundouros, 1956)

A mousy bank clerk (Dinos Iliopoulos) with a uncanny resemblance to a criminal on the run finds himself hiding in a shady cabaret on New Year's Eve instead of spending a quiet evening alone. During his forced stay at the nightclub, he comes to enjoy and identify more and more with his newfound persona and assumes the role of the notorious “Drago”.

An initial box office dud, it is now considered one of the top ten all-time best Greek films.

Happy new year, everyone! On to many more cinematic discoveries!

#Bales2023FilmChallenge #NikosKoundouros #DinosIliopoulos #GiannisArgyris #MargaritaPapageorgiou #MarikaLekaki #ManosHatzidakis #KostasTheodoridis #FilmNoir #satire #crime #holidays #romance #drama #music #Greece #1950s ★★★★☆

Umut (1970)

Hasan (Tuncel Kurtiz) and Cabbar (Yılmaz Güney) planning their next step sitting atop of the pit. DP: Kaya Ererez.

Umut (1970)

December 30: discussing an elaborate plan on #NationalResolutionPlanningDay

Umut [Hope] (Yılmaz Güney & Şerif Gören, 1970)

I left forty lira at home, the family is hungry now.

Cabbar (Yılmaz Güney), an impoverished, illiterate phaeton driver, loses his already half-dead horse when a rich man crashes into the cart. Now destitute and burdened with feeding his six children, wife and grandmother, Cabbar is offered several ways out. While winning the lottery is not in his stars, his friend Hasan's (Tuncel Kurtiz) and imam Hodja's (Osman Alyanak) wondrous plan to go out into the Kurdish wastelands to dig up an illusive treasure may be his only escape.

Umut is Turkey's early venture into Neorealismo. Banned by the national board of censorship – the display of abject poverty, characters not observing morning prayer etc etc – the film was smuggled out off the country and into Cannes, where its screening urged the Turkish government to reconsider its decision. It's now seen as one of Turkey's most important cinematic masterpieces.

#Bales2023FilmChallenge #YılmazGüney #ŞerifGören #TuncelKurtiz #OsmanAlyanak #ArifErkinGüzelbeyoglu #KayaErerez #Turkey #poetry #drama #1970s ★★★★☆

剣 (1964)

One of the kendōka kneeled on the floor in gruelling punishment, facing the clock on the wall, while the other students continue their training. DP: Chikashi Makiura.

剣 (1964)

December 29: a clock face on #TickTockDay

[Ken / Sword] (Kenji Misumi, 1964)

– So what is your goal in life then – Satisfaction of the present. The sword, and nothing else.

After World War II, the Japanese martial arts of #kendo was banished by the occupying forces in an attempt to “remove and exclude militaristic and ultra-nationalistic persons from life”. With that in mind, it makes complete sense that nationalist author and former kendo practitioner Yukio Mishima wrote a short story – Sword, originally published in literary magazine Shincho in 1963 – about the art.

Both the story and Kenji Misumi's 1964 film adaptation follow arrogant kendo student Jiro, played by sublime kabuki actor Raizō Ichikawa who also appears in an earlier Mishima adaptation, 炎上 [Enjō / The Temple of the Golden Pavilion aka Conflagration] (1958).

#Bales2023FilmChallenge #KenjiMisumi #YukioMishima #RaizōIchikawa #ChikashiMakiura #SeiIkeno #ChikashiMakiura #drama #BookAdaptation #ComingOfAge #LGBT #sports #MartialArts #Japan #1960s ★★★★½

A Zed & Two Noughts (1985)

A zebra and a man in a cage with the word ZOO in large blue lit capitals in the background. DP: Sacha Vierny.

A Zed & Two Noughts (1985)

December 27: a zoo on #VisitTheZooDay

A Zed & Two Noughts aka Z+00 aka ZOO (Peter Greenaway, 1985)

In the land of the legless, the one-legged woman is queen.

#Bales2023FilmChallenge #PeterGreenaway #AndréaFerréol #BrianDeacon #EricDeacon #FrancesBarber #JossAckland #GerardThoolen #WolfKahler #GeoffreyPalmer #DavidAttenborough #MichaelNyman #SachaVierny #UK #Netherlands #animals #CarCrash #1980s ★★★★☆

Рождество обитателей леса (ca 1912)

Various beetles and a grasshopper rejoice around the Christmas tree materialised by Old Man Frost.

Рождество обитателей леса (ca. 1912)

December 25: a Santa for #Christmas

Pождество обитателей леса [Rozhdestvo obitateley lesa / The Insects' Christmas] (Wladyslaw Starewicz, ca 1912)

Father Christmas makes a Christmas tree for the people of the forest.

Дед Мороз (Ded Moroz, or Old Man Frost) is the Slavic version of Saint Nicholas or Santa Claus. An ornament depicting the old grey climbs down a child's (or doll's) Christmas tree and sets off to the forest where he plants his magic staff to create a Christmas feast for the woodland animals.

The word “animation” means “a bestowing of life“. Like his ancestor in the arts Bernard Palissy and the ancient winter solstice celebration of the return of light that long ago spawned Christmas, Wladyslaw Starewicz's Insects' Christmas breathes life into real but inanimate beetles, dragonflies, and frogs. The illusion is complete as you effortlessly forget they are painstakingly animated.

From me to you, a little Christmas treat

Director Wladyslaw Starewicz and his daughter Irina (Irene), surrounded by several of his tiny actors. Irina, writer and director in her own right, starred in her father's WW1 short “Liliya Belgii” [“The Lily of Belgium”] (1915).

Рождество обитателей леса (ca. 1912)

#Bales2023FilmChallenge #WladyslawStarewicz #Russia #fantasy #animation #ShortFilm #Christmas #holidays #StopMotion #insects #animals #1910s ★★★★☆

Colloque de chiens (1977)

Monique (Silke Humel, R) spending Christmas Eve in a bar, looking for a way out. She's speaking to an elderly man in an expensive tuxedo. Is this it? DP: Denis Lenoir; still photographer Patrice Morere.

Colloque de chiens (1977)

December 24: the night before Christmas (Christmas Eve)

Colloque de chiens (Raúl Ruiz, 1977)

“Nobody knows why Monique, the cold and dry voiced whore, bears in her eyes the sadness and tiredness of her past.”

Filmed during an actors' strike, Raúl Ruiz's Colloque de chiens consists for the most part of still photographs with mixed in stolen moving footage of unsuspecting bystanders and stray dogs. Told in fotonovela format, we follow the pitiful account of Monique, who as a young girl, learns that her mother is not who she thinks she is. Rejected, she throws herself into a life of vice until she meets Henri, a handsome young television repairman. Together they buy a small café, and are happy for once. But the cyclical nature of life determines her faith.

Raúl Ruiz's work is, like Henri's modus operandi, determined by maps and patterns. Even in the short comically melodramatic breathe of Colloque de chiens, the map has been laid out for Ruiz's later, much more complex narrative.

Colloque opens in a barren landscape. There are the skeletal towers of a nearby city, and the endless barks of abandoned dogs. Obscured by tall reeds, a blown-up photograph of a young man. The face, soft and familiar, a distant memory.

“He wanted to be returned to the world of his childhood and to this woman who was perhaps waiting for him” –Chris Marker, dialogue from La Jetée (1962)
Amongst bare winter bushes a large photo of a friendly, young, familiar looking man. In the background against a grey sky multiple white apartment buildings.

Colloque de chiens (1977)

#Bales2023FilmChallenge #RaúlRuiz #SilkeHumel #EvaSimonet #RobertDarmel #JorgeArriagada #DenisLenoir #PatriceMorere #drama #crime #melodrama #ShortFilm #photography #animals #gender #prostitution #France #1970s ★★★★☆

El-Fallâh el-fasîh (1970)

The peasant (Ahmed Marei) in a stone temple, flanked by scribes. DP: Mustafa Imam.

El-Fallâh el-fasîh (1970)

December 23: #farmers for #NationalFarmersDay in India

شكاوى الفلاح الفصيح [El-Fallâh el-fasîh / The Eloquent Peasant] (1970) (Chadi Abdel Salam, 1970)

He's a peasant. Without looking into his situation, words are all he has.

4000 years ago, Egypt, Middle Kingdom. A peasant, leading his mules past a stream of water, is tricked. With his animals gone, he pleads to the Pharaoh to restore Maʽat, harmony.

Chadi Abdel Salam is not only this film's director, but also a trained architect, later set and costume designer. His eye wordlessly speaks the passing of time in the smallest of details. The withering of ferns, desert sand staining linen, the Sun merging with skin. At once, the universal presence of the gods becomes visible.

#Bales2023FilmChallenge #ChadiAbdelSalam #AhmedMarei #GamilSoliman #MustafaImam #crime #history #mythology #drama #animals #poetry #ShortFilm #Egypt #1960s #1970s ★★★★☆

Mahagonny (1980)

A kaleidoscopic New York street scene. Mahagonny requires two projectionists to screen it in its intended form.

Mahagonny (1980)

December 22: mathematics on #MathematicsDay (India)

Mahagonny [Number 18] (Harry Smith, 1980)

Mahagonny is filmmaker, artist, musicologist, and alchemist Harry Smith's mathematical analysis of Marcel Duchamp's masterpiece La mariée mise à nu par ses célibataires, même [The Bride Stripped Bare by Her Bachelors, Even], aka Le Grand Verre [The Large Glass], which was completed in 1923. It is set to Brecht and Weill's opera Aufstieg und Fall der Stadt Mahagonny [Rise and Fall of the City of Mahagonny] from 1930, which was an opera Smith was obsessed with while living in New York's Chelsea Hotel.

Read an interview with Jonas Mekas about Harry Smith and his Mahagonny.

#Bales2023FilmChallenge #HarrySmith #MarcelDuchamp #BertoltBrecht #KurtWeill #RoseFeliuPettet #AllenGinsberg #LotteLenya #JonasMekas #PattiSmith #art #mathematics #opera #ExperimentalFilm #USA #1980s

Sunset Boulevard (1950)

Norma Desmond (Gloria Swanson) descending an ornate staircase. The size of the set gives you an approximate idea of her height. Even when several steps above him, Swanson's dwarfed by the photographer in the dark suit and glasses. DP: John F. Seitz.

Sunset Blvd. (1950)

December 21: a short girl for #ShortGirlAppreciationDay

Sunset Boulevard (Billy Wilder, 1950)

I am big. It's the pictures that got small.

The great Gloria Swanson (4'11” – 5ft 2 / 1,49 m) – fabulously decked out by Edith Head (5'1” / 1,55 m) with an endless parade of platform shoes – in Billy Wilder's Sunset Blvd. (1950). Also starring, Buster Keaton, who was 5'5” / 1,65 m.

#Bales2023FilmChallenge #BillyWilder #GloriaSwanson #BusterKeaton #WilliamHolden #ErichVonStroheim #JackWebb #FranzWaxman #JohnFSeitz #drama #USA #1950s ★★★★☆